ceiling metaphor‚ a framework of the 1980s‚ constructs discrimination processes in a particular way in particular organizational frame works.” (Bendl) Using a procedure of metaphor evaluation to examine the glass ceiling metaphor to determine whether it continues to exist and be useful in economic contexts. The authors then analyze the recent “firewall” metaphor for its usefulness for constructing discrimination in organizations. Which the author states remains hidden in the glass ceiling metaphor. Both
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“The Metaphor” Questions 1. The metaphors Charlotte makes for her mother and Miss Hancock are very accurate. Charlotte compares her mother to a “white picket fence” with “thorny bushes and barbed wire” on the other side (72). Charlotte’s mother is a very beautiful person on the outside. She has great hair and a great figure‚ but deep down she is not that good of a person. She is a very emotionless and stern woman. In the last few paragraphs of the novel she tells Charlotte that Miss Hancock’s
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kingdom with thy dearest friend” (Marlowe 1.1.2). Gaveston is incredibly pleased to be returning to Edward. Metaphor: Gaveston compares himself to the Greek mythological hero‚ “Leander.” Leander supposedly swam across the Hellespont every night to be with the woman he loved. Gaveston is using the story of Leander to compare to his reunion with the king. Gaveston also uses another metaphor to describe his feelings upon seeing London. He compares it the experience of seeing “Elysium to a new-come soul”
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While writing and revising Mrs. Dalloway‚ Virginia Woolf was corresponding with E.M. Forster‚ who was working on A Passage to India. In September of 1921‚ she records in her diary: ``A letter from Morgan [Forster] this morning. He seems as critical of the East as of Bloomsbury‚ & sits dressed in a turban watching his Prince dance ’ ’ (Diary 2.138). His novel came out well before she finished hers; she read it and noted‚ ``Morgan is too restrained in his new book perhaps ’ ’ (Diary 2.304). A note
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Mr World: PROLOGUE Agent Peter Brooks‚ thirty seven. Adjy agent number 37‚ Peter Brooks‚ stepped off the metal flooring of the built-for-sea hover craft and landed on firm earth. The ground shook a little as he made the short trip from the hover landing area to the small mouth of the cave. Small reptiles and insects scurried out of his way‚ except for a giant leopard moth which flew to his feet. He kicked it away‚ cursing‚ and held out his index finger for a scan. A bright green laser swept over
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Kaitlyn Truong Period 4 Literary Device Metaphor: A metaphor is a figure of speech in which there is a comparison between two things or object that are contradictory or different but have a common characteristic. Is similar to a simile but is a hidden comparison because a metaphor doesn’t use the words "like" or "as" like a simile does. Example: " My mother gets very hysterical. She’s not too bad after she gets something thoroughly digested‚ though." (The Catcher in the Rye 51 Function: When Holden
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“The Writer” by Richard Wilbur makes use of metaphors and poetic devices such as assonance to show the journey of a girl’s struggles to overcome the obstacles of adolescence and gain independence. This poem uses two metaphors to convey its message. The first metaphor is comparing the girl’s journey to a journey across the sea. The daughter is writing “in her room at the prow of the house”‚ so her house is like her ship (1). The typewriter keys sound “like a chain hauled over a gunwale”‚ a sound you
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In chapter 19‚ Kenny uses a metaphor to express how the poor and suffering people in India never ask for help‚ and thus‚ never receive any aid to better their harsh lives. After Kenny employs Selvam‚ Rukmani’s youngest son‚ at his hospital that will be built‚ Rukmani goes to Kenny to thank him and ask him how he got the money to build the hospital. When he responds that he has thousands in money‚ Rukmani is surprised because Kenny had always lived like the poor. Kenny explains by saying‚ “Part of
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tired of being invisible and unnoticed. Despite these desires‚ Evan has learned to just stop trying because his attempts always end in embarrassment and humiliation. This message is expressed through the many metaphors used in the song. “Waving Through a Window” is full of metaphors and is a metaphor in itself. “I’ve learned to slam on the break/ before I even turn the key/ before I make the mistake/
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A metaphor is the use of something familiar to understand something less familiar. For instance‚ if a news report says "unemployment went down this month‚" the familiar feeling of "going down" helps everyone to understand that the number of people looking for work has reduced. Metaphors are more common than many people think. If you look up the origin of almost any word in the dictionary‚ you will find a metaphor if you go back far enough. Some psychologists suggest that all of our thinking comes
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