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    their masters so they can get what they really want. In the play King Lear by Shakespeare‚ the topic of blindness occurs often. The theme of blindness is demonstrated by the biggest mistake that King Lear makes‚ by the disguise of Kent‚ and by Gloucester’s trust in Edmund. The biggest mistake of King Lear when he divides his kingdom among his three daughters‚ but he does not know that his blindness will lead him to be controlled by Goneril and Regan. Lear gets angry on Cordelia. King Lear divides her

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    the play‚ Oedipus is able to see but does not know the truth about who killed Laius. At the conclusion of the play‚ Oedipus is physically blind but knows the truth‚ which is how Teiresius was throughout the play. The irony of Oedipus’s blindness begins on the opening pages of the play‚ when says‚ “I never saw the man myself‚” (4) while speaking about King Laius. Oedipus’s ignorance is evident because he killed Laius‚ and Laius was his father‚ neither of which he knew. He however‚ states

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    Oedipus the King has many images of blindness‚ both physical and blindness of the mind. The characters surrounding these images are Oedipus and Tiresias the prophet. When the play begins Oedipus has vision and Tiresias cannot see‚ but by the end of the play‚ it is clear who can really see and who is blind. When Oedipus first encounters Tiresias‚ the blind prophet proceeds to tell Oedipus after much pressure that Oedipus is the one who has brought the great plague down upon Thebes and that he

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    Recently in AVID class we watched a TED talk about “color blindness” and “color braveness” by Mellody Hobson. During her talk she focuses on how race has impacted our lives and what she thinks of it. Although she talks about both “color blindness” and “color braveness‚” she wants people to become color brave in order to make the world a better place. Mellody Hobson gives a powerful speech and her view on racism is geared toward the reality of racism today. She wants people to be aware that racism

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    Running head: COGNITION AND REALITY Raymond Summers Psychology 202 Cynda Hopper Change Blindness: The Proof of Ignorance Cognitive psychology is not so much difficult to see in action‚ but rather it is difficult to understand why. This did not stop cognitive psychologists Daniel Levin and Daniel Simons. They proposed that when a person meets another object‚ if that object is not important enough to the person‚ that same person will in fact pay less attention to it. They performed two experiments

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    In the play Oedipus Rex by Sophocles‚ the themes of sight and blindness are developed in a way to communicate to the reader that it is not eyesight itself‚ but insight that holds the key to truth and‚ without it‚ no amount of knowledge can help uncover that truth. Some may define insight as the ability to intuitively know what is going to happen‚ or simply as the capacity to understand the true nature of a situation. Both definitions hold a significant role in the play‚ not only for more obvious

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    Vincent Mendez Arden Thomas Humanities 1 23 December 2016 Blindness is the Unknown In this play‚ sight and blindness are a motif because some people in the play are blind and a lot of people are able to see. Eyes are everywhere in this play. For example‚ Teiresias is blind but he can still see the clearest of everyone. Tiresias is also able to predict the future. Some of the things he predicted were that Oedipus would kill his father and marry his mother. He also predicted that Oedipus would

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    novel Invisible Man‚ Ralph Ellison works with many different images of blindness and impaired vision and how it relates to perception. These images prove to be fascinating pieces of symbolism that enhance the themes of impression and vision within the novel. From the beginning of the novel when the narrator is blindfolded during the battle royal to the end where Brother Jack’s false eye pops out‚ images of sight and blindness add to the meaning of many scenes and characters. In many of these situations

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    Borges’ Blindness & Dillard’s Seeing In Jorge Luis Borges’ piece from Ficciones‚ “Blindness” and Annie Dillard’s piece from Pilgrim at Tinker Creek‚ “Seeing”‚ we read writers’ perspectices on their own blindness. The writers contradict the common fallacies our culture has about blindness with their own personal experiences. Although both writers portray blindness in a positive light‚ each writer uses his disability to enhance his lives differently. Borges depicts his loss of sight as an opportunity

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    In the analytical paper “‘I Stumble When I Saw’: Interpreting Gloucester’s Blindness in King Lear” written By Robert B. Pierce‚ he analyzes how disability often plays a symbolic role in literature and the stereotype surrounding blindness. Then‚ the author analyzed Gloucester from the literature King Lear. In the beginning of the essay‚ blindness is characterized as the ultimate disaster in one’s life‚ and it is either worse than or near to death. Blind individual is often depicting as helpless and

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