Monica Lewinsky Essays

  • Who is Monica Lewinsky?

    1311 Words  | 3 Pages

    Is Monica simply a hapless White House intern caught in the middle of a media created scandal started by Linda Tripp. Monica Lewinsky is a 24 year old graduate of Lewis and Clark University in Oregon. Daughter of a Democratic contributor she was easily able to get an intern position in the White Horse. Some of Lewinsky's friends have said that she only took the intern position to sleep with important people. If the recent news reports are true Monica Lewinsky got what she was looking for. Linda

  • Monica Lewinsky: Women in Society, Body Image and Feminism

    5508 Words  | 12 Pages

    Monica Lewinsky: Women in Society, Body Image and Feminism In the current post-impeachment proceedings the question becomes whom it has affected most and what it will mean to them and their agenda. Obvious groups that will suffer most from the impeachment that are subject to the after effects are the Republican Party and American politics in general. As far as individuals are concerned, Monica Lewinsky has a good deal of post-scandal baggage. But what about those who will experience the effects

  • Clinton I Misled People Speech Analysis

    794 Words  | 2 Pages

    relationship with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky. In a four-minute apologia speech, Clinton formally apologized for his personal misconduct, and at the same time, asked for support from the people to stop the lawsuit and accusations that came from the scandal. Clinton carefully and skillfully made use of logos and pathos throughout the speech to convince the audience that there were bigger issues at hand than his personal dealings with Monica Lewinsky. Therefore, he believed that this matter

  • Irony In President Bill Clinton's Living History

    1296 Words  | 3 Pages

    the second. He stood there saying over and over again, ‘I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I was trying to protect you and Chelsea.’,” Mrs. Clinton writes in her memoir, Living History. Not only did the affair between former President Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky have an effect on his wife, former First Lady Hillary Clinton, but also the American people. This scandal also brought up questions of morality and whether or not Clinton was fit to finish his presidency. From 1995 to 1998, President Bill Clinton

  • Rhetorical Analysis Of Monica Lewinsky's The Price Of Shame

    1211 Words  | 3 Pages

    Sometimes there’s nothing more powerful than a personal story of tragedy and perseverance. With poise, humor and emotional pleas, Monica Lewinsky is able to captivate her audience through her narrative – one known to many in a public sense but far more vulnerable and moving when told through her private moments. Lewinsky’s speech, titled “The Price of Shame,” shares a broad call to action against cyberbullying and online harassment, highlighted by her own battles and a devastating tale of a young

  • Rhetorical Analysis Of I Have Sinned

    1031 Words  | 3 Pages

    president Bill Clinton delivered the infamously self-proclaimed speech entitled “I Have Sinned.” In an attempt to convert the public suspicion and hatred back to trust and loyalty, Clinton finally confessed to the inappropriate relations with Monica Lewinsky. By deeply expressing his sorrow through his foreboding and apologetic tone, Clinton constructs various examples of ethos, uses stiff body language and blank facial expressions, direct eye contact, and crafts the majority of his speech on short

  • President Bill Clinton Was Responsible For 9/11

    670 Words  | 2 Pages

    reported saying this in the year 1995, after he found out that Bin Laden was responsible for the acts. However, Clinton did take action in 1998, in which he bombed a Sudanese aspirin factory, which he claimed held chemical weapons, on the eve of the Monica Lewinsky trial. This killed hundreds of innocent workers in the factory. “If any one act inspired hatred towards America, that was it.” (A Synopsis: Clinton Set the Stage for 911) With each terrorist attack, Clinton went before the American people on

  • Corruption Of The Media

    765 Words  | 2 Pages

    Today, more than ever the media plays a pivotal role in the ways in which Americans think and what they believe. Media can influence the masses in a number of different ways. Without the media it would be virtually impossible for the typical American citizens to be informed of today’s events. But information is not always the media’s goal. In fact, it rarely is. Many Americans feel that they can form opinions on there own. But, unknowingly opinion’s are formed simply by what paper gets delivered

  • Sexual Harassment in the Workplace

    2314 Words  | 5 Pages

    Sexual harassment is an important issue in every business; if left unattended it could cost companies millions in damages. In 1980 the Supreme Court ruled that sexual harassment was a violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. From 1978 to 1980, sexual harassment cases brought against companies cost them $189 million. This number rose to $267 million from 1985-1987. Damages are just measured only by numbers. Sexual harassment can cause harm to a company's image, reputation, customers, as well as

  • Folklore and British Cultural Studies

    3099 Words  | 7 Pages

    Folklore and British Cultural Studies As an American folklorist studying postcolonial literature in a cultural studies centre in England, I felt a bit colonized myself when, upon browsing in Fred Inglis' Cultural Studies, I read about "the large vacant spaces now being staked out by cultural studies" (181). It reminded me of the nineteenth-century maps of Africa, made by Europeans, that depicted the continent as an unfilled void, even though it teemed with people, cultures and boundaries. So

  • Rhetorical Analysis Of I Have Sinned By President Bill Clinton

    876 Words  | 2 Pages

    President Bill Clinton, gave an apologetic speech “I have Sinned” on September 11, 1998 in front of over a hundred priests and ministers in the annual White House prayer breakfast. The whole nation knows what happened with President Clinton and his intern, many would defend him even say that media and other sources are invading his privacy but something like that coming from our president? I don’t think it’s something a big icon as himself can just let slide by. Which leads to this speech of his

  • Rhetorical Analysis Of Speech By Tiger Woods

    1105 Words  | 3 Pages

    In December 2009, the world was shocked by Tiger Woods. News was released to the public of a scandal regarding Woods cheating on his wife with numerous women. As a well-known and respectful individual in the golfing world, it was important for him to take responsibility for his actions. More importantly, in order for Woods to keep his sponsors and save his reputation, he needed to apologize to his sponsors and family. His apologetic speech exemplifies his remorseful attitude through diction, or word

  • Anthony Clinton's Letter Of Confession

    609 Words  | 2 Pages

    Thesis: Both texts convey a similar tone of remorse, however in ‘Confession’ this tone is a result of a survival response, whereas ‘Clinton’s letter of apology’ was a sincere apology for the actions of the government. Paragraph #1: “Confession” The narrator confesses and apologizes to the things he was accused of, not because he did it, but because he was afraid he would be killed if he didn’t. The narrator was tortured for information and his only choice was to confess so that he would not be

  • The Secularization of Popular Culture and Young Girls

    911 Words  | 2 Pages

    wearing revealing clothing. Many girls look up to these women and want to emulate them because they are their favorite artist. For instance, Beyoncé’s album “Beyoncé” features the song “Partition”, where Beyoncé says “He Monica Lewinski all on my gown”. The sexual reference to Monica Lewinski is hypersexu... ... middle of paper ... ... themselves so that as they grow older they can make better decisions. Works Cited Morgan, Mandy. "Toddlers and Tears: The Secularization of Young Girls

  • Case Review: Addressing The Lewinsky Scandal?

    1096 Words  | 3 Pages

    Addressing the Lewinsky Scandal The Lewinsky Scandal rocked the lives of Bill and Hillary Clinton while in office. Monica Lewinsky was just an unpaid intern that started a sexual relationship with Mr. Clinton who at the time was the President of the United States. This event was the most important thing to happen in 1998. It showed how even as president you can fall to temptation like any other human being. Challenging the trust of the American people for the president raising questions like “Can

  • media

    1125 Words  | 3 Pages

    Malik Pokks                                Speech 245, 711 May 8, 2005                                         Professor Greener PAPER 2 Media Effects on governing the mass media has played a major role in American politics since the formation of our country. So much so that it has been called by many, "the fourth branch of government." Originally, media power was only vested in the papers, but today radio and television are the more prominent forms of news. Since the administration of Franklin Delano

  • The Voice Of Generation X

    594 Words  | 2 Pages

    longer trustworthy. 'I am not saying that every politician is corrupt,'; states Mazzaferro, it's just hard to believe what he or she says is true when our generation has witnessed such harsh realities involving political figures. For example: the Monica Lewinsky ordeal that involved President Clinton. How are we supposed to trust a President who lies and commits forms of adultery to run our country effectively? Still many X'ers are too consumed in themselves to even worry about who is elected to our heads

  • We Wear The Mask: Our Different Masks

    1079 Words  | 3 Pages

    Clinton. Bill Clinton wore a mask that seem to correspond with monogamy, but when the mask was removed, the public saw otherwise. This was revealed in an address to the nation in which Clinton confessed that “Indeed I did have a relationship with Ms. Lewinsky that was not appropriate. In fact, it was wrong. It constituted a critical lapse in judgment and a personal failure on my part for which I am solely and completely responsible” (www.cnn.com). Clinton’s mask was removed when the public saw that Clinton

  • LINDA TRIPP: "I’m you. . . I’m just like you." Really Linda? I don’t think so!

    3747 Words  | 8 Pages

    audience to relate her to the "girl next door" or in her case just your, "everyday single mom trying to do the right thing." The taping of the phone conversations amongst her Lewinsky can easily be explained by Tripp. "I [even] thought of it as my patriotic duty." (NBC, Today Show, "Linda Tripp Speaks About her Motives in Recording Monica Lewinsky’s Phone Conversations" February 12, 1999)

  • George W. Bush as the Anti-Christ

    1629 Words  | 4 Pages

    presidents--express emotions and will, and they express them in terms of a man (Americans seem to feel strongly that the office should be held by a man). The presidency is symbol in that it expresses us: we impeached Clinton because we found his conduct with Monica Lewinsky to be reprehensible. There was not the political will to convict him, however, because we knew that essentially he stood for us, and who among us has not had love affairs of which we are embarrassed? In essence, we brought Clinton before a