Female Inequality in the Workplace and Household Equality between all people‚ regardless of age‚ colour or gender is something which every democratic society seeks to achieve in order to permit social justice and human rights‚ yet in nearly all societies and in all scopes of activity‚ women are subject to inequalities. This is most often both caused and exacerbated by the presence of discrimination in the family‚ community and work place. Though the causes and consequences of this may vary from
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HARD TIMES ASSIGNMENT DISCUSS: Dickens’ Coketown is not a city‚ rather a stage for the workings out of Gradgrind’s philosophy. Considering the above sentence examine the construction of the city in Hard Times. Coketown is quite literally the ‘town of coke’‚ the raw material used to convert iron to steel and indirectly the foundation of the ‘steel/industrial revolution’. It is critical to analyze the name of the city for Dickens’ Hard Times is a satirical caricature on the condition of England
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In " Hard Times: Coketown" Charles Dickens is assessing industrialization and the effect it had on the people in the towns in which they resided. Coketown seems to be portrayed as a city of work and not anything else. It is put across that the town consists of only fact and nothing else to alleviate the dullness. Charles Dickens is sharing his analysis on the social issues implicated in this town through a narrative that reflects upon the environment. He uses a lot of descriptions and similes to
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Dickens‚ Hard times The novel Hard Times by Charles Dickens presents the use of “flat or two-dimensional” characters which ultimately signifies a character that is lacking depth in their character and essentially maintains the same character portrayal throughout the novel. Dickens portrays this through the use of placing his characters’ names with their dominant personality trait. For example the character of Bounderby who is identified as a banker in the novel; by definition means “a morally reprehensible
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Sugar (Sucrose)- C12H22O11 Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid)- C6H8O6 Aspirin (Acetylsalicylic Acid)- C9H8O4 Common Name | Chemical Name | acetone | dimethyl ketone; 2-propanone (usually known as acetone) | acid potassium sulfate | potassium bisulfate - used in the conversion of tartrates to bitartrates in wine. | acid of sugar | oxalic acid – used in cleaning or bleaching‚ especially for the removal of rust (iron complexing agent) | ackey | nitric acid | alcali volatil | ammonium
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Although introduced almost seventy-three years apart‚ Charles Dickens’ novel Hard Times‚ and Fritz Lang’s Metropolis share many common parallels and themes. Through the use of biblical allusions‚ both Lang and Dickens are able to compare characters in their stories to holy figures such as Freder and Stephen Blackpool being alluded to as Christ-like. Both stories also show the harsh effects of industrialization‚ and present similar situations of with the school children and factory workers living
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Be Decent?” by Jay Sterling Silver states how being ethically responsible should be a law. Though many may argue that silver’s argument is invalid‚ most will agree that his argument is in fact logical because the world will be a better place and lots of lives would be saved. In the article Can the law make us be decent? by Jay Sterling Silver argues that a law should be passed‚ about helping others when in trouble and they won’t be sued or fined etc. The author Jay Sterling Silver wants it to be
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Representation of Industrialisation in Dickens’ ’Hard times’ Charles Dickens uses his fictitious town in Hard Times to represent the industrialization of England at that time or close to it. Most of this representation‚ however‚ isn’t accurately described compared the way things really were during industrialization. It is important to remember throughout this paper that not only is Hard Times a work of fiction‚ it was meant to be a satire‚ a parody of ideas and ways of thinking at the time. In most
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Take Tchaikovsky’s “The Nutcracker‚” set it in a 1960’s U.S. suburbia‚ remove the Sugar Plum Fairy and add sexual and homosexual overtones‚ and you have Mark Morris’s “The Hard Nut” – an adaptation of the original ballet inspired by the comic book artist‚ Charles Burns‚ whose work is “deeply instilled with archetypal concepts of guilt‚ childhood‚ mystery‚ adolescent sexuality and poignant portrayals of post-war America” (The Hard Nut: A Look Back). Morris’s story can be described as the background
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