Mother Earth Essays

  • Mother Earth

    831 Words  | 2 Pages

    of people dream of a happy family in a beautiful house, but we did not imagine about environment in those days. Industries and vehicles are releasing carbon dioxide, which damage our environment. While we are dreaming about our bright future, our earth has been raped by our activities since humans are exist. When people realize about environmental problem, they push their responsibility to solve and protect our planet to the large organizations. Instead of blaming governments and factories, people

  • Acting To Save Mother Earth

    506 Words  | 2 Pages

    Everday we hear more bad news about our planet. Reports tell us that wildlife and forests are disappearing at an alarming rate. Newscasts give the latest word on how quickly earth is losing its protective shirld and warming up. Newspapers lament the pollution of our air, water, and soil. What can we do in the face of such widespread gloom? In fact, we do not have to feel helpless. We can each learn practical ways to better our environment. For example, saving and recycling newspapers has a number

  • The Anarchist Journal, Mother Earth

    3026 Words  | 7 Pages

    "This version of Mother Earth was an anarchist periodical aimed at bringing up progressive issues, and discuss these. It was in circulation among people in the radical community in the United States from 1933 - 1934." -- Wikipedia Repeatedly in history, conceptions of nature have served as ideological justifications for political theory. The most obvious example

  • Gender of Nature: Mother Earth

    1857 Words  | 4 Pages

    Gender of Nature: Mother Earth “Forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the wind longs to play with your hair.” -The Prophet, by Kahlil Gibran There is no voice more comforting than Mama’s. In the womb we are suspended in safe warmth, hearing every noise that Mama makes. And we don’t just hear her voice. We feel its vibrations, its muffled hum, through our ears and our entire forming bodies. It’s no wonder that that is often the only voice that can comfort us in the distress

  • Mother Earth and the Impacts of Human Activities

    950 Words  | 2 Pages

    people nowadays realize that there are some human activities that help the planet to be more sophisticated, while more other activities bring damage to Earth. In fact, there are not many activities made by humans that benefit the planet because many people tend to secure their own food and welfare even though such activities could harm the Earth. After the industrial revolution, the world had become much faster than it used to be in the middle ages. It is important, though, to know that industry

  • All Quiet On The Western Front Mother Earth Essay

    963 Words  | 2 Pages

    When you pay attention to Mother Earth, you will notice motherly nature of her. Mother Earth’s protective features serve as a symbol of comfort to those who suffer. Many people experience the destructive nature of war, but Mother Earth is always present to provide shelter to them. In the 1920 war novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, Paul enters World War I leaving his innocence behind. From the front to the tomb, Paul reminisces about Mother Earth’s comfort, protection

  • The Importance Of Mother Earth

    723 Words  | 2 Pages

    we conveniently forget and neglect Mother Earth. And now, Mother Nature suffers.

  • Argumentative Essay On Mother Earth

    913 Words  | 2 Pages

    Many people say that the earth is a living planet. Due to the fact that it is constantly changing, this statement holds true. The earth is always moving, both inside and out. Whether one thinks it is good that humans live on a planet that moves is good or not, everyone is affected. This is because when Mother Earth moves, people all across the world will feel it. There are many dangers that the Mother Earth and its geology present to human life. These things lay resting, waiting to be awakened. Things

  • Marijuana as a Gift from Mother Earth

    1010 Words  | 3 Pages

    Marijuana as a Gift from Mother Earth When and where will the senseless persecutions of America’s Marijuana users end? These Marijuana smokers are typically middle class males, between the ages of 17 and 39, and one in three have no prior felony charges on their records. (HRW World Report) However, each year, hundreds of thousands of them are arrested and thrown into jail, alongside murderers, rapists, and child molesters. The “Marihuana Tax Act” was passed in August 1937, and took effect on

  • Summary Of Mother Earth: Advertising And The Myth Of The Natural

    766 Words  | 2 Pages

    Anderson. 2000. “Selling “Mother Earth”: Advertising and the Myth of the Natural” Pp. 292-304 The main point of this section is to exemplify businesses using “Mother Nature’s” ethos in order to sell more products. Anderson states that references to the environment and Mother Nature in advertisements from these companies play at gaining support from those who support the environmental movement. He ends making the point that instead of being “green” and good for the environment, these typically cheap

  • Millay's View on Death as Depicted in Renascence

    720 Words  | 2 Pages

    As the earth gave way and Millay sank softly and perfectly six feet under the ground, the reader celebrates as if a runner was finally crossing the finish line. Comparing death to a successful situation is an unusual way of looking at the end of life. Yet, this view of death is a positive outlook and is quite wonderful as opposed to other literary views of death such as "death: the gatekeeper of hell who has conquered the Earth." Millay makes the reader believe that the sinking earth is more

  • Criticism of Organized Religion in Little Boy Lost and Little Boy Found

    794 Words  | 2 Pages

    as human, or Jesus, or in the image of his father, the priest. God leads the child back to his mother, the mother earth, depicted at the right of the stanza, perhaps with wings. The mother earth had been seeking her natural child who had been led astray by the misconceptions of man-made religion. The illustration at the top of the plate shows the little boy and a female figure, presumably the mother earth, both with halos, walking through the forest hand in hand. This hints at the divination of man

  • Gaia: Argument over a single word

    2075 Words  | 5 Pages

    Gaia: Argument over a single word THESIS: Life on earth has been considered by some as a purposeful interaction tending toward ecological stability. However, when the scientific community led by James Lovelock tried to match this concept with science, it was (and continues to be) a dilemma. Introduction Whenever one hears the word Gaia, he or she will also hear life, goddess, purpose, ecology, and undoubtedly controversy. Not many topics have provoked more controversy among the scientific

  • The Story of Poseidon

    1974 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Story of Poseidon (Roman - Neptune) Poseidon was the ruler of the sea, and a powerful god in Greek mythology who was often called the "Earth-shaker." His father was the Titan Cronus, who at the time was ruler of the Universe, and his mother was Rhea. Cronus was a paranoid ruler, because it had been prophesized that one of his own sons would dethrone him, just as Cronus had done to his father, Uranus. Thus, Cronus would swallow the children whom Rhea bore him. He figured that it was the

  • Zeus Obstacle

    880 Words  | 2 Pages

    and goddesses, even if you combined all of their attributes together, they still were no match for Zeus and his dominance, It is no surprise that a god this great should need no woman to bear offspring at the level of the gods. Zeus was told by mother earth and father sky that him, and his wife metis would bare children, which would jeopardize his position as ruler of everything. With this foretold conclusion, Zeus decided to swallow Metis who was about to give birth, and in so gaining her intelligence

  • Analyzing Emma

    836 Words  | 2 Pages

    previous speeches gave her experience, gained her popularity, and helped mentally prepare Emma for “Address to the Jury.” Goldman’s popularity was also due to her editing job, and some even went as far as to state, “The period that Goldman edited Mother Earth, from 1906 to 1908, coincided with the height of her popularity” (Selfa). Emma gave “Address to the Jury” in hopes of swaying the jury’s decision towards one of innocence and not the opposition. Although Goldman was convicted and later exiled from

  • Winter and Sunny Weather Systems

    1515 Words  | 4 Pages

    Weather is a fascinating subject. It is such an intricate and amazing process, which our mother earth goes through on a daily basis. All over the world, weather seems to be a very important aspect for our everyday lives. For instance; sunny weather can bring on a very harmonious and beautiful atmosphere, while cloudy and rainy weather can bring about tragedy. In 1998; the earth experienced an El Nino which brought on fierce weather, flooding, and hurricanes. Weather systems are very broad and detailed

  • How the Role of Women in Haudenosaunee Culture Inspired the Early Feminist Movement

    872 Words  | 2 Pages

    was tremendous. Haudenosaunee women held prominent, decision-making positions in their matriarchal political system. They had the power to choose their clan’s chief, and their authority as clan mothers was respected by Haudenosaunee law. Spiritually, these women were viewed as being connected to Mother Earth and were responsible for leading various religious ceremonies, alongside of men. Haudenosaunee women also shared agricultural work with men, dealing with the work load on a communal basis. Not

  • Expansion vs. Preservation

    715 Words  | 2 Pages

    life . The Unabomber’s ideal society would be that of life in the nineteenth century. It would be characteristic of life without TV’s to brainwash us with, no scientists and engineers to try to simplify our lives, and no cars to pollute our mother earth with. It all comes together in what we see in the “Garden of the Gods,” hunting for food to feed your loving family, living in a shack made by ones own god given hands, and entertaining each other by storytelling in front of a campfire. Depicted

  • An Analysis of Anne Bradstreet: In Memory of My Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet

    612 Words  | 2 Pages

    Puritan patriarchy while remaining within a loose form of elegiac style is a cunning method of subversion. The value-laden categorical relationship made between the initial section of the elegy concerned with connections of  femininity to nature, mother earth, and the body is juxtaposed with the secondary section of the elegy  referring to maleness. Maleness is related to death, the fall of nature, and time providing t...