Mystic River is an important film that portrays the turnover of events I an urban life. Murders occur anywhere and anytime with close friends and relatives being some of the major suspects. The situation may get out of hand when the affected family members decide to take law into their own hands by engaging into vengeful acts. This paper will delve on reviewing Mystic River and determine how it can be related to the urban planning.
The urban vetting has limited space as children are seen playing some of their games on the same streets where the vehicles are supposed to use. The three boys are able to come across wet concrete walls and decide to write their names on them before one of them is kidnapped by one of them. The scenario portrays a very serious challenge experienced in most urban areas where people remain crowded together due to scarcity of land. This eventually, leads to limited mobility. Children are seen playing in dangerous and risky areas such as on roadsides where they can be easily hit by speeding vehicles(Zhonget al., 7). Therefore, it is imperative devising appropriate mechanisms that can help address the overcrowding challenge in order to overcome the limited mobility menace. It is remains a serious issue that needs to be addressed as it aids in eliminating many vices among them children abduction.
It is also evident that a number of the urban residents are related to each familial links. Therefore, they have a strong affiliation to each other
All the extended family members live in close proximity in the suburbs, indicating that the issues that are experienced spread across the whole extended family.
Culture in urban communities, also referred to as inner-cities, are growing increasingly violent. In the article, The Code of the Streets by Elijah Anderson, he begins to take an in-depth look at the root of the evil. He deduces that economic factors, parenting and the troublesome environments largely influence the violent norms within this culture.
Have you ever needed easier access to the essential items to stay alive? This is specifically what the residents of the North-East thought around the year 1817. Carol Sheriff argues in her book, “The Artificial River” that the residents of the canal corridor actively sought after long-distance trade and therefore consumer goods that markets brought to their homes. The fact that people supported the Erie Canal at all "suggests that at least some aspired to engage in broader market exchange" (p. 11). The transformation of this region because of the Erie Canal is organized around six topics, each of which is covered by a chapter. They include the; Visions of Progress, the Triumph of Art over Nature, Reducing Distance and Time, the Politics of Land and Water, the Politics of Business, and the Perils of Progress.
In the movie “Mystic River”, directed by Clint Eastwood it focuses on three boys that grew up in the streets of Boston. The urban environment that they grew up in as children directly impacted their lives, as they got older. One big universal theme of the movies was urban crime; the movie displayed both sides of urban crime (the corrupt side as well as the investigators and law enforcement, also known as the “good side”). All of the urban crimes shown throughout this movie relate to the way the boys lives played out. Within their urban neighborhood there existed such a closed social community that it is hard to believe that Jimmy Markum, Sean Devine and Dave Boyle came to grow apart at all, but the urban crime that was such a big part of
The Secret River by Kate Grenville focuses on the characterisation of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians and social expectations each may have in the 19th Century. Throughout the entirety of the novel Grenville discusses characters and how each adjust to their new environments whether it be the Aborigines or the non–Aboriginal Australians.
How does the river function in the story? Is it a metaphor, a catalyst, or both? Is it a character?
One other glaring example of the injustice committed by gentrification is the attack on localized social life, which in itself is a manifestation of the many wrongs perpetuated by this so called “painless” process, because before gentrification many of these areas were able to create and foster this sense of communal solidarity, which afforded and allowed them to build generational relationships, which placed an emphasis on creating a real sense of community pride. Therefore, many of the local residents took to the heart in looking out for what was best for their neighbors, thus there was not this sense of entitlement exhibited in residents, but a real sense of pride in knowing that they themselves were able to create something uniquely their own
Bill McEwen in the article, River Plan Too Fishy for my Taste Buds, points out the river plan has two large flaws. The flaws McEwen explains in the article were:
The speaker’s tendency to overthink his choices and his inability to move on after a dissatisfactory outcome in “Prelude to Jumping in the River” by Katia Grubisic can be likened to the anxieties we often feel before and after making important decisions in our own lives. The missed opportunities that come as a by-product of the choices we make often cause us to overthink them, just as the speaker stood “at the edge of the bank [for] centuries” (9-10) unable to come to a coherent conclusion about whether or not to make the jump. It is crucial to weigh the costs and benefits while making an important decision. Nevertheless, spending too much time doing so will result in the opportunity passing you by. This is reflected in the regretful tone of
A River Runs Through It is, deservedly so, the work that Norman Maclean will always be best known for. His 1976 semi-autobiographical novella tells what is really only a brief piece of the life story of two brothers who grew up together in the Montana wilderness; but the scope of this timeless tale of fishing, family, and religion extends beyond just a few months. It touches on the entirety of the complicated relationship between Norman Maclean and his parents, and his prodigal yet distant and troubled brother Paul. In masterful and stirring prose, Maclean examines the strength of their bond, and yet how neither he nor his family could keep Paul from self-destruction. Maclean also mulls over his and his family’s ideas about grace and man’s relation to nature. Maclean’s enthralling vision is delivered through the artistry of his writing, earning the book its deserved position as a classic of American literature. In 1992, a film adaptation of the novel was released,
In the poem "Prelude to Jumping in the River" by Katia Grubisic, the speaker enlightens individuals with the mental process of making important decisions and the result when no action is taken. The speaker first sees a man strip to his undergarments and procedes to jump in the river. The speaker desires to do the same; however, "the mental preparation takes some time" for the speaker (4-5). This indicates the speaker is a cautious character who does not often commit reckless actions. Furthermore, when the speaker notices the man resurface, the speaker is feeling regretful about not jumping in the river. The speaker sees "the slowing ripples, the dogs rushing down the hill, the surprised head bobbling above the water,"and realizing that
The geography of the town of Guadelupe from the book Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya is immensely symbolic. After Lupito was murdered at the river, Antonio becomes “afraid of the awful presence of the river, which was the soul of the river” (15). The water conveys the impurity of the town it surrounds and at the same time, it symbolizes the cleansing of nefarious acts and thoughts of the town’s people. The river also illustrates how life continues to flow no matter the case. However, Antonio comprehends that the town’s detrimental avocations will soon reach his family when he reveals to himself that “the innocence which our isolation sheltered could not last forever” (20). Their isolation restrains the corrupt ways of the city and its people.
At some point in our lives, we all took a history class and learned about the Slave Trades, the Civil War and the Reconstruction Era. Whether it was in elementary school, high school, or even in college, we all got a sense of that history and happened during that time frame. From what I learned, the impression that I got from what these history books were explaining was that, first, white people went to Africa and gathered hundreds and thousands of people, took them on boats to and turned them into slaves. Then after years have passed, good ol’ President Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves and blacks and whites lived equally ever after. Although these events did happen, textbooks still managed to “sugarcoat”
To him, this association is the basis from which the family is formed, families then group to form villages and villages, in turn, group to form city-states.
Planning of any city is one of the most fundamental things to be considered before the development of any city or regions. Through planning, economic and social development in any city can prosper (Crane & Weber, 2015). Through films, a reflection of the structure and planning of the various regions in the setting of the movie can easily be displayed. One of the outstanding planning and structure of a city is displayed by the film city of God. The movie assists in exposing the social networking within a planned community and the various ways in which restricting can be done after the occurrence of a natural disaster. The movie reveals the consequences which might arise from the poor organization as well as poor planning of any city. Some