Sunday, January 26, 2020

A Tree, A Rock, A Cloud by Carson McCuller

A Tree, A Rock, A Cloud by Carson McCuller Philosophy of the modernism and postmodernism period takes twists and turns at every chance it can. As the world begins to change at a speed previously unseen, people all over the world are confused and scared of what might come next. Though today writers have taken to the internet to show the world their ideas, writers during these periods expressed the emotions human beings felt through many different genres of literature. First a man must help those around him but then the philosophy shifts to a man must help himself to gain meaning in this life. As each man struggles to find a place for himself in the world, each man is also subject to the actions of others. So each man is a master of his own destiny but yet he is also a slave to the whims of others. This knowledge scares men, women and children all over the world. Yet human beings continue to find themselves among the fear. We all find meaning for ourselves yet sometimes questions arise after we find the meaning which defines ou r life. Some questions being: Is this the meaning I wasted my time on? Is this worth all the time I spent alone? In A Tree, A Rock, A Cloud by Carson McCullers these questions pop out to me after reading the tramps so called science of love. The tramp in the story had his heart broken by a woman so severely he believed he could never love again. While the philosophy of love today would suggest otherwise, the tramp wandered the country in isolation, searching for his lost love and searching for love itself. He believes he has discovered the science of love, his own personal philosophy he uses to define his life in the world. He never finds the woman he held to be so dear nor does he find another woman he loves as much as her even after he develops his science of love. The disillusionment the tramp faces after losing his first love tears down the natural beauty of what love really is. Natural not scientific I should say. Science can tell many things and uncover many truths but one thing science has no power over is the ability we have to love freely. This I believe the tramp fails to understand. The tramp tried to fragment love. Thats like trying to tear Mount Everest apart with a rubber mallet. It cant be done. Nor can you apply logic to love. You cannot apply logic to something that contradicts itself as much as love does. Yet the tramp did not realize this as he tried to break down love. The tramp tells the boy he speaks to I meditated on love and reasoned it out. All he reasoned out was how to believe he loved something or someone. He believed love was only one love. According to his science you could love a rock as easily and as deeply as you loved a woman or your child. This is not the case as most would agree. I myself have never loved my iPod or my car as much as I have loved my girlfriends or my family. The tramp failed to realize many things but chief among them was that love comes not from what others can give you to make you happy but rather love exists when your desire to make another happy matchs your own desire to make yourself happy. An inanimate object could never return the love that men chase, so this science of love is base on false beliefs. Another question that comes to mind after reading the story is how can you love an inanimate object as deeply as you could a person and then loss said object? Do you react the same way you would if your parents died? If my iPod breaks (again) you wont see me crying and mourning something that cannot be replaced with a few hundred dollars. While I wont exactly be thrilled to hand out that money, its easier than losing a loved one. Once again the science of love is incorrect. The tramp was isolated from the human world as he traveled the country developing his science. He tried to replace the love he held for this woman with a love for other things. As Thoreau once said There is no remedy for love but to love more. Perhaps this is what the tramp thought as he traveled the country. He could not love the woman who left him anymore so he began to love everything he could in hopes of finding a love just as strong as his first love. Although I could not find his last name a man named Jeffery once said Love never dies, even if you have found a new love, the sweet memory of the past will continue to hunt you for the rest of your life. So no matter what the tramp did the memory of his past love would stay with him forever. He might think about her less and less but she will never truly be gone from his heart. This is true to me because even though I rarely think of her, I can still remember the feeling I got when I held the first girl I ever loved in my arms. Suc h depth of love does not disappear we just become accustomed to the lost. Once again the science of love could not explain the true depth of love. The tramp should have labeled this theory on love as the philosophy of love because thats all it really is. To use the world science is to imply that there are hard facts behind the theory. This work of literature aimed to create a fragmentation and disillusionment of love. The disillusionment came from the shattering of the naivety of what love is. The fragmentation came from the attempt to apply reasoning to something as complex as love. While in the present day most would agree that this science is untrue and full of false perceptions, how it was received in the post modernism period reflects how the world society felt about love. With the rising of all the new sciences and the conflict of World War II, many people around the world were lost and searching for answers. At the rapid rate the world seemed to become engulfed in the war, people everywhere must have questioned when they were going to be swallowed by the war. So at a time of war love was a very precious thing. Yet what was love? For people all across time have had questions about love, and this story attempts to explain what McCullers had to think of love. In conclusion, while this story has a spotty philosophy on love at best, it does open the mind to think a bit about love. Love itself is an experience to have in any life we might imagine for ourselves. We all must understand however that love will strike us however and whenever it so chooses. Love is an emotion and all emotions rise when we least expect them. Logic cannot be applied to emotion. McCullers tried to apply logic to love through this story but like William Shakespeare once said To say the truth, reason and love keep little company together now-a-days.

Friday, January 17, 2020

Market Development

In this report I will be analysing and comparing the marketing techniques used by ASDA and Cancer Research UK taking into account the similarities and differences between them and how they contribute to the company’s success. Igor Ansoff developed a description of the strategies available for growing in a business in 1957. He have identified for categories for the growth of the business these are Market Penetration, Market Development, Product development and Diversification. Ansoff used these four categories in a matrix to show how the opportunities differ in term of new and existing products and markets. Marketing Techniques used by ASDA Market Penetration What is Market Penetration? Market Penetration is when increasing market share of an existing product, or promoting a new product, through strategies such as bundling, extensive advertising, lower prices, or volume discounts. ASDA uses TV adverts to advertise their product. Advertising on TV will catch the interest of their customers as it will have sound and colour. They also use their own website to advertise. By having a website it will allow their customers to see what products they have with prices and also to shop online. They also let their customer know what product they have and also to promote by giving out leaflets. To make sure that their new products are trustworthy ASDA will have samples for their customers to try. ASDA will advertise their business by using newspapers and Billboards. ASDA should advertise as much as possible for the business to run for a long term. They also make sure that they are presenting their brands well from till receipts, plastic bags and staff uniform. Cancer Research sells its existing products into existing markets by advertising their new campaigns such â€Å"Race for Life†. The charity advertises their campaigns on TV’s, Newspapers, Leaflets, Charity shops, posters, billboards on busses and using their own website. Cancer research uses these methods of advertising to increase the awareness and encourage people to donate. Tesco have supported Race For Life for ten years, which has contributed to Cancer Research UK raising over ? 62m for the fight against cancer sine the series began in 1994. Tesco now is working in partnership with Cancer Research to recruit 1 million women and raise ? 80million to fund life-saving work. Market Development What is Market Development? Market Development is a marketing technique aimed at increasing a company’s market in order to widen the customer base for the pur pose of selling more products. ASDA is continuing to open new stores in UK. They are now planning to open ASDA in Tottenham High Street. Opening new stores gives the idea of them doing really well in the business and is meeting the needs of their customers. They also advertise themselves online and in the store. However, they can use different languages on website for the people who are not able to understand English. As there are different ethnic backgrounds in UK, Cancer research should have different languages available in their website. This will allow them to attract more people to the charity from different ethnics. Cancer research can also operate overseas such as Europe. This will help to

Thursday, January 9, 2020

Definition Of Handicap In Harrison Bergeron, By Kurt Vonnegut

Each individual in the world has their own lexicon, likewise, people have their own definition of the word handicap. While the dictionary may say that handicap means â€Å"a circumstance that makes progress or success difficult,† others may think that it is a way to ensure equality. Both, Harrison Bergeron and Maysoon Zayid, revolve around being a handicap. Whereas one person takes on handicaps due to the law, and the other struggle to overcome them. Vonnegut and Maysoon both use language to express their ideas. Handicap has a huge impact on the society of Harrison Bergeron and the reality we live in, from what the word means to how people overcome it, Maysoon and Vonnegut both use humor to show the world what being handicap means to them.†¦show more content†¦What the word handicap denotes in Harrisons society and reality are somewhat similar, due to the fact that people want to encourage handicaps, in reality, to overcome obstacles, while in Harrisons society they encourage handicaps to make people â€Å"equal. † In the society rather than helping people overcome handicaps, the government does everything in its power to reassure that they are equal to others. For instance, they make the beautiful wear a hideous masks or disfigure themselves, the intelligent must wear an earpiece that broadcasts loud noises to impede their ability to think, and the graceful and strong must wear weights around their necks and body all the time. They force a warped idea in many individuals main resulting in summer people who hide their special attributes. For Maysoon Zayid being handicap is a type of motivation, showing that she is not lesser nor incapable as others who are not disabled. She never used being handicap as an excuse to not do something. Her father used several methods to get her to walk, for example, he would keep her heel on his foot and trained her to walk, sometimes even dangling a dollar bill in front of her. She was expected to do every thing, if her sister were moping she was moping. If her sisters got A’s she had to get A’s or face her mothers slippers. But the biggest impact, I believe, was when her parentsShow MoreRelatedThe Downfalls of Egalitarianism and Television964 Words   |  4 Pageswas forced to be equal? Kurt Vonnegut envisioned the fatal outcome in his masterpiece, â€Å"Harrison Bergeron.† The story illustrates â€Å"what would happen if a government or some other power takes this notion serious† (Mowery). The protagonist, Harrison, who is arrest for â€Å"exuberant individuality,† escapes from prison and goes on national television station to declare himself emperor, only later to be killed by the handicap general Diane Moon. In â€Å"Harrison Bergeron,† Kurt Vonnegut satirizes the movementRead MoreThe Downfalls of Egalitarianism and Television989 Words   |  4 Pageseveryone was forced to be equal? Kurt Vonnegut envisioned this in his masterpiece, â₠¬Å"Harrison Bergeron.† The story is about â€Å"what would happen if a government or some other power takes this notion serious† (Mowery). The protagonist, Harrison, who is arrest for â€Å"exuberant individuality,† escapes from prison and goes on a national television station to declare himself emperor, only later to be killed by the handicap general Diane Moon. In â€Å"Harrison Bergeron,† Kurt Vonnegut satirizes the movement towardRead MoreAnalysis Of Kurt Vonnegut s Harrison Bergeron 935 Words   |  4 PagesIn â€Å"Harrison Bergeron† Kurt Vonnegut reveals the truth about world. Vonnegut farther explains how humankind is controlled by America’s first amendment of everyone being created equal. The main character of the story, also a protagonist Harrison Bergeron aims to let the world know what is truly happening to them. He is killed by an antagonist Dianna Moon Clampers who is a handicapper general. The futuristic short story is writ ten in a third person omniscient. It’s told y a narrator who seems to knowRead MoreHumes Ideas Present In Kurt Vonneguts Harrison Bergeron444 Words   |  2 PagesUpon analysis of Kurt Vonneguts, Harrison Bergeron, evidence suggests that the story imitates the basic structure of the monomyth. However, unlike the sequence and obvious events presented in a monomyth Vonnegut cleverly applies his own unique play on the iconic structure. What is to be noted first is the definition of amonomyth. Joseph Campbell defines the term, monomyth, as the standard cycle of events that occur to which the hero endures during the progression of the story (kfjakhfakjf).Read MoreEssay on Between Harrison Bergeron and aP1076 Words   |  5 Pages(AP and Harrison Bergeron), the main characters are classified as heroes because of their willingness to defy the authoritive forces around them, whether it be the store manager Lengel in AP or the Handicapper General in Harrison Bergeron, as well as the ir willingness to strike out on their own instead of adhering to social norms. In Harrison Bergeron, the main character Harrison stands up to a society that attempts to dull his individual qualities by ripping off his physical handicaps and temporarilyRead MoreSocialism In Harrison Bergeron1983 Words   |  8 Pageshigher-ups, â€Å"the man,† or whatever these enforcers’ wish to be called. The world of Harrison Bergeron functions like this. Now while it may seem a tad outlandish to relate every detail of this brilliant satire by Kurt Vonnegut to the real world, it was absolutely written to instill some kind emotion in the reader about reality, or at least where reality could be headed. In this paper, I will be discussing Harrison Bergeron and how it relates to socialism. I will define socialism as well as what its effectsRead MoreUniformity In Harrison Bergeron, By Kurt Vonnegut Jr.1018 Words   |  5 PagesIn the story â€Å"Harrison Bergeron† by Kurt Vonnegu t Jr. the Constitution of the year 2081 perverts the original meaning and intent of our nation’s founding principle that â€Å"all men are created equal.† The U.S government assumes the role of ensuring not just equality under the law but uniformity of â€Å"intelligence,† and â€Å"thoughts† (Vonnegut, 1961). Talents are only identified so as to be targeted and suppressed. Conflict arises when someone is found that is so uniquely strong that heavy weights areRead More`` Harrison Bergeron `` By Kurt Vonnegut : Critique Of American Conformity And The Power Of The Government949 Words   |  4 PagesThe world is an unfair place, and while this may seem wrong, changing it would only create more disorder. In the story â€Å"Harrison Bergeron,† Kurt Vonnegut introduces the readers to a world where everyone is â€Å"equal.† This definition of equality is based on the notion that all competition is evil and corrupt, and that no one should feel inferior in light of others success or talent. Controlled by the Handicapper General, the extreme measures used to equalize society has limited innovation and madeRead MoreThe Sociology Of Deviance, Kai T. Erikson1563 Words   |  7 Pagesimagined by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., these questions find their answer. The short story â€Å"Harrison Bergeron† starts on a day of April 2081 when George and his wife Hazel are about to witness the murder of Harrison, their 14 year old son, on television. This year, everybody was equal in every which way. No man could run faster than anyone and no woman could look more beautiful than anyone other one. The short story begins by introducing us to George and Hazel with their respective handicaps. As they wereRead MoreA Utopia By George Orwell1993 Words   |  8 Pageseven the strongest utopias can survive. A utopia is â€Å"an imaginary place in which the government, laws, and social conditions are perfect†; they seem to be everywhere, ye t they really cease to exist (â€Å"Utopia†). George Orwell’s 1984 and Kurt Vonnegut’s Harrison Bergeron produce the illusion of a utopia but fall under dystopian characteristics. A dystopia is defined as â€Å"an imaginary place where people lead dehumanized and often fearful lives† (â€Å"Dystopia†). The two works incorporate dystopian characteristics

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Essay about Media Violence - 1541 Words

Violence has been a contributing negative factor to society throughout history. Many researchers believe that the use of violent media, particularly video games, play a huge role in the downward trend of behavior and attitude of youth, and that this behavior continues to spiral out of control. However, other researchers believe that since violence has been occurring since the beginning of time, that adolescence are as capable today of violence, as they were a thousand years ago. Research has been found to link violent maladaptive behavior to the use of video games, but other researchers believe that the outcome is inconsistent to the findings, since the results are often skewed. Meta-analysis have statistically proven that†¦show more content†¦Two studies were conducted to compare and contrast video gamers’ moral attitudes towards violence in video games, and to reveal whether this moral attitude correlates to real life situations. Media Psychology purports that †Å"In both studies, justification of virtual violence and user’s trait empathy determined guilt in a structurally similar way to real world scenarios† (g. 1644). Players, especially those who were empathetic, felt just as guilty engaging in virtual violence as they would have had if engaging in unjustified violence in the real world. Research has concluded that violent media content is responsible for desensitization to violence, although those whom are desensitized have no greater tendency towards violence. According to Becker-Olsen (2010) desensitization to violence is â€Å"a reduction in emotion-related physiological reactivity to real violence† (pg. 85). Those whom are desensitized show a greater tendency to viewing violence as normal, but out in the real world show no inclination to acting violent because of the desensitization. The American Academy of Pediatrics (2001) reports that today’s younger audiences are more desensitized to violence, not solely because of violent content of media games, but because of a diet of violent television, movies andShow MoreRelatedMedia Violence And The Media Essay864 Words   |  4 PagesExposure to the media violence may be especially problematic in late adolescence. Television and other media play a major role in adolescent socialization and identity development by providing perspectives, values, ideologies, and behavior models (Arnett G., Roberts D. et al.). The socializing role of television in particular may be ampliï ¬ ed by the large amount of time young people spend with this medium. Speciï ¬ cally, 18- to 24-year-olds spend more time watching television and movies than youngerRead MoreMedia Violence1535 Words   |  7 Pagesat looking at the potentially harmful effects of the consumption of violent media and the impact it has on psychological factors. Two psychological factors that have been researched are empathy and aggression and how violent media influences these two emotions. Theories that have tried explaining the pathway from the viewing of violence in media and the impact on aggression have generally focused on the role of violent media being used by consumers as observational learning and promoting the developmentRead MoreMedia Violence and Violence in Society1059 Words   |  4 Pagesprogramming contains some violence, there should be more and more violent crime after television is available† (Freedman). Many suggest the violence in media is causing violence in society but th en how is it that violent crimes are actually decreasing in the United States. The violence that is occurring is actually due from the mentally ill, poor parenting, and the location of where one lives in society. 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Today’s society has become acquainted with the violence in video games, tv shows, movies, and music since it is everywhere but many have become too attached to this violence and brought it to real life. Many assume that getting rid of this violence is essential to a more passive and peaceful society but there are more benefits to the portail of violence that society sees today. One of the key itemsRead MoreMedia, Violence, And Violence Essay1892 Words   |  8 Pageswould be the media. Media and violence are both very wide and broad concepts that have massive impacts in our society, and it is important to distinguish their relationship with each other. The types of media are things such as violent video games, films, newspapers, magazines and television. One particular type of media that is often very problematized is violent video games. Different studies have shown convincing and unconvincing correlational in regards to the media and violence, but to whomRead MoreMedia, Violence, And Violence Essay1949 Words   |  8 Pageswould be the media. Media and violence are both very wide and broad concepts that have massive impacts in our society, and it is important to distinguish their relationship with each other. The types of media are things such as violent video games, films, newspapers, magazines and television. One particular type of media that is ofte n very problematized is violent video games. Different studies have shown convincing and unconvincing correlational in regards to the media and violence, but to whomRead MoreThe Effects Of Media Violence On Behavioral Violence916 Words   |  4 PagesEffects of Media Violence on Behavioral Violence in Young Adults in America The influence of mass media has progressively increased in American society, but can the media have effects beyond mere entertainment and impartial information? American culture has become saturated with online news reports, social media, and media entertainment. Technology has become a major factor in America’s social environment. Much of the information gained from digital sources involves or portrays violence, and manyRead MoreMedia Violence And Its Effects1057 Words   |  5 Pages Media violence exposure has been investigated as a risk factor for aggression behavior for years. The impact of exposure to violence in the media the long term development and short term development of aggressive behavior has been documented. Aggression is caused by several factors, of which media violence is one. Research investigating the effects of media violence in conjunction with other predictors of aggression such as; environmental factors and dysfunction within the family household,Read MoreThe Effects Of Violence On The Media1550 Words   |  7 PagesThe effect of violence in the media is a big controversy; some say it affects are society and others say that there is not any proof of this. There are many theories on how violence in media does, and how it does not, affect our society. Many people claim watching television or even playing video games will affect children’s or young adults’ minds. Researches claim that they found no evidence of change in aggr essiveness in children or young adults while playing video games. Researchers allowed children