Anthea Turner Essays

  • I Stand Here Ironing: The 1950s Woman

    889 Words  | 2 Pages

    What do Betty from "Pleasantville," June from "Leave it to Beaver," and Donna Reed from "The Donna Reed Show" all have in common? They all represent the image of the perfect housewife in the 1950s. They represent women who gladly cooked, cleaned, dressed in pearls and wore high heals while waiting for their all-knowing husbands to come home. They represent women who can only find fulfillment in male domination and nurturing maternal love. Tillie Olsen, as a single mother with four children (204)

  • The Fires of Jubilee : Nat Turner's Fierce Rebellion

    840 Words  | 2 Pages

    Fires of Jubilee, is a well written recollection of the slave insurrection led by Nathaniel Turner. It portrays the events leading towards the civil war and the shattered myth of contented slaves in the South. The book is divided into four parts: This Infernal Spirit of Slavery, Go Sound the Jubilee, Judgment Day, and Legacy. The story takes place in Southampton County, Virginia where little Nat Turner is introduced. Nat led a normal childhood for the most part, supervised by his beloved grandmother

  • Role of Colour in Impressionism

    1686 Words  | 4 Pages

    expression for emotion, whereas line is the expression of rationality. Their style was painterly rather than linear; colour offered a freedom that line denied. Among the Romanticists who had a strong influence on Impressionism were Joseph Mallord William Turner and Eugéne Delacroix. In Turner’s works, colour took precedence over the realistic portrayal of form; Delacroix led the way for the Impressionists to use unmixed hues. The transition between Romanticism and Impressionism was provided by a small group

  • Analysis of The Abstract Wild by Jack Turner

    3431 Words  | 7 Pages

    Abstract Wild by Jack Turner Jack Turner's The Abstract Wild is a complex argument that discusses many issues and ultimately defends the wild in all of its forms. He opens the novel with a narrative story about a time when he explored the Maze in Utah and stumbled across ancient pictographs. Turner tells this story to describe what a truly wild and unmediated experience is. The ideas of the aura, magic, and wildness that places contain is introduced in this story. Turner had a spiritual connection

  • Similarities between the music of Debussy and the painting of Turner

    757 Words  | 2 Pages

    Similarities between the music of Debussy and the painting of Turner The music of Claude Debussy and the painting of J.M.W. Turner are, in most people's minds, two entirely different things. However, each man was considered the founder of impressionism in his own artform. Impressionism was a movement in late 19th century European art, which was a reflection of the realizations in physics about the properties of light. Turner's atmospheric paintings and Debussy's tone poems, although different forms

  • Nat Turner's Confessions and Frederick Douglass' The Heroic Slave

    2477 Words  | 5 Pages

    Nat Turner's Confessions and Frederick Douglass' The Heroic Slave The names of Nat Turner and Frederick Douglass are remembered because of the fame that they earned as black Americans during pre-Civil War slave period. However, their names color the pages of history books for widely different reasons: Nat Turner led one of the greatest slave revolts in almost 150 years of slavery, while Frederick Douglass obtained his freedom and education, going on to become a renowned speaker, author, and public

  • Slaves

    806 Words  | 2 Pages

    they had to do. They protested in several different ways whether it be attacking the slave owner, wounding themselves, or simply “ accidentally” breaking tool needed to perform their everyday duties. (Doc 115) A slave named Nat Turner led one of the most famous revolts. Turner, a slave preacher, led an armed group of African-Americans on a killing spree from house to house in Southampton County, Virginia. They killed sixty white men, women, and children before being overcome by federal troops. Turner’s

  • JD Rockefeller and Ted Turner

    2203 Words  | 5 Pages

    Comparative Essay on JD Rockefeller and Ted Turner “Yet among men there are some endowed with vision, an insight more penetrating and more sustained. To their liberated spirit the world unfolds a farther prospect.” These words were spoken by Carleton Noyes to his class as they were analyzing The Harvard Classics (collection of poetry). This phrase means to reflect the driving genius behind such philanthropist entrepreneurs as John D. Rockefeller and Ted Turner. Both of these ‘supermen’ have displayed

  • american character - then and now

    2079 Words  | 5 Pages

    Crevecour, Turner believed that American character was not simply a product of English character transported to America, but rather another idea altogether (Faragher 63). He expressed this opinion the best when he said, “In the crucible of the frontier the immigrants were Americanized, liberated, and fused into a mixed race, English in neither nationality nor characteristics” (Faragher 64). How exactly did American character form and what defines it? Turner answered this question with the Turner thesis

  • Progressive Historians

    6483 Words  | 13 Pages

    of "personal truth," we must proceed... Perhaps the most famous of all progressive historians is Frederick Jackson Turner. His most famous argument is not devoted strictly to the American Revolution, but instead to the effects of the American frontier. In a sentence, his argument is that the frontier was the chief determinant in American history. This is not to say that Turner did not write about the war; he did, in his seminal work, "The Frontier in American History," there are discussions of

  • James Norrington Fanfiction

    1256 Words  | 3 Pages

    couldn't be an admiral when he knew in his heart it was all a lie. Before she left he gave her a kiss. It was the first and last he'd shared with her. James shot the rope leading to Elizabeth's ship was when he was stabbed by a deranged Bootstrap Bill Turner. As he felt the life leaving his body Davy Jones offered a deal to serve him, or die then. He replied to the sea-devil by stabbing him with the cutlass, a sign of his honor. Rejecting evil he entered into rest with his soul clean.

  • The Fires of Jubilee: How Reliable is It?

    1472 Words  | 3 Pages

    Jubilee, by Stephen B. Oates, tells an account of Nat Turner’s rebellion. Beginning with Nat’s early life and finally ending with the legacy his execution left the world, Oates paints a historical rending of those fateful days. The Confessions of Nat Turner by Thomas R. Gray and approved by Nat himself is among Oates’ chief sources. Oates is known as a reputable historian through his other works, and has strong credentials however, in the case of The Fires of Jubilee there are some limitations. It

  • The Work Of Grayson Perry

    1684 Words  | 4 Pages

    Influences and Motivation in the Work of Grayson Perry Grayson Perry was born in Chelmsford in 1960. He is a Turner Prize-winning artist who specialises mainly in ceramic vases and tapestries which are highly decorated with bright colours and markings. (Perry, 2016) Perry’s early family life was difficult, and he was just 7 years old when his parents split up. Perry has always described his father’s departure as having the single biggest impact on him throughout his life. (Jones, 2006) Perry

  • What Factors Influenced Me For Become A Teacher?

    741 Words  | 2 Pages

    difference in the world I wanted to bridge gaps between races, gender, generalizations and stereotypes. . If single-handedly saving the world did not work out, I could be a rock star like Carol King, Stevie Nicks, or my personal favorite, Tina Turner. But teaching? Nope. Not for me. After graduation, the only job I could find to keep a roof over my head was, teaching! I went to work in January after a beloved teacher found it necessary to retire mid-year. I was teaching high school history

  • Wedding Reception Speech – Best Man

    1909 Words  | 4 Pages

    Wedding Reception Speech – Best Man Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, I’m sure you’ll all agree it’s been a fantastic day so far, but unfortunately for every silver lining there’s a cloud, and I’m yours. For those of you that haven’t bought me a drink yet, I’m Simon and I’ve been sentenced to being Randy’s best man today. It’s said that, being asked to be best man is one of the greatest honours you can be given, on the other hand it’s also one of the most terrible things you can do to

  • Modern Rites of Passage

    1008 Words  | 3 Pages

    transcends all political, social, cultural and geographical differences. While ritual itself has many forms, one of the most regnant aspect is that of the Rite of Passage. This paper will examine rites of passage as defined by the anthropologist Victor Turner through examples of two modern Canadian rituals; the graduation from high school and the completion of undergraduate studies. From the sequences of the rites of passage to the modern examples of such, Canadian culture has proven itself to be full

  • Essay On Turner Syndrome

    2600 Words  | 6 Pages

    Turner Syndrome Turner syndrome occurs in approximately one in every 2,000 female births (Overview par. 1). Every one in 2,000 girls born may not seem like a great deal, but adds up to be eventually. No matter how many girls have Turner syndrome, they all face challenges because of the chromosomal disease. The syndrome was first discovered in 1938 when Henry Turner published a book about seven girls who shared unique features. The exceptional features included, “short stature, lack of sexual development

  • Turner's Syndrome

    949 Words  | 2 Pages

    Turner’s Syndrome, which is one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities, is defined as “a syndrome with a chromosome count of 45 and only one X chromosome.” Turner’s was first described in 1938. Henry Turner, an endocrinologist from Oklahoma City, was the first to discover this syndrome. He was curious about why seven of his female patients, six adolescents and one adult, who he was treating for dwarfism and lack of development, were not responding to the treatments. He described the women as

  • The Fires Of Jubilee Summary

    1044 Words  | 3 Pages

    narrative of Nat Turner and his journey in the slave revolt against Virginia slave owners in mid 1800’s that marked the turning point in America’s history. The book is based on a biography of Nat turner, the actions that lead to the rebellion and the legacy it left behind. Nat Tuner was an enslaved African American who led the slave rebellion in Virginia on August 21, 1831. The African-American boy was named “Nat” by Benjamin Turner, the man who owned his mother and him as slaves. When Turner died in 1810

  • Of Frank O 'Hara's Poem (Lana Turner Has Collapsed !'

    1351 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the reactionary words of John Updike upon reading, “Poem (Lana Turner Has Collapsed!)” he claimed that this was Frank O’Hara at his “silliest, and most emptiest.” However, it is easily debatable to state exactly how Frank O’Hara was able to create a well-developed world and sense of character in his brief poem about seemingly nothing. Through the sum of its parts Frank O’Hara is able to create a rich sense of being that comments on a world outside of his poem. When the individual parts are taken