The Physicists was a very interesting play. The play starts out with the police investigating the murder of a sanatorium nurse. The death was caused by one of the sanatorium patients who thinks he is Albert Einstein. The story revolves around three men who are all patients in the sanatorium and all of which thinks that they are someone else. The three men ended up killing the nurses that were taking care of them, because of the nurses falling in love with them. In the second act, we find out that none of the men are mad, but they were all just pretending. As the play goes on we find out that the other two men that were pretending to be Sir Isaac Newton and King Solomon were spies from two different countries, and they checked into the
Anh Do’s family is loving and supportive, yet many different family situations are shown throughout the text. How important is ‘family’ in The Happiest Refugee, and what do you think the novel has to say about the way families ought to be?
For this unit, I decided to read Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony.” The author, Franz Kafka, was an early 20th century middle-class Jew who lived in Prague and wrote mostly in German. The present short story, published in 1919, refers to an unnamed penal colony somewhere in the tropics and focuses on four characters: the commander of the camp, an invited foreign dignitary, a guard, and a victim. The story revolves a twisted idea of justice, where the punishment does not fit the crime, and the condemned does not know neither the charge nor the nature of his punishment. Indeed, justice seems completely irrelevant to the commander who is only fascinated with the torturing as an art and science; the apotheosis of the latter represented with the torturing machine that resembles a CNC router that inscribes the accusation on the skin of the condemned who then dies slowly from bleeding.
In the book The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America in the Cold War, author Greg Grandin traces Guatemala’s evolutionary period from the late 19th century to the early 1980s. What he dubs as ‘the last colonial massacre,’ the Panzós Massacre of 1978 was the mass murder by the Guatamalan army of 35 Q’echi-Mayan men, women and children who had gathered in the town square demanding democractic representation, land reform and higher wages. Outrage over this massacre led many Guatemalan peasants to join the communist Guerilla Army of the Poor (EGP) which prompted violence and repression by the US backed right-wing government. Grandin’s thesis is that Cold War terror unleashed or excused by the United States, weakened the advancement of democracy
Clifford Geertz in “Deep Play” gives us a detailed account of the Balinese cockfight which he defines as a sociological entity and a simulation of social matrix. Persistently ignored by the natives, anthropologist and his wife were only accepted into the community after demonstrating solidarity by fleeing from the cockfight like other villagers. Through his interaction with the Balinese and observation, Geertz attempts to disentangle the meaning and nature of cockfight which appears to play a significant role in Balinese society. At first, he analyzes the cockfight from general and universal perspective, assuming that cocks are “magnifications of the narcissistic male ego”, but then considers the particularities of the Balinese culture: Its
The play Terra Nova opens with the protagonist Captain Robert Falcon Scott, trying to write a letter to the public. However, Scott was having difficulty to do so, as he’s too weak and weary, he seems to have suffered from frostbites in his hand but he continues to write, speaking his words out loud. At the same time Roald Amundsen, a Norwegian explorer also enters the stage, introducing Scott to the members of the Royal Society, who gathered together in honored of him. Amundsen ' introduction of Scott was the first hint to the audiences that Scott was already dead, and his story is told through the journal and letters that were later found.
Into which colony, the first or the second, should this student classify the unknown third colony? In your justification for your decision, include a detailed analysis of the plots (Q1 b) and summaries (Q1 a) obtained in Question 1 as well as a comparative discussion on the general overall shape of the beaks in each group.
In every story, there are many things to analyze. In “Game” by Donald Barthelme, he shows us the way our minds start to work in stressful situations like how the narrator and Shotwell started to respond while controlling the console for the war. In “Game” the narrator’s name is never told, Shotwell and the narrator do not trust each other, but are left alone together and trusted to kill the other if they start to “behave strangely,” although it is never clarified what counts as strange and what counts as normal. Various literary devices are used throughout the story to show us Barthelme’s intended theme, some used are: repetition, symbolism, irony, and figurative language.
Burnet, TX has been a gratifying small town to be a part of. The people of Burnet have been admirable to me through amazing times and dreadful times and present every time I've laughed or cried. And most of these moments have been involved with the Fine Arts Department of Burnet High School.
In history, the wars and revolutions of countries have begun with rebellions and those in the rebellions fighting back. Those rebellions are often a response to tyranny and unjust demands from the government against their subjects. After the colonies had settled themselves into the new land, the British became greedy for more money and power. They began to pass Acts after Acts that taxed the colonies on many everyday things like paper, tea, sugar, etc. and even forcing the colonies to keep British soldiers in their houses and feed them. These actions from Britain made the colonies feel like the king of England did not treat them like adults and it angered the colonists. The colonists were outraged at how the British were taxing them, and how
Have you ever thought about why the colonists settled where they did. Well I have an Idea you'll see what it is after reading this. So keep reading.
In The Colonizer and the Colonized, Albert Memmi’s essential argument is that the collapse of colonialism is inevitable. According to Memmi, there are only two answers for the colonized to disrupt the system of oppression. The two possible “solutions” are assimilation and revolt. In response to the marginalization of the colonized, both answers carry a high price. In Memmi’s eyes, neither will work in the end. The first of two answers on the road to collapsing colonization is assimilation. Imitation and compromise are not the answer to decolonizing, for neither the colonized nor the colonizer.
Our Secrets The play, Our Secrets, was quite interesting. Although many parts of the play were quite confusing, due to the fact that the play was done in Hungarian, with English subtitles, there were a few parts that I did understand that I would like to talk about. I thought the guilt felt by main character in the beginning of the play, where he talks to the lady about his love to his own 7-year-old step-daughter was very intense. I thought the expressions shown by the actor was quite an impactful thing to begin the play with, and it most certainly caught my attention. The words that the man speaks to the lady were also quite powerful, even with just the subtitles, I was able to feel the depth of emotions felt by the main character.
In the play, The Secretaries, the women had routine BOW meetings with their boss Susan. At these meetings the women would first start with an odd prayer asking to help better their typing skills, time of the month, and diets. After, they would go over a list of topics they needed to cover and at some point Susan would collect all of their tampons. The meeting all around gave an erie feeling, but then set into a shock mode when the tampons were whipped out. I think the writer of this play wanted to display this scene as a normal thing. For example, all of the other secretaries besides Patty were completely comfortable with doing such an out of the box thing. The meaning of this scene would have to be that the ladies at one point were all just like Patty and were
After doing the role-play video, I realized that this assignment a great learning opportunity for me as a learning professional to utilize and display all the information I have learned from the beginning of the Social Service Worker (SSW) program and at my practicum, up till this moment into practice. I chose to use the Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) in my role-play video, as this is the therapy that will help the client to make a positive change and help dispute his negative distortions – Scenario #1. This scenario clearly states the client’s presenting concern with having an anxiety around having fears of talking to others or being in public. In order to support the client, first, the counsellor must ensure to use appropriate skills and counselling techniques that will meet the client’s needs during the helping process, most importantly, to develop a therapeutic alliance with the client in order for change to happen. Secondly, it is important for the counsellor to be aware of the client factors and to take it into consideration when working with the client, as the client is the expert in his life. Thirdly, it is important for the counsellor to build a working relationship with the client, in order to gain the client’s trust, respect and to increase his commitment towards the helping process. Finally, the counsellor must have an understanding of the placebo effect and its important because it significantly impacts the client
The Removalists is a play written by Australian playwright David Williamson in 1971. Williamson is one of Australia’s best-known dramatists and playwrights. Williamson’s work as a playwright focuses on themes of politics, loyalty and family in Australia. The Removalists is based on the Australian society in the 1970s. During the 1970s women’s rights and corruption in the police force were becoming publicly vocal. Williamson used issues such as corruption and violence in the police force and reflected them in The Removalists, to produce a play that Australian audience can relate to. The main issues The Removalists addresses are domestic violence and the abuse of power and authority. The genre of the play is drama, which provides in depth development of realistic characters dealing with emotional themes.