Members
Member's Area
Subjects
American History
Arts and Television
Biographies
Book Reports
Creative Writing
Economics
Education
English Papers
Geography
Health and Medicine
Legal Issues
Miscellaneous
Music and Musicians
Poetry and Poets
Politics
Religion
Science and Environment
Social Issues
Technology
World History
|
|
Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 5581 - 5590 of 6646 matching essays
- 5581: The Revival Of Jazz In South Africa
- ... still be heard in South African jazz today.(KEBEDE-133) From its birth, it was dangerous music. It was performed at unregulated gatherings and drinking spots, rather than in the government-licensed and rigidly-controlled beer halls. Its practitioners were often classified as "vagrants", under constant threat of expulsion from the cities.(NEKETIA-82) But in the 1960s and 1970s the ...
- 5582: The Success Of Rap
- ... continue to expand. Where would rappers today be without seventy percent of their record sales, bought by white people? Those who at one point were rebelling against white people (the government, corporate America) through protest rap can give thanks directly to those “oppressors” (white people) in general for their success in the music industry. Furthermore, the cooperation between the beat makers ...
- 5583: The Matrix-critique And Review
- ... There Morpheus tells to make an improbable leap to safety. He fails to make the leap, does not even try in fact, and allows himself to be captured by the government agents instead. He is taken into custody and while there is offered a deal which demands him to cooperate in the tracking of Morpheus, in return he will get a ...
- 5584: The Masters Of Puppets
- ... album The $5.95 EP – Garage Days Revisited (Clark 714). Metallica’s first commercially successful album, … And Justice For All, a hold-no-prisoners attitude that lashed out towards the government, was released in 1988 (Justice). The album was a hit in the United Kingdom, but later rose to popularity in the United States (Rees and Crampton 572). Their most famous ...
- 5585: Who Was The Bard
- ... father had been elected as alderman and later as bailiff, he could not read or write. As surprising as it may seem, "of the nineteen important men charged with the government of the town, thirteen had to 'make their mark' in attesting important documents, because they could not write their names(Twain, Chpt 3)." This was not uncommon in a small ...
- 5586: Wallstreet, Movie
- ... Because the best and safest way to gain unearned pay is to get the state to take it from others, greed leads, as by an invisible hand, toward ever more government action – to socialism, not capitalism.” The greed that is described here characterizes Gordon Gekko when he says, “I don’t throw darts. I bet on sure things.” Free enterprise to ...
- 5587: Star Wars Vs. Star Trek
- ... has been in syndication ever since. Star Trek is a fascist world run by the Federation, no money is needed by the crew, everything is provided. It is a dull, government run police state. The ultimate humanist new world order, paradise created after nuclear war had destroyed much of our world around 2000. The world of Star Trek is the Phoenix ...
- 5588: Romero
- ... outside of the church. Throughout the movie Romero was faced with the decision of what is right and wrong. The easy way would to be to go along with the government and the other bishops, and leave church and politics separate, but he couldn't watch he people get hurt any longer. In the end he stood up for what he ...
- 5589: Romanticism
- ... and freedom. He raised individuality to a state of "prime importance". His thoughts on individualism seem to be the philosophical foundation for the American republic (the largest territory having a government proclaiming people to be free and equal). During the Enlightenment, nature meant human nature, but in the Romantic Period nature meant unspoiled natural scenery such as forests, lakes, mountains, the ...
- 5590: Metallica
- ... 5.98 Tape) in the summer of 1987. In 1988, Metallica released there first “real” album with Jason Newstead, “...And Justice For All.” This album had been written with corrupt government in mind and guitar and bass wrifs that Cliff Burton had written before he died. This album went double platinum in record setting times. The album included the song “ONE ...
Search results 5581 - 5590 of 6646 matching essays
|
|