"The bluest eye in relation to national gaze" Essays and Research Papers

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    Eye for an Eye

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    Persuasive Essay At some point in a kid’s life‚ they will beg for a cell phone. Most teens or preteens own one. However‚ some people abuse the privileges of having one. People do not understand the actual reasons for owning a cell phone. I am mature and independent enough to own one. I should be able to have a cell phone for convenience‚ to teach responsibility‚ and for safety. One positive reason for having a phone is for convenience. Cell phones are a great way to contact parents while

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    DEFINE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS. DEMONSTRATE‚ WITH EXAMPLES‚ THE SIGNIFICANCE OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS TO NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ANSWER As the world gets smaller and smaller due to technological advancement‚ people from places that are geographically far apart are increasingly getting into contact with one another at a frequency that was never experienced before. So intimate has been the contact that an event in one society may have a global impact. The world has people of different races‚ ethnic

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    Their Eyes

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    Gillian Wagner April 30‚ 2011 ENGL 3353 Modern American Fiction Dawn and Doom in the Branches “There is no agony like bearing an untold story inside of you.” Zora Neale Hurston Zora Neale Hurston’s novel‚ Their Eyes Were Watching God‚ was written in 1937 at the tail end of the Harlem Renaissance. It is a passionate tale of Janie Crawford’s evolving self as she goes through three marriages and a life of triumphs and tragedies. The novel starts off with Janie retracing her steps by coming

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    Male Gaze Gender Roles

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    14‚ 2017 The Shifting of a Male’s Gaze According to the feminist literary theory “The Male Gaze”‚ literary texts have a tendency to portray the world and women from a masculine point of view. These texts present women in terms of stereotypes and as objects of male pleasure. This usually occurs through the way males in a novel describe‚ talk about‚ and view women. In “The Male Gaze‚” there is often one character‚ usually male‚ who is more extreme in his male gaze attitudes towards women than the other

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    How to Solve the National Debt Ever since the Revolutionary War‚ the United States has been a debtor. At first‚ it started out as a few million dollars but exploded to $211 billion during World War II; it has rapidly increased since then (“The New”). As of September of 2013‚ the national debt is in excess of $16.9 trillion (“US”). To most people‚ this is an impossible sum of money to pay off. However‚ if one simply examines the causes of the debt‚ they could find solutions to solve it. The majority

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    Finding the Source of the Power of the Gaze In almost all of literature‚ women are represented as objects of desire. They are supposed to be submissive and their male counterparts are supposed to possess the power. This power structure is ever-present in books‚ photographs‚ and advertisements‚ but especially in film. In the film Gilda (Charles Vidor‚ 1946)‚ the main character and her male counterparts exemplify that women are mean to be recipients of the male gaze‚ and it becomes problematic if these

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    In the analysis of the texts‚ the importance of citizenship and representation in relation to black girls and women are central topics of discussion. Although the central topics of the texts were similar‚ their views and commentary were very different. The realization of the lack of diversity formulated in the media concerning black women seemed to be understood‚ but their suggested ways to combat this unfortunate reality were vastly different. Also‚ the civic duties of black women and girls are

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    gender‚ but the theory of naturalism as well: the idea that one ’s social and physical environments can drastically affect one ’s nature and potential for surviving and succeeding in this world. In this article‚ I will explore Toni Morrison ’s The Bluest Eye from a naturalistic perspective; however‚ while doing so I will propose that because Morrison ’s novels are distinctly black and examine distinctly black issues‚ we must expand or deconstruct the traditional theory of naturalism to deal adequately

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    Ian Tsai 00121145 Professor Grace Ma Selected Reading in English & American Novels 20 June 2013 Freudian Criticism: Reading Characters ’ Trauma In Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita & Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye According to Sigmund Freud‚ the unconscious of every individual are residual traces of prior stages of psychosexual development‚ form earliest infancy onward‚ which have been outgrown‚ but remain as "fixation" in the unconscious of the adult. When triggered by some later event in

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    Megan Boler discusses how a student‚ or one can produce empathy while reading‚ in “The Risks of Empathy: Interrogating Multiculturalism’s Gaze.” Boler believes that the Aristotelian way of producing empathy while reading only produces passive empathy. When passive empathy reading occurs it does not guarantee social change within the reader. It is basically a waste of time trying to identify with the text because there is no action to social justice. Boler argues that social imagination is important

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