Anti-Semitism Essay

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    Journal Week Seven From this week’s reading an interesting essay by Gerald Graff “Hidden Intellectualism” resembled a story from a family member. This essay spoke about people who are “street smart,” people that are extremely smart in many things but cannot apply towards school. Graff says that schools are not considering the intellectual potential of street smart people because they only weight academic knowledge as smart. This reminded me of my family, my cousin comes from a low income family

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    Hugo Ball Essay

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    An artist by the name of Hugo Ball, who was a crucial figure in constructing the foundations of Dadaism, created performance pieces that is now one of the well-known characteristics of what expresses the Dada movement . Ball’s poetry performances were in a way, a response to the audacities of what WWI had presenting the world with. According to Demos, Hugo Ball found that “language was deeply discredited due to its use as propaganda that “justified” war,” and continued to express that “[t]he journalistic

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    His love for sports continued to flourish as he read magazines and novels related to the topic. Graff believes, “[his] preference for sports over schoolwork was not anti-intellectualism so much as intellectualism by other means” (265). Sports, according to Graff are chalked with “arguments, debates, problems for analysis, and intricate statistics that you could care about” (268). These interwoven subjects were everything

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    in a negative way that only “nerds” aim for. He also mentions his experiences in hiding his own type of intellectualism. Graff grew up thinking “book smart” was not taken seriously and the subject was stigmatized. He describes himself as a typical anti-intellectual teenager. Gerald grew up being torn between choosing to be tough or intelligent. Although he had a disinterest for traditional academic

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    In his essay “Hidden Intellectualism”, Gerald Graff argues that street smarts are much more important as school smart. Graff explains how many people are street smart, but do not perform well in school. The street smarts are the ones who are focused on sports or entertainment and the school smarts are the ones who love books and are into their academic lives. He believes students who are in school need to read literature to become more intellectual. Graff believes schools should encourage the street

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    With today’s education, teachers are enforcing much academic work on students to, hopefully, increase their intelligence. The goal of this academic work is to give the students that they will need for their life later. All schools have a group of students that have a lot of “street smarts,” but don’t do well in school. There is a common argument of if “street smarts” and academic work should be combined to better teach students. In Gerald Graff’s piece, Hidden Intellectualism, Graff talks about the

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    Have you ever seen a murdering airplane, a melting clock or a lobster telephone? Although these are nonsensical statements, each was featured in very famous pieces of art of the time, know as Surrealist Movement. The Surrealist Movement was a creative effort to establish a new style. As a way to diverge from previous writing and artistic norms, artists began to use the idea of the unconscious mind and their own dreams as a way to better exemplify one's own imagination and mind. Artist and writer

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    Jaehun Lee 10/12/17 First Writing Assignment Realist artists, writers, and playwrights strived to portray objective reality in opposition to what they saw as excessive dependence on the subjective imagination in Romantic Art. They did this to portray the plight of the lower and middle class, and provided influential social commentary. For example, Daumier’s First Class Carriage and Third Class Carriage showed the stark contrast between the lives of the rich and the poor. However, purely realist

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    In his essay, “America Needs It’s Nerds”, Leonid Fridman describes the erroneous hierarchy of athletics to intelligence. Fridman recognizes the poor treatment of people who do not excel in sports or would rather be reading than attending parties. He emphasizes the social outcasting of people who are considered “nerds” and how society mistreats them. Fridman develops his argument by describing the American culture and comparing it to the culture of other countries, incorporating a dictionary definition

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    We usually consider music as the necessity of life because it brings comfortable environment or the resonance of heart. However, with the development of modern computer technology and the industrial regulatory loopholes, the situations mentioned in the article have become a common phenomenon. Although some music fans may get their benefits from the pre-leaked CDs or illegally recorded products, the music smuggling and pirate have made negative impacts on the entire industry. The pirated music creates

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