Margaret Bourke-White: Photography as Social Commentary Born in the Bronx‚ New York in 1904‚ Margaret Bourke-White was one of the best-known photographers of the twentieth century who was known for her fearless and dramatic photographs. She graduated from Cornell University and started her career as an industrial photographer at a steel company in Cleveland‚ Ohio. In 1929 she got hired by Fortune Magazine and traveled to the Soviet Union to photograph its industrial development. Bourke-White then
Premium Photography New York City United States
Grantham‚ England‚ Margaret Thatcher became Britain’s Conservative Party leader and in 1979 was elected prime minister‚ the first woman to hold the position. During her three terms‚ she cut social welfare programs‚ reduced trade union power and privatized certain industries. Thatcher resigned in 1991 due to unpopular policy and power struggles in her party. She died on April 8‚ 2013‚ at age 87. Politician and former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher was born as Margaret Hilda Roberts on October
Premium Margaret Thatcher Conservative Party Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
The Life of Margaret Mitchell The Life of Margaret Mitchell Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell was a writer from Georgia. She wrote the book Gone With the Wind. I chose Margaret Mitchell for this assignment because I am also from Georgia and I wanted to know more about her and what inspired her to write this book. I have seen the movie based on this book more than any other movie. A biographical sketch provides information about a person’s life. The biographical sketch will explain who the person
Premium Fiction Short story Literature
victories‚ but she was far from context. After 40 years of fighting for women to control their fertility‚ Sanger was extremely frustrated with the limited birth control options available to women. There had been no new advances since the 1842 invention of the diaphragm in Europe and the introduction of the first full length rubber condom in the US in 1869. She had championed the diaphragm‚ but after promoting it for decades‚ it was the least popular method in the United States. It was highly effective
Premium Margaret Sanger Birth control Pregnancy
both saw the need for unity‚ but their speeches had both similarities and differences. Their style of writing‚ want for interconnection‚ and why they wanted the country to come together are some of the main points of the speeches. Patrick Henry and Margaret Smith had a comparable style or approach to their speeches. Henry states in his speech “Mr. President: No man thinks more highly than I do of the patriotism.” He is showing that he is an advocate for freedom‚ yet still being respectful as he addresses
Premium United States United States Senate
Werner Herzog declares‚ “There are deeper strata of truth in cinema.” This “mysterious and elusive” truth that he searches for is “poetic‚ ecstatic…and can be reached only through fabrication and imagination and stylization” (Minnesota Declaration). His manifesto of sorts aptly explains why the line between documentary and narrative fiction is so blurry in his plethora of films. In this same pronouncement‚ Herzog denounces “the so-called Cinema Verite’‚” which he deems is “devoid of verite” because
Premium Film Mind Truth
Saint Margaret of Cortona Margaret of Cortona was born in Loviana in 1247. When she was 7 years old‚ her mother passed away. Her father remarried. Her stepmother had little care & love for her. Growing up‚ she became more willful and reckless‚ & she had a reputation one wouldn’t envy. At the age of 17‚ she met a young man from Montepulciano‚ and she eloped with him. They had a child out of wedlock. Nine years after‚ her lover was murdered & his body was found in the forest. This crime shocked Margaret
Premium Repentance Sin Forgiveness
plays of Euripides‚ though it was written well into his career. It is also one of the most popular. Margaret Thatcher‚ former prime minister of Great Britain‚ once said‚ “In politics‚ if you want anything said‚ ask a man; if you want anything done‚ ask a woman.” Novels and plays often portray circumstances that reflect Margaret Thatcher’s sentiment. In the play Medea‚ one of the most powerful and enduring of Greek Tragedies‚ some of the characters portrayed Margaret Thatcher’s sentiment by the actions
Premium Medea Euripides Greek mythology
The book ‘Once’‚ by Morris Gleitzman Develops a sense of hope through a carrot that a boy named Felix finds in his soup bowl‚ Felix’s stories he tells‚ his imagination and his love for books that the Nazis are destroying and a man called Barney who is caring and helpful towards children in their time of grief and loneliness. Felix goes through lots of emotions on his journey to find his parents‚ but keeps is head held high because of all the great memories he has had in the past At the start of ‘Once’
Premium Love Marriage Woman
For this essay I aim to show the importance of memory and of remembering the past in The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. The Handmaid’s Tale is a ‘speculative fiction’ first published in 1985 but set in the early 2000s. The novel was in response to changes in US politics with the emergence of Christian fundamentalism‚ the New Right. Atwood believed that society was going wrong and wrote this savage satire‚ similar to Jonathan Swift’s ‘A Modest Proposal’‚ depicting a dystopia which she uses as
Premium The Handmaid's Tale Margaret Atwood Science fiction