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Emily Dickinson

... Congregational Church on a regular basis. Emily did not like going to church because she didn't think of herself as being very religious. She refused to believe that Heaven was a better place than Earth and eventually rebelled from the church. Emily saw herself as a woman who had her own way of thinking, a way of thinking shaped neither by the church or society. By the time she was twelve, her family moved to a house on Pleasant Street where they lived from 1840 to 1855. Emily was already writing letters, but composed most of her poetry in ...

Number of words: 723 | Number of pages: 3

Streetcar Named Desire

... arrival; she would never have the same life that she had with Stanley. "Stella is doomed too." From the arrival of Blanche, Stella is reminded of her traditional way of life. The life she left behind for Stanley Kowalskis. "Stella is a refined girl who has found a kind of salvation or realization, but at a terrific price." (Pg. 304 Kazan) She likes the idea of waiting for Stanley every night, where he makes her feel special and she has no reminder of the price she is paying. Reason for her action is not proven in the play, but it is d ...

Number of words: 803 | Number of pages: 3

The John Scopes Trial

... movement. The Scopes “Monkey” Trial, having been called “the most serious setback to civilization in all history,” (Smout 45), as well as a “threat to civilization itself,” is the “trial of the century.” New ideas frequently require considerable time to gain public approval, especially when religion is involved. Galileo’s heliocentric theory of the sun revolving around the earth directly contrasted Ptolemy’s 600-year-old precedent of geocentricism. This was looked upon as an act of heresy, and Galileo was nearly burn ...

Number of words: 1552 | Number of pages: 6

The USA Becoming Less Democratic Prior To The Revolution

... by twenty-two, while the number of slaves fell by five. This would suggest that since the number or free people in Weathersfield was increasing, Weathersfiled was becoming more democratic, as more people were able to participate in government. Further evidence to support that argument is found in a chart comparing the numbers of white males able to meet the voting requirements, registering to vote, voting, and being elected to town offices. The percentage of men able to met the voting requirements rose only by 2%, but the numbers of men regis ...

Number of words: 1327 | Number of pages: 5

Celts VS Saxons

... In the Celtic culture men were expected to go and fight in war. That was considered their job. Teachers, artists, poets and musicians were known as the druids whose job was to write of the Celtic culture and carry the generation over the course of the years. This is seen now by looking at those cultures and groups of people that are consistently oppressed and whose tolerance level is dangerously low. An example of this is the Jewish people throughout history. The Celtic people were also highly independent. This characteristic became known ...

Number of words: 532 | Number of pages: 2

Capoeira-itsnot Just A Dance

... moves as a way to defend themselves. Capoeira was the name given for those moves of African martial arts that came out of Angola and were later modified and mixed in Brazil. Earlier, these slaves lacked a form of self-defense, an in a way quite parallel to karate, they began to use these grappling and striking as well as animal forms with the things they had in hand, such as sugar cane knives and 3/4 staffs. Being slaves, they had to disguise the study of the art, and that is how the dance came into it. Their hands were manacled most of the ...

Number of words: 591 | Number of pages: 3

Manhattan Project

... as "The ."1 The was brought by fear of Germany and it's atomic research. On account of the fear of Germany the United States took action upon testing their own atomic bomb. Once the bomb was tested, the United States had to decide whether it should be used and if so, where? Then there was the process of dropping the bomb. The was overall one of the highest and most significant projects ever done in the United States.2 The United States government was shocked by the news of German scientists discovering nuclear fission. The news came to ...

Number of words: 1676 | Number of pages: 7

Consensus Historians

... history and the involvement they had made consensus history a subject still looked upon today (Sternsher pg.1). From the year 1944 to 1970 Richard Hofstadter enriched the historical world with his writings. In 1948 Hofstadter joined the faculty at Columbia University. Here Hofstadter published The American Political Traditions and the Men who made it. Many regard this book as the start of the consensus school of historical writing. Much of this book was a look into brief political biographies on presidents, but the way that it was prese ...

Number of words: 1731 | Number of pages: 7

Druids

... different duties from them. To become a Druid, students assembled in large groups for instruction, and training, for a period of up to twenty years (Spence 67). The mythologies describe capable of many magical powers such as divination and prophesy, control over the weather, healing, levitation, and shape changing themselves into the forms of animals. even filled the roles of judge, doctor, mystic, and clerical scholar; in other words they were the religious intelligentsia of their culture. The Celtic people believed in a variety of ...

Number of words: 769 | Number of pages: 3

Civil War Causes And Reconstru

... for power all around. One of the biggest was the North versus the South constantly trying to compromise political power. They were trying to figure out a way to keep the power in Congress between the slave states and the free states equal. The Missouri Compromise and the Kansas-Nebraska Act are two great examples of the long list of compromises the two sides have tried to come to. The compromises continued but to no avail, the subject of who had the final say involving slavery was one that had to be defined clearly, and this could ...

Number of words: 705 | Number of pages: 3

Christian Reformation

... dead relatives. Martin Luther a German priest, who lived in the small city of Wittenberg was the the most famous critic of the corrupt practices of the Catholic church. He wrote his critiques down in 95 theses on a door of a church in Wittenberg. These 95 theses spread quickly all over Germany and parts of northern Europe. The first reaction of the catholic church was a reduction of the sales of indulgences. But this sale was not the only point Luther criticized in the Catholic church. The Catholic church taught that salvation comes f ...

Number of words: 321 | Number of pages: 2

Ku Klux Klan

... of Western Civilization. Its achievements and reputation for victory immortalize the glorious ride of the of Reconstruction. No misrepresentations by prejudiced historians or by the aliens who control America’s mass media can dim the luster of its deeds, or rob it of its rightful place in history as the savior of the White south, and thereby, the preserver of the purity of the White race for all of America. This period is known as the “First Era.” The Knights of the keeps alive the memory of the original Klansmen and the principles ...

Number of words: 323 | Number of pages: 2

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