Jules Essays

  • Jules Verne

    1065 Words  | 3 Pages

    Jules Verne Going to moon, a balloon trip around the world, adventure under the sea, all this in the late 1800s? All this was possible in the writings of Jules Verne. Jules Verne was born in Nantes on February 8, 1828. He had a vivid imagination and as a child, he often sailed down the Loire River with his brother. He always wondered about air and undersea travel. In the 1800s, none of these advances were discovered. His father was a lawyer and wanted young Verne to be one, too. Jules was sent

  • Joan Of Arc By Jules Basten Lepage

    626 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Joan of Arc,” was painted by the French realist artist Jules Bastien-Lepage in 1879. “After the province of Lorraine was lost to Germany following the Franco-Prussian War in 1821, The Frenchmen saw in Joan of Arc a new and powerful symbol. In 1875, Bastien-Lepage, a native of Lorraine began to make studies for a picture of her. In the present painting, exhibited in the Salon of 1880, Joan is shown receiving her revelation in her parents garden. Behind her are Saints Michael, Margaret, and Catherine

  • Biography of Jules Verne

    1081 Words  | 3 Pages

    Introduction Jules Gabriel Verne (1828 - 1905) was a novelist, poet and playwright, renowned as one of the pioneers of science fiction as a genre. As a person who was born, brought up and lived most of his life in France, it should come to no one’s surprise that his primary language was French. As a science fiction fan myself, I thought that one of the first writers to take this genre seriously would be the perfect subject for this essay. Undeniably Jules Verne has had a huge impact on literature

  • Jules Verne's A Journey to the Center of the Earth

    663 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the novel, A Journey to the Center of the Earth, author Jules Verne tells the fictitious story of three men and their adventures as they descend into the depths of the earth. The leading character in this expedition is a fifty-year-old German professor named Hardwigg. He is an uncle to the narrator, Henry (Harry), a simple Englishman. The other man is Hans, a serene Icelandic guide. Professor Hardwigg finds a piece of parchment that written in Runic in a book. Harry finds out before his uncle

  • Jules Verne: A Brief Biography

    1371 Words  | 3 Pages

    Throughout time, genres have had their era of popularity. One genre that has stayed strong is science fiction. Jules Verne has entertained multiple generations with his fantasizing vision of the future and technology. Jules Verne should be studied because modern influence and creation of science fiction. Jules Gabriel Verne was born on February 8, 1828 in Nantes, France. Born to lawyer, Pierre Verne, and housewife, Sophie Allotte; Verne was the eldest of the two boys and three girls (Press 7). At

  • A Brief Biography Of Jules Cheret

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jules Cheret was born on May 31, 1836 in Paris into a family of artisans. Cheret was forced to end his education early, at the age of 13, due to the fact that his family was not able to keep up with the expenses. Because his schooling ended so early, Cheret was enrolled into a three-year apprenticeship under a lithographer. Lithography is the process of printing form a flat, smooth surface, such as limestone or a metal plate, which has been prepared in a way that only ink will stick to the surface

  • Truffaut’s Jules et Jim — An Expressionistic Analysis

    3581 Words  | 8 Pages

    Truffaut’s Jules et Jim — An Expressionistic Analysis As far as Bazin’s essay “The Evolution of the Language of Cinema” might be used as a formal test of categorisation—notwithstanding the problematics inherent in his oversimplification of the realist and expressionist methodology—initial viewing of Jules et Jim seems to present a dichotomous structure. Certainly, a number of Bazin’s criteria for realism are met: camera movement; long-takes; composition-in-depth. and deep focus; a certain ambiguity

  • Journey to the Center of the Earth - Jules Verne

    811 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Science, my lad, has been built upon many errors; but they are errors which it was good to fall into, for they led to the truth.” Journey to the center of the earth by Jules Verne is a science fiction that tell the story of a man Axel discovering a deciphered text, his strong head uncle Professor Lidenbrock, a man intelligent in science and Hans Bjelke, a Danish speaking Icelander and well hunter.Once Axel reveals the code to his uncle the Professor, he departs for Iceland immediately. He takes

  • A Brief Biography Of Jules Verne

    814 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jules Verne was a family man who loved his wife and children, but also had a true passion for writing. He spent much of his time with his beloved spouse of thirty years and his three children that he loved deeply. When he wrote he would be inspired by the travels that he took with his family. Verne was born February 8, 1828 and he died on March 24, 1905. As he grew up he learned that he had diabetes that later killed him. In Verne’s seventy-seven year life he dabbled in the stock market to try

  • Jules Verne’s Around the World in 80 Days

    974 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jules Verne’s Around the World in 80 Days Jules Verne’s 19th century novel about the travels of the “eclectic” Phileas Fogg at first seems a quick read, an adventurous tale written in a light-hearted vernacular. Yet a close reading of passages, such as the paragraph at the beginning of chapter two, reveals more complex, latent themes amidst the pages of such “mass” fiction. An analysis of one passage in particular1 [1] suggests that this classic novel has little to do with travel, adventure

  • The Influences of Politics, Science, and Discovery on Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea

    1749 Words  | 4 Pages

    Jules Verne’s science fiction novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea delivers profound insight into historical events which influenced the work. Through Verne’s descriptive style, one is able to ascertain various political and foreign policy aspects that involved France during the time the novel was written. In addition, worldly issues and struggles can be accurately assessed. Due to Verne’s “detail and determination to explore questions of liberty and authority,” it is evident that he largely

  • My Best Friend’s Wedding

    620 Words  | 2 Pages

    Julianne’s—or how Michael considers her, Jules—strategy is simple: put on a happy face, pretend to go along and destroy from within. Kimmy (Cameron Diaz) knows she’s got a remarkable opponent, and her strategy is to befriend Jules. “You win. “He’s got you on a pedestal and me in his arms.” She asks Jules to be her maid of honor since all her female relatives are supposed sluts and mostly because she wants to keep her eye on Jules so she doesn’t get her grips on her man. Jules stoops to evil means worthy of

  • Women, Sport & Film

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    athletes to fulfill all aspects of the ideal woman. This is evident in films such as Bend it Like Beckham. Both main characters, Jess and Jules, face pressure from their families, teammates and society in general to be the best at both playing soccer and being female. The pressure to excel in sport comes from their motivations and their teammates. For Jess and Jules, it is especially important, since they are representative of all women footballers. They are on one of the few teams for women in the

  • Pulp Fiction

    1383 Words  | 3 Pages

    in question involves two lovebirds (Amanda Plummer and Tim Roth) holding up unsuspecting restaurants, instead of their usual liquor stores. As their plan falls into action, time alters and we find ourselves riding down the street with Vincent and Jules John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson), two hit men on their way to work. As the men travel to work they discuss such worldly things as gourmet food, like the "Royale with cheese", and the sexual innuendoes involved when one gives a foot massage. These

  • Loons

    838 Words  | 2 Pages

    months in hospital Piquette's voice was hoarse and she was limping when she was walking. She wore grimy cotton dresses that were always miles too long. Jules Tonnerre built a small square cabin which was made of poplar poles and chinked with mud. He Built it about fifty years before, when he came back from Batoche with a bullet in his thigh. Jules had only intended to stay the winter in the Wachakwa Valley. The cottage on Diamond Lake had a sign on the roadway bore in austere letters name MacLead

  • A Journey To The Center Of The Earth

    907 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Voyage au centre de la terre" and is written by the famous writer Jules Verne. The book was published in 1864 in French, and was later translated into English, which is the language of the book I read. As I have not read the original version of this book, I cannot compare the languages of the two books. Something I can tell you, is that I could not notice that it was a translation, as the language used in the book was extremely good. Jules Verne was a French author who was born in 1828 and died in 1905

  • Jules and Jess

    572 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the movie Bend it like Beckham, we are presented with cultural hybridity in it's functional role in society and in what way it is actually formed. Painting two different pictures of an Indian and a British family, the startpoint of the movie is showing how different these two cultures actually are. The theme of accepted social behaviour is seen throughout the movie in various situations. Jess, an Indian girl whose parents came to Britain in search for a better life, struggles to find mutual ground

  • Analysis Of Jules Ostin

    1673 Words  | 4 Pages

    tries to pass it off as a strong leading female character. Jules Ostin, as previously stated is a hard working and independent business women. But as the film goes on, we see Jules take on a new role. We start to see Jules reliance on a male figures in her life, to keep her safe or to help her battle her own insecurities and doubts. At times it is hard to believe that Jules even made it to where she is; because in the film, all we see of Jules is a woman who is late to meetings and feels like she is

  • 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

    993 Words  | 2 Pages

    Thousand Leagues Under the Sea Some time ago, I decided to read Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, by Jules Verne. I figured that because it was so well known it must be an extremely interesting book. In addition, it was science fiction, the one area that I was always interested. My assumption was only partially correct, for I only was to a degree interested in the piece of writing. When Jules Verne was writing this book, he must have been reading some incredibly dull science book the day before

  • Jules And Jim Essay

    528 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hailed as one of the finest films ever made, Jules and Jim adapted from the book with the same name, when projected today, can still generate an emotional effect that just as remarkable as the results provoked in the young viewers of 1960s. As a represent film of the French New Wave, Jules and Jim feels like a breath of fresh air injected into the French cinema in that era. Directed by the New Wave’s leading figure Francois Truffaut, Jules and Jim, against the conventional production known as the