Margaret Bourke-White: Photography as Social Commentary Born in the Bronx‚ New York in 1904‚ Margaret Bourke-White was one of the best-known photographers of the twentieth century who was known for her fearless and dramatic photographs. She graduated from Cornell University and started her career as an industrial photographer at a steel company in Cleveland‚ Ohio. In 1929 she got hired by Fortune Magazine and traveled to the Soviet Union to photograph its industrial development. Bourke-White then
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2005 it was regarded as a milestone in German politics; and the USA‚ the country of freedom and sophistication has yet to experience a female president. One of the exceptions in this context is the UK. Not because of the UK itself but because of Margaret Thatcher. She took office as the first female Prime Minister of the UK as well as the first female leader of the Conservative Party already 30 years ago‚ when women in such high political positions were basically non-existent. She was one of the
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Sun Dec.10 2014 Abstract There are three main parts of this article i.e. the introductory part that elucidates the objective of the paper and the main body that compares and contrasts the theories put forward by the articles of Stephen Harsh and Margaret Rouse. At the conclusion‚ reasons why the two articles were selected for discussion is provided; highlighting a subjective opinion of both articles. Introduction Management information systems can be described as computer based systems that provides
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Margaret Thatcher‚ otherwise known as The Iron Lady‚ was known for her role in saving Britain. The economy of Britain was facing tremendous troubles in the nineteen hundreds (Blundell 92). If the economy of Britain continued down the road it was going‚ Britain would have faced many great economic hardships that Margaret Thatcher prevented during her time in office. Margaret Thatcher‚ the first female prime minister in British history‚ exceptionally reformed Britain in a time of need while leaving
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With America at war in 2004‚ looking back to our past to how we overcame insurmountable odds is what Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was pleading when she delivered an eulogy at President Ronald Reagan’s funeral in 2004. She believes that since both wars and eras parallel each other‚ we must look to back to see how confident and daring President Reagan was when he took on the USSR and communism in order to understand how we should take on the War on Terror. She started out by describing how effective
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For this essay I aim to show the importance of memory and of remembering the past in The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. The Handmaid’s Tale is a ‘speculative fiction’ first published in 1985 but set in the early 2000s. The novel was in response to changes in US politics with the emergence of Christian fundamentalism‚ the New Right. Atwood believed that society was going wrong and wrote this savage satire‚ similar to Jonathan Swift’s ‘A Modest Proposal’‚ depicting a dystopia which she uses as
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and analyzing Margaret Atwood’s “Variations on the Word Love”. In this poem‚ the poet defines a wide range of different types of love. As described by the Poet‚ each aspect of love that can be experienced is completely different and unique. The poem “Variations on the world love” is divided into two concrete segments. The purpose of dividing this poem into two unique sections is directly related to defining and assessing the word “love” in two unique ways. In the first stanza‚ Atwood has defined
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Margaret Thatcher and Indira Gandhi were both polarizing figures in their countries‚ who left behind controversial legacies. Both of these influential leaders seized opportunity when it appeared‚ and overcame the obstacles of being female politicians during some tremendously difficult and trying times. However‚ both of these women proved that leadership is not dependent on gender‚ yet on the determination and passion one has for their country. On October 13‚ 1925‚ Margaret Thatcher was born in
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reveal and emphasise key ideas and captivate the audience. This has been shown in Margaret Atwood’s speech‚ Spotty-Handed Villainesses (1994) as well as Aung San Suu Kyi’s speech‚ the Keynote Address at the Beijing Conference on Women (1995). These two speeches focus on the role of women in society and effectively discuss it in a way that has successfully raised the issue and resonated through history. Margaret Atwood uses a variety of rhetorical methods in captivating the audience. She uses wit
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Werner Herzog declares‚ “There are deeper strata of truth in cinema.” This “mysterious and elusive” truth that he searches for is “poetic‚ ecstatic…and can be reached only through fabrication and imagination and stylization” (Minnesota Declaration). His manifesto of sorts aptly explains why the line between documentary and narrative fiction is so blurry in his plethora of films. In this same pronouncement‚ Herzog denounces “the so-called Cinema Verite’‚” which he deems is “devoid of verite” because
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