Sympathy in The Reprimand Sympathy is an extension of empathic concern‚ or the perception‚ understanding‚ and reaction to the distress or need of another human being. Sympathy must be given and received in order for the world to operate because all humans make mistakes that impact other people’s lives. The Reprimand is a short “phone play” written by Jane Anderson in 2000. The two characters‚ Rhona and Mim‚ have a confrontation about what Rhona believes to be an inappropriate remark during a
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is the first time that we are told that Medea intends to hurt more than just Jason with her revenge‚ we start to see that Medea may not be all that stable. Sympathy that we had for Medea when Jason left her‚ after she abandoned her country and possibly murdered her
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Though these words may make their appearance in similar text‚ they have different meanings. While sympathy is feeling compassion‚ sorrow‚ or pity for the hardships that another person encounters‚ empathy involves putting yourself in in the shoes of another. In Susan Glaspell’s short story‚ A Jury of Her Peers‚ Martha Hale demonstrates both of these commonly confused words. Martha Hale‚ the wife of Mr. Hale‚ is a resident of the farm close to the property of the Wrights’. Mrs.Hale used to be good
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Empathetic listening is a learned skill where the listener feels as the speaker instead of for the speaker‚ empathy as opposed to sympathy. It’s a skill that once learned will not come automatically‚ sufficient time must be set aside for it and preparations must be made for it. To be a good empathetic listener one has to let the other parties dominate the discussion‚ stay attentive to what is said‚ hold back from interrupting‚ use open ended questions‚ stay aware and sensitive to the emotions being
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written in the ancient Greek style. In this play‚ it follows the journey Medea makes‚ and not only narrates‚ but commentates on what is happening. Euripedes uses the Chorus as a literary device to raise certain issues‚ and to influence where the sympathies of the audience lie. <br> <br>In the list of characters at the beginning of the play‚ the Chorus is stated to be a chorus of Corinthian Women. This draws the first link between them and Medea. The Chorus follows Medea on her journey through this
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Morrison “How I Met My Husband” Response Q4 1 October 2013 At a young age‚ women have a tendency to be naïve and innocent. With that‚ the two factors create a vulnerable persona in a girl‚ and it compels a person to feel sympathy towards them. “How I Met My Husband” consists of a protagonist‚ Edie‚ who is also naïve and innocent as well as humble and simple. These traits convince me to believe her to be a sympathetic character in the story. As a young‚ naïve‚ gullible girl‚ I feel nothing
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of Shakespeare’s time. "In a sense William Shakespeare’s greatest achievement in life wasn’t writing Hamlet or the sonnets but just surviving the first year." This quotation is a prime example of Bryson’s understanding towards Shakespeare and the sympathy that he shows for Shakespeare having grown
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Paul Laurence Dunbar was an African American poet of the late 19th and early 20th centuries who lived through slavery‚ racism and segregation. So this poem is considered to be an extended metaphor where through out the entire poem Dunbar is comparing himself and all African Americans at that time with a caged bird that does not have the freedom to enjoy the nature and does not have the freedom to fly like all other birds meaning white people at that time. The poet starts the poem with a sentence
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Neither Medea nor Jason deserve our sympathy || Faigy Gross Euripides wrenches and pulls at the emotions of the reader from every angle throughout his play of Medea‚ where he compels the audience to feel sympathy for both Medea and those she causes to suffer. At the inception of the play‚ Euripides positons the audience to pity Medea‚ employing an emphatic nurse figure to describe her tormented past. In contrast‚ the audience are manipulated to be unsympathetic towards Jason who has betrayed Medea
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events are replicated in this book‚ which makes the reader to be sympathetic. In the novel Frankenstein‚ many themes are discussed and a major one is sympathy. Sympathy is defined as “feelings of pity and sorrow for someone else’s misfortune.” –TheFreeDictionary. When sympathy is discussed in Frankenstein‚ we are mostly talking about having sympathy towards the monster or Victor Frankenstein. Different arguments and points support both sides‚ but it entirely depends on the readers’ perspective; a
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