Hairy ape Essays

  • Yank’s Absurd Inheritance in The Hairy Ape

    3197 Words  | 7 Pages

    Yank’s Absurd Inheritance in The Hairy Ape It is intriguing how Eugene O’Neill stages the audience for The Hairy Ape. When the curtain opens upon the forecastle of the transatlantic liner, the audience is immediately beset by Yank’s seemingly unassailable sense of identity. “Everting else dat makes de woild move, somep’n makes it move. It can’t move without somep’n else, see? Den yuh get down to me. I’m at de bottom, get me!” (261). Yank trumpets himself, in effect, as the prime mover

  • The Tragedy of Eugene O’Neill’s Play, The Hairy Ape

    1768 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Tragedy of Eugene O’Neill’s Play, The Hairy Ape Eugene O’Neill’s The Hairy Ape is the story of an alienated, low-class stoker named Yank. Yank’s life becomes a whirlwind when Mildred, the daughter of a wealthy steel owner, looks at Yank like he is a hairy ape. This action creates the withdrawal Yank exhibits. The remainder of the play is Yank’s journey to find his place in society’s realms. He searches for his place in a stokehole, at Fifth Avenue, and in jail. Ultimately Yank’s trek

  • Yank as a Modern Day Oedipus in O' Neill's Play, The Hairy Ape

    2260 Words  | 5 Pages

    Yank as a Modern Day Oedipus in O' Neill's Play, The Hairy Ape The representation of tragedy today has adapted itself to more humanistic, base and symbolic concerns. Often, they are commentaries on society just as much as they are on the nature of man. Although O' Neill insists that his play "The Hairy Ape" is not a tragedy, but rather a dark comedy, the play follows the definition of a tragedy. The basic points that make up a tragedy still remain the same, even if they have to be slightly modified

  • My Thoughts on Susan Glaspell's 'Trifles'

    1236 Words  | 3 Pages

    Since the Civil War. Create edition. McGraw-Hill, 2011. 222-224. e-Book. Oates, Joyce Carol Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" American Literature Since the Civil War. Create edition. McGraw-Hill, 2011. 333-344. eBook. O’Neill, Eugene, The Hairy Ape. " American Literature Since the Civil War. Create edition. McGraw-Hill, 2011. 180-209. e-Book. . Roethke, Theodore, “My Papa's Waltz " American Literature Since the Civil War. Create edition. McGraw-Hill, 2011. 308-309. e-Book.

  • Symbolism In Eugene O 'Neill's The Hairy Ape'?

    1296 Words  | 3 Pages

    theater. Before O’Neill, the American theater was viewed as childish and purely for entertainment, but O’Neill used his expressionist writing style to transform it into a strong social medium for change. One of O’Neill’s most eye-opening plays was The Hairy Ape, a play about a poor ship worker who is questioning his identity and searching for his place in society, but ultimately decides that he doesn’t fit in any social group. This play brought attention to the oppression and mistreatment of the working

  • Dehumanism In Eugene O 'Neill's' The Hairy Ape

    1281 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Hairy Ape by Eugene O’Neill shines a light on the differences between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat during the industrial age. While focusing on how the working class men are slaves to the new, industrial society, O’Neill purposefully describes Yank, and the other working men, in harsh ways. By dehumanizing Yank and focusing on the bad traits of the working class, the wealthy, upper class appears to fly under the radar of the reader, but by the end of The Hairy Ape, the virtually unnoticed

  • O’Neill’s The Hairy Ape: Most Representative Play of Early 1900s

    1137 Words  | 3 Pages

    traditions. Broadway’s establishment caused a rise in theatre that led to new plays and playwrights emerging. Among those emergent playwrights was Eugene O’Neill. O’Neill’s The Hairy Ape encompassed Modern characteristics such as alienation and industrialization, as well as characteristics of Naturalism. Although The Hairy Ape is one of the most representative plays of this era, many other plays are worth noting as influential during the early 1900s. Realism is presented in Eugene O’Neill’s play, Beyond

  • Bigfoot Essay

    705 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bigfoot also known as Sasquatch is a large, hairy, muscular, ape-like creature that somewhat looks like a human being. While the idea of a real Bigfoot is pretty unconvincing, the stories have caught on. It’s unlikely the idea of Bigfoot will fade any time soon. Even though there is not plenty of evidence for Bigfoot’s existence It’s just a matter of time when they decide to show themselves to the people, that’s why I’ll be preparing you for when that time comes by describing to you their traits

  • New World Monkeys

    618 Words  | 2 Pages

    They are often seen cutie and highly intelligent animals. Also, there are many different species that have their abilities. They are hairy animals; they make noises such as when a person is getting tickled by someone else. Some of them live on ground while the others live in trees. They are also the animals that appear on the Chinese zodiac. Monkeys have many human-like traits such as communications and grooming by observing the behaviors of these amazing primates. We can see how much they are similar

  • Sara Gruen's Ape House

    2048 Words  | 5 Pages

    Ape house by Sara Gruen is a unique book that incorporates humor with fictional events, based on real research. Originally published in 2010, Ape house is “a tale that’s full of heart, hope, and compelling questions about who we really are” (Redbook). Apes capable of communication don’t fail to entertain. When the bonobo apes are in danger, two very different characters unite to save them. Isabel Duncan has always had a deeper connection to her bonobo family, a group of apes that can understand

  • Do Primates Posses Culture?

    611 Words  | 2 Pages

    learned behavior, than it is reasonable to say that primates posses a form of culture. Primates have been observed making tools to aid in collecting food and developing communication system, both of which are learned behaviors. It is common in monkeys, apes and humans that behavior and social organization aren’t necessarily programmed into the genes. There have been several cases where an entire troop has learned from the experiences of just a few. In a group of Japanese macaques, for example, a three-year-old

  • Chimpanzees: The Dangers Of Animals In The World

    772 Words  | 2 Pages

    There are many animals in the world. Even we don’t know the exact number of them. Recently, it’s difficult to find some species because they already threaten and most of them become extinct. We can’t find the great ape called chimpanzees easily in the Africa forest. The largest population of chimpanzees are in central Africa, mainly Gabon, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and Cameroon. It’s about 150,000 to 250,000 individuals (WWF,n.d). Their population keeps decreasing rapidly each year. Although

  • The Aye Observation

    683 Words  | 2 Pages

    I have read that the aye aye is a lemur that is found inhabited in the rain forests of madagascar. There is one set of species that is this type, its habitat is very dense and very dry. The aye aye is closely related to the lemur species their colors are brown and sandy white, and they are very ugly. It spends most of all its life living high in the trees. The male aye ayes climb high up the trees and cover 4km at night because they search for food. Whenever the aye aye was first discovered, it

  • Animal Intelligence

    765 Words  | 2 Pages

    Animal Intelligence Intelligence is defined as the ability to acquire and apply knowledge. Psychologists have exploited this concept in many ways to try and determine whether non-human animals are capable of intelligence. From social learning it is logical to assume that, since non-human animals are able to both acquire and use new behaviours, they must be intelligent in some way. Heyes stated that there are 6 types of behaviour which suggest intelligence. These are imitation, self-recognition

  • Primate Communication

    1273 Words  | 3 Pages

    Monkeys and humans have been compared for years, “we have all heard the expression monkey see, monkey do. But should the saying really go monkey hear, monkey do?” (Sakrison) Recent studies are finding that the language abilities of some monkeys are more sophisticated than we ever thought possible (Sakrison). Monkeys often always live together in social groups. And each member contribute by helping to defend their food sources, watch for predators, and even raise each other’s young. Is it impossible

  • Review of Planet of the Apes

    621 Words  | 2 Pages

    Review of Planet of the Apes by Tim Burton This essay will examine Tim Burton's remake of the science-fiction film 'Planet of the Apes'. 'Planet of the Apes' is the story of astronaut Leo Davidson, who in an attempt to save his chimp is transported through time. Leo crashes in a futuristic time; a planet ruled by apes, where humans are enslaved. Leo is captured, with a tribe, from the slave owner's shop he is bought by a kind chimp, who believes in humans and apes living in peace. With

  • Orangutans Essay

    560 Words  | 2 Pages

    After researching and observing the lives of orangutans I can support my hypothesis. The orangutans are restricted into a small area, fed when the trainers feed them, and live on the ground because there are no trees causing them to have a different lifestyle than the wild orangutans. The captive orangutans are taken care of by the trainer and never have to struggle to get food. They seem to sit and sleep at the same time, for majority of the time I was observing. There are no predators for them

  • Dire issues with Chimpanzees

    703 Words  | 2 Pages

    Although the practice of collecting animals have been present since 2500 B.C (Dunlap and Kellert), efforts to keep animals in a safe and natural habitat have been poorly consummated. Psychological manipulation has consequentially drawn chimpanzees to mental illness, as in the article “How Abnormal Is the Behavior of Captive, Zoo-Living Chimpanzees?” Lucy P. Birkett and Nicholas E. Newton-Fisher wrote, “Many chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) kept in laboratory housing settings show a variety of serious

  • Analysis Of Common Ground By Barbara Smuts

    1199 Words  | 3 Pages

    Smuts, points out the main differences between humans and apes, such as our upright stance, large brains, and capacity for spoken language and abstract reasoning. However, the main point of this article is to emphasize the many similarities that apes share with us. Smuts goes into great detail about how human social and emotional tendencies are very reflective in the family of apes. The idea that humans could possibly have evolved from apes was thought impossible until about 150 years. Charles Darwin

  • Koko Is A Special Gorilla Essay

    527 Words  | 2 Pages

    Koko is a very special gorilla. She can really communicate with humans using her hands. She was the very first gorilla to learn and understand American Sign Language. Koko was born in a San Francisco zoo, but soon after she was born, she became very ill and had to be cared for in the zoo’s nursery. That’s when Penny Patterson Penny believed that if gorillas could learn sign language, they could communicate with humans. So, when Koko was just a year old, Penny began teaching her American Sign Language