Silence Essays

  • Silence

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    Silence In Maxine Hong Kingston’s autobiographical piece “Silence”, she describes her inability to speak English when she was in grade school. Kindergarten was the birthplace of her silence because she was a Chinese girl attending an American school. She was very embarrassed of her inability, and when moments came up where she had to speak, “self-disgust” filled her day because of that squeaky voice she possessed (422). Kingston notes that she never talked to anyone at school for her first year

  • Silence in a Classroom

    4290 Words  | 9 Pages

    Silence in a Classroom How can silence be put to use in a feminist classroom? What are the positive ways to cultivate silence, ways which empower, rather than shut down? Audre Lorde has been widely quoted on the negative impacts of silence on women. She uses the term "silence" as an active verb; those with power have historically silenced others.But I am interested in the other implications for silence, namely, using silence as a tool:for discovery, creation, and real critical thinking.Our culture

  • Silence and the Notion of the Commons

    571 Words  | 2 Pages

    The title of this essay “Silence and the Notion of the Commons” gives the same idea of people as programmable and unprogrammable similar to the idea seen in the Matrix. Whereas programmable people, who are the commons, are the people inside the matrix they are also known as the sheep, the people that believe in everything they are told. The unprogrammable people, who are the silence, are the people outside of the matrix. Ursula Franklin uses a variety of techniques in order for the audience to fully

  • Charlestown's Code of Silence

    1570 Words  | 4 Pages

    Charlestown's Code of Silence Driving through Charlestown will take you just three minutes. The kids on street corners will stare at your car, while adults will yell out your name and wave. The friendly atmosphere can make you feel welcome if you are a part of the neighborhood. But it vanishes if you are an outsider or a local victim of a crime. “Charlestown is the nicest town you would ever want to live in. There are people there that would help you rebuild your house if it ever burnt down

  • Silence in Chaim Potok's The Chosen

    629 Words  | 2 Pages

    Silence in The Chosen In the book The Chosen the four main characters have different views on how children should be raised. Danny Saunders was said to be raised in silence. Danny was raised in silence in that communication was cut off between Danny and his father, except when they were studying Talmud. The reason Danny’s father did not speak to his son is because Rabbi Saunders wanted to have Danny think things through himself. Reb Saunders also wanted Danny to grow up in the same manner he himself

  • Shusaku Endo's Silence

    3284 Words  | 7 Pages

    Shusaku Endo's Silence The novel Silence has provoked much discussion on Loyola's campus this semester. As a predominantly Christian community, we find that the themes and dilemmas central to its plot land much closer to home for us than they would for many other schools: to non-Christians, the question of whether to deny (the Christian) God--for any reason--may not necessarily be such a personal one. Jesus' commandments to love God above all and one's neighbor as oneself do not find a parallel

  • Sounds of Silence analysis

    723 Words  | 2 Pages

    also probably his most famous, “The Sounds of Silence”. Like many other Paul Simon pieces, the contradictory title is not the only confusing aspect of the song, each line conveys complex yet meaningful words. The 60's was a decade dominated by great musicians: Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin, and Jimi Hendrix. Paul Simon is another man that tackled music and took it to the level of excellence, like the other 60's music idols. In his song “The Sounds of Silence”, he puts multiple concepts of importance into

  • Silence In Trial Of God By Elie Wiesel

    1423 Words  | 3 Pages

    Silence is not simply the absence of sound, not simply the absence of activity; rather, it is the sum of all things that can be heard, seen, or felt. Silence is not simply produced from discipline, not simply produced from anxiety; rather, it involves everything before and everything after - comprising a period of time rather than a single moment. On the other hand, what is silence’s effect? As complex as silence is itself, its effect is complex as well; generally, it serves as an amplifier to that

  • Paul Simon?s The Sound of Silence

    1141 Words  | 3 Pages

    Paul Simon’s The Sound of Silence A poem, like all other works of art, may appear as an inter-subjective truth, an intricate thread of images, a surreal yet realistic expression, and as a “creative fact” according to Virginia Woolf. In canon literature, a good poem is usually that which has fine structure, imagery, meaning and relevance; an art, which has sprung out not only of personal necessities but out of socio-cultural quagmires. Paul Simon’s The Sound of Silence transcends the mediocre. It

  • Sound Vs. Silence

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    The most apparent difference between Dracula and Nosferatu is that one was made while film was still without sound-at least dialogue-and the other was not. This difference, though not a revelation in itself, leads to a great number of much more in-depth contrasts that deserve discussion. In making a silent film, a director must rely on sight-and a certain amount of text-to portray to the audience his intended emotional, and intellectual reaction. As a result of this, the director is not able to go

  • Marianne Villanueva's Siko and Silence

    1306 Words  | 3 Pages

    The theme that will be explored in this essay will be the dominant culture, prevailing cultural attitudes, and the mental environment/state. The two short stories that will be discussed in this essay are Marianne Villanueva's Siko and Silence. In both short stories the leading characters show signs of breaking down because of physical, but also their mental stress. Marian Villanueva's Short stories Siko, and Silance can relate in many ways. For instance the main characters of both stories seem to

  • Silence In Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin

    2244 Words  | 5 Pages

    Silence In Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin "Out of silence," said the Unitarian theologian Carlyle, "comes thy strength."[1] I believe Carlyle is describing one of two kinds of silence. On one side, silence can be negative and harmful. This is the silence of oppression, a controlling force which leaves victims voiceless and the needy helpless. This is not what Carlyle means by his silence. He is invoking a different force. His silence has agency; it is the silence of resistance, of overcoming, and

  • Richard Ii - Silence Is The Plot

    580 Words  | 2 Pages

    of his uncle the Duke of Gloucester? Could the reader possibly pick up this assumption having known nothing about the play? These are all factors that one must find by reading in between the lines, noticing and understanding the silence that is exchanged. For the silence is just as important as the speech.Why is it assumed that King Richard II has anything to do with the murder? Let us review a scene from the play were Gaunt accuses Richard of being accountable for Gloucester's death. "Gaunt: O

  • The Power of Dillard's A Field of Silence

    1225 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dillard's A Field of Silence In her essay, Annie Dillard wrote: "There was only silence. It was the silence of matter caught in the act and embarrassed. There were no cells moving, and yet there were cells. I could see the shape of the land, how it lay holding silence"(396)1. The story in which she talked about the silence of the land was published in 1982, and today, almost two decades having gone by, A Field of Silence, is still able to relate to its readers. A Field of Silence is a story about

  • Silence Of The Lambs

    791 Words  | 2 Pages

    The movie Silence of the Lambs is categorized as a horror movie genre, which is full of symbolic references and representations. One of the most powerful and essential symbols of the movie are the lambs, which are also mentioned in the title. Lambs symbolize purity, innocence, and in the movie it is a journey of redemption and psychological freedom. The protagonist of the movie Clarice Starling is introduced to the audience as an innocent and naive character. She is interested in the Behavioral Science

  • Silence of the Lambs

    1479 Words  | 3 Pages

    " Silence of the Lambs " is a classic of the genre which is a thriller. A cult film which signed up in history of cinema. A masterpiece performed by Anthony Hopkins. The film is based on the book by Thomas Harris of the same name (Harris, 1988) . Although it was filmed in 1991, it remains one of the best psychological thrillers ever made. Jonathan Demme's film goes beyond the classical framework of the genre, playing with intellect viewer with associations . The movie surprises, though, even the

  • Silence Of The Lambs

    1612 Words  | 4 Pages

    The “Silence of the Lambs” directed by Jonathan Demme based on the story by Ted Tally, is a psychological thriller film that involve the main character(s) Clarice Starling, Dr. Hannibal Lecter, and Jamie Gumb. Most of story in the film take place around Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1989-90s. In the film, Jodie Foster played the female protagonist Clarice Starling, a F.B.I agent who worked in the behavioral science unit; which was assigned to confide and interrogate an incarcerated killer to receive

  • Deadly Silence in Susan Glaspell's Trifles

    1398 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Deadly Silence in Trifles While reading Susan Glaspell's play Trifles, the use of characters, descriptive language, and symbolism teaches the audience that one person's home and one person's way of living can also be an introduction to one person's private hell.  Throughout the play, discoveries are made to teach the audience that maybe things are not what they seem and that sometimes people must take a deeper look into what is around them. Mrs. Hale, Mrs. Peters, the county

  • Silence of the Lambs

    981 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the movie “Silence of the Lambs”, the secondary antagonist, Dr. Hannibal Lecter, was interrogated by FBI trainee Clarice Starling on the whereabouts of the main antagonist nicknamed Buffalo Bill. Starling asked Lecter for his help on solving the case because he is a brilliant psychiatrist and psychopath, currently incarcerated at the Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Buffalo Bill was kidnapping young women and skinning them in order to make a “woman suit” for him to wear, being

  • The Silence Of The Lambs

    657 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Silence of the Lambs is a horror thriller film, directed by Jonathan Demme in 1991, which features Dr Hannibal Lecter; a serial killer psychopath. The film’s trailer showcases the prominence of violence, and the fear it instills into its responders through the codes and conventions of the thriller genre. Although many conventions contribute to the trailers overall effect, it is the film techniques which seem to have the greatest influence, however without the contributions of the trailer’s