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    Dante's Divine Comedy

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    dedicated to the Year 11 Preliminary Course students biting their nails and pulling their hair out struggling to grasp the concept of journeys. On our show today we have a special guest who is here to talk about his world-renowned poem ‘Dante’s Divine Comedy’ which is basically the epitome of ‘imaginative’ journeys. Yes folks you heard correct‚ please welcome the one and only Mr. Dante Alighieri. For any students who are on the edge of their seats wanting to embellish Mr. Dante’s insightful frame of

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    Popular Culture

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    POPULAR CULTURE By definition‚ popular culture is associated with the everyday‚ the mainstream and that which is commonly accessible: in short‚ culture produced for mass consumption. If there’s one thing people like to consume more than almost anything else‚ it’s popular culture. Television‚ music‚ movies. Every year it seems‚ the popular culture goes a little bit further‚ louder and faster‚ more action‚ bigger explosions. Is it good or bad? Popular culture is hard to ignore. It affects nearly

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    LYSISTRATA‚ a comedy of stereotypes The playwright Aristophanes wrote about an ancient Greece‚ Athens in particular‚ during a time of constant warfare. His play "Lysistrata" is an attempt to amuse while putting across an anti-war message. In fact even the naming of the play is an anti-war message of sorts. The word "lysistrata" means‚ "disband the army" (Jacobus 162). Aristophanes was a crafty writer; he creates a work of art that causes his audience to think about the current state of affairs

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    With the introduction of the radio in the 1920s‚ American television evolved dramatically. Television today is not simply for entertainment purposes‚ but rather it is a part of our culture‚ engaging viewers to universally be informed with the news‚ to have emotions towards television shows and dramas‚ and to find a sense of purpose or lifestyle with the adoption of watching recurring shows Americans enjoy. Television has the power to impact the audience’s perspectives as well as the technological

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    Divine Comedy Thesis

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    Dante Alighieri’s “The Divine Comedy” is a poem written in first person that tells of Dante’s altered-ego pilgrimage through the three realms of death‚ Hell‚ Purgatory‚ and Paradise while trying to reach spiritual maturity and an understanding of God’s love while attaining salvation. Dante creates an imaginative correspondence between a soul’s sin on Earth and the punishment one receives in Hell. "In the middle of the journey of our life I came to myself in a dark wood where the straightway

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    than It is now. Teenagers getting pregnant had never really been heard of and people having affairs or getting divorced would have been very slim. Television brought many different and innovative programs‚ soap operas which have become the most popular over the years. These soap operas deal with a variety of different issues‚ but it was in the middle and late 1990’s when this programs started to disturb me. They started to deal with issues such as teenage pregnancy‚ affairs‚ divorce and homosexuality

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    1800’s. It was the first dominant style of architecture in the United States and was able to be found in all regions of the country. The architecture became so popular it became known as the first "national style" in America‚ and was the first architectural style that reached to the west coast. The Greek style of architecture became so popular because of its beauty‚ simplicity‚ and its link to the world’s earliest democracy. Originally‚ America liked Roman architecture more but it was closely related

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    Racial Stereotypes in Comedy Hollywood films‚ for centuries‚ have been using American comedies to humorously naturalize the beliefs of racial differences that construct the ideological basis of racial hierarchy. In American history racial hierarchy refers to the ranking of different races or ethnic groups. Professionals have found a ways for these films to provide the public with a positive source of pleasure in the negative portrayals of their own race and no reactions to produce oppositional discourse

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    Racial Comedy Analysis

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    participants’ feedback from the focus groups‚ the authors found that while there are several similarities in opinion between the two races‚ the most significant results come from the differences. Both races agreed with the very broad statements that racial comedy can be entertaining‚ that there is some truth to it‚ and that there is certainly a time and place for it. When these generalizations are broken down‚ however‚ there are many distinct differences. These differences are especially clear when broken

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    Black Comedy Sparknotes

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    living room. While all of his guests‚ intended and accidental‚ attempt to illuminate their condition both figuratively and literally‚ Brindsley desperately endeavors to thwart them to increasingly comedic effect. In Peter Shaffer’s one-act farce‚ Black Comedy‚ first performed in 1965‚ he amusingly juxtaposes light and dark in order to underscore the play’s central treatment of lies and deceit. Simultaneously its most distinctive and challenging feature‚ the play is performed under a reversed lighting

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