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    Roman Polanski's Chinatown

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    James Berardinelli’s review on Roman Polanski’s Chinatown purports that the film is ‘one of the best films to emerge from the 1970s’‚ exploring his value judgements and sweeping generalizations but providing minimal evidence to substantiate. Berardinelli immediately introduces his review in a positive light‚ often adopting debateable opinions. Not only does he cite this movie as ‘the high-water point’ in both Jack Nicholson and Polanski’s careers but he also labels it the ‘finest colour entry into

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    The Romans Script

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    Senate with my partner Christopher. Now tell us what is the announcement from the Senate? Christopher: Well the Roman army needs some support to be a bigger empire. Cristina: But why should you join the army. Well because of lots of reasons. Christopher. Well it is my belief that you can protect your family and your properties so they will be always safe. In other words the romans give you security to your land and you can also give them because by defending your country you are also defending

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    The Roman Empire

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    almost completely low of nutrients and such from tons of farming. Then again the Empire was around a few million people‚ which means that there was probably a lot of farming going on. Most of these farmers moved west into the vast territory of the Roman Empire(Goldsmith). During this slow decline in the Empire‚ Caesar made a lot of new rules and did some pretty weird things. For one‚ he passed a law allowing men to meet in bars and anywhere else to discuss whatever they felt like talking about. After

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    Primogeniture In Macbeth

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    http://www.enotes.com/macbeth-text http://nfs.sparknotes.com/macbeth Primogeniture Act III.i ▪ Preference given to the 1st born son in inheritance of titles and property is called primogeniture ▪ It is important to know that primogeniture was NOT in effect in Scotland in Macbeth’s time‚ and Duncan’s naming of Malcolm as his successor in Act I was actually illegal on two counts. ▪ Not only did a law exist that restricted the succession to those who had reached adulthood (which Malcolm

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    Macbeth as a tragedy

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    Macbeth as a Tragedy According to Aristotle ’s Definition Literature provides us the various sensation; for examples; love‚ hate‚ sorrow‚ melancholy‚ pity‚ fear and joyfulness. Melancholy is the origination of many great literature works; for instances; the works written by the greatest writer in English literature‚ William Shakespeare. He wrote many precious works and his masterpiece namely tragedy of Hamlet‚ Othello‚ King Lear and Macbeth. The Tragedy of Macbeth seems to fit to an idea mold

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    Feminism In Macbeth

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    Female characters in classical literature are usually written as objects in a misogynistic viewpoint and made out to be nonhuman in a sense. Shakespeare’s Macbeth is a tragedy written by William Shakespeare. Set mainly in Scotland‚ the play dramatizes the damaging psychological effects of political ambition on those who seek power for its own sake. Feminism is a movement that seeks equality for all people‚ and an elimination of classical ideas of gender (male intelligence versus female inferiority;

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    greek and romans

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    1) What were the main similarities and differences between Greek and Roman political structures? Answer: Similarities: emphasis on aristocratic principles with some democratic elements‚ localism‚ and city-state units. Differences: Rome had more emphasis on unifying laws and more success in developing institutions for empire. (Students could be assigned some additional reading on this topic.) 2) What is the significance of the Hellenistic period in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean history? Answer:

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    Macbeth Soliloquy

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    clear to him. At the beginning of Macbeth’s soliloquy Shakespeare uses rhetorical questions to represent Macbeth’s feelings about killing Duncan. In the first seven lines we see three rhetorical questions. These questions lead into the conversation Macbeth has with himself to decide if he will kill Duncan. At the beginning of the soliloquy he seems unsure if he actually wants to go through with the plan. This uncertainty is represented by his uncertainty of the dagger’s existence. The first question

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    Power: Macbeth

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    Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Ridley Scott’s Gladiator are portrayed in completely different worlds‚ they both share the theme of power. Macbeth‚ a story written in 1606 for King James‚ follows the path of Macbeth as he seeks to gain power through the hamartia of regicide. Similarly‚ Commodus‚ Gladiator’s vicious antagonist‚ kills his own father in his quest for immoral power. This act of regicide and gain of immoral power consequently throughs the order of all things out the window. Both Macbeth and Commodus

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    Roman Law

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    Module 4 1. In Roman law - particularly in The Body of the Civil Law – what does "natural law" refer to? According to Roman law‚ specifically The Body of the Civil Law‚ natural law refers to laws that apply to both animals and humans. 2. Describe Aquinas’s distinctions between eternal law‚ natural law‚ human law‚ and divine law. According to Thomas Aquinas‚ there are four distinct types of laws; eternal law as the most faultless and complete set of Gods law that rules the entire community

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