othello as an outsider essay

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    LIT 201 Midterm Examination-Essay Questions . . You are required to answer at least three of the questions listed below. Indicate which questions you are answering. Review the guidelines below for full details. Each essay response should be approximately 500-750 words. Include your full name, course number, and date in the upper right of your document file before uploading it. Name your document with your first initial, last name, and submit it to the 3.1 Discussion Board forum by Thursday

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    Society places value on a person based either on who they are, what they believe, or how much money they make. What happens when society places value on how “normal” a person is? Using the texts of “Merchant of Venice” and “Taming of the Shrew” I will argue that in dealing with difference, society often unintentionally annihilates it; but what remains in its wake is often far more disturbing. Religion is one of the most dividing forces in a society. At the time of “Merchant of Venice” Jews were

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    "I never said to be like me. I said to be like you and make a difference," famed shock-rocker Marilyn Manson once said. This quote has always stood out to me. I have never fit in anywhere. Figuring out who you are is a big part of growing up. Deciding you likes and your dislikes, what you believe in and helps you craft your moral compass. Compared to many of my peers I have a completely different moral compass. It took me a long time to understand that was okay. Our past experiences and surrounding

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    Everyone is always looking to have the most relationships or to be accepted and popular. However, people often forget the value of having a few strong relationships. Aldous Huxley 's dystopian novel, ¨Brave New World¨, takes place in futuristic London, in a society that values stability and community above all else. Close relationships are seen as dangerous and unstable because strong emotion supposedly leads to misery. To prevent emotion, the government only allows people to have shallow sexual

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    Time and time again, children have disappointed their parents; it happened in the past, it occurs now, and it will forever weave itself into the fabric of familial relations. William Shakespeare’s major works have survived the test of time due to their relatability, both then and now. Shakespeare, who become one of the most famous writers of all time, was born to Mary, who most likely could neither read nor write, and John Shakespeare. The Bard’s father was, “highly esteemed by his fellow townspeople

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    Ahab as the Hero of Moby Dick Essay

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    the tragic hero had to be a high-born individual of elevated status possessed of a fatal flaw which resulted in their downfall. With Othello Shakespeare redefined elevated status to include position alone rather than being linked to societal or birth status. In this way it was possible for Othello as the military leader to be the tragic hero despite being an outsider in the composition of the society. Melville follows this example in Moby-Dick.

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    According to the Oxford English Dictionary, Utilitarianism is defined as a doctrine in which the greatest happiness of the greatest number should be the guiding principle of conduct. John Stuart Mill theorized that that happiness and pleasure are multi-dimensional ways of feeling thus there are different qualities associated with happiness. In this respect, Mill hypothesized that higher and lower pleasures exist within the human experience. Higher pleasures nourish the intellect they consist of reading

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    John “The Savage” experiences a rift from the civil society of London as a result of his misunderstanding of that society’s standards. Dwelling among the savages, he had believed that the civilized world would be more accepting of him than the people of Malpais. However, his experiences in the savage world had enlightened him in the deeper meaning of life, separating him from the ignorantly blissful inhabitants of the civil world, and even his own mother. This rift illuminates the text as a whole

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    The role of Jedediah Leland was played Orson Welles’ life-long friend, Joseph Cotten, well-known as a stage, radio, television, and film actor. Beginning acting in the 1920s, Cotten later teamed up with Orson Welles at the Mercury Theater in the 1930s, where the collaboration would bring him stardom. Cotten’s acting style was intense, soft-spoken, and chivalrous with a trace of a Southern drawl mixed in. His height, combined with his wavy-haired looks, unconventional features made him perfect to

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    As a global collective, the human past is purely one of conflict. Power struggles are widespread and unique in context, but these struggles are not special in the presence or complexity of the self-versus-other conflict within them. One of the strongest examples for this assertion is the First Crusades. At face value, any observer can immediately take notice of the separation between those of Christian faith and those of Islamic faith. If additional diligence in research is provided, any one of these

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