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Complete in Cornell Format- Store in Binder Notebook MUST HAVE! Critical lens Essays provide a quote‚ which the student must connect to literature read. The literature must be that read in class. It consists of 5 paragraphs = Introduction‚ 3 body paragraphs‚ conclusion. The student must discuss 2 pieces of literature and three literary terms. Students must know the correct titles of the literature and punctuate it correctly. All titles are capitalized. Book titles are underlined
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Nyjae Ms.Sargent Eng 11th/Pd.1 February 9‚ 2013 Critical Lens Essay #3 Joanna Kathleen Rowling once said‚ “It is our choices that show what we truly are‚ far more than our abilities.” Rowling’s words suggest it is our decisions that show who we really are more than our capabilities. It’s not about what we can do or how fast
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In the essay “Triumph of the Lens‚” the author describes the emotional appeals that were used during the 1935 film Triumph of the Will to persuade the audience into believing Adolf Hitler was an appropriate leader for the Germans. The author notes how the film’s director‚ Leni Riefenstahl‚ used ethos (ethics)‚ pathos (emotion)‚ and logos (logic) to relate to the audience’s senses. The author comes to a realization that these techniques are very powerful influences in the way it can shift a person’s
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Critical Lens: The Pearl L.M. Montgomery once said‚ “we pay a price for everything we get or take in this world.” Every decision and everything we take‚ in the hopes of bettering our lives‚ will come with a price a pay. What he is saying is the choices we make in life‚ whether they be good or bad‚ consequences are received. These consequences don’t necessarily have to be bad nor have to be good on your part. The Pearl by John Steinbeck provides us with a character that gives enormous sacrifices
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Marketing Plan EX3 Super High Vision Lens Coating By: Valerie Ross Athabasca University Copyright by: Valerie Ross Contents 1.0 Executive Summary 5 2.0 Situation Analysis 6 2.1 Company Analysis 7 2.1.1. Goals 7 2.1.2. Focus 7 2.1.3. Culture 7 2.1.4. Positives 8 2.1.5. Negatives 8 2.1.6. Market Situation 9 2.1.7. Market
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Throughout the play‚ preserving one’s reputation is a prevalent theme. I believe that the truth is more important than a good name. Some characters that are an example of preserving reputation are Abigail‚ John Proctor and Parris. Abigail plays a big role in the play as kind of an antagonist. Abbigail is involved with John in doing sexual things with him even though he has a wife. Abigail says “ I know how you clutched my back behind your house and sweated like a stallion whenever I come near! Or
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Understanding the experience of the patient through the lens of care Introduction Drawing on my own ethnographic findings‚ and further enriched with that of others in a hospital context‚ this essay will deconstruct a patient’s experience of care in an intensive care unit (ICU) and place different aspects of it within a broader theoretical framework of care. Primarily‚ I will discuss how and why a patient in an ICU experiences feelings of de-humanisation. This discussion will elucidate the changes
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of the girls in the town who are trying to cover up that they danced. Choosing to live and ruin their reputations‚ or choosing to hang with dignity is a problem many face. Throughout the play John Proctor‚ Judge Danforth‚ and Reverend Parris are concerned with their reputations and will stop at nothing to try and protect themselves. The protagonist‚ John Proctor is concerned for his reputation‚ but more so for his family and friends’ well-being. He withholds information from the court that he commits
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“It takes many good deeds to build a reputation‚ and only one bad one to lose it” (Benjamin Franklin). Reputation is one of the most important things in our life‚ it can take many years to build up and only a small amount of time to lose it. Miss Emily will battle between love and reputation. William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” enforces the conflict between love and reputation through Miss Emily and Homer Barron‚ and Miss Emily and the townsmen. One of the main conflicts is between Miss Emily and
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