affiliation play equally influential roles in the meaning production of dress (Andrew 2008; Calefato 2004; Crane 2000; Crane and Bovone 2006; Clark and Turner 2007; Entwistle 2001; Kaiser 1997; Swain 2003; Taylor 1997; Tompson and Hayiko 1997). The notion of fashion as a non-verbal communication system is discussed by Barthes (1990‚ 2006)‚ Calefato (2004)‚ Entwistle (2001)‚ Kaiser (1997)‚ Crane (2000) and Taylor (1997) through the use of semiotics in their analysis of fashion‚ and their focus on the
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Passage From The Red Badge of Courage In this short passage from the Red Badge of Courage‚ Samuel Crane uses many literary devices to make the text seem to jump out at the readers. He uses much auditory and visual imagery in order to make his words seem more life-like. "The splitting crashes swept along the lines until an interminable roar was developed. To those in the midst of it‚ it became a din fitted to the universe. It was the whirring and thumping of gigantic machinery‚ complications
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Stephen Crane’s own book “Maggie: The Girl of The Streets” used setting to develop his ideas throughout the course of the story. Stephen Crane portrayed the main characters with actions of violence and‚ moral hypocrisy to convey a message towards the reader. In the novel itself power comes from the manner in which Crane combines certain themes into a critical‚ ironic thrust at his culture. In the first three chapters alone in the setting of the streets of Rum Alley‚ Jimmie fights a rival
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green grass surrounded a happy community. Children’s laughter and happy chattering were the beautiful music that delighted the ears. But like any community‚ there are secrets that torture souls and change lives forever. In “The Monster” by Stephen Crane‚ we see how a community’s true face is revealed and the people are turned into monsters. Based on a deeper understanding of the story‚ many facts denying that Henry was a monster‚ and details pointing to the townspeople being monsters‚ we can prove
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In “The Red Badge of Courage” by Stephen Crane written in 1895 and set during the civil war‚ Crane presents a fiction novel on a young man named Henry wanting to become a U.S soldier who discovers the truth of war. He goes to war and figures out the hard way that war is not the place for him until he meets a man name Tall Soldier and that man he meets and looks up to doesn’t make it. From that man dieing it shook Henry up and then Henry really thinks hard and figure that his live is on the line it
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extremely well due to it’s new and innovative style and it’s colorful cast of characters. The show was created by David Crane and Marta Kauffman for NBC and had a total of eight seasons. The show became especially popular with younger viewers‚ who were bored of family oriented sitcoms (Laurie 1) and would inspire many other sitcoms like it‚ such as “How I Met Your Mother”. According to Crane the one-line pitch was‚ “it’s that special time in your life where your friends are your family” (Keck 1). The creator
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Is The Red Badge of Courage an anti-war novel? Is it more neutral? What is Crane’s perspective on war itself? In The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane‚ Henry Fleming faces authenticity of war‚ while his mom is facing the authenticity of her son leaving her on her own (anti-war). The Red Badge of Courage is a neutral novel‚ according to evidence in The Red Badge of Courage and in outside sources. The Red Badge of Courage is a neutral novel‚ and this is kenned from the definition of an anti-war
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War is Kind In Stephen Cranes poem “War is Kind‚” He uses repetition‚ tone and imagery‚ to communicate his theme: war is not kind‚ it is horrible. Repetition is the most prominent literary element used by the author. One of the most repeated phrases is "war is kind." Not only does it appear in the title‚ but it is repeated in lines 15‚ 12‚ 16‚ and 26. Crane illustrates that he is being verbally ironic. He does not mean that war is kind‚ but that war creates Misery. The phrase "do not weep" is
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invention of the container‚ cargo was handled by hand. The loading and unloading of ships took days or even weeks‚ in this way it was not possible to increase the ship sizes. But when the containerization started‚ much more cargo was handled by gantry cranes. In this way the cargo handling time was very much reduced. Ports and terminals became more productive. The major question in this paper has everything to do with the increasing vessel sizes and the productivity of the terminals. So the focus in
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Naturalism in Stephen Crane’s “Maggie: A Girl of the Streets” “Maggie: A Girl of the Streets‚” is a novella written by Stephen Crane and published in the year 1893. This work was published during the time of the Industrial Revolution‚ when factories were appearing everywhere. Their workers were often not paid enough to lead a decent life‚ and suffered from their situation. They were not very civilized and sometimes aggressive in their behavior. Perhaps because of this radical change from a more agricultural
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