Modern Era Essays

  • Compare And Contrast Victorian Era And Modern Era

    1201 Words  | 3 Pages

    and the Modern Literature era are two very different times for the literature world. Each era had a big impact through literature, politics, and economics. The Victorian era was a time of change during the reign of Queen Victoria between 1837 to 1901. The Modern Literature era also known as the Twentieth Century and After increased popularity in literature due to the rise of industrialization and globalization from roughly about the 1910 's to the 1990 's. Even though, both of these eras made an

  • The Industrial Revolution: The Beginnings of the Modern Era

    1952 Words  | 4 Pages

    Many historical events can be linked to the beginning of the “modern era,” but no development continues to impact and shape the contemporary world like the Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution affected nations everywhere and ultimately created the world as we know it today. As Peter Stearns said, “Industrialization was the most fundamental force in world history in both the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries, and it continues to powerfully shape the twenty-first” (1). The Industrial

  • Leisurely Activities of the Victorian Era: The Significance to Modern Day

    1920 Words  | 4 Pages

    Entertainment in modern America is the key element associated with free time, whether it be surfing the web or watching a movie; pastimes that surpass class and gender. Up until the Victorian Era of England, leisure pursuits were only enjoyed by the wealthy. After the rise of the Industrial Revolution, however, the middle class grew and relaxing activities became numerous as free time was no longer only reserved for the rich. New forms of entertainment were enjoyed both by the working and elite as

  • The Early Modern Era

    699 Words  | 2 Pages

    Economic development of the early modern era was heavily influenced by the demand for international trade. However, the start of globalization also led to many socio and economic changes throughout the world. Individuals from all over the world were being brought together, and introduced to “international experiences” through globalization (Stearns, 462). Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson acknowledge that, “The indirect effects of Atlantic trade through institutional change, as well as its direct effect

  • The Development of Personal Computers

    2482 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Development of Personal Computers The history of the computer goes back hundreds of years. From the abacus through the modern era the evolution of computers has involved many innovative individuals. It was out of this desire to innovate many fascinating tabulating machines developed. The modern computer, therefore, evolved from an amalgamation of the genius of many individuals over a long period of history. Many people shaped the world by making the efforts to develop technology. An early

  • The Meaning of Heart of Darkness in the Post-Colonial Climate

    3729 Words  | 8 Pages

    publication in 1899, Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness has rarely been disputed on the basis of its literary merits; in fact, it was long seen as one of the great novels of the burgeoning modern era, a sort of bridge between the values and storytelling styles of the waning Victorian period and those of the modern era (Gatten), and regarded a high-ranking space amidst the great literature of the century, if not the millennia (Mitchell 20). Conrad’s literary masterpiece manages references to other great

  • Comparing the Role of Women in Taming of the Shrew and Twelfth Night

    1146 Words  | 3 Pages

    Shakespeare's most famous plays, and has weathered well into our modern era with adaptations into popular television series such as Moonlighting.  For all the praises it has garnered throughout the centuries, it is curious to note that many have considered it to be one of his most controversial in his treatment of women.   The "taming" of Katherine has been contended as being excessively cruel by many writers and critics of the modern era.  George Bernard Shaw himself pressed for its banning during the

  • King Leopolds Ghost

    725 Words  | 2 Pages

    Book Review of King Leopold's Ghost, by Adam Hochschild What some have considered to be the first international scandal of the modern era took place in the Congo from 1890 until 1910. King Leopold II of Belgium was at the head of this so-called scandal. Although Europe and the rest of the world seemed to have forgotten the victims of these crimes, there is a considerable amount of material to use when attempting to recreate the horror that took place in Leopold's Congo. This is exactly what

  • Baroque Art in Europe and North America

    1411 Words  | 3 Pages

    the Popes during this time. According to the History and Appreciation of Art, ”The term Baroque is from the Portuguese barroco, which means a ‘misshapen pearl’ and the Baroque was the final phase of the Renaissance or an era distinct from both the Renaissance and the modern era”(History and Appreciation of Art). Baroque is a word that is considered to be a style that emerged in Europe in the late sixteenth century and that last approximately into the eighteenth century. “Baroque, as a formal style

  • The Essence of the Otavalo

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Essence of the Otavalo In our modern era and by our modern standards, the Otavalo people of Ecuador shine with scintillating success in the global arena. A myriad of factors have contributed to Otavalo prosperity and wealth, factors both outside and within their control, but factors nonetheless dependent upon the fluidity and ever-changing construct of indigenous identity. Tracing the saga of this indigenous people’s rise to textile, musical and cultural capital, the opportunistic attitude

  • Freedom vs. Gun Control

    1667 Words  | 4 Pages

    country’s constitution since its conception in 1776. Guns we originally a commodity that almost every household had. Firearms were used for hunting and protection. As the modern era came upon us, there became a lesser need to own a firearm because of a controlled police force and a surplus in food. The surplus in food and modern law enforcement, along with rising firearm crimes prompted the government to start reviewing gun laws. Furthermore, over the past century the right to bear a firearm has been

  • Salmon Rushdie

    1079 Words  | 3 Pages

    the same: writers, no matter who they are, or what their standing in society is, will be criticized. Salmon Rushdie, although a modern writer, is faced with much criticism that earlier writers also faced. In June of 1947, in Bombay, India, a child was born. A child who would grow up to become one of the most outspoken and radical writers of this modern era. Born in a time of political unrest (DISCovering), and a newly found freedom for India from British rule, Rushdie would grow not to

  • A Critical Response to Lady Chatterley's Lover

    1884 Words  | 4 Pages

    A Critical Response to Lady Chatterley's Lover Lady Chatterley's Lover by D. H. Lawrence examines the human condition in the modern era.  Through the experiences of the novel's characters, Lady Chatterley's Lover advances techniques for coping with the modern world:  retreating from society and engaging in phallic sex.  However, the application of these techniques is problematic as phallic sex necessitates the abandonment of social convention, while retreating from society conflicts with phallic

  • Anticipatory (Pre-emptive) Self-defence: The Need for a Modern Approach

    2897 Words  | 6 Pages

    Anticipatory (Pre-emptive) Self-defence: The Need for a Modern Approach The use of military force is a valid customary international law norm and it is enshrined in the United Nations Charter. Nevertheless, the use of force is only authorised if it falls under one of two categories: self-defence (article 41 of the United Nations Charter), or Security Council authorisation. To justify a resort to pre-emptive war, a state must give reasonable proof that the action is necessary to the vital

  • California Love

    1113 Words  | 3 Pages

    in the world. All the more power to you my friend. If you are not already aware, my home state of California is undergoing civic pandemonium disguised in political rhetoric as a “recall.” We are witnessing one of the biggest travesties in the modern era and poor Gray Davis is clearly the victim. Given the circumstances when he took office, Davis has done a pretty damn good job with the mess he inherited from former Governor Pete Wilson. Davis is surrounded by malevolent bureaucrats on a day-to-day

  • Is Genetic Engineering Just Humans Playing God?

    556 Words  | 2 Pages

    research prescribe a new commandment, “Thou shalt not play God”? The answer is that human pride or hubris is dangerous. We have learned from experience that what the Bible says is true: “pride goes before destruction” (Proverbs 16:18). And in our modern era, pride among the natural scientists has taken the form of overestimating our knowledge, of arrogating for science a kind of omniscience that we do not in fact have. Or, to refine it a bit: “playing God” means we confuse the knowledge we do have

  • Jamaican Culture

    1275 Words  | 3 Pages

    is 'the property of the individual and it's a property of societies' (Alleyne 9). Jamaica has a very diverse culture with original natives coming into contact with the Spanish and English. Jamaican culture can be split into the primitive era and the modern era. The primitive characteristics are all the effects of the African slave trade. There are several different cultural backgrounds connected to the people of Jamaica. It is one of the truly multiculturalism countries in the world. The native

  • Homosexuality In The Romantic Era And The Modern Era

    1247 Words  | 3 Pages

    looked at in culture. Literature can be used almost as a guide to look into culture of the time. The three time periods that will be addressed are the Romantic Era, Victorian Era, and the Modern Era. George Gordon Byron, or otherwise known as Lord Byron, was born in 1788. He was one of the major contributors to the progression of the Romantic Era in England. He is very well-known for the sexual escapades put into his literature. His works were very emotionally riveting. Byron was born into an Aristocratic

  • Historical Insights in Devil in the White City

    1844 Words  | 4 Pages

    cultural, military and political force to be reckoned with. Because of the fair’s gigantic scale, it became a microcosm of the conflicts and the tenor of the times. In effect, the fair was the turning point between the old Victorian days and the modern era, technologically, culturally, politically, and in the hearts of the people of the US and the world. The United States of the Gilded Age was not the superpower is it today. At best, it was considered a powerful manufacturing and industrial country

  • Man's Struggle with His Identity in Steppenwolf

    2038 Words  | 5 Pages

    Man's Struggle with His Identity in Steppenwolf "The Christian resolve to find the world ugly and bad has made the world ugly and bad." These are the words of Friedrich Nietzsche, among the most influential philosophers of the modern era and one who has exerted an incontrovertible influence on many German authors, including Hermann Hesse. That Hesse should feel drawn to a figure so prominent in the German consciousness is not suprising, that he should do so in spite of the religious zeal of