Lessons Learned by The American Experience of the Vietnam War Christal K. Jones Professor Anderson August 15¸ 2013 Introduction The Vietnam War lasted close to twenty years; the American experience help to put into perspective‚ the complex lessons that the United States military and its leadership should have learned from their involvement in this war. This paper will discuss some of the lessons learned from the following arenas: diplomatic negotiations‚ presidential leadership‚ and cultural/social
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Good versus Evil in King Lear Life will always bestow us with choices which we must wisely choose either a moral or immoral response to. Shakespeare exemplifies goodness and wickedness in King Lear. The play presents a powerful manifestation of loyalty‚ specifically through the characters Kent‚ Edgar‚ and Cordelia. Kent’s unrestricted loyalty to Lear remains stable throughout the play. He recognizes Lear’s tragic flaw and remains faithful‚ even after being banished. His reliability is further
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Through the years I’ve been in school there have been many lessons I have learned. These can be described in three standard phrases‚ mind over matter‚ anything is possible‚ and treat people the way you want to be treated. All of these things came into play when I was in elementary school and high school. Coming into college I have been able to apply these rules to my advancements in school. All these lessons comes in to play when you’re in college because there are a lot of things that mess with
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"Love is whatever you can still betray. Betrayal can only happen if you love." (John LeCarre) In William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of King Lear‚ characters are betrayed by the closest people to them. The parents betray their children‚ mostly unintentionally. The children deceive their parents because of their greed and power hunger. Their parents were eventually forgiven‚ but the greedy children were not. Parents and their children betray one and other‚ and are only able to do so because they are
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King Lear Comparison A tragedy is not only an imitation of life in general but an imitation of an action‚ as Aristotle defined his ideas in the Poetics‚ which presents Oedipus as an ultimate tragic hero. There is a obvious link between the two characters in that blindness – both literal and metaphorical – is a strong theme in the stories. Issues of self-recognition and self-knowledge are significant for Oedipus as well as King Lear. For Aristotle‚ Reversal‚ Recognition and Suffering are key
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his play ‘King Lear’‚ as well as the movie “Life as a House’ and the famous Bob Dylan song ‘The Times They Are a Changin’’. With these texts‚ I’m going to distinguish and expose the outcomes and arduousness of change. The natural order – or in other words‚ the physical universe considered as an unchanging structure of life - in King Lear is absolute and when pushed‚ it pushes back. The most obvious example where the natural order is changed is at the beginning of the play when King Lear divides his
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going off the phrase‚ “You learn something new everyday.” that would suggest that I would have learned 2‚324 lessons from school alone. To only say that one of the 2‚324 lessons shaped me more than the rest would be false. They all have shaped me and made me into the person that I am today. However‚ talking about all of the lessons that have shaped me is not logical‚ I will share a lesson that I learned from my seventh grade math teacher‚ Ms. Canfield. I was selected as “special” at a young age by
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(Title) In the play‚ King Lear‚ written by William Shakespeare‚ Shakespeare displays that all of humanity is susceptible to sin. In King Lear‚ Shakespeare puts emphasis on family relationships. In fact‚ he uses two separate families to show the reader that sin can destroy any relationship even if they share the same bloodline. The main relationship is between King Lear and his daughters‚ Cordelia‚ Regan‚ and Goneril. The relationship between Lear‚ Regan‚ and Goneril is quite toxic‚ however‚ Lear’s
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Amelia Weidemann “If the heavens do not their visible spirits/Send quickly down to tame these vile offenses/...humanity must perforce prey on itself‚”(IV.ii.48-50). This quote comes from the fourth act in King Lear written by William Shakespeare. In the process to amend the social uproar that ensues after the first act‚ Cordelia later on in the play tries to reestablish the aristocratic ideal of service to one’s lord by waging war on the betrayal of her sisters. Shakespeare wants to illuminate that
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How are Ophelia from Hamlet and Cordelia from King Lear similar in their actions and the way they develop the story? Throughout both plays‚ the main characters (King Lear and Hamlet) progress because of the these women. Whether it is reference to the growth of Hamlet’s insanity or King Lear’s guilt and acceptance‚ these women pushed their respected plots to their climax. I have discussed Ophelia in a previous paper but I focused more on her weakness rather than her power over the plot. Ophelia
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