Can someone be truly selfless their entire lives? To answer this, I will be analyzing the warden scene in both the book and the film adaptation of the Kiss of the Spider Woman. In pages 149 to 153 of the Kiss of the Spider Woman strong language is used to show that Molina is an example of a completely selfless person. On page 150 the warden utters the word “crying” this word is used after he tells Molina that his mother is feeling better. This is also one of the few occasions that language draws to the fact that there is something physically being done. Another emotionally evoking word used in this scene is on page 149 when the warden states that Molina is “trembling.” This word is used after Molina enters the warden’s office, and it’s significant …show more content…
In many aspects Molina appears selfish by using the word “me” or “I” throughout this chapter. Molina however, uses this as a ruse to help Valentin get better. One phrase that Molina uses to trick the warden into helping Valentin is seen on page 150 when Molina says, “it’s probably a clever idea to let him begin to recover now.” However, the warden seems to start getting suspicious of why Molina wants Valentin to get better. So, he must guise this form of kindness by stating that the only reason Valentin should be left alone is because if he ends up in the infirmary Molina will have no chance to escape the prison. However, the warden doesn’t seem to buy that excuse. Later, Molina is offered a reimbursement for him eating the poisoned food and to cover up his euphoria about his pardon. Molina ponders what food he wants and later settles on two of everything. He could have simply settled for one of everything because Valentin could have kept eating the prison food. But by asking for two of everything it elicits the idea that Molina is intentionally asking for that much to help Valentin. This use of context within this scene alerts us to fact that even though Molina may appear somewhat selfish scene he is rather tricking the warden to both get information about his mother and help his
The Memoir Spider Eaters by Rae Yang is her personal account of her life during the Maoist revolution. In addition, she reminisces about her trials and tribulations during her active participation in the culture revolution and the great North Wilderness. Her family also had various misfortunes due to these changing ideological beliefs spread by the revolution. This memoir illustrates in great detail what Yang experienced under communist rule. Spider Eaters opened up a door to a young girl and her families struggle to be good Samaritans under communist rule and their final disillusionment of the revolution they whole heartedly believed in. Yang and her family struggled with the vast ideological changes during the Maoist Revolution, in turn,
The reader sees that throughout this story Dade avoided catching the woman and was letting her go, but then she ignored him after he asked her “why [she is] doing this to [him],”(75) and his father hired a guard. Dade was sitting on the roof and watching air force jets fly when he made a realization that he “wanted the woman to be caught… The woman was a thief,” (98). He believed that wanting the woman to be caught was a realization that the world wanted him to have, and he believed that his life then made sense. Along with changing his mind about the woman, Dade went up to his mom and blantaly told her that he's “never going to discover anything” and that and that all he has done on the roof is “look at clouds,” (113). Reading this story, these lines seem simply confusing and a bit frustrating because he is now acting like his father rather than his mother. His opinions and views changed, which then led to a shift in the story and yet again his father's actions and influence led to dades views of the woman, which are now negative rather than positive in previous parts of the
Elie Wiesel’s Night is an autobiography on his survival as a teenager in the Nazi torture camps. Night starts when Elie is twelve years old and living in a small town called Sighet in Transylvania (now located in modern-day Romania) with his family. Which consisted of his parents and his three sisters, which is all that mattered to him. One day, a Jewish Sighet named Moshe the Beadle, comes into town to warn everyone of the impending danger of the German army and of their ruler. Unfortunately warnings about the Germans intentions towards them was not taken seriously, and Elie’s family, and the rest of the town, missed their chance to flee the country.
Imagine a world where AI creatures have to check a pipeline each night and kill those who refuse to leave it. This is the type of world Eme lives in, she has an abusive husband and uses this pipeline as an escape, however, what happens when her only escape is taken from her by an AI machine? The literary techniques, imagery, diction and mood help portray Emes' fear and friendship with the machine in the story, “The Spider Artist” by Nnedi Okoradfor. To start off, “The Spider Artist” includes many examples of imagery to help support the theme of friendship Eme has with the machine. As Eme sits in the pipeline to escape her husband's abuse, the monster starts creeping towards her, she explains, “It left the pipeline and crept up to me” (Okordfor 729).
He now starts talking about the lifestyle of llano vaqueros he admires, and reveals who the “llano vaqueros” really are to the
This shows that he cares for Saskia and is jealous that she is spending time with Ernesto. Although things seem rocky, they achieve inner thoughts and feelings which helps them to dissolve them to discover their own identities.
For centuries, scientific development has been a hot issue among media. Especially since the invention of cloning technology, more and more arguments about the developing pattern and power gained from such a development worried people globally. No doubt that the rapid development did provide us numerous conveniences and improving our life greatly, though, in regard to the increasing acknowledgment that people have from our nature, and the unpredictable human nature, likewise Dr. Abnesti in the fiction story, Escape from Spiderhead. From my pass readings and experiences, I think that human need to take every step of scientific development extremely seriously. As see from now, people are arguing about
In the Journal of Alcohol & Drug Education is the letter “Tapping into College Football: The Need for Research Examining the Impact of Stadium Alcohol Sales on Drinking Behaviors and Incidents” written to the editor by Adam E. Barry, Texas A&M; Steven M. Howell, Northern Illinois University; and Steven Salaga, Texas A&M University. Barry, Howell, and Salaga give background information on the alcohol sales and alcohol related incidents. They focus on the West Virginia University Case findings heavily. The research provided shows a decrease in alcohol related incidents in 2010 which was the year before allowing alcohol to be sold in the West Virginia stadium (Tapping into College Football). According to Jenni Carlson, a sports columnist for the Oklahoman, “West Virginia decided to start selling beer at concession stands in 2011. That was its final season in the Big East before jumping to the Big 12. The first year that it sold alcohol in the stadium, sales added $700,000 to the athletic department coffers. But there were more benefits, benefits that should interest other schools. In 2011, the campus police at West Virginia reported an across-the-board drop in game-day incidents. Calls. Cases. Arrests. Charges. All of them went down, including a 35 percent drop in arrests,” (Cheers to Selling Beers at Football Games).
The shoplifter’s quiet confrontation is Dade’s sense of desperation about taking action and his sense of urgency is the antagonist in the story. In the climax, catching the shoplifter is not a moral choice for Dade, but a need to quiet the persistent question of what he will do with himself. However, in the end/resolution, he does make a compassionate choice, proving that he can take self-directed action and in letting the shoplifter go free, is left with a feeling of solitude. The author leaves it to the reader to determine whether by taking action Dade has perhaps freed himself from the dichotomy and pressure of his parents' expectations to finally make choices that reflect his own desires. By setting her free, Dade IS experiencing the beginning of self-realization. Thus, while Dade does not develop during the narrative, the end choice is the beginning of his development even if that choice does not resolutely answer the question of about what he will do with his
In the book Kiss of the Spider Woman the author Manuel Puig I eventually notice a conviction after reading some of the book and also listening to the classroom discussions. Although I personally could not fully follow and understand the text and what Puig was saying to my full capability I also thought deeper into what was said and involved the two main characters Valentin and Molina. The author writes about two very different people who are put into an Argentine jail together for two different reasons. These main characters are total opposites of each other, Molina is a romantic, a homosexual, and someone who likes to tell a romantic story involving a guy that he was in love with at point who was straight. Valentin is a character who hates the government, says cynical things, and is more of a realist. But throughout their time together in the jail cell they have ended up telling each other their stories, which I think strengthens a bond between them. I do not know one hundred prevent for sure what the author meant by his writing or if he even had anything to feel remorse for but I personally think this was a gateway for him to recognize what he had done or done to him.
When he got sick trying to protect their land, his Abuelita asked to take him home but refused and answered, “no, no, no. I want to help Mami with her dream house” (128). Carlos had wanted to prove to his mother that he wants her to stay badly, even if it could cost him his life.
Cronos, by Guillermo del Toro, is a Mexican film about the lengths in which one would go to be granted immortality. Throughout the film, there are many nods to religion: the main character’s name is Jesus, there is a side character that wears a cross, and a significant portion of the film is set during Christmas. These homages to religion (Christianity in particular) could be emphasizing how religion is a major part of Mexican society. There is also a scene, near the beginning of the film, that shows the streets of the town where the movie is set. What is noticeable about this scene is that del Toro does not show a pristine street, but a messy street.
Molina chooses to escape the men’s shared harsh reality through stories and fantasies, and Valentin through his political vision and his studying, which he keeps up religiously, saying that he has to “keep up with [his] reading schedule, you know that”, as it has apparently become such a routine for him, known by Molina, that he feels unable to miss a day, perhaps worried that this will hinder his much-needed-for escape from reality.
Spider-man films have been a success since 2002 from “Spider-man” evolving to even greater heights over the past 12 years, as seen in 2014’s blow-away, ‘The Amazing Spider-man’. Examining the posters which display the different Spider-man advertisements, a clear recognition of the evolution of the Spider-man genre is obtained, as well as the evolution of the technological aspects of the films. The evolution of both Spider-man films, “Spider-man’ and ‘The Amazing Spider-man’, will be compared by means of a comparative essay.
Nearly all heroes are faced with a variety of inconceivable tasks which in turn help to overcome obstacles that the character may face. In Spider-Man, Peter Parker is forced to overcome these impediments so that he can help protect the people in his city. The task that first illustrates this quest is Spider-Man’s revenge on the man who killed his uncle and committed robbery. To catch this criminal, though, Spider-Man has to learn how to use his mind: thinking quickly and on-the-spot. Not only does it take courage for Spider-Man to defeat this criminal, it takes quick reflexes that only his “spidey senses” can offer him. In the end, Spider-Man tricks the man and is successful in turning him into the police. Another example of a