Anne Applebaum Essays

  • The Torture Myth, by Anne Applebaum

    897 Words  | 2 Pages

    Torture Myth,” Anne Applebaum explores the controversial topic of torture practices, focused primarily in The United States. The article was published on January 12, 2005, inspired by the dramatic increase of tensions between terrorist organizations and The United States. Applebaum explores three equality titillating concepts within the article. Applebaum's questions the actual effectiveness of using torture as a means of obtaining valuable information in urgent times. Applebaum explores the ways

  • Gulag: A History By Anne Applebaum

    2340 Words  | 5 Pages

    Gulag: A History is an examination of Soviet history, specifically the Soviet Gulag system. Author Anne Applebaum discusses the time periods from the Bolshevik revolution to the collapse of the Soviet Union. She emphasizes the creation, implementation and expansion, and the disintegration of the Gulag system. This novel is separated into three distinct parts that examine the rise of the Gulag system, life in the Gulag, and the fall and legacy of the system. Perhaps most strikingly, the latter part

  • Summary Of Twilight Of Democracy By Anne Applebaum

    1138 Words  | 3 Pages

    Authoritarianism, Anne Applebaum delves into the history of authoritarianism and the conditions that promote it today. She explains how countries now have the conditions that promote authoritarianism, how clercs and new forms of media contribute to these conditions, and how conditions in the United States parallel those of some authoritarian states. Applebaum starts by discussing the conditions for authoritarianism that have been seen in a variety of countries across the world. Applebaum states that around

  • If The Japanese Can T Build A Safe Nuclear Reactor, Who Can By Anne Applebaum

    1026 Words  | 3 Pages

    Who Can?” was written by Pulitzer Prize winning author Anne Applebaum. The article is about the author’s opinion regarding the use of nuclear power as the new source of energy. This comes after the earthquake of 2011 hit Japan and disrupted the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor. The author believes that if the “technologically brilliant” Japanese cannot construct a completely safe reactor, then no one else can. Although I do believe that Applebaum makes some good points, I do think that her fault is

  • Anne Robert Jaques Turgot and His Relevance to the French Revolution

    2039 Words  | 5 Pages

    Introduction Anne Robert Jaques Turgot, baron l' Aulne, was born in Paris on May 10, 1727 to a noble French family of Normandy. Following in the footsteps of his ancestors, who had furnished the state with numerous public officials, Turgot would achieve public renown as Intendent of Limoges and later as Controller General of all France. Although Turgot ended his public career in unfortunate circumstances, being dismissed by Louis XVI for ineffectiveness, his political theories became a major influence

  • Use of Foreshadowing in Anne Radcliffe's The Italian

    921 Words  | 2 Pages

    Use of Foreshadowing in The Italian Anne Radcliffe incorporates many aspects of the Gothic into her novel, The Italian. In this book, one can find an exciting exploration of an exotic culture, a history of family secrets, subtle hints at supernatural forces at work, and Gothic architecture in both ruins and in the Inquisition prison. However, perhaps the most prominent feature of the Gothic used in this novel is the element of suspense. Radcliffe creates suspense in The Italian through a chain

  • The Friday Everything Changed by Anne Hart

    967 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Friday Everything Changed by Anne Hart The Friday Everything Changed” written by Anne Hart describes how a simple question challenges the unspoken rule, the tradition and in the process, bringing people closer together. We are introduced to Alma Niles, a girl who is well-liked among her peers. She was the one who triggered this exciting revolution. Joined by many other girls such as Minnie Halliday and Doris Pomeroy. These girls rose against tradition and decided to defy the rule: That

  • Anne Spencer

    1661 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Atypical Woman in a Typical World Do many people know who Anne Spencer is? Probably not. Anne Spencer was a Harlem Renaissance poet who actually lived in Lynchburg, Virginia. She immensely enjoyed working in her garden and spending time in Edankraal, a small cottage in her garden where she wrote most of her poetry. Though Anne was a hard worker, she definitely was not a typical woman of the early 20th century. Anne and her husband, Edward, did many things that were not typical during the early

  • Anne Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi

    1128 Words  | 3 Pages

    Anne Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi Coming of Age in Mississippi is the amazing story of Anne Moody's unbreakable spirit and character throughout the first twenty-three years of her life. Time and time again she speaks of unthinkable odds and conditions and how she manages to keep excelling in her aspirations, yet she ends the book with a tone of hesitation, fear, and skepticism. While she continually fought the tide of society and her elders, suddenly in the end she is speaking as if

  • Anne Conway’s Critique of Cartesian Dualism

    3234 Words  | 7 Pages

    Anne Conway’s Critique of Cartesian Dualism ABSTRACT: I describe and analyze Anne Conway’s critique of Cartesian dualism. After a brief biographical introduction to Conway, I sketch some of the influences on her philosophy. I then describe her non-Cartesian view of substance. According to Conway, there is only one substance in created reality. This substance contains both matter and spirit. A purely material or spiritual substance is, she argues, an impossibility. Next, I discuss several of

  • The Killjoy by Anne Fine

    1540 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Killjoy by Anne Fine Main characters: Alicia Anna Davie (19 years old) and professor Ian Laidlaw(49 years old) Summary: In a late afternoon seminar in the department of politics of a Scottish university, a student was talking on about an essay that he wrote, and Professor Laidlaw tried to cut him short twice with one of his most characteristic phrases: 'Quite so. Quite so.' On the second time, Laidlaw heard a tiny noise, and he realized that it was one of the other students. Alicia Anna

  • Biography of Anne Hutchinson

    3755 Words  | 8 Pages

    Anne Hutchinson has long been seen as a strong religious dissenter who paved the way for religious freedom in the strictly Puritan environment of New England. Another interpretation of the controversy surrounding Anne Hutchinson asserts that she was simply a loving wife and mother whose charisma and personal ideas were misconstrued to be a radical religious movement. Since this alleged religious movement was led by a woman, it was quickly dealt with by the Puritan fathers as a real threat. Whatever

  • Good and Evil in The Gathering by Anne Enright

    928 Words  | 2 Pages

    “At the beginning of the cycle, the darkness calls, drawing like to like until one comes who is empty: like a vessel who will gather the darkness into it, and enable infection to grow and extend like cancer. The vessel has come, the darkness now gathers” (page 84). Evil that gathers in Cheshunt comes in shades of colours: “fire-red” and “uniform-blue”. But each of these evils are defeated by “love-white”. The mental battle of evil and how evil can be abusive, aggressive and violent (fire-red) and

  • My Friend Anne and Bipolar Disorder

    637 Words  | 2 Pages

    My Friend Anne and Bipolar Disorder Anne, a registered nurse, is known for her exuberant personality. Talkative, always having an interesting story to reveal, she automatically owns your attention. Someone meeting her for the first time is likely to be fascinated by this flamboyant woman whose liveliness makes her the "life of the party." Only those she is close to know how excessive her moods are. Anne often goes off in too many different directions, making plans to take part in the local

  • Comparing the Forgotten God of Love in Robert Bridges’ Poem EPÙÓ and Anne Stevenson’s Poem Eros

    848 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing the Forgotten God of Love in Robert Bridges’ Poem EPÙÓ and Anne Stevenson’s Poem Eros It is often—in books, poems, paintings, and sculptures—that one hears of and sees the goddess of love. But when is it that one hears of the god? In Greek mythology, Eros is the god of love, and a god who is many times overlooked. In Robert Bridges’ “EPÙÓ” and Anne Stevenson’s “Eros”, the idea that Eros is overlooked is portrayed, but in two separate ways. Techniques such as diction, imagery, and tone

  • Nathaniel Hawthorne's References to Anne Hutchinson in His Work

    1002 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hawthorne's References to Anne Hutchinson in His Work Works Cited Missing From the beginning of his writing career, Nathaniel Hawthorne has made several references to Anne Hutchinson. In fact, he even wrote a sketch called ?Mrs. Hutchinson';. Because of Hawthorne?s apparent interest in Mrs. Hutchinson, it is entirely possible that he would use her as a template for one of the characters in his many books. Hawthorne?s character, Hester Prynne, is similar in many ways to Anne Hutchinson. One likeness

  • Anne Sexton: Poetry as Therapy

    1430 Words  | 3 Pages

    Anne Sexton: Poetry as Therapy Many great literary and artistic geniuses have been troubled with deep depression and mental illness. Anne Sexton is an example of a poet with such problems who used her personal despair to inspire her poetic works. Not all of Sexton's work is based solely on her mental health; but a good portion of her work is influenced by her constant bouts with depression. As she struggled to deal with her own marital infidelity and the problems associated with being a female

  • Act 1 scene 5 of The Diary of Anne Frank

    771 Words  | 2 Pages

    Act 1 scene 5 is the dramatic climax of act 1 in the drama The Diary of Anne Frank written by Goodrich and Hackett. The play is based on the Diary of Anne Frank. Act 1 scene 5 is the dramatic climax of act 1 in the drama “The Diary of Anne Frank” written by Goodrich and Hackett. The play is based on the Diary of Anne Frank kept during the two years they were in hiding from the Nazis, 1942-1944. The Franks were hiding in with another family, the Van Daans. Both of these families were hiding

  • anne bradstreet

    3092 Words  | 7 Pages

    Anne Bradstreet was not only the first English-speaking, North American poet, but she was also the first American, woman poet to have her works published. In 1650, without her knowledge, Bradstreet’s brother-in-law had many of her poems published in a collection called The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up In America. Although these poems did not reflect what would be her best work, they did emulate what would be the greatest influence on all of her writing. Anne Bradstreet’s Puritan life was the strongest

  • Comparing Mary Anne in Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong and Kurtz in Apocalypse Now

    2598 Words  | 6 Pages

    Comparing Mary Anne in Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong and Kurtz in Apocalypse Now In 1979, Francis Coppola released a film that he said he hoped "would give its audience a sense of the horror, the madness, the sensuousness, and the moral dilemma of the Vietnam war" (as quoted in Hagen 230). His film, Apocalypse Now, based on Joseph Conrad's 1902 novel Heart of Darkness, is the story of Captain Benjamin Willard's (Martin Sheen) journey to the interior of the jungle of Southeastern Asia for the