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Compare And Contrast Karl Jaspers And Jaspers
What is philosophy? Is it the knowledge that only the insane seek? Is it a path to wisdom we will
never be able to secure? Oxford defines it as "the study of the fundamental nature of knowledge,
reality, and existence". With that being said who can be a philosopher? Does it take extensive years
of training? Maybe it's simply the thoughts you have. Karl Jaspers and Martin Heidegger have two
very contrasting views on the topic. Karl Jaspers was born in Germany in 1883. Originally he
studied law at the University of Heidelberg then later switched to medicine. He received his
doctorate in medicine and began working at a psychiatric hospital. He was displeased with the
conditions and tried looking for ways to better the ways mental illness was treated. Through his
work he received a doctorate in psychology before he finally became a full time professor. In 1933
the Nazi's seized power and he was forced to "retire" from teaching. He was deemed to have a
"Jewish taint" because his wife was Jewish. His publications were banned and he later moved to
Karl Jaspers believed that everyone is a philosopher, especially children and the insane. Children
come equipped with all the tools needed to be philosophers. They raise the questions that are
believed to be simple until asked. Children are hardly ever satisfied with a singular answer and
always enquire further. Children have a tendency to ask "why" maybe because of the simplicity of
their linguistics or maybe because they are hungry. I
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Biography Of John Cone Jr, A Citizen Of Jasper County
SYNOPSIS:
At approximately 0752 hours on March 6, 2016, unknown subjects left trash at the Stokes Bluff
Landing, in the Garnett area of Hampton County. John Cone Jr, a citizen of Jasper County, who
keeps the landing clean reports a large crowd came to the landing on March 5, at approximately
2100 hours to camp out and have a barn fire. He further reports the subjects left the landing with
beer bottles all over the ground along with beer cans and several other objects throw all over the
ground. He advised a vehicle was left unattended with woods and other object on the back of the
truck. He advised this is an ongoing incident that he consistently reports throughout the year.
INTERVIEW WITH COMPLAINANT: (JOHN PERRY CONE JR)
Mr. Cone stated unknown subjects came to the landing on last night and camped out throughout the
night. He stated a large crowd started a fire pit while standing around drinking alcohol beverages.
He then stated he sat on his porch and watched the subjects for a period of time to see if Law
Enforcement would show their presence. He continued to he woke up this morning and observed the
landing left with trash all over the place. He advised a pickup truck was left on the landing with a
flat tire. He was not familiar who the vehicle belongs to.
INTERVIEW WITH SUBJECT: (UNKNOWN)
No contact was made at this time
OFFICER'S ACTION/OBSERVATION:
On the above listed date and time, I arrived on scene and made contact with the complainant. I
gathered the above listed
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Satire : Humor And Satire
Humour and satire are two concepts that are both wide ranging and diverse, from dark, to light
hearted, with each producing a different effect. Humour in the main, is something that is used to
please the audience, its function is to invoke laughter amongst its audience. Satire is used to create a
comical critical view of the subject at hand, this can range from a light hearted comical way, to a
judgemental way, with each style giving the text a different meaning, however this does not mean
that satire cannot be humorous, which can evident in the use of parody and irony within texts.
Within literature both concepts play an important role to how the text is viewed, humour can include
word play, grammatical jokes, to even inside jokes with the author and reader, and with satire,
including that of irony and parody, with each style and type delivering humour in its own unique
way. These differing styles of humour can be found in a variety of forms including Jasper Forde's
The Eyre Affair (2001), with its silly atmosphere, word play and grammar jokes, and the use of light
hearted satire and parody to brighten up the text, and Julian Barnes A History of the World in 10 1/2
Chapters (1989), where there is a more serious atmosphere, with a more critical, satirical eye on
history and characters, as well as using irony to achieve its comical effect, and the position of the
world. Each text is humorous and satirical in its own right, and with each author using different
techniques to
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Jasper Jones Quotes
Class Address:
Good Afternoon Ms Caminiti and Literature class,
As most of you may know by now, I have chosen to do a book analysis on the novel; Jasper Jones
by Western Australian named Craig Silvey. This book has been the winner of many awards such as
the 2010 ABIA Book of the Year, the INDIE Book of the year in 2009 and has also been shortlisted
for the Miles Franklin Award in 2010. In my opinion Jasper Jones is a book that encapsulates
various elements from the thrillers of a safe–guarded murder to being excluded from a community
with bigoted and derogatory views. The novel gives us an insight into the perspective of a quiet,
precocious and Harper Lee like–minded –'Charlie Bucktin' who has mutual relationships with many
interrelated individuals ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Craig Silvey dedicates his book to show how beings regarded as 'evil' always has a reason for their
wrongdoing. Whether they be being brought up in an abusive family or just the development of bad
habits, Jasper Jones combats both of these hardships as part of being an 'outcast'. It also shows the
devastating effects it has on not only himself, but the world around him. Also touching on
discrimination, the audience learn that false perception is the reason why there are many stereotypes
in society. Moreover, the main message being conveyed is that ' You never really understand a
person until you consider things from his point of view'. And this was what Charlie did to unravel
the secrets of discrimination and injustice such as from Jasper's point of view when being beaten
and mistreated just for being suspected of a
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The Rise Of Pop Art
In the 1940s the United States and the allies were in the midst of a deadly war against their Nazi–
German counterparts, World War II officially ended in 1945 and the Allies were victorious. In the
early 1950s the post–war economic boom in both the United States of America and Great Britain,
gave the people optimism and money to spend as the super markets were filled with all kinds of
consumer goods . The economy was good and people were happy.
Capitalizing on the post–war economic boom of the 1950s were advertisers. Advertising persuaded
many, it told people what was popular, what was good, and what to buy. Advertising and glossy
magazines were found everywhere, in the street, the highway, and even at the comfort of your own
house as you opened the newspaper. This mass marketing phenomenon was incorporated with the
rise of Pop Art. It paved the way for iconic artist such as Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns .
With the rise of this bona fide American phenomenon also brought critics. Critics asked and
wondered how a can of soup or a soft drink could be considered art. Pop artist, Andy Warhol
responded by stating, "Art is what you can get away with." What made pop art popular? It was
brash, transient, witty, hostile, young, mass produced, and most importantly it was low–cost .
Pop art was the new art movement of the 1950s and 1960s, it was the successor of the art movement
of a decade earlier. In the 1940s abstract expressionism was all the rage in the United States, it was
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Research Paper On Andy Warhol
Biography Andy Warhol, U.S. painter, film– maker and figure in Pop Art movement (BBC, 2011).
Studied at Carnegie Institute of Technology then moved to New York in 1949 (BBC, 2011). Andy in
1960's experimented with reproductions on advertisements, newspapers headlines and other mass
productions such as Coca Cola bottles and Campbell's Soup tins (BBC, 2011). Andy started in 1962,
portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Jackie Kennedy and Elvis Presley. Andy Warhol's studio, also known
as Factory, that is where he began working on experimenting films establishing a meeting point for
artists, actors and musician (BBC, 2011). In 1968 Warhol was shot at the studio by Valerie Solanas
(BBC, 2011). Throughout the 1970's– 1980's, Warhol's exhibitions
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Masculinity In Jasper Jones
I am considering essay question number three:
Throughout Jasper Jones the boys use the word "queer" to playfully insult each other and the
narrative is constrained by heteronormative ideas and discourses. Discuss how masculinity is
constructed throughout the novel. In particular, how does Charlie relate to the conventional
masculine values of Corrigan?
Within heteronormative ideas and discursive practices, lives are marginalised socially and
politically, as a result of they can be invisible within societies. During the time the novel took place
feminism was in its second wave and hierarchal structures were dominate. All of these factors are
thought–provoking and something I noticed subconsciously throughout the text, I would like to
knowingly
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Jasper Jones Quotes
{Video showing wolf pack} How do you rise above someone's unethical morality? Rise above the
people around you? Rise above them like an alpha wolf of a pack? Well, sometimes rising above the
pack isn't about your physicality, but rather your ability to challenge the prominent beliefs of the
pack and chose the correct path in a crossroad.
Welcome! Welcome! To Rodrigo's Novel Analysis, by your favourite host {drumroll} ...RODRIGO!
Or... I hope I am your favourite host {Tear's animation on screen}. {Fast panning shot} Today we
will be looking into "Jasper Jones", a novel that you are all too familiar with! Craig Silvey has
constructed Charlie Bucktin as a character who demonstrates the human nature of how maturing
results in challenging conventional morals and beliefs. By doing this, Craig Silvey also wanted to
convey to his audience that one's own moral code can see beyond conventional morality, with a
deeper and more complex understanding of right and wrong.
Now to illustrate Craig Silvey's construction of Charlie, his gradual moral evolution can be
metaphorically depicted in an ethological social hierarchy – a wolf pack. Yes, you heard me right.
Just like how an innocent wolf cub listens to the pack, Charlie initially follows the prominent
morality and beliefs of Corrigan. As a wolf matures, it challenges the members of its pack {start
fake howling}, similar to how Charlie challenges the conventional morality of the town. Eventually,
Charlie can be represented as an alpha
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Narrative About Jasper
Jasper lives pretty far from my apartment. We've been driving for about half an hour. "So, what's on
the menu?" I ask, turning the music down. Jasper likes a wide variety of music but his favorite is old
bands like AC/DC, The Beatles, Guns n' Roses, The Red Hot Chili peppers, and Bon Jovi. I would
have taken Jasper for the type of guy to like nothing but classical music. I guess I shouldn't judge a
handsomely dressed book by its cover. "It's a surprise." He answers. "Is it a surprise or do you just
not know yet?" I ask. He laughs. "The second one." He answers and turns the music back up. We get
to his place, it looks like a huge property. There are many trees and lots of green grass around. A few
patches of wildflowers ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"What about you?" I ask. "I believe we're alone." He answers. "How so?" I ask. "All of these other
planets we're discovering and still no signs of life. My theory is that our planet is the last one to have
life on it. Something happened and all of the other planets are just empty and lifeless. Earth is the
last planet to sustain life and we as humans are killing it." He answers. "That's an interesting theory.
What do you think killed the other planets?" I ask. "A plague of some kind, maybe humans did. All I
know is something did." He answers. I sit up and look at Jasper. "What?" He asks and sits up too. I
don't say anything, I just kiss him. He kisses me back. When he kisses me, it's not like the fireworks
some people describe. It's more like magma moving in my chest. Just hot, hot fire that cannot be
quenched. He pulls back and looks into my eyes. "Jasper, I love you." I say. I can't believe I just said
it. What if he doesn't feel the same way? What if I'm moving us along too fast? I've messed up. This
is it. We're done. "I love you.. Too.." He replies, gently grazing his knuckles along my jawline. "I
wanted to say it
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Jasper Jones Quotes
The Novel, Jasper Jones, is a coming of age story, written by Craig Silvey, the basis of the story is
about two teenage boys, Jasper Jones and Charlie Bucktin; One late summer night, Jasper Jones
comes to Charlie's window and asks Charlie to follow him. Jasper proceeds to take Charlie to the
Dead Body of Laura Wishart, leaving one question in the reader's mind; If possible to turn back
time, would Charlie close his window to Jasper Jones? In the first thirteen pages, the readers are
formally introduced to three major characters of the book: Charlie Bucktin, Jasper Jones and Laura
Wishart; Jasper Jones and Charlie Bucktin are both starting adolescents, Charlie is very naive and
fairly innocent to the world around him, whereas, Jasper Jones is very much aware of the cruelness
of the world around him and is, in some ways, a lot more mature than Charlie. The book is written
in Charlie's perspective, on page 30, (lines 20–21) Charlie says "everything has been rocked with
such rigour and tumult. Everything has been uprooted and broken." The quote itself shows that
Charlie has been relatively ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The book is an enthralling mystery about a girl, Laura Wishart, who was beaten and murdered, and
two teenage boys, Jasper Jones and Charlie Bucktin, who are trying to figure out who killed Laura;
Jasper went to Charlie's window to take him to where Laura's dead body is, the two then hide the
body so Jasper Jones doesn't get blamed. The readers are left with the question, does Charlie
Bucktin regret opening his window to Jasper Jones? With the quotes from the books as evidence and
support the theory that Charlie regrets opening his book, it is safe to say, at this moment in the book,
Charlie Bucktin, if possible, would close his window to Jasper
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Jasper Jones Quotes
Tori Glowacki Mrs.Atkin ELA 8 3, March 2015 Jasper Jones By: Craig Silvey Jasper was an outcast
in their small town. Maybe that's the reason Charlie agrees to help him when he comes to his
window late at night. Charlie is terribly afraid but how could he turn down Jasper Jones, he was
desperate to impress. Jasper had never said a word to Charlie before, Charlie didn't know Jasper had
even knew his name. This was too strange, what could Charlie possibly help Jasper with? Charlie
knew in his mind that if it was anyone else he would have never snuck out his window that night.
Although then he wouldn't of had to look past Jasper Jones to reveal his horrid secret. The book
"Jasper Jones" is about a 13 year old boy named Charlie Bucktin who
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Jasper Short Stories
Jasper's eyes snapped open as he awoke with a start. He could've sworn he heard a noise. He shook
it off, and rolled over to check the time. 4:37 am. He sighed, climbing out of bed to get a drink of
water for his parched mouth. He passed his window, and had to do a double take. The city, his city,
was in ruins. The sky was fire, the air was ashen. He whirled around, pulling on jeans and a t–shirt.
As he was grabbing his pilot's goggles, Jasper's vision swirled as he realized exactly what was going
on. It dawned on him that the scene he had witnessed outside of his bedroom window was Chicago
being bombed. He ran to his door, only to touch his door handle and yank his burned hand back.
There must've been a bomb nearby, the sheer force of it must've ... Show more content on
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He turned around, and that was when he saw it. There was no doubt about it. The man, if one could
even call it that, was large and bulky, and smelled of ash and blood. Jasper bit the inside of his cheek
so hard he could taste something metallic inside his mouth. Without wasting another precious
moment, Jasper turned on his heel and took off. He was sure he could hear the stranger's feet
pounding on the damp soil. He knew the man was weighed down by all the fur pelts of the animals
he had probably maimed and killed, but Jasper could tell he was close behind from the pure stink of
his ripe body odor. His eardrums were filled with the sound of his pumping blood and his own
panting breath. He thought he was going to make it, he truly did. His hopes died, however, when he
felt something grab at the back of his torn and bloodied clothes. Jasper cried out as he felt blunt
fingernails scrape at the back of his neck before grabbing hold of his shirt and yanking him back. He
could feel his skin tear as a particularly sharp branch sliced his abdomen clean across. He knew it
was a shallow laceration, but his vision still fogged up, his body threatening unconsciousness due to
the sheer amount of pain it was in. Jasper fought it, though. His breaths were coming in and out too
fast and too short, and he was fully aware that he couldn't keep this up much longer. His vision was
darkening and he felt as though his body was collapsing in
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Jasper Jones Essay
Jasper Jones By: Ciara Mickle The Novel Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey revolves around a young boy
named Charlie Bucktin living in the small Australian town of Corrigan in the 1960's. Charlie is
exposed to the confronting issues of racial prejudice, injustice and moral duality. He is challenged to
question right from wrong, has to come to the realization that law doesn't always uphold justice and
we as readers are positioned to understand that people are capable of holding two conflicting values
and remain in confortable harmony. The ideas are portrayed through Silvey's use of narrative
conventions that are used to either challenge or reinforce our values, attitudes and beliefs on the
issues explored. Our morals and ethics is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Silvey is expressing this theme through the establishment of characters and plot. His message is that
the Law and what seems morally right, doesn't necessarily uphold justice. Jasper Jones has a bad
reputation in Corrigan and after his discovery of Laura's body, Charlie argues that they should go to
the police but Jasper knows that the rule of law doesn't apply to him. He is the town's scapegoat
when an incident occurs and says, "We can't tell anyone. Especially the Police... they are gonna say
it was me." (page 13). When the disappearance of Laura becomes public, Jasper is locked up and
bashed by her father the "Shire President". Throughout the novel Pete Wishart is always referred to
by this title. He is supposed to be a public figure and role model but instead he's an abusive drunk
that impregnated his daughter and manhandled a child. This misconduct shows how power can be
misused and the double standards that exist in society. The myth of 'Mad Jack Lionel' burdened the
town of Corrigan. Rumours were spread concerning his involvement with the death of Rosie Jones
and he was Jaspers first suspicion as to what had happened to Laura. "The lies and suppositions
were just heaped upon the stack" (page 240). He had been wrongfully accused and blamed for things
he did not do and his town turned its back on him. The unjust treatment of Jasper and Jack Lionel
shows that people are so quick to judge and make assumptions about others without knowing a thing
about them. It
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Nietzsche Forgiveness And Forgetfulness
Philosophical Anthropology (Seminar) – Term Paper (Draft)
Krishna S (0607197)
In this paper, I am going to elucidate on the significance of the concepts of forgiveness and
forgetfulness in Hannah Arendt and Friedrich Nietzsche's conceptualization of human action and
agency.
Remedial Action: Forgiveness and Promise
Hannah Arendt in her book, The Human Condition, delineates the three fundamental human
activities that set up the Vita Activa: Labour, Work and Action. Arendt constitutes them to be
fundamental because each of these "corresponds to one of the basic conditions under which life on
earth has been given to man". (Arendt, 1958:7). Arendt's conceptualizes labour as the Sisyphean
tasks of our life. It includes all the necessary and repetitive ... Show more content on
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Rather it carries the introjected and incorporated objects from his/her life. Freud develops a
framework for the subject where the Unconscious is in a hyphen with the Other's discourse. In
melancholia, Freud postulates, that the 'love object' is kept alive by being held captive in the inner
world of the subject. The shadow of the object is incorporated, thus splitting the ego into the one
[who] seeks to detach the libido from the object [thus allowing the subject to live and the object to
die], the other to maintain this position of the libido [which is bonded to the immortal internal
version of the object. (Freud, 1917). The subject here is not a foreclosed, substantive 'I'. It is in an
infinite wait with the other. The subject is the other: the affective shadow of the object is the Othered
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Jasper Jones Quotes
Jasper jones analysis King is a calaway–jones Hr:6 The significance of decisions in the book jasper
jones is that if you make one wrong choice it will affect all decisions thereafter. The way this is
presented in jasper jones is that after jasper is did something wrong now everyone just blames him
for everything bad that happens. Now the book starts of with a very smart boy named Charlie who is
awoke in the night by a boy named jasper jones. Jasper is a very "mischievous" boy but he didn't
earn this title the town pretty much gave it to him because he was a half–caste,a boy of mixed
heritage. This led to him being blamed a lot for things and/or crimes he didn't commit. Most of the
time it was small things,petty theft and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He eventually tells them he's Jasper's grandfather. Jasper's mother suffered from appendicitis and
while trying to rush her to the hospital mad jack got into a car accident and sadly she was the one
that's died. That's why everyone thinks that he killed someone.so now he feels as though he has to
hide from corrigan or else he would be persecuted. This is yet another example of how your one
decisions can affect almost all of your other ones because he made a mistake and decided to never
clear things up now he was stuck being a hermit.after this happens jasper and Charlie don't really
talk that much. But then Charlie finds out something. Something he couldn't just keep from jasper
whilst he is walking with Eliza,Laura's sister. She tells him that on the night that Laura died their
family found out that Laura's father had been abusing her sexually and physically.so she left. They
didn't hear from her since but Eliza saw her die she saw who killed her. Well right after Laura's
father beat her then she left so Eliza followed her. Followed her here where jasper sleeps.then she
waited Eliza not knowing she had been waiting for jasper was perplexed then Laura grabs a rope ties
it around her neck and jumps. Immediately after that Charlie
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Jasper Jones
On the AMC hit television show, Mad Men, the main character Don Draper spoke very powerful
words when he said, "People tell you who they are but we ignore it, because we want them to be
who we want them to be.". The main character of the novel written by Craig Silvey titled, Jasper
Jones dealt with the troubles of, as Don Draper said, people ignoring who somebody is simply
because we want them to be who we want. Set in 1965 in a small West Australian town called
Corrigan, main character, Charlie Butkin is faced with the fear of being drafted into war with
Vietnam and seeing his friends treated poorly by others because of racism. The novel kick starts,
however, when Charlie is interrupted by Jason Jones tapping on his window asking Charlie ... Show
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The characters in the story saw exactly just how twisted and heartless people can be in this world,
and that just because you are seen one way it does not mean that that way is true. The quote of Don
Draper about how we see people as what we want them to be goes hand in hand with the theme of
Jasper Jones,which was growing up and seeing the world how it really is, and not just how you
thought it was when you were
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The African American Artist By White Anglo Saxon...
"Although dominated by white Anglo–Saxon sociocultural patterns, American culture is in fact a
tapestry woven of diverse threads that include Native American, Hispanic, Asian and African
traditions, as well as those of European origin" (Craven, 2003, p. 529). America is often described as
the melting pot; the concept of culture is formulated around the notion of many subcultures inside
one larger nation in which, "the melting pot has not merely melted; it has cooked a broth with an
unmistakable favor of its own" (Perry, 1949, p. 357). Many painters took up the plight of those who
were not sharing fully in the American dream (Craven, 2003, p. 564). Evidence of this is in the
visual images throughout the course of American history of what the overall ideology of American
culture summarizes enabling one to perceive what Americans' daily lives were like in the past, how
it is seen now in the present, and what it may reflect in the future. The African American artist
Robert Gwathmey (1903–88) painted pictures of the social injustices meted out to blacks to keep
them in poverty (Craven, 2003, p. 546). He captured the true aesthetics of the African American
culture and what dreams/aspirations they hoped to achieve, even portraying the struggle of their
adversities. His painting entitled "Belle" (1965) portrays the destitution, discrimination, and
amateurish methods of white supremacy reflected on the blacks psyche in America. Grant Wood,
another American artist, painted the
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Jasper Jones Attitudes
English Essay Valuable texts examine challenging ideas and attitudes. In Jasper Jones, a text valued
for its insights and ideas, Craig Silvey outlines many ideas and attitudes that challenge the social
perception and understanding of today. Firstly, he examines how people's external appearances do
not reflect their thoughts, actions and true selfs. Secondly, he investigates scapegoats and shows
how many people who have responsibility thrust it on to other people, or in some cases, how people
thrust this responsibility onto themselves. Thirdly, he examines how social structures and legal
systems are working, and how nothing is as fair as it is meant to be. Through these examples, he
analyses, describes, and presents these ideas under the surface ... Show more content on
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This was helped in 1965 by a general distrust of members of other races due to high feelings of
racism, and how people gossip and words spread and mistrust leads to blame. And even others will
put blame on themselves due to a sense of honour and duty. Charlie realises this when his narrative
voice states that, "...a girl goes missing in town and it's Jasper Jones who is held and threatened...but
somehow those monsters will arouse no suspicion." This shows that the level of mistrust, prejudice
and racism against Jasper, a half Aboriginal, is so great that no matter what happens or who does it,
people will always turn it back to Jasper, the scapegoat, and ignore the true perpetrators. Their belief
is so real that Jasper says that, "They [townspeople] all suspect it. They expect it. Of course he's a
thief, they say. Of course he burned down the post office. Of course he hanged that poor girl. That
poor girl." This shows that immediately, without a second thought, they blame Jasper for the crime.
Through exaggeration, it shows that the racism in this town is so strong and people are instantly
ready to turn the blame on him. And Jasper reveals how the whole town thinks, echoing them in his
slightly bitter recount: "They don't know sh*t about what it is to be me. They never ask why. Why
would he be stealin'? They reckon it's my nature. Like I don't know any better." Through his
dialogue with Charlie, Jasper reveals the sad truth of how people don't try to understand him, but
circulate rumours around each other which people and slowly turn into what the town believes is
fact. However, Jasper Jones is not the only one to feel this blame. Eliza Wishart takes the blame
upon herself for not stopping her sister from committing suicide, saying
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How Did Marcel Duchamp's Use Of Imagery In Pop Art
Pop Art c. 1952–1970
Pop art began to emerge in the early 1950s as a result of a booming, capitalist American economy
that followed the Second World War. A sense of optimism arose nationwide with new job security,
healthy incomes and an absence of military obligations. Post war marriage and baby booms yielded
the 'largest generation in the nations history'. The American dream was born and idealized in the
media through advertising. Research undertaken by sociologists into consumer habits and behavior
became a marketing strategy and corporations adapted their production by tapping into what was
fashionable and desirable among the masses.
The exponentially growing population gave way to a social group that had never before been
established in its own right, teenagers. Now that families could afford to give their children a
wholesome education, this age group no longer had to spend their days contributing to the family
income at work, which left more time and freedom for leisure activities. As adolescents began to
follow popular music and culture, the concept of popular culture exploded in America. This in turn
is from where the movement of Pop art was derived. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Marcel Duchamp's concept of the objet trouvé or ready–made as subject matter and material for his
work inspired the use of popular imagery in Pop art. The use of trivial imagery in his work brought
art into the every day world and made the every day world into art. In his book Pop Art, Tilman
Osterwold declares 'Dada combined advertising, images and texts, slogans, revolutionary films,
assemblages, theatre and performances' in its art. It was this idea of reality dubbed as art that later
inspired Andy Warhol in his Campbell's Soup
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The Social Contextualisation Of Robert Rauschenberg's...
1953, a 27–year–old Robert Rauschenberg found himself outside the house of Willem de Kooning
with a bottle of Jack Daniels in hand, knocking on the door he held a lingering hope that his
wrapping on the wood would not be answered.
This essay will discuss the social contextualisation of Robert Rauschenberg's Erased de Kooning
Drawing (1953).
We are shown an almost blank piece of paper, subsequently framed in a simple gilded frame with a
caption reading "Erased de Kooning Drawing, Robert Rauschenberg, 1953".
Fellow artist Jasper Johns, at the request of Rauschenberg wrote the caption for the piece.
The work is considered to be a Neo–Dadaist conceptual art work, attaining affinities to Added Art,
albeit having material removed from the original work rather than added to it.
Through the conception of this work, Rauschenberg first attempted to create this piece by erasing
his own drawings. He ultimately decided that for the investigation to succeed, it was imperative that
he begin with an artwork that was unquestionably significant in its own standing.
He approached Willem de Kooning (1904–1997), a formidable artist of the time for whom the art
world and he himself held in tremendous regard, and asked him for a drawing to erase. With
reluctance, de Kooning agreed.
"I remember that the idea of destruction kept coming into the conversation, and I kept trying to
show that it wouldn't be destruction," said Rauschenberg
After Rauschenberg had completed the arduous erasure of de
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Morality In Jasper Jones
Although fictional texts are simply narratives, the characters and ideas presented within them have
the ability to reflect a particular period in time and the attitudes and beliefs associated with it. The
coming of age novel Jasper Jones, written by Craig Silvey, follows the journey of Charlie Bucktin,
the thirteen–year–old protagonist, who is forced to rethink his traditional notions of right and wrong,
after a tragedy opens his eyes to the world around him. Throughout the novel Silvey brings to light
issues concerning morality, justice, and humility, by discussing them from the perspectives of
certain individuals including Charlie, Jasper and Jeffrey. Overall it is these representations that
provoke audiences to question their own morality, and to question the prejudices present in society
during that era. Throughout the novel, the Character Charlie Bucktin has been constructed to
highlight how innocence can shield us from the true corruption and immorality present in the world
around us. In the beginning, Charlie represents innocence and obliviousness, traits that at the time
came naturally to a 'well off' middle class white Australian. Silvey has constructed Charlie to be well
read and well educated, a trait which in turn allowed him to view society in a way far beyond the era
he lived in; in a way Charlie represents the change and non–discriminatory outlook to come in
future years. However, because of his well–sheltered background, Charlie remains for the most part,
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Jasper Jones Analysis
Jasper Jones is a 2009 novel aimed at young adults, which focuses on the death of Laura Wishart,
and the journey protagonist Charlie Bucktin and his friend Jasper Jones undergo in order to discover
to truth of her death. Throughout the novel, the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany's, which was aimed at
adult women is mentioned, in an interesting use of intertextuality by author Craig Silvey. Eliza
Wishart, younger sister of Laura, dreams of a life in New York as Holly Golightly of Breakfast at
Tiffany's, and Silvey uses this as a way to explore escapism. The two texts also deal with themes
such as isolation and the search for identity using a range of literary devices and stylistic features, in
particular, imagery, literary allusion and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
We hear of her moving to New York to escape her life as a child bride after being orphaned at a
young age. This story allows the audience to gain a sense of sympathy for Holly, and enhances the
pathos of the story. This pathos puts the audience into the shoes of Holly and enables them to
understand the reasoning behind her escape. The use of language features like pathos and literary
allusion allow the authors of both texts to convey the theme of escapism.
Furthermore, both authors explore the theme of isolation throughout their texts. In Jasper Jones,
Laura constantly feels isolated from her community, and seeks refuge from this isolation in a
relationship with Jasper. The isolation is represented through the characterisation of Laura. Towards
the end of the novel, it is revealed that her father had been sexually assaulting her. The isolation she
was experiencing due to this assault comes to a head at the climax of the novel, where we read
Laura's suicide note. She reveals that although she is now dead, she has been "dead inside long
before this" and that her "life was disappearing". This is a clear example of the isolation manifesting
within her to the extent that she feels suicide is her only option. In Breakfast at Tiffany's, we are
introduced to the isolation and anxiety Holly feels through dialogue. In one particular scene, Holly
explains to Paul how she is experiencing the "Mean reds", which is when you are afraid of
something, but you do not know what
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Autumn Rhythm, By Robert Rauschenberg, And Marilyn Diptych
Abstract Expressionism began in the 1940s and the 1950s in New York after World War II from the
ideas of Surrealism about art that looks to examining the unconscious mind, and the feelings people
hold that makes us all humans. Through the discussion of Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) by Jackson
Pollock, I will define Abstract Expression and why this work is part of this movement. Then,
through the discussion of Canyon by Robert Rauschenberg, Target with Plaster Casts by Jasper
Johns, and Marilyn Diptych by Andy Warhol, I will explain Assemblage and Pop Art and why each
of these works belong to those movements. Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) is Jackson Pollock's most
famous piece that shows action painting, a defining technique of Abstract Expressionism, and his
innovative drip painting technique he developed in 1940. Pollock created his piece by placing the
canvas on the floor, then he used brushes, or even his hands and started to drip the paint on the
surface. His distinct technique of painting makes him absorbed in the creation of his art piece
without being aware of what he is doing. Therefore, Pollock is free from realism and from his own
self through painting because it relieves his anxiety now that he is focused only on his art. Pollock's
work is classified as non–objective because Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) cannot be related to any
recognizable object from real life, so he is not constraint by reality, but goes outside the box as if
liberated to soar free and paint from his
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Jasper John Analysis
Jasper john is a standout amongst the most well–known pop workmanship painter. He experienced
childhood in South Carolina. He had his initial one–man in 1958 at the Leo
Castelli display, New York. He was spoken to at the Venice Biennale amid that year. In 1964, he was
given a far–reaching review at the Jewish Museum, New York. He was spoken to at
The Venice Biennale in 1978. He was granted the Grand Prix at the Venice Biennale
This a standout amongst the most renowned painting made by jasper john. He was
Made this composition in 1958. This bit of workmanship is extremely inventive fine arts in the 20
centuries. This piece contains three canvases painted with warm wax. The three canvas frame a
worn–out course of action, with each canvas ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Mutual critical commentary has been devoted to the contradictions inherent in this mislabelling, and
then discusses it at length. One most important fact about this painting is that Johns says he was
sitting in the Cedar Tavern, a bar supported by craftsman of the time, when he saw a dashing print
titled" False Start". He took that for the of his own artistic creations. However, numerous spectators
detected a reference to the craftsman's perspective, or his inclination while working.
0 Through 9 was made by johns in 1961 when he was living in New York. This is the most
appealing painting since all the number are painted on each other. Besides, this huge work, render in
region ranges of red, blue and brilliant yellow, exhibits the watchers with the numerical figure 0–9,
each scaled to fill the entire canvas and superimposed more than each other, with the end goal that
while each number is noticeable, it is hard to observe them exclusively. Substantial brush checks
and oil movies paint the composition, along with far reaching impasto. Regions of shading are
exceptionally worked and mixed inside and crosswise over individual spaces made
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Jasper Jones Monologue
I was broken. I had nothing left inside of me, my life was slowly disappearing and I couldn't stop it.
As I lied on the cold wooden floor of my room the pain from where he had hit me was erupting
inside of me. Every part of my body ached in agony, I struggled to suck in air. As my eyes flooded
with tears and I looked at myself in the mirror I was horrified at the person looking back at me.
Blood was running off my face and onto my nightdress. Deep purple welts had already started to
form across my fragile body from the forceful impact of his rough fists that consistently made
contact with my small figure. But living day and night in this torture couldn't hurt me anymore than
it already has, but what does is that it was him that did this to ... Show more content on
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However, tonight was slightly different there was a feeling of emptiness within me that only jasper
could fill, but he was know where to be seen. As I walked towards the smooth grey eucalyptus that
presided over the small dam on the far side, I peered into the broad hallow space at its base where I
knew Jasper stayed. But there was no sign of jasper or even the slightest amount of evidence that he
had been here. I felt my body shatter for what felt like the millionth time tonight as the tears started
to fall down my cheeks, I didn't know how much more I could take before I simply couldn't handle
this anymore. As I sat slumped along the water's edge with my head on my knees, I felt betrayed and
heartbroken. Jasper Jones was really gone, he had left me and gone to the city by himself, a plan that
we were meant to do together. I was distressed, filled with anger and heartbreak. He had broken his
promise. But the truth is what hurt me the most, I thought he loved me, I thought what we had was
real, but I was wrong. Tonight was going to be the night I tell him everything, the night I was going
to beg him to leave with me. Because I was in trouble. I couldn't do this alone. I needed him more
than ever but he wasn't there. As these thoughts kept running through my head I begin to write it
down. One way or another
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Masculinity In Jasper Jones
This concept is further explored in "Jasper Jones" by Craig Silvey via the characterisation of Charlie
Bucktin, the main protagonist. For Charlie, hypermasculinity was an idealism. Something to be
desired in a man. And at least for someone like him, timid and effeminate –belonging more to the
femininity archetypes of masculinity–, it served as a life goal. The reason he is depicted as so, is due
to his cautious personality and reserved character traits. For example, Charlie described his sandals
as "scrubbed clean and perfectly aligned". Stereotypically, "real" men are associated with labour and
dirt, never caring much about hygiene and yet Charlie's sandals, clean and aligned, seem to
contradict those masculine traits entirely, suggesting
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How Does Jasper Fforde 's The Eyre Affair Testify?
How does Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair testify to the importance of reading in the formation of
one's self–identity? Many aspects contribute to the formation of a person's self–identity. Whether it
be their surroundings, their culture, their language, or even other's personal identities, they all shape
one's perception of the world, the self–imposed rules surrounding them, and where they believe they
belong within it. This world is encompassed with stories, and they contribute to the fabrication of
everything ever known. It is these stories and histories that surround all things that play a
comprehensive role in the formation of one's identity. Jasper Fforde, in his novel The Eyre Affair,
demonstrates and testifies to this through both ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The effect and influence that Brontë's Jane Eyre has on its audience is profound, and this is emulated
in Thursday. It is evident early in the text that Thursday's childhood experiences and exposure with
the characters and universe of Jane Eyre has caused her to, somewhat subconsciously, embody the
character of Jane that she discovered within the pages of the novel. Thursday's self–identity is
molded and formed so much by the novel that the character of Thursday herself, can be almost
directly transposed with Jane. Through the author's use of intertextuality, Fforde is able to depict
what would be perceived as a modern day, contemporary Jane Eyre, through the character of
Thursday Next. Within the first exposure that Thursday directly has to the story of Jane Eyre, the
effect of Brontë's protagonist on the nine–year–old Thursday is unmistakable. Immediately,
Thursday sees herself in the character and her beliefs surrounding her own self–image are visible,
saying she "had realised not long ago that [she]. . . was no beauty. . . and had seen how the more
attractive children gained favour more easily." (Fforde 66), however, she finds somewhat of a role
model within Jane Eyre, expressing that "in that young woman I could see how those principles
could be inverted. I felt myself stand more upright and clench my jaw in subconscious mimicry of
her pose." (Fforde 66). This mimicry of Jane Eyre, even through the subtlety of the apery of her
pose,
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The Art Institute Of Chicago
Next time you are walking through the Art Institute of Chicago I would highly recommend a visit to
the Gift of Edlis|Neeson Collection, located on the second floor, gallery 292A. Here you will find a
tantalizing array of modern day contemporary art that delivers a sensory overload wherever you
turn. Nestled in between the copiousness of talent you will find three offerings from a prominent
living contemporary artist called Jasper Johns titled Alphabet (1959), Figure 4 (1959), and Target
(1961). Although at times his work faced rejection from the critics of individualism of abstract
expressionists his life's journey sculptured his path to who he is as a person and who he has become
as a modern day renowned contemporary artist.
In 1958, gallery owner Leo Castelli discovered Johns while visiting the Rauschenberg 's studio. This
was an important time in Johns art career as his "style" had started to settle more into contemporary
art due to his personal relationship with Robert Rauschenberg. According to The Society for
Contemporary Art "Castelli gave him his first solo show. It was here that Alfred Barr, the founding
director of New York 's Museum of Modern Art, purchased four works from this show. In the latter
part of the 1950's, Jasper Johns arose as the shinning star in the American art scene" (Wildfire Media
2015). His paintings of maps, flags, and targets led the artistic community away from Abstract
Expressionism toward a new emphasis of Neo–Dada and Pop Art. Today, as
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Jasper Jones
Bigotry and stubbornness are perceptible attitudes of small–town communities in 1960's Western
Australia. The notion that the inhabitants of the tight–knit community of Corrigan are racist,
prejudiced and ignorant is explicated in Craig Silvey's coming of age novel, Jasper Jones. The
bildungsroman is narrated by Charlie Bucktin, an adolescent from the small town of Corrigan.
Charlie becomes unexpectedly involved with a local indigenous boy, Jasper, as they set out to
discover the truth about the death of a young girl from their community. Throughout this quest,
Charlie comes to many realisations about life, ultimately, that society can be very cruel. The
prejudism and ignorance of the tight–knit community of Corrigan manifests in the ... Show more
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Charlie articulates how he "never understood why you would ever feel the need to shoot the fish in
the barrel... (if) they're in a barrel, you've already caught them... they can't escape... why bring guns
into it?" Silvey's use of characterisation and first person point of view portrays Charlie's realisation
of the community's racial prejudice towards 'the other'. The "fish" is symbolic of Charlie and how he
is different to the people of Corrigan; who are like vultures – constantly seeking the chance to attack
those that are considered the 'minority'. Charlie's close friend, Jeffrey Lu, is a gifted and committed
cricket player who persistently tries to get himself in the local team, however, due to his Vietnamese
background, "he's ruthlessly bullied and belted about by the boys at school." The emotive imagery
and alliteration of "bullied" and "belted" further depict Charlie's internal conflict in addition to his
realisation of the community's racial prejudice towards the peripheral of society. The use of emotive
imagery positions readers to realise the extent to which powerful words can have; causing readers to
recognise how crude and harrowing humankind can be towards the marginalised. Thus, Silvey
effectively conveys to the reader how the indigenous race were isolated from 'white Australian'
society; how intelligent individuals were ostracised; and, how groups of people with racially
different backgrounds were isolated from mainstream Australian society. Society
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Jasper Jones Quotes
The 1960's was a really dark period for the many people whose race was noticeably different.
Indigenous Australians, in most states were deprived of full citizenship of the new nation on grounds
of their race. Restrictive immigration laws were also in place at the time to preference "white"
European immigrants to Australia. However, people's perceptions were slowly beginning to change
in the late 1960's. During the 1960's there was much fear that communism would undermine
Australian plans for a peaceful and secure future. The outbreak of the Vietnam War was seen as
further communist aggression, and additionally inflamed the fear of the "domino effect". As a result,
the fear of communism became major political issues. Racism throughout the1960's influenced the
characters in the way that it enhanced certain characteristics, and got the readers to ... Show more
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The majority of attitudes associated with the people whom live in Corrigan, are that of bias beliefs
towards the Lu family. This is due to the fact that the Vietnamese were specifically targeted during
the time of the Vietnam War. The idea that families, such as the Lu family, could actually enrich the
Australian life, was a completely foreign concept at the time. Throughout 'Jasper Jones',
communism can be seen to influence the characters, as the fear of it seems to further conflict Charlie
in his struggling campaign, standing up for "what is right", when witnessing the unremitting
maltreatment of his friends and their families. The fear of communism also influences the members
of the Lu family, as they're continuously looked down upon by the small town of Corrigan, whom
view them as a threat. The majority of these townspeople basically associated the Lu family with
being communist, simply because they were
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Jasper Jones Essay
Jasper Jones Essay Charlie Bucktin learns a great deal about himself, others, Corrigan and important
lessons that will help him live a better life in Jasper Jones. In the novel, Charlie goes through some
experiences that teach him some of life's great lessons. In particular he comes to learn a great deal
about trust, love, facing and overcoming fear, role models and racial prejudice. Charlie learns that
trust is the most important thing in Corrigan and also his life. Charlie hadn't ever trusted someone as
much as he did Jasper Jones. The town believed Jasper to be a liar, thief, a bad influence and many
other things, and they all knew especially not to trust him. When Laura went missing, Corrigan
believed Jasper had something to do ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Charlie also learns love in a way to get him better and set him for life. When his mother makes him
dig the hole and fill it back up, this is harsh love and will prepare Charlie for later life as it will teach
him respect and manners. Charlie deep down knows this is what his mother is trying to teach him,
but at the time he just wanted to believe that she was trying to punish, annoy and make him work.
Charlie also discovers the love of peers. When Charlie is dragged into the drama of Laura by Jasper
he didn't know if to trust him. But when the truth came out and Jasper wasn't a part of it, Charlie
loved him for telling the truth and being a good friend. Also when Jasper asks Charlie to leave
Corrigan with him when they are older, Charlie loves Jasper for the respect and friendship he is
giving him. Charlie also sees the act of false love. This is seen by Charlie when he witnesses his
mother cheating on his father in the backseat of a car. Charlie knew his parents relationship wasn't
going too well, but he didn't expect this. He uses this to overcome his mothers power over him. But
this example shows us how Charlie has learnt the difference between real love and false love, this
will only help him later in life. Charlie also learns about facing fears in the book. Facing his parents,
the sneaking out with Jasper, Corrigan and of course the truth about Laura. Charlie was always a
scared
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Jasper Jones Analysis
Jasper Jones (2017) by Kate Mulvany has certainly influenced my understanding of 1960s
Australian society. There have been many societal changes since that era, and this text helps me
realise just how many there have been. The main changes I have noticed from the text include the
text's main themes of family, sexism, and racism.
Jasper Jones gave me an insight into what family life was like in the 1960s. Charlie Bucktin lived
during a time where the family living standards were very different to the ones in present
contemporary Australian society. Charlie lived in a nuclear family, meaning a mother and father
living together with their biological children. This was the norm for most families during the 1960s.
However, this family is not the best role model because there are many issues inside the Bucktin
house. Charlie was physically abused by his mother Ruth Bucktin, as can be seen when he arrives
home and the first thing that happens is 'Charlie is slapped hard on the bum by MRS BUCKTIN, a
beat...she slaps him again' (I, vii). This can be justified by some because most parents would be
protective of their children through discipline when they think a kidnapper is on the streets.
However, many parents in today's day and age would not consider this an acceptable punishment
because they have been socialised to not physically punish their child and would punish their child
by some other means. Yet in the 1960s it was a time when physical punishment was an accepted
behaviour,
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Similarities Between Ancient Greece And China Essay
1. Using three civilizations as examples, describe the concept of the Axial Age The concept of axial
age was introduced into the sphere of philosophical knowledge by German existentialist philosopher
Karl Jaspers for characterizing the period of ancient history during about the 8th to the 3rd century
BC. In this period of time we have developed a fundamentally new religious beliefs and doctrines
that promoted human and cultural values of the era. Jaspers described the Axial Age as an
interregnum between two ages of great empire, a pause for liberty, a deep breath bringing the most
lucid consciousness. Jaspers argued that during the Axial Age, the spiritual foundations of humanity
were laid simultaneously and independently in China, India, Persia, Judea and Greece. And these are
the foundations upon which humanity still subsists today. Consider, for example Greece, India and
China. Ancient Greece up to the 6th century BC was on a par with other civilizations by the level of
spiritual development. Hellenic culture range was one of those, whose coordinate system covers the
problems of family, God, nature and Eros. As a general rule, the mentality of this culture consisted
the two vectors – Apollonian and Dionysian. Dionysian beginning was aimed at the satisfaction of
the instinctual needs, as opposed to the Apollonian, whose essence consisted of creative and
scientific elements. The widespread fall of the monarchy and the actualization role of the nation
brought Hellenic
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Stereotypes In Jasper Jones
Hi, I'm Phoebe Ryan and today I am going to be giving a talk that addresses the issues of
misinterpreted youth within media and literature using the novel Jasper Jones as word If teenagers'
lives, including all major decisions and events, are constantly portrayed within the media, how can
they be judged for the decisions they're making? Teenagers can easily be influenced to make naive
and impulsive decisions whilst under the impression that they are making the correct choices
because of being constantly pressured by their peers and the surrounding stereotypes shown within
the media. This is reflected in contemporary Australian society where the Australian youth are being
represented as naive, impulsive and self–righteous by both literature ... Show more content on
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Charlie instantaneously accompanies Jasper when he appears at his window one night. Charlie
explains that "The thrill of this, coupled with the fact that Jasper Jones needs my help, already fills
the moment with something portentous." (Silvey, pg. 2). Charlie has already decided to follow
Jasper even though he doesn't know him and has only heard bad things for all of his life. He is
acting impulsively in that he is going to follow Jasper just because he has a feeling that something
momentous is going to happen that will alter his life, for better or worse he doesn't know. Dr. Marisa
Silveri suggests that teens act impulsively "to gain new experiences that will ultimately lead to their
independence". The representation of youth being impulsive can be related to many different aspects
of life. Portraying teens as impulsive may be correct but is also an unfair judgment considering they
are being constantly exposed to varying models of life and are being pressured by the media, peers,
social media, and
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A Brief Look at Jasper Johns
Artist Introduction
Jasper Johns was born in Augusta, Georgia on May 15, 1930. He is still alive today known for his
paintings and printmaking. During his childhood, he lived with his father's grandparents due to his
parents' marriage ending. His only introduction to art as a child was of paintings in his grandfather's
house of his grandmother who had died. He then moved around among with his aunt then his mother
throughout his teenage years, and then finally graduated high school in Sumter South Carolina as
valedictorian of his class. After high school, Jasper then spent little time enrolled at the University of
South Carolina, and later directed his education to New York City studying at the Parsons School of
Design. A few years later he was drafter to Sendai, Japan to fight during the Korean War in 1952.
Two years later, he came back to New York where he met his partner, Robert Rauschenberg. Jasper's
art career began when he discovered the world of contemporary art sharing views with Merce
Cunningham and John Cage. His work was revealed at Rauschenberg's studio to Leo Castelli, a
gallery owner who gave Jasper his first solo show in 1958. This led to his pieces being bought by
the founder of New York's Museum of Modern Art. Later in 1963, Johns and Cage both founded the
Foundation of Contemporary Performance Arts in New York City, which is now known today as the
Foundation of Contemporary Arts.
Style of Art
Jasper's primary types of art were paintings, sculptures,
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Jasper Dyer Biography
This is the biography of Jasper Dyer, my 2nd great grandfather – Jasper Dyer was born on June 25,
1838, in Morgan County, Indiana, the twelfth of thirteen children. He is the son of John and Sarah
Koons (Coones) Dyer. When he was two years of age he traveled to Iowa with his parents along
with brothers, John, George, Asa and and sisters, Delpha Jane, Pauline and Charlotte. Jasper was
orphaned around 1842 and moved back to Indiana with his brother George. He lived with his
grandmother, Amelia Millie Koons Bass. Amelia was first married to her cousin Devault Koons, and
remarried to Arthur Bass of Johnson County, Indiana. In 1860, Jasper was working as a farmhand
for a gentleman named Martin McKinley in Washington Township, Morgan County, ... Show more
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I believe Amos was born while the couple were traveling to Illinois. Amos married Ella E. Wheeler.
This couple never had any children. It is possible that they may have adopted one daughter. This is
still under investigation at the time of this writing. Amos died on December 10, 1916. The
newspapers reported that he was drinking with other men and was hit in the temple and died from
this injury. Four men were arrested for the murder of Amos but were never convicted of this crime.
Emeline Dyer was born on December 29, 1863. Emaline was never married and passed away on
May 2, 1905, in Jacksonville, Illinois. Emaline was committed to the insane asylum because of her
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Jasper Jones Quotes
Jasper Jones, written by Craig Silvey, is a coming of age novel set in 1965. It follows thirteen–year–
old protagonist Charlie Buckton who must question his ideas of morality, racism, and hypocrisy
while navigating the small, fictitious town of Corrigan in Western Australia. One night, Jasper
Jones, the town's mixed race outcast, and scapegoat unexpectedly visits charlie's window, asking for
help. Together, Charlie and Jasper attempt uncover the mysterious disappearance of the Shire
president's daughter, Laura Wishart. This essay discusses how the themes of morality vs ethics and
scapegoats are portrayed through Jasper Jones and how Jasper and Jeffrey both foreground
Australian culture.
One theme portrayed by Jasper Jones throughout the novel is morality vs ethics. This theme
involves the idea of doing the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Jasper is labeled as a 'bad boy' which makes him a perfect scapegoat for Corrigan. He is the first and
likeliest suspect when a crime occurs, such as the Post Office burning down because. The town did
not search for the criminal, assuming it just was Jasper. Also, according to the novel, Corrigan has a
terrible reputation of Jasper, 'He's a thief, a liar, a thug, a truant', and 'He's the rotten model that
parents hold aloft as a warning' (p. 5). Additionally, families blame Jasper for all misdemeanors,
even when their own child's guilt is clear, parents will ask if their child was with Jasper, assuming it
was his fault So, people will get a lesser punishment if when admitting to being with Jasper, as he is
a scapegoat so they do not have to take personal responsibility for their wrong–doings. Furthermore,
another example of Jasper being scapegoated is when the town suspected him of being involved in
Laura Wishart's disappearance, without any justifiable evidence of his involvement. Therefore, the
town's prejudice has shaped Jasper's misunderstood reputation resulting in him being a convenient
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Jasper Jones Quotes
Open mindedness and effort to accept multiculturalism are keys for people to realise the
consequences of the prejudistic way they lead their lives. A life that values the presence of normality
and neglecting anything that are not considered the norm. Craig Silvey bring this idea into novel
'Jasper Jones' through the use of a historical 'universally recognisable' small town such as Corrigan
set in Western Australia in 1960's a representation of time when Australians lived in such strict
social order that the law cannot be trusted. The use of setting, symbolism and first person narration
by the author teach the reader about the reality of 'White Australia's' segregation, how those have an
affect on other culture residing in Australia at the time ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Silvey skillfully crafted this idea into the novel using the character of Jasper Jones. Jasper is a social
'half cast,' who lost his mother at a young age and his father is an alcoholic who neglect Jasper
forcing him to thrives for himself. Being a half aboriginals, Jasper is subjected to a constant
discrimination as he was never able to fit into the appearance of a 'model' white family that the
whole town of Corrigan values as their priority. He is used as a scapegoat for anything and
everything that goes wrong in this town despite the lack of evidence to prove so, children are taught
to think of him as '...a thief, a liar, a thug, a truant...' ,as described by Charlie, Jasper is then blamed
for anything they did wrong knowing that they will be let off if Jasper were involved. Knowing this,
when Charlie tells Jasper to report the police about the murder of Laura Wisharts, he refuses saying,
"Bloody hell. Listen, Charlie, we can't tell anyone. No way. Specially the police. Because they are
gonna say it was me. Straight up. Understand?" This sums up and reflects the degree of
discrimination the whole of Australia is in
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Jasper Jones Quotes
Craig Silveys remarkable novel Jasper Jones succeeds in its intention to address real issues facing
young readers today. To a certain extent, significant life topics including the hardships adolescents
face through a coming of age, the deep rooted fear of prejudice and the dark, struggle that is fear and
courage are all expressed around the central protagonist Charlie and the small country town of
Corrigan. In this essay I will give and insight to these issues, discussing how it involves and affects
today youths. The trials and tribulations adolescents face as they shed their innocence and cross the
threshold into adulthood is a universal issue facing young readers in all eras. The dazzling use of
simile in Charlies' statement "my exit from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
A maxim of courage throughout the statement "courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not
absence of fear" mixed in with the repetition of 'of fear' alludes to Mark Twain's superior comments
in Huckleberry Finn. Charlie finds courage through his interpretations of powerful southern gothic
novels. Young readers today still deal with ache of facing and accepting the truth. The commanding
anaphora of 'if' and the depressed repetitive tone through the line, "if I run, I'm caught and floored
and nailed. If I try to fight back, I risk complete annihilation, if I insult them, the same. If I tell
someone about it, it's a suspended death sentence" demonstrate a fear that Charlie constantly deals
with, as he is seen as diverse in his country town Corrigan. The protagonist Charlie sees past the
conformist and etches the truth through assertive tone with the phrase "everyone in this town is
going to see that there's nothing to be afraid of". Additionally the pain that appears with facing fear
is highlighted with an extended metaphor of darkness and symbolic cosmic imagery though Charlies
line "often it's not the darkness they're afraid of, it's the fact that they don't know what's in it". Yet
most significantly it is the fact that Charlie develops the courage to face these truths that shows us
that he has truly developed "in a town full of liars". The relevant themes of fear and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Compare And Contrast Karl Jaspers And Jaspers

  • 1. Compare And Contrast Karl Jaspers And Jaspers What is philosophy? Is it the knowledge that only the insane seek? Is it a path to wisdom we will never be able to secure? Oxford defines it as "the study of the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence". With that being said who can be a philosopher? Does it take extensive years of training? Maybe it's simply the thoughts you have. Karl Jaspers and Martin Heidegger have two very contrasting views on the topic. Karl Jaspers was born in Germany in 1883. Originally he studied law at the University of Heidelberg then later switched to medicine. He received his doctorate in medicine and began working at a psychiatric hospital. He was displeased with the conditions and tried looking for ways to better the ways mental illness was treated. Through his work he received a doctorate in psychology before he finally became a full time professor. In 1933 the Nazi's seized power and he was forced to "retire" from teaching. He was deemed to have a "Jewish taint" because his wife was Jewish. His publications were banned and he later moved to Karl Jaspers believed that everyone is a philosopher, especially children and the insane. Children come equipped with all the tools needed to be philosophers. They raise the questions that are believed to be simple until asked. Children are hardly ever satisfied with a singular answer and always enquire further. Children have a tendency to ask "why" maybe because of the simplicity of their linguistics or maybe because they are hungry. I ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Biography Of John Cone Jr, A Citizen Of Jasper County SYNOPSIS: At approximately 0752 hours on March 6, 2016, unknown subjects left trash at the Stokes Bluff Landing, in the Garnett area of Hampton County. John Cone Jr, a citizen of Jasper County, who keeps the landing clean reports a large crowd came to the landing on March 5, at approximately 2100 hours to camp out and have a barn fire. He further reports the subjects left the landing with beer bottles all over the ground along with beer cans and several other objects throw all over the ground. He advised a vehicle was left unattended with woods and other object on the back of the truck. He advised this is an ongoing incident that he consistently reports throughout the year. INTERVIEW WITH COMPLAINANT: (JOHN PERRY CONE JR) Mr. Cone stated unknown subjects came to the landing on last night and camped out throughout the night. He stated a large crowd started a fire pit while standing around drinking alcohol beverages. He then stated he sat on his porch and watched the subjects for a period of time to see if Law Enforcement would show their presence. He continued to he woke up this morning and observed the landing left with trash all over the place. He advised a pickup truck was left on the landing with a flat tire. He was not familiar who the vehicle belongs to. INTERVIEW WITH SUBJECT: (UNKNOWN) No contact was made at this time OFFICER'S ACTION/OBSERVATION: On the above listed date and time, I arrived on scene and made contact with the complainant. I gathered the above listed ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Satire : Humor And Satire Humour and satire are two concepts that are both wide ranging and diverse, from dark, to light hearted, with each producing a different effect. Humour in the main, is something that is used to please the audience, its function is to invoke laughter amongst its audience. Satire is used to create a comical critical view of the subject at hand, this can range from a light hearted comical way, to a judgemental way, with each style giving the text a different meaning, however this does not mean that satire cannot be humorous, which can evident in the use of parody and irony within texts. Within literature both concepts play an important role to how the text is viewed, humour can include word play, grammatical jokes, to even inside jokes with the author and reader, and with satire, including that of irony and parody, with each style and type delivering humour in its own unique way. These differing styles of humour can be found in a variety of forms including Jasper Forde's The Eyre Affair (2001), with its silly atmosphere, word play and grammar jokes, and the use of light hearted satire and parody to brighten up the text, and Julian Barnes A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters (1989), where there is a more serious atmosphere, with a more critical, satirical eye on history and characters, as well as using irony to achieve its comical effect, and the position of the world. Each text is humorous and satirical in its own right, and with each author using different techniques to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Jasper Jones Quotes Class Address: Good Afternoon Ms Caminiti and Literature class, As most of you may know by now, I have chosen to do a book analysis on the novel; Jasper Jones by Western Australian named Craig Silvey. This book has been the winner of many awards such as the 2010 ABIA Book of the Year, the INDIE Book of the year in 2009 and has also been shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Award in 2010. In my opinion Jasper Jones is a book that encapsulates various elements from the thrillers of a safe–guarded murder to being excluded from a community with bigoted and derogatory views. The novel gives us an insight into the perspective of a quiet, precocious and Harper Lee like–minded –'Charlie Bucktin' who has mutual relationships with many interrelated individuals ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Craig Silvey dedicates his book to show how beings regarded as 'evil' always has a reason for their wrongdoing. Whether they be being brought up in an abusive family or just the development of bad habits, Jasper Jones combats both of these hardships as part of being an 'outcast'. It also shows the devastating effects it has on not only himself, but the world around him. Also touching on discrimination, the audience learn that false perception is the reason why there are many stereotypes in society. Moreover, the main message being conveyed is that ' You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view'. And this was what Charlie did to unravel the secrets of discrimination and injustice such as from Jasper's point of view when being beaten and mistreated just for being suspected of a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. The Rise Of Pop Art In the 1940s the United States and the allies were in the midst of a deadly war against their Nazi– German counterparts, World War II officially ended in 1945 and the Allies were victorious. In the early 1950s the post–war economic boom in both the United States of America and Great Britain, gave the people optimism and money to spend as the super markets were filled with all kinds of consumer goods . The economy was good and people were happy. Capitalizing on the post–war economic boom of the 1950s were advertisers. Advertising persuaded many, it told people what was popular, what was good, and what to buy. Advertising and glossy magazines were found everywhere, in the street, the highway, and even at the comfort of your own house as you opened the newspaper. This mass marketing phenomenon was incorporated with the rise of Pop Art. It paved the way for iconic artist such as Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns . With the rise of this bona fide American phenomenon also brought critics. Critics asked and wondered how a can of soup or a soft drink could be considered art. Pop artist, Andy Warhol responded by stating, "Art is what you can get away with." What made pop art popular? It was brash, transient, witty, hostile, young, mass produced, and most importantly it was low–cost . Pop art was the new art movement of the 1950s and 1960s, it was the successor of the art movement of a decade earlier. In the 1940s abstract expressionism was all the rage in the United States, it was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Research Paper On Andy Warhol Biography Andy Warhol, U.S. painter, film– maker and figure in Pop Art movement (BBC, 2011). Studied at Carnegie Institute of Technology then moved to New York in 1949 (BBC, 2011). Andy in 1960's experimented with reproductions on advertisements, newspapers headlines and other mass productions such as Coca Cola bottles and Campbell's Soup tins (BBC, 2011). Andy started in 1962, portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Jackie Kennedy and Elvis Presley. Andy Warhol's studio, also known as Factory, that is where he began working on experimenting films establishing a meeting point for artists, actors and musician (BBC, 2011). In 1968 Warhol was shot at the studio by Valerie Solanas (BBC, 2011). Throughout the 1970's– 1980's, Warhol's exhibitions ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Masculinity In Jasper Jones I am considering essay question number three: Throughout Jasper Jones the boys use the word "queer" to playfully insult each other and the narrative is constrained by heteronormative ideas and discourses. Discuss how masculinity is constructed throughout the novel. In particular, how does Charlie relate to the conventional masculine values of Corrigan? Within heteronormative ideas and discursive practices, lives are marginalised socially and politically, as a result of they can be invisible within societies. During the time the novel took place feminism was in its second wave and hierarchal structures were dominate. All of these factors are thought–provoking and something I noticed subconsciously throughout the text, I would like to knowingly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. Jasper Jones Quotes {Video showing wolf pack} How do you rise above someone's unethical morality? Rise above the people around you? Rise above them like an alpha wolf of a pack? Well, sometimes rising above the pack isn't about your physicality, but rather your ability to challenge the prominent beliefs of the pack and chose the correct path in a crossroad. Welcome! Welcome! To Rodrigo's Novel Analysis, by your favourite host {drumroll} ...RODRIGO! Or... I hope I am your favourite host {Tear's animation on screen}. {Fast panning shot} Today we will be looking into "Jasper Jones", a novel that you are all too familiar with! Craig Silvey has constructed Charlie Bucktin as a character who demonstrates the human nature of how maturing results in challenging conventional morals and beliefs. By doing this, Craig Silvey also wanted to convey to his audience that one's own moral code can see beyond conventional morality, with a deeper and more complex understanding of right and wrong. Now to illustrate Craig Silvey's construction of Charlie, his gradual moral evolution can be metaphorically depicted in an ethological social hierarchy – a wolf pack. Yes, you heard me right. Just like how an innocent wolf cub listens to the pack, Charlie initially follows the prominent morality and beliefs of Corrigan. As a wolf matures, it challenges the members of its pack {start fake howling}, similar to how Charlie challenges the conventional morality of the town. Eventually, Charlie can be represented as an alpha ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Narrative About Jasper Jasper lives pretty far from my apartment. We've been driving for about half an hour. "So, what's on the menu?" I ask, turning the music down. Jasper likes a wide variety of music but his favorite is old bands like AC/DC, The Beatles, Guns n' Roses, The Red Hot Chili peppers, and Bon Jovi. I would have taken Jasper for the type of guy to like nothing but classical music. I guess I shouldn't judge a handsomely dressed book by its cover. "It's a surprise." He answers. "Is it a surprise or do you just not know yet?" I ask. He laughs. "The second one." He answers and turns the music back up. We get to his place, it looks like a huge property. There are many trees and lots of green grass around. A few patches of wildflowers ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "What about you?" I ask. "I believe we're alone." He answers. "How so?" I ask. "All of these other planets we're discovering and still no signs of life. My theory is that our planet is the last one to have life on it. Something happened and all of the other planets are just empty and lifeless. Earth is the last planet to sustain life and we as humans are killing it." He answers. "That's an interesting theory. What do you think killed the other planets?" I ask. "A plague of some kind, maybe humans did. All I know is something did." He answers. I sit up and look at Jasper. "What?" He asks and sits up too. I don't say anything, I just kiss him. He kisses me back. When he kisses me, it's not like the fireworks some people describe. It's more like magma moving in my chest. Just hot, hot fire that cannot be quenched. He pulls back and looks into my eyes. "Jasper, I love you." I say. I can't believe I just said it. What if he doesn't feel the same way? What if I'm moving us along too fast? I've messed up. This is it. We're done. "I love you.. Too.." He replies, gently grazing his knuckles along my jawline. "I wanted to say it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Jasper Jones Quotes The Novel, Jasper Jones, is a coming of age story, written by Craig Silvey, the basis of the story is about two teenage boys, Jasper Jones and Charlie Bucktin; One late summer night, Jasper Jones comes to Charlie's window and asks Charlie to follow him. Jasper proceeds to take Charlie to the Dead Body of Laura Wishart, leaving one question in the reader's mind; If possible to turn back time, would Charlie close his window to Jasper Jones? In the first thirteen pages, the readers are formally introduced to three major characters of the book: Charlie Bucktin, Jasper Jones and Laura Wishart; Jasper Jones and Charlie Bucktin are both starting adolescents, Charlie is very naive and fairly innocent to the world around him, whereas, Jasper Jones is very much aware of the cruelness of the world around him and is, in some ways, a lot more mature than Charlie. The book is written in Charlie's perspective, on page 30, (lines 20–21) Charlie says "everything has been rocked with such rigour and tumult. Everything has been uprooted and broken." The quote itself shows that Charlie has been relatively ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The book is an enthralling mystery about a girl, Laura Wishart, who was beaten and murdered, and two teenage boys, Jasper Jones and Charlie Bucktin, who are trying to figure out who killed Laura; Jasper went to Charlie's window to take him to where Laura's dead body is, the two then hide the body so Jasper Jones doesn't get blamed. The readers are left with the question, does Charlie Bucktin regret opening his window to Jasper Jones? With the quotes from the books as evidence and support the theory that Charlie regrets opening his book, it is safe to say, at this moment in the book, Charlie Bucktin, if possible, would close his window to Jasper ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. Jasper Jones Quotes Tori Glowacki Mrs.Atkin ELA 8 3, March 2015 Jasper Jones By: Craig Silvey Jasper was an outcast in their small town. Maybe that's the reason Charlie agrees to help him when he comes to his window late at night. Charlie is terribly afraid but how could he turn down Jasper Jones, he was desperate to impress. Jasper had never said a word to Charlie before, Charlie didn't know Jasper had even knew his name. This was too strange, what could Charlie possibly help Jasper with? Charlie knew in his mind that if it was anyone else he would have never snuck out his window that night. Although then he wouldn't of had to look past Jasper Jones to reveal his horrid secret. The book "Jasper Jones" is about a 13 year old boy named Charlie Bucktin who ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. Jasper Short Stories Jasper's eyes snapped open as he awoke with a start. He could've sworn he heard a noise. He shook it off, and rolled over to check the time. 4:37 am. He sighed, climbing out of bed to get a drink of water for his parched mouth. He passed his window, and had to do a double take. The city, his city, was in ruins. The sky was fire, the air was ashen. He whirled around, pulling on jeans and a t–shirt. As he was grabbing his pilot's goggles, Jasper's vision swirled as he realized exactly what was going on. It dawned on him that the scene he had witnessed outside of his bedroom window was Chicago being bombed. He ran to his door, only to touch his door handle and yank his burned hand back. There must've been a bomb nearby, the sheer force of it must've ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He turned around, and that was when he saw it. There was no doubt about it. The man, if one could even call it that, was large and bulky, and smelled of ash and blood. Jasper bit the inside of his cheek so hard he could taste something metallic inside his mouth. Without wasting another precious moment, Jasper turned on his heel and took off. He was sure he could hear the stranger's feet pounding on the damp soil. He knew the man was weighed down by all the fur pelts of the animals he had probably maimed and killed, but Jasper could tell he was close behind from the pure stink of his ripe body odor. His eardrums were filled with the sound of his pumping blood and his own panting breath. He thought he was going to make it, he truly did. His hopes died, however, when he felt something grab at the back of his torn and bloodied clothes. Jasper cried out as he felt blunt fingernails scrape at the back of his neck before grabbing hold of his shirt and yanking him back. He could feel his skin tear as a particularly sharp branch sliced his abdomen clean across. He knew it was a shallow laceration, but his vision still fogged up, his body threatening unconsciousness due to the sheer amount of pain it was in. Jasper fought it, though. His breaths were coming in and out too fast and too short, and he was fully aware that he couldn't keep this up much longer. His vision was darkening and he felt as though his body was collapsing in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Jasper Jones Essay Jasper Jones By: Ciara Mickle The Novel Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey revolves around a young boy named Charlie Bucktin living in the small Australian town of Corrigan in the 1960's. Charlie is exposed to the confronting issues of racial prejudice, injustice and moral duality. He is challenged to question right from wrong, has to come to the realization that law doesn't always uphold justice and we as readers are positioned to understand that people are capable of holding two conflicting values and remain in confortable harmony. The ideas are portrayed through Silvey's use of narrative conventions that are used to either challenge or reinforce our values, attitudes and beliefs on the issues explored. Our morals and ethics is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Silvey is expressing this theme through the establishment of characters and plot. His message is that the Law and what seems morally right, doesn't necessarily uphold justice. Jasper Jones has a bad reputation in Corrigan and after his discovery of Laura's body, Charlie argues that they should go to the police but Jasper knows that the rule of law doesn't apply to him. He is the town's scapegoat when an incident occurs and says, "We can't tell anyone. Especially the Police... they are gonna say it was me." (page 13). When the disappearance of Laura becomes public, Jasper is locked up and bashed by her father the "Shire President". Throughout the novel Pete Wishart is always referred to by this title. He is supposed to be a public figure and role model but instead he's an abusive drunk that impregnated his daughter and manhandled a child. This misconduct shows how power can be misused and the double standards that exist in society. The myth of 'Mad Jack Lionel' burdened the town of Corrigan. Rumours were spread concerning his involvement with the death of Rosie Jones and he was Jaspers first suspicion as to what had happened to Laura. "The lies and suppositions were just heaped upon the stack" (page 240). He had been wrongfully accused and blamed for things he did not do and his town turned its back on him. The unjust treatment of Jasper and Jack Lionel shows that people are so quick to judge and make assumptions about others without knowing a thing about them. It ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Nietzsche Forgiveness And Forgetfulness Philosophical Anthropology (Seminar) – Term Paper (Draft) Krishna S (0607197) In this paper, I am going to elucidate on the significance of the concepts of forgiveness and forgetfulness in Hannah Arendt and Friedrich Nietzsche's conceptualization of human action and agency. Remedial Action: Forgiveness and Promise Hannah Arendt in her book, The Human Condition, delineates the three fundamental human activities that set up the Vita Activa: Labour, Work and Action. Arendt constitutes them to be fundamental because each of these "corresponds to one of the basic conditions under which life on earth has been given to man". (Arendt, 1958:7). Arendt's conceptualizes labour as the Sisyphean tasks of our life. It includes all the necessary and repetitive ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Rather it carries the introjected and incorporated objects from his/her life. Freud develops a framework for the subject where the Unconscious is in a hyphen with the Other's discourse. In melancholia, Freud postulates, that the 'love object' is kept alive by being held captive in the inner world of the subject. The shadow of the object is incorporated, thus splitting the ego into the one [who] seeks to detach the libido from the object [thus allowing the subject to live and the object to die], the other to maintain this position of the libido [which is bonded to the immortal internal version of the object. (Freud, 1917). The subject here is not a foreclosed, substantive 'I'. It is in an infinite wait with the other. The subject is the other: the affective shadow of the object is the Othered ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. Jasper Jones Quotes Jasper jones analysis King is a calaway–jones Hr:6 The significance of decisions in the book jasper jones is that if you make one wrong choice it will affect all decisions thereafter. The way this is presented in jasper jones is that after jasper is did something wrong now everyone just blames him for everything bad that happens. Now the book starts of with a very smart boy named Charlie who is awoke in the night by a boy named jasper jones. Jasper is a very "mischievous" boy but he didn't earn this title the town pretty much gave it to him because he was a half–caste,a boy of mixed heritage. This led to him being blamed a lot for things and/or crimes he didn't commit. Most of the time it was small things,petty theft and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He eventually tells them he's Jasper's grandfather. Jasper's mother suffered from appendicitis and while trying to rush her to the hospital mad jack got into a car accident and sadly she was the one that's died. That's why everyone thinks that he killed someone.so now he feels as though he has to hide from corrigan or else he would be persecuted. This is yet another example of how your one decisions can affect almost all of your other ones because he made a mistake and decided to never clear things up now he was stuck being a hermit.after this happens jasper and Charlie don't really talk that much. But then Charlie finds out something. Something he couldn't just keep from jasper whilst he is walking with Eliza,Laura's sister. She tells him that on the night that Laura died their family found out that Laura's father had been abusing her sexually and physically.so she left. They didn't hear from her since but Eliza saw her die she saw who killed her. Well right after Laura's father beat her then she left so Eliza followed her. Followed her here where jasper sleeps.then she waited Eliza not knowing she had been waiting for jasper was perplexed then Laura grabs a rope ties it around her neck and jumps. Immediately after that Charlie ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Jasper Jones On the AMC hit television show, Mad Men, the main character Don Draper spoke very powerful words when he said, "People tell you who they are but we ignore it, because we want them to be who we want them to be.". The main character of the novel written by Craig Silvey titled, Jasper Jones dealt with the troubles of, as Don Draper said, people ignoring who somebody is simply because we want them to be who we want. Set in 1965 in a small West Australian town called Corrigan, main character, Charlie Butkin is faced with the fear of being drafted into war with Vietnam and seeing his friends treated poorly by others because of racism. The novel kick starts, however, when Charlie is interrupted by Jason Jones tapping on his window asking Charlie ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The characters in the story saw exactly just how twisted and heartless people can be in this world, and that just because you are seen one way it does not mean that that way is true. The quote of Don Draper about how we see people as what we want them to be goes hand in hand with the theme of Jasper Jones,which was growing up and seeing the world how it really is, and not just how you thought it was when you were ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. The African American Artist By White Anglo Saxon... "Although dominated by white Anglo–Saxon sociocultural patterns, American culture is in fact a tapestry woven of diverse threads that include Native American, Hispanic, Asian and African traditions, as well as those of European origin" (Craven, 2003, p. 529). America is often described as the melting pot; the concept of culture is formulated around the notion of many subcultures inside one larger nation in which, "the melting pot has not merely melted; it has cooked a broth with an unmistakable favor of its own" (Perry, 1949, p. 357). Many painters took up the plight of those who were not sharing fully in the American dream (Craven, 2003, p. 564). Evidence of this is in the visual images throughout the course of American history of what the overall ideology of American culture summarizes enabling one to perceive what Americans' daily lives were like in the past, how it is seen now in the present, and what it may reflect in the future. The African American artist Robert Gwathmey (1903–88) painted pictures of the social injustices meted out to blacks to keep them in poverty (Craven, 2003, p. 546). He captured the true aesthetics of the African American culture and what dreams/aspirations they hoped to achieve, even portraying the struggle of their adversities. His painting entitled "Belle" (1965) portrays the destitution, discrimination, and amateurish methods of white supremacy reflected on the blacks psyche in America. Grant Wood, another American artist, painted the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Jasper Jones Attitudes English Essay Valuable texts examine challenging ideas and attitudes. In Jasper Jones, a text valued for its insights and ideas, Craig Silvey outlines many ideas and attitudes that challenge the social perception and understanding of today. Firstly, he examines how people's external appearances do not reflect their thoughts, actions and true selfs. Secondly, he investigates scapegoats and shows how many people who have responsibility thrust it on to other people, or in some cases, how people thrust this responsibility onto themselves. Thirdly, he examines how social structures and legal systems are working, and how nothing is as fair as it is meant to be. Through these examples, he analyses, describes, and presents these ideas under the surface ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This was helped in 1965 by a general distrust of members of other races due to high feelings of racism, and how people gossip and words spread and mistrust leads to blame. And even others will put blame on themselves due to a sense of honour and duty. Charlie realises this when his narrative voice states that, "...a girl goes missing in town and it's Jasper Jones who is held and threatened...but somehow those monsters will arouse no suspicion." This shows that the level of mistrust, prejudice and racism against Jasper, a half Aboriginal, is so great that no matter what happens or who does it, people will always turn it back to Jasper, the scapegoat, and ignore the true perpetrators. Their belief is so real that Jasper says that, "They [townspeople] all suspect it. They expect it. Of course he's a thief, they say. Of course he burned down the post office. Of course he hanged that poor girl. That poor girl." This shows that immediately, without a second thought, they blame Jasper for the crime. Through exaggeration, it shows that the racism in this town is so strong and people are instantly ready to turn the blame on him. And Jasper reveals how the whole town thinks, echoing them in his slightly bitter recount: "They don't know sh*t about what it is to be me. They never ask why. Why would he be stealin'? They reckon it's my nature. Like I don't know any better." Through his dialogue with Charlie, Jasper reveals the sad truth of how people don't try to understand him, but circulate rumours around each other which people and slowly turn into what the town believes is fact. However, Jasper Jones is not the only one to feel this blame. Eliza Wishart takes the blame upon herself for not stopping her sister from committing suicide, saying ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. How Did Marcel Duchamp's Use Of Imagery In Pop Art Pop Art c. 1952–1970 Pop art began to emerge in the early 1950s as a result of a booming, capitalist American economy that followed the Second World War. A sense of optimism arose nationwide with new job security, healthy incomes and an absence of military obligations. Post war marriage and baby booms yielded the 'largest generation in the nations history'. The American dream was born and idealized in the media through advertising. Research undertaken by sociologists into consumer habits and behavior became a marketing strategy and corporations adapted their production by tapping into what was fashionable and desirable among the masses. The exponentially growing population gave way to a social group that had never before been established in its own right, teenagers. Now that families could afford to give their children a wholesome education, this age group no longer had to spend their days contributing to the family income at work, which left more time and freedom for leisure activities. As adolescents began to follow popular music and culture, the concept of popular culture exploded in America. This in turn is from where the movement of Pop art was derived. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Marcel Duchamp's concept of the objet trouvé or ready–made as subject matter and material for his work inspired the use of popular imagery in Pop art. The use of trivial imagery in his work brought art into the every day world and made the every day world into art. In his book Pop Art, Tilman Osterwold declares 'Dada combined advertising, images and texts, slogans, revolutionary films, assemblages, theatre and performances' in its art. It was this idea of reality dubbed as art that later inspired Andy Warhol in his Campbell's Soup ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. The Social Contextualisation Of Robert Rauschenberg's... 1953, a 27–year–old Robert Rauschenberg found himself outside the house of Willem de Kooning with a bottle of Jack Daniels in hand, knocking on the door he held a lingering hope that his wrapping on the wood would not be answered. This essay will discuss the social contextualisation of Robert Rauschenberg's Erased de Kooning Drawing (1953). We are shown an almost blank piece of paper, subsequently framed in a simple gilded frame with a caption reading "Erased de Kooning Drawing, Robert Rauschenberg, 1953". Fellow artist Jasper Johns, at the request of Rauschenberg wrote the caption for the piece. The work is considered to be a Neo–Dadaist conceptual art work, attaining affinities to Added Art, albeit having material removed from the original work rather than added to it. Through the conception of this work, Rauschenberg first attempted to create this piece by erasing his own drawings. He ultimately decided that for the investigation to succeed, it was imperative that he begin with an artwork that was unquestionably significant in its own standing. He approached Willem de Kooning (1904–1997), a formidable artist of the time for whom the art world and he himself held in tremendous regard, and asked him for a drawing to erase. With reluctance, de Kooning agreed. "I remember that the idea of destruction kept coming into the conversation, and I kept trying to show that it wouldn't be destruction," said Rauschenberg After Rauschenberg had completed the arduous erasure of de ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Morality In Jasper Jones Although fictional texts are simply narratives, the characters and ideas presented within them have the ability to reflect a particular period in time and the attitudes and beliefs associated with it. The coming of age novel Jasper Jones, written by Craig Silvey, follows the journey of Charlie Bucktin, the thirteen–year–old protagonist, who is forced to rethink his traditional notions of right and wrong, after a tragedy opens his eyes to the world around him. Throughout the novel Silvey brings to light issues concerning morality, justice, and humility, by discussing them from the perspectives of certain individuals including Charlie, Jasper and Jeffrey. Overall it is these representations that provoke audiences to question their own morality, and to question the prejudices present in society during that era. Throughout the novel, the Character Charlie Bucktin has been constructed to highlight how innocence can shield us from the true corruption and immorality present in the world around us. In the beginning, Charlie represents innocence and obliviousness, traits that at the time came naturally to a 'well off' middle class white Australian. Silvey has constructed Charlie to be well read and well educated, a trait which in turn allowed him to view society in a way far beyond the era he lived in; in a way Charlie represents the change and non–discriminatory outlook to come in future years. However, because of his well–sheltered background, Charlie remains for the most part, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Jasper Jones Analysis Jasper Jones is a 2009 novel aimed at young adults, which focuses on the death of Laura Wishart, and the journey protagonist Charlie Bucktin and his friend Jasper Jones undergo in order to discover to truth of her death. Throughout the novel, the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany's, which was aimed at adult women is mentioned, in an interesting use of intertextuality by author Craig Silvey. Eliza Wishart, younger sister of Laura, dreams of a life in New York as Holly Golightly of Breakfast at Tiffany's, and Silvey uses this as a way to explore escapism. The two texts also deal with themes such as isolation and the search for identity using a range of literary devices and stylistic features, in particular, imagery, literary allusion and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... We hear of her moving to New York to escape her life as a child bride after being orphaned at a young age. This story allows the audience to gain a sense of sympathy for Holly, and enhances the pathos of the story. This pathos puts the audience into the shoes of Holly and enables them to understand the reasoning behind her escape. The use of language features like pathos and literary allusion allow the authors of both texts to convey the theme of escapism. Furthermore, both authors explore the theme of isolation throughout their texts. In Jasper Jones, Laura constantly feels isolated from her community, and seeks refuge from this isolation in a relationship with Jasper. The isolation is represented through the characterisation of Laura. Towards the end of the novel, it is revealed that her father had been sexually assaulting her. The isolation she was experiencing due to this assault comes to a head at the climax of the novel, where we read Laura's suicide note. She reveals that although she is now dead, she has been "dead inside long before this" and that her "life was disappearing". This is a clear example of the isolation manifesting within her to the extent that she feels suicide is her only option. In Breakfast at Tiffany's, we are introduced to the isolation and anxiety Holly feels through dialogue. In one particular scene, Holly explains to Paul how she is experiencing the "Mean reds", which is when you are afraid of something, but you do not know what ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Autumn Rhythm, By Robert Rauschenberg, And Marilyn Diptych Abstract Expressionism began in the 1940s and the 1950s in New York after World War II from the ideas of Surrealism about art that looks to examining the unconscious mind, and the feelings people hold that makes us all humans. Through the discussion of Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) by Jackson Pollock, I will define Abstract Expression and why this work is part of this movement. Then, through the discussion of Canyon by Robert Rauschenberg, Target with Plaster Casts by Jasper Johns, and Marilyn Diptych by Andy Warhol, I will explain Assemblage and Pop Art and why each of these works belong to those movements. Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) is Jackson Pollock's most famous piece that shows action painting, a defining technique of Abstract Expressionism, and his innovative drip painting technique he developed in 1940. Pollock created his piece by placing the canvas on the floor, then he used brushes, or even his hands and started to drip the paint on the surface. His distinct technique of painting makes him absorbed in the creation of his art piece without being aware of what he is doing. Therefore, Pollock is free from realism and from his own self through painting because it relieves his anxiety now that he is focused only on his art. Pollock's work is classified as non–objective because Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) cannot be related to any recognizable object from real life, so he is not constraint by reality, but goes outside the box as if liberated to soar free and paint from his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. Jasper John Analysis Jasper john is a standout amongst the most well–known pop workmanship painter. He experienced childhood in South Carolina. He had his initial one–man in 1958 at the Leo Castelli display, New York. He was spoken to at the Venice Biennale amid that year. In 1964, he was given a far–reaching review at the Jewish Museum, New York. He was spoken to at The Venice Biennale in 1978. He was granted the Grand Prix at the Venice Biennale This a standout amongst the most renowned painting made by jasper john. He was Made this composition in 1958. This bit of workmanship is extremely inventive fine arts in the 20 centuries. This piece contains three canvases painted with warm wax. The three canvas frame a worn–out course of action, with each canvas ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Mutual critical commentary has been devoted to the contradictions inherent in this mislabelling, and then discusses it at length. One most important fact about this painting is that Johns says he was sitting in the Cedar Tavern, a bar supported by craftsman of the time, when he saw a dashing print titled" False Start". He took that for the of his own artistic creations. However, numerous spectators detected a reference to the craftsman's perspective, or his inclination while working. 0 Through 9 was made by johns in 1961 when he was living in New York. This is the most appealing painting since all the number are painted on each other. Besides, this huge work, render in region ranges of red, blue and brilliant yellow, exhibits the watchers with the numerical figure 0–9, each scaled to fill the entire canvas and superimposed more than each other, with the end goal that while each number is noticeable, it is hard to observe them exclusively. Substantial brush checks and oil movies paint the composition, along with far reaching impasto. Regions of shading are exceptionally worked and mixed inside and crosswise over individual spaces made ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Jasper Jones Monologue I was broken. I had nothing left inside of me, my life was slowly disappearing and I couldn't stop it. As I lied on the cold wooden floor of my room the pain from where he had hit me was erupting inside of me. Every part of my body ached in agony, I struggled to suck in air. As my eyes flooded with tears and I looked at myself in the mirror I was horrified at the person looking back at me. Blood was running off my face and onto my nightdress. Deep purple welts had already started to form across my fragile body from the forceful impact of his rough fists that consistently made contact with my small figure. But living day and night in this torture couldn't hurt me anymore than it already has, but what does is that it was him that did this to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, tonight was slightly different there was a feeling of emptiness within me that only jasper could fill, but he was know where to be seen. As I walked towards the smooth grey eucalyptus that presided over the small dam on the far side, I peered into the broad hallow space at its base where I knew Jasper stayed. But there was no sign of jasper or even the slightest amount of evidence that he had been here. I felt my body shatter for what felt like the millionth time tonight as the tears started to fall down my cheeks, I didn't know how much more I could take before I simply couldn't handle this anymore. As I sat slumped along the water's edge with my head on my knees, I felt betrayed and heartbroken. Jasper Jones was really gone, he had left me and gone to the city by himself, a plan that we were meant to do together. I was distressed, filled with anger and heartbreak. He had broken his promise. But the truth is what hurt me the most, I thought he loved me, I thought what we had was real, but I was wrong. Tonight was going to be the night I tell him everything, the night I was going to beg him to leave with me. Because I was in trouble. I couldn't do this alone. I needed him more than ever but he wasn't there. As these thoughts kept running through my head I begin to write it down. One way or another ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Masculinity In Jasper Jones This concept is further explored in "Jasper Jones" by Craig Silvey via the characterisation of Charlie Bucktin, the main protagonist. For Charlie, hypermasculinity was an idealism. Something to be desired in a man. And at least for someone like him, timid and effeminate –belonging more to the femininity archetypes of masculinity–, it served as a life goal. The reason he is depicted as so, is due to his cautious personality and reserved character traits. For example, Charlie described his sandals as "scrubbed clean and perfectly aligned". Stereotypically, "real" men are associated with labour and dirt, never caring much about hygiene and yet Charlie's sandals, clean and aligned, seem to contradict those masculine traits entirely, suggesting ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. How Does Jasper Fforde 's The Eyre Affair Testify? How does Jasper Fforde's The Eyre Affair testify to the importance of reading in the formation of one's self–identity? Many aspects contribute to the formation of a person's self–identity. Whether it be their surroundings, their culture, their language, or even other's personal identities, they all shape one's perception of the world, the self–imposed rules surrounding them, and where they believe they belong within it. This world is encompassed with stories, and they contribute to the fabrication of everything ever known. It is these stories and histories that surround all things that play a comprehensive role in the formation of one's identity. Jasper Fforde, in his novel The Eyre Affair, demonstrates and testifies to this through both ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The effect and influence that Brontë's Jane Eyre has on its audience is profound, and this is emulated in Thursday. It is evident early in the text that Thursday's childhood experiences and exposure with the characters and universe of Jane Eyre has caused her to, somewhat subconsciously, embody the character of Jane that she discovered within the pages of the novel. Thursday's self–identity is molded and formed so much by the novel that the character of Thursday herself, can be almost directly transposed with Jane. Through the author's use of intertextuality, Fforde is able to depict what would be perceived as a modern day, contemporary Jane Eyre, through the character of Thursday Next. Within the first exposure that Thursday directly has to the story of Jane Eyre, the effect of Brontë's protagonist on the nine–year–old Thursday is unmistakable. Immediately, Thursday sees herself in the character and her beliefs surrounding her own self–image are visible, saying she "had realised not long ago that [she]. . . was no beauty. . . and had seen how the more attractive children gained favour more easily." (Fforde 66), however, she finds somewhat of a role model within Jane Eyre, expressing that "in that young woman I could see how those principles could be inverted. I felt myself stand more upright and clench my jaw in subconscious mimicry of her pose." (Fforde 66). This mimicry of Jane Eyre, even through the subtlety of the apery of her pose, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. The Art Institute Of Chicago Next time you are walking through the Art Institute of Chicago I would highly recommend a visit to the Gift of Edlis|Neeson Collection, located on the second floor, gallery 292A. Here you will find a tantalizing array of modern day contemporary art that delivers a sensory overload wherever you turn. Nestled in between the copiousness of talent you will find three offerings from a prominent living contemporary artist called Jasper Johns titled Alphabet (1959), Figure 4 (1959), and Target (1961). Although at times his work faced rejection from the critics of individualism of abstract expressionists his life's journey sculptured his path to who he is as a person and who he has become as a modern day renowned contemporary artist. In 1958, gallery owner Leo Castelli discovered Johns while visiting the Rauschenberg 's studio. This was an important time in Johns art career as his "style" had started to settle more into contemporary art due to his personal relationship with Robert Rauschenberg. According to The Society for Contemporary Art "Castelli gave him his first solo show. It was here that Alfred Barr, the founding director of New York 's Museum of Modern Art, purchased four works from this show. In the latter part of the 1950's, Jasper Johns arose as the shinning star in the American art scene" (Wildfire Media 2015). His paintings of maps, flags, and targets led the artistic community away from Abstract Expressionism toward a new emphasis of Neo–Dada and Pop Art. Today, as ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Jasper Jones Bigotry and stubbornness are perceptible attitudes of small–town communities in 1960's Western Australia. The notion that the inhabitants of the tight–knit community of Corrigan are racist, prejudiced and ignorant is explicated in Craig Silvey's coming of age novel, Jasper Jones. The bildungsroman is narrated by Charlie Bucktin, an adolescent from the small town of Corrigan. Charlie becomes unexpectedly involved with a local indigenous boy, Jasper, as they set out to discover the truth about the death of a young girl from their community. Throughout this quest, Charlie comes to many realisations about life, ultimately, that society can be very cruel. The prejudism and ignorance of the tight–knit community of Corrigan manifests in the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Charlie articulates how he "never understood why you would ever feel the need to shoot the fish in the barrel... (if) they're in a barrel, you've already caught them... they can't escape... why bring guns into it?" Silvey's use of characterisation and first person point of view portrays Charlie's realisation of the community's racial prejudice towards 'the other'. The "fish" is symbolic of Charlie and how he is different to the people of Corrigan; who are like vultures – constantly seeking the chance to attack those that are considered the 'minority'. Charlie's close friend, Jeffrey Lu, is a gifted and committed cricket player who persistently tries to get himself in the local team, however, due to his Vietnamese background, "he's ruthlessly bullied and belted about by the boys at school." The emotive imagery and alliteration of "bullied" and "belted" further depict Charlie's internal conflict in addition to his realisation of the community's racial prejudice towards the peripheral of society. The use of emotive imagery positions readers to realise the extent to which powerful words can have; causing readers to recognise how crude and harrowing humankind can be towards the marginalised. Thus, Silvey effectively conveys to the reader how the indigenous race were isolated from 'white Australian' society; how intelligent individuals were ostracised; and, how groups of people with racially different backgrounds were isolated from mainstream Australian society. Society ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. Jasper Jones Quotes The 1960's was a really dark period for the many people whose race was noticeably different. Indigenous Australians, in most states were deprived of full citizenship of the new nation on grounds of their race. Restrictive immigration laws were also in place at the time to preference "white" European immigrants to Australia. However, people's perceptions were slowly beginning to change in the late 1960's. During the 1960's there was much fear that communism would undermine Australian plans for a peaceful and secure future. The outbreak of the Vietnam War was seen as further communist aggression, and additionally inflamed the fear of the "domino effect". As a result, the fear of communism became major political issues. Racism throughout the1960's influenced the characters in the way that it enhanced certain characteristics, and got the readers to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The majority of attitudes associated with the people whom live in Corrigan, are that of bias beliefs towards the Lu family. This is due to the fact that the Vietnamese were specifically targeted during the time of the Vietnam War. The idea that families, such as the Lu family, could actually enrich the Australian life, was a completely foreign concept at the time. Throughout 'Jasper Jones', communism can be seen to influence the characters, as the fear of it seems to further conflict Charlie in his struggling campaign, standing up for "what is right", when witnessing the unremitting maltreatment of his friends and their families. The fear of communism also influences the members of the Lu family, as they're continuously looked down upon by the small town of Corrigan, whom view them as a threat. The majority of these townspeople basically associated the Lu family with being communist, simply because they were ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Jasper Jones Essay Jasper Jones Essay Charlie Bucktin learns a great deal about himself, others, Corrigan and important lessons that will help him live a better life in Jasper Jones. In the novel, Charlie goes through some experiences that teach him some of life's great lessons. In particular he comes to learn a great deal about trust, love, facing and overcoming fear, role models and racial prejudice. Charlie learns that trust is the most important thing in Corrigan and also his life. Charlie hadn't ever trusted someone as much as he did Jasper Jones. The town believed Jasper to be a liar, thief, a bad influence and many other things, and they all knew especially not to trust him. When Laura went missing, Corrigan believed Jasper had something to do ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Charlie also learns love in a way to get him better and set him for life. When his mother makes him dig the hole and fill it back up, this is harsh love and will prepare Charlie for later life as it will teach him respect and manners. Charlie deep down knows this is what his mother is trying to teach him, but at the time he just wanted to believe that she was trying to punish, annoy and make him work. Charlie also discovers the love of peers. When Charlie is dragged into the drama of Laura by Jasper he didn't know if to trust him. But when the truth came out and Jasper wasn't a part of it, Charlie loved him for telling the truth and being a good friend. Also when Jasper asks Charlie to leave Corrigan with him when they are older, Charlie loves Jasper for the respect and friendship he is giving him. Charlie also sees the act of false love. This is seen by Charlie when he witnesses his mother cheating on his father in the backseat of a car. Charlie knew his parents relationship wasn't going too well, but he didn't expect this. He uses this to overcome his mothers power over him. But this example shows us how Charlie has learnt the difference between real love and false love, this will only help him later in life. Charlie also learns about facing fears in the book. Facing his parents, the sneaking out with Jasper, Corrigan and of course the truth about Laura. Charlie was always a scared ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 63. Jasper Jones Analysis Jasper Jones (2017) by Kate Mulvany has certainly influenced my understanding of 1960s Australian society. There have been many societal changes since that era, and this text helps me realise just how many there have been. The main changes I have noticed from the text include the text's main themes of family, sexism, and racism. Jasper Jones gave me an insight into what family life was like in the 1960s. Charlie Bucktin lived during a time where the family living standards were very different to the ones in present contemporary Australian society. Charlie lived in a nuclear family, meaning a mother and father living together with their biological children. This was the norm for most families during the 1960s. However, this family is not the best role model because there are many issues inside the Bucktin house. Charlie was physically abused by his mother Ruth Bucktin, as can be seen when he arrives home and the first thing that happens is 'Charlie is slapped hard on the bum by MRS BUCKTIN, a beat...she slaps him again' (I, vii). This can be justified by some because most parents would be protective of their children through discipline when they think a kidnapper is on the streets. However, many parents in today's day and age would not consider this an acceptable punishment because they have been socialised to not physically punish their child and would punish their child by some other means. Yet in the 1960s it was a time when physical punishment was an accepted behaviour, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 65. Similarities Between Ancient Greece And China Essay 1. Using three civilizations as examples, describe the concept of the Axial Age The concept of axial age was introduced into the sphere of philosophical knowledge by German existentialist philosopher Karl Jaspers for characterizing the period of ancient history during about the 8th to the 3rd century BC. In this period of time we have developed a fundamentally new religious beliefs and doctrines that promoted human and cultural values of the era. Jaspers described the Axial Age as an interregnum between two ages of great empire, a pause for liberty, a deep breath bringing the most lucid consciousness. Jaspers argued that during the Axial Age, the spiritual foundations of humanity were laid simultaneously and independently in China, India, Persia, Judea and Greece. And these are the foundations upon which humanity still subsists today. Consider, for example Greece, India and China. Ancient Greece up to the 6th century BC was on a par with other civilizations by the level of spiritual development. Hellenic culture range was one of those, whose coordinate system covers the problems of family, God, nature and Eros. As a general rule, the mentality of this culture consisted the two vectors – Apollonian and Dionysian. Dionysian beginning was aimed at the satisfaction of the instinctual needs, as opposed to the Apollonian, whose essence consisted of creative and scientific elements. The widespread fall of the monarchy and the actualization role of the nation brought Hellenic ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Stereotypes In Jasper Jones Hi, I'm Phoebe Ryan and today I am going to be giving a talk that addresses the issues of misinterpreted youth within media and literature using the novel Jasper Jones as word If teenagers' lives, including all major decisions and events, are constantly portrayed within the media, how can they be judged for the decisions they're making? Teenagers can easily be influenced to make naive and impulsive decisions whilst under the impression that they are making the correct choices because of being constantly pressured by their peers and the surrounding stereotypes shown within the media. This is reflected in contemporary Australian society where the Australian youth are being represented as naive, impulsive and self–righteous by both literature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Charlie instantaneously accompanies Jasper when he appears at his window one night. Charlie explains that "The thrill of this, coupled with the fact that Jasper Jones needs my help, already fills the moment with something portentous." (Silvey, pg. 2). Charlie has already decided to follow Jasper even though he doesn't know him and has only heard bad things for all of his life. He is acting impulsively in that he is going to follow Jasper just because he has a feeling that something momentous is going to happen that will alter his life, for better or worse he doesn't know. Dr. Marisa Silveri suggests that teens act impulsively "to gain new experiences that will ultimately lead to their independence". The representation of youth being impulsive can be related to many different aspects of life. Portraying teens as impulsive may be correct but is also an unfair judgment considering they are being constantly exposed to varying models of life and are being pressured by the media, peers, social media, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 69. A Brief Look at Jasper Johns Artist Introduction Jasper Johns was born in Augusta, Georgia on May 15, 1930. He is still alive today known for his paintings and printmaking. During his childhood, he lived with his father's grandparents due to his parents' marriage ending. His only introduction to art as a child was of paintings in his grandfather's house of his grandmother who had died. He then moved around among with his aunt then his mother throughout his teenage years, and then finally graduated high school in Sumter South Carolina as valedictorian of his class. After high school, Jasper then spent little time enrolled at the University of South Carolina, and later directed his education to New York City studying at the Parsons School of Design. A few years later he was drafter to Sendai, Japan to fight during the Korean War in 1952. Two years later, he came back to New York where he met his partner, Robert Rauschenberg. Jasper's art career began when he discovered the world of contemporary art sharing views with Merce Cunningham and John Cage. His work was revealed at Rauschenberg's studio to Leo Castelli, a gallery owner who gave Jasper his first solo show in 1958. This led to his pieces being bought by the founder of New York's Museum of Modern Art. Later in 1963, Johns and Cage both founded the Foundation of Contemporary Performance Arts in New York City, which is now known today as the Foundation of Contemporary Arts. Style of Art Jasper's primary types of art were paintings, sculptures, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 71. Jasper Dyer Biography This is the biography of Jasper Dyer, my 2nd great grandfather – Jasper Dyer was born on June 25, 1838, in Morgan County, Indiana, the twelfth of thirteen children. He is the son of John and Sarah Koons (Coones) Dyer. When he was two years of age he traveled to Iowa with his parents along with brothers, John, George, Asa and and sisters, Delpha Jane, Pauline and Charlotte. Jasper was orphaned around 1842 and moved back to Indiana with his brother George. He lived with his grandmother, Amelia Millie Koons Bass. Amelia was first married to her cousin Devault Koons, and remarried to Arthur Bass of Johnson County, Indiana. In 1860, Jasper was working as a farmhand for a gentleman named Martin McKinley in Washington Township, Morgan County, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I believe Amos was born while the couple were traveling to Illinois. Amos married Ella E. Wheeler. This couple never had any children. It is possible that they may have adopted one daughter. This is still under investigation at the time of this writing. Amos died on December 10, 1916. The newspapers reported that he was drinking with other men and was hit in the temple and died from this injury. Four men were arrested for the murder of Amos but were never convicted of this crime. Emeline Dyer was born on December 29, 1863. Emaline was never married and passed away on May 2, 1905, in Jacksonville, Illinois. Emaline was committed to the insane asylum because of her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 73. Jasper Jones Quotes Jasper Jones, written by Craig Silvey, is a coming of age novel set in 1965. It follows thirteen–year– old protagonist Charlie Buckton who must question his ideas of morality, racism, and hypocrisy while navigating the small, fictitious town of Corrigan in Western Australia. One night, Jasper Jones, the town's mixed race outcast, and scapegoat unexpectedly visits charlie's window, asking for help. Together, Charlie and Jasper attempt uncover the mysterious disappearance of the Shire president's daughter, Laura Wishart. This essay discusses how the themes of morality vs ethics and scapegoats are portrayed through Jasper Jones and how Jasper and Jeffrey both foreground Australian culture. One theme portrayed by Jasper Jones throughout the novel is morality vs ethics. This theme involves the idea of doing the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Jasper is labeled as a 'bad boy' which makes him a perfect scapegoat for Corrigan. He is the first and likeliest suspect when a crime occurs, such as the Post Office burning down because. The town did not search for the criminal, assuming it just was Jasper. Also, according to the novel, Corrigan has a terrible reputation of Jasper, 'He's a thief, a liar, a thug, a truant', and 'He's the rotten model that parents hold aloft as a warning' (p. 5). Additionally, families blame Jasper for all misdemeanors, even when their own child's guilt is clear, parents will ask if their child was with Jasper, assuming it was his fault So, people will get a lesser punishment if when admitting to being with Jasper, as he is a scapegoat so they do not have to take personal responsibility for their wrong–doings. Furthermore, another example of Jasper being scapegoated is when the town suspected him of being involved in Laura Wishart's disappearance, without any justifiable evidence of his involvement. Therefore, the town's prejudice has shaped Jasper's misunderstood reputation resulting in him being a convenient ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 75. Jasper Jones Quotes Open mindedness and effort to accept multiculturalism are keys for people to realise the consequences of the prejudistic way they lead their lives. A life that values the presence of normality and neglecting anything that are not considered the norm. Craig Silvey bring this idea into novel 'Jasper Jones' through the use of a historical 'universally recognisable' small town such as Corrigan set in Western Australia in 1960's a representation of time when Australians lived in such strict social order that the law cannot be trusted. The use of setting, symbolism and first person narration by the author teach the reader about the reality of 'White Australia's' segregation, how those have an affect on other culture residing in Australia at the time ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Silvey skillfully crafted this idea into the novel using the character of Jasper Jones. Jasper is a social 'half cast,' who lost his mother at a young age and his father is an alcoholic who neglect Jasper forcing him to thrives for himself. Being a half aboriginals, Jasper is subjected to a constant discrimination as he was never able to fit into the appearance of a 'model' white family that the whole town of Corrigan values as their priority. He is used as a scapegoat for anything and everything that goes wrong in this town despite the lack of evidence to prove so, children are taught to think of him as '...a thief, a liar, a thug, a truant...' ,as described by Charlie, Jasper is then blamed for anything they did wrong knowing that they will be let off if Jasper were involved. Knowing this, when Charlie tells Jasper to report the police about the murder of Laura Wisharts, he refuses saying, "Bloody hell. Listen, Charlie, we can't tell anyone. No way. Specially the police. Because they are gonna say it was me. Straight up. Understand?" This sums up and reflects the degree of discrimination the whole of Australia is in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 77. Jasper Jones Quotes Craig Silveys remarkable novel Jasper Jones succeeds in its intention to address real issues facing young readers today. To a certain extent, significant life topics including the hardships adolescents face through a coming of age, the deep rooted fear of prejudice and the dark, struggle that is fear and courage are all expressed around the central protagonist Charlie and the small country town of Corrigan. In this essay I will give and insight to these issues, discussing how it involves and affects today youths. The trials and tribulations adolescents face as they shed their innocence and cross the threshold into adulthood is a universal issue facing young readers in all eras. The dazzling use of simile in Charlies' statement "my exit from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A maxim of courage throughout the statement "courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear" mixed in with the repetition of 'of fear' alludes to Mark Twain's superior comments in Huckleberry Finn. Charlie finds courage through his interpretations of powerful southern gothic novels. Young readers today still deal with ache of facing and accepting the truth. The commanding anaphora of 'if' and the depressed repetitive tone through the line, "if I run, I'm caught and floored and nailed. If I try to fight back, I risk complete annihilation, if I insult them, the same. If I tell someone about it, it's a suspended death sentence" demonstrate a fear that Charlie constantly deals with, as he is seen as diverse in his country town Corrigan. The protagonist Charlie sees past the conformist and etches the truth through assertive tone with the phrase "everyone in this town is going to see that there's nothing to be afraid of". Additionally the pain that appears with facing fear is highlighted with an extended metaphor of darkness and symbolic cosmic imagery though Charlies line "often it's not the darkness they're afraid of, it's the fact that they don't know what's in it". Yet most significantly it is the fact that Charlie develops the courage to face these truths that shows us that he has truly developed "in a town full of liars". The relevant themes of fear and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...