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American Romanticism first originated in the serene early 1800s and still spans its influence today in our buzzing modern day society. Icons of modern pop culture still exhibit romantic heroic traits of the classical American hero.
By J. Lin | Published 6/26/2006
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The hormones, neurotransmitters and other chemicals those generate mature adult features, tendency to fall in love in man and the importance of romanticism.
By SAIKAT KUMAR DUTTA | Published 11/1/2007
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In this paper, I explain how Hemingway's A Farewell To Arms reflects the failure of romanticism, depicting a war that has no beauty, no logic and no hero.
By Freidman | Published 9/26/2007
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The literature of a country is affected and influenced by how
the people of that country live. This paper will prove that The French Revolution greatly influenced 19th Century French Romanticism. By Clare Ritzi | Published 4/6/2006
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Romanticism was actually a by-product of the sensibility of the Enlightenment movement.
By Eisla Sebastian | Published 11/13/2005
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This is part of a four week Instructional Unit designed to teach college students the origins of the German Romantic Movement demonstrated through literature and music.
By Audrey Rappe | Published 10/10/2007
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An analysis of the new age movement, transpersonalism, and its comparison to the romantic era.
By S. Bumpus | Published 7/6/2007
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Can you define romance? Can we define anything? Rationalists think so! Watch as the Romantics duke it out with the Rationalists and see who wins.
By Heather Leah | Published 8/29/2006
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Coleridge's experience with conversation poetry drives the "Eolian Harp." His fantastic approach to romanticism is evident through the important truths found in the poem. Romantics believed in being visionary which Coleridge portrays in poem.
By Piper Davenport | Published 11/7/2006
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Discusses Yeats' role in bridging the Romantic Era with the Modern Era.
By Jessica Goodwin | Published 7/16/2007
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Examination of Romanticism as the adverse reaction to science and the enlightenment using the literature of nineteenth century European writers.
By Carli Guyon | Published 5/16/2007
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Discussing the affects of Mysticicsm and Romanticism on Goethe's Faust.
By Jessica Goodwin | Published 4/23/2007
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Don't worry kiddos, we've all been there. You've got the hots for your highschool sweetheart but your job stocking shelves won't allow you to take the little lady out to dinner every night. Not a problem for the guys that have a little imagination.
By Justin Gautreaux | Published 12/25/2006
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A research paper that considers the possibilty that Samuel Taylor Coleridge's lesbian vampire poem Christabel might actually be a veiled confession of homosexual love between Coleridge and Wordsworth.
By Timothy Sexton | Published 8/23/2006
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Pushkin's most celebrated work is a clear allegory of the literary struggle that was occurring in nineteenth century Russia between Western, Byronic influences and Russia's own pastoral past.
By KT Prime | Published 8/23/2006
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If you have no experience with Block Island accommodations, then you may want to find out more about what is available. There are many factors to consider when choosing your Block Island accommodations.
By Scott Kessman | Published 7/27/2006
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An essay comparing the approaches by two very different plays in exploring the role of drama in art and life.
By Cassie O'Shea | Published 7/23/2006
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A look at the political and cultural context of America's international role at the turn of the 20th century.
By N. Katers | Published 7/9/2006
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Ernest Hemingway was a writer who changed the world of literature forever. he ahs influenced American literature in various ways and inspired many. His novel, Old Man and the Sea, was extremely successful and is still read by many.
By Elyse Levin | Published 6/22/2006
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Outcome - why Postmodernism arose? Characteristics, historical context, philosophy etc.
By J. Lin | Published 6/15/2006
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Where did we get all the fascinating traditions that make up a wedding? Should we keep them? Each bride must decide for herself.
By Alanna Parke Kvale | Published 6/3/2006
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Flotilla of action and superfast disasters that goes by like the tide.
By Lee Alon | Published 6/1/2006
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A book review of William Goldman's translation of S. Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure: The Princess Bride.
By Timothy Sexton | Published 6/1/2006
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I just wanted to play it cool, that's all I remember.
By Mark Maier | Published 5/26/2006
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I gunned the Taurus around corners, hoping to get Sarah out of the situation as quickly as possible.
By Mark Maier | Published 5/25/2006
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The novel is Woolf's manifesto in fiction of her unique enterprise to create character beyond the one-to-one mimetic method of conventional Victorian and Edwardian realism.
By Lonnie Lopez | Published 5/24/2006
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This passage serves as a criticism of adherence to the Romantic ideals that were so prevalent in America in the early 19th Century, but also offers a kinder message that those ideals can be achieved, if only they are strived for with realistic aims.
By B.Krisher | Published 5/16/2006
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Egypt is very foreign to Americans and Europeans. With a few insights, you can travel almost like one of them instead of like an outsider.
By john atkinson | Published 5/8/2006
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Caryl Churchill's Cloud Nine:Gender, postcolonialism and the 1980s in Britain.
By Amy Madore | Published 4/30/2006
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A discussion of William Blake's "The Chimney Sweeper" poems from Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience.
By K.L. Reiser | Published 4/27/2006
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A review of Robert Conquest's book Reflections on a Ravaged Century, an analysis of the effects of the Cold War on the development of politics in the 20th century.
By N. Katers | Published 4/7/2006
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The music is as variable as Doci's penchant for switching his language
By Keith | Published 4/7/2006
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It was the dawn of a new era; the world in a state of political upheaval. Rising out of this tumultuous chaos would be one of the most disruptive forces in music history.
By Melissa Maccarelli Slawsky | Published 3/10/2006
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Comparative paper on the similarities in concepts of how the characters sexuality is repressed in these two works. while the main characters are entirely different, sexual repression guides their lives and brings them to their fate.
By D. A. Garrido | Published 3/4/2006
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I've been a fan of Robin Williams since I was 12 when I first saw him on t.v. and his comedy helped me with my depression.
By Terri Rimmer | Published 3/3/2006
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Art is relative to the person creating it and the person or person that is viewing it. Each individual viewing the piece will come to there own conclusion of what exactly the piece means to them.
By La'Sarah Motley | Published 2/22/2006
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In the vein of classic American poetry, Levine observes on the nature of industrial society with a keen eye and a penchant for both sentimentality and brutal honesty.
By Sarah Riedel | Published 2/10/2006
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Gothic architecture first developed in Northern France in the 12th century and soon spread throughout the western world.
By La'Sarah Motley | Published 2/9/2006
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Community policing brings desirable benefits to the community, and refocus community-police relations in a productive, amiable context.
By Theresa Hemsoth | Published 1/9/2006
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In John Keats' poem "This living hand, now warm and capable" he is contemplating on the integral part of literature, the relationship between the writer and reader. This is the basis of literature's appeal: the grasping for expression and understanding.
By Nicole Beck | Published 12/14/2005
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E.M. Forster's novel, A Passage to India, not only looks into the effect of colonization on the colonized, but also the colonizer. This essay looks at the role of the colonizer and how the colonizer is affected by colonization.
By J.E. Newman | Published 12/9/2005
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The utterance of 'judgment' hs the ability of interpolating the moral paralysis that pervades in all of teh short stories of which Dubliners is comprised, in addition to making reference to the capacity of the reader.
By Carmen Medici | Published 11/21/2005
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Shopgirl starts out a comedy, but ends up a sweet look at love and relationships when you're 20-something and growing.
By Alexa DeGennaro | Published 10/30/2005
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With his bright red hair, the x-shaped scar on his cheek, and his lightening-fast sword, Himura Kenshin is one of today's most recognized manga characters.
By Star Hopper | Published 9/21/2005
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Despite its reputation as one of the shadier sides of New England, Worcester, Massachusetts' art museum is a truly top-notch cultural facility that should make any citizen of Worcester proud.
By Mike Larsen | Published 8/24/2005
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The following conversation between activist Sherry Wolf of the International Socialist Organization (ISO) and journalist Greg M. Schwartz took place in the Kent State Student Center on the afternoon of March 10, 2005
By Greg M. Schwartz | Published 7/9/2005
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"Life is One Big Adventure", while informing about the popularity of adventure travel packages, profiles three esteemed travel companies, Abercrombie & Kent, Travcoa and G.A.P. and the variety of excursions they have available.
By Nancy Simon | Published 7/8/2005
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