Bart the Bear Essays

  • The Tlingit and Grizzly Bear House-Partition Screen

    571 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Tlingit and Grizzly Bear House-Partition Screen The region of the northwest coast was blessed with an abundance of natural recourses for human existence and made it possible for the area to thrive. As a result of this unusual abundance, the area could sustain large populations and a complex social order for many Indian groups. Because of the level of sustainability, the cultures had more time for artistic and intellectual activities and endeavors and over time, art became very important

  • Media Analysis of Gender

    1742 Words  | 4 Pages

    friends, at work, or doing something that is stupid and dangerous. This enforces the stereotype that women have few friends and stay close to domestic life whereas men have lots of friends, are more independent, and bring home the bacon. Moreover, Bart and Lisa are in accordance with their gender stereotypes as well. For instance, in the backseat, Ba... ... middle of paper ... ...art with the men. Similarly, in The Simpsons, the same basic issue of male dominance was addressed as Lisa’s doll

  • The Simpsons Satire Essay

    1550 Words  | 4 Pages

    of comedy, satire, and American culture. Due to its cartoonish appearance, the show is deemed comical and appeals to only young viewers. Aside from the cartoon comedy with Homer’s shenanigans, there are also implicit connections to the real world. Bart is an example of the reckless, anti-hero rebel, whereas, Lisa is the moral child with integrity in her life decisions. These character aspects relate to how each character is an individual and can mirror American life. The show appeals to simple-minded

  • Green Bay Packers: Indian Packing Company

    849 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Green Bay Packers were born on August 11, 1919 on the second floor of the old Green Bay Press Gazette building. On August 13 it was established that the Indian Packing Co. would sponsor a football team. They named it the “Packers”. Their games were to be held at Hagemeister Park. The team limit was 38 people altho they only had 20 full uniforms. Most of the team players were from East and West Green Bay high schools. Curly Lambeau was elected team captain and George Calhoun was manager or what

  • Tell Me a Story, Daddy

    760 Words  | 2 Pages

    One She climbed into the big canopy bed and snuggled her favorite teddy bear close. His name was Bart and he wore faded denim overalls, one strap fastened with a safety pin. He was also missing an eye but the little girl wouldn't sleep without it. Her daddy pulled her blanket up under her chin and kissed her on the nose. She giggled; his beard tickled her face. "Tell me a story, Daddy." He perched on the edge of her bed and crossed his arms in his lap. "And what story would my princess like to

  • The Simpsons

    4113 Words  | 9 Pages

    literally millions of Simpsons fan-sites around the world.). The Simpsons themselves are a simple family in a small town in Middle America called Springfield. They are: Homer (loyal but stupid father), Marge (dissatisfied, trapped housewife/mother), Bart (rebellious son), Lisa (unappreciated genius daughter), and Maggie (silent baby). The show also revolves around a number of other of the townsfolk, such as Mr Burns (Homer's miserly boss), Smithers (Burns's loving assistant), Apu (Indian shop owner)

  • A Comparison between Madame Bovary and The Awakening

    1177 Words  | 3 Pages

    story of a woman who is not content with her life, and searches for ways to get away from the torture she lives everyday. The Awakening, much like Bovary, features a woman who is unhappy with her life, and wishes to find new adventures. The two books bear very strong similarities to each other, and the plots are almost exactly the same, though there are some subtle differences. Set in two old cities in France, Emma Bovary, the main character in the first book, is not content with her life. She

  • Objectification of Women in The House of Mirth

    2117 Words  | 5 Pages

    Objectification of Women in The House of Mirth Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth is an affront to the false social values of fashionable New York society.  The heroine is Lily Bart, a woman who is destroyed by the very society that produces her.  Lily is well-born but poor.  The story traces the decline of Lily as she moves through a series of living residences, from houses to hotel lodgings.  Lily lives in a New York society where appearances are all.  Women have a decorative function in such

  • My Calling

    2847 Words  | 6 Pages

    able to integrate her faith into her work, which led her to distinguish two separate callings. John 15:16 “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you.” I am going to go and bear fruit for Christ. I am going to follow the calling that Christ has for my life. I am going to embody my calling with every fiber of my body. I am going to continue to learn, love, and tell

  • the simpsons

    2034 Words  | 5 Pages

    clumsily loves his family. Marge is the hard working and optimistic housewife, constantly struggling with the feeling that she has wasted her potential starting a family, and loves her children and husband. Most discussed is their ten year old son Bart, is m... ... middle of paper ... ... pop culture. They were looking to limit foreign programming, especially that emphasizing the English language and immodest dress and inappropriate words. In surveys conducted it was shown that eighty percent

  • Stereotypes Of Male Nursing

    1319 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nursing is one of the most needed careers in the United States, but each year the number of graduating nursing students’ decreases. Out of all nursing students in the United States, only a small portion is male and graduating, but even if the numbers are small the numbers are slowly starting to increase. Peter Beurhaus, who works as a nursing professor at Vanderbilt University, tells us “We saw the nation lose hundreds of jobs during the recession, but health care grew in the number of jobs it produced

  • Racism Exposed In Richard Wright's Native Son

    1413 Words  | 3 Pages

    think whites act like. Out of frustration and blatant realization, Bigger exclaims, “We black and they white. They got things and we ain’t. They do things and we can’t. It’s just like living in jail” (Wright 71). When it comes to opportunities, Bigger bears the weight of restriction--the result of racism--and cannot handle it. He struggles to comprehend the reasoning behind racism, which incites his violence and his sporadic eruptions of anger throughout the novel. Secondly, the rudimentary discrepancies

  • Lehman Brothers Case Study

    1200 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lehman Brothers Incorporation was the forth-biggest investment bank in the United State of America before they were closing down their business. And it is very famous and even the Hollywood, they put their company name to their movies such as “Despicable Me” which is one of the most famous animated movie and filmed about the father-daughters. In that movie, under the name of Bank of Evil, they put Formerly Lehman Brothers. Not only this movie, but also other movies like Margin Call, Too Big to Fail

  • Mentors In The Film Revenge Of The Sith

    1427 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Told him to do that not I did!” Why does everyone ignore me! If someone were to listen they would know how I feel and why I feel that way. 912 years old I am. Live this way I have, after the clone wars bear I could not the weight of all of the deaths. Still, to this day haunted I am by the nightmares of the past and the present. Help I still can, speak to you Luke I must. You must learn the ways of the force from my teachings. You must let go of your feelings Luke, let the force flow through you

  • Feminism and Magical Realism Across Cultures

    2573 Words  | 6 Pages

    Reading and Revolution: Postboon Parody in Como Aqua Para Chocolate". Hispanic Review, Vol. 63, No.2, p.133. 1995. Morrison, Toni-Social and Historical Context. http://www.oll.temple.edu/ih/IH52/Novels/Morrison/MorrisonContext.htm Schwarz-Bart, Simone. The Bridge of Beyond. 1972. Heinemann Educational Publishers, Oxford. Zamora, Lois Parikinson and Wendy B. Faris. Magical Realism. 1995. Duke University Press, Durham and London.

  • Contemporary Christian Music Analysis

    1990 Words  | 4 Pages

    beside me, He carries my healing in his hands. ". The associated lyrics connect to the Gospel of Matthew which depicts that it is completely normal for a human being to be discombobulated of the miracles performed by Jesus, that even the disciples who bear witness to the event is petrified at their first sight as " the disciples saw [Jesus] walking on the sea, they were terrified" (Matthew 14:26). The same occasion is described in the Gospel of Mark, in which " Jesus came towards his disciples early

  • World Population at 7 Billion: Challenges

    1862 Words  | 4 Pages

    planet has a limited number of resources, and despite attempts of their wise allocation, there are often not enough of them for everyone; and rapid population growth may put even more pressure on the world’s already scarce water and energy supplies (Bart 2005). Therefore, overpopulation leads to various environmental issues like attrition of fresh water resources, deforestation and even ozone layer depletion due to increased greenhouse emissions from densely populated areas. The problem exacerbates

  • The Awakening and The Yellow Wallpaper

    2398 Words  | 5 Pages

    Kate Chopin's story The Awakening and Charlotte Perkins Gilman's story The Yellow Wallpaper draw their power from two truths: First, each work stands as a political cry against injustice and at the socio/political genesis of the modern feminist movement. Second, each text is a gatekeeper of a new literary history. Kate Chopin and Charlotte Perkins Gilman seem to initiate a new phase in textual history where literary conventions are revised to serve an ideology representative of the "new" feminine

  • Domanik Research Paper

    3553 Words  | 8 Pages

    Anna loves her family and figure skating and all of her friends at school. One beautiful summer morning, Shayla the sheep was running around the grassy pasture with all of her best sheep friends and talking about life. All of a sudden, a sheep dog came running and chased them around. When they were in the other pen, Shayla said to her friends, "I wish I were a sheep dog." Her friends called her crazy. The next morning, she tried being a sheep dog, but the other sheep were not afraid of another

  • Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan and the Fundamental Principle of a Society

    2500 Words  | 5 Pages

    be more advantageous, but it would take incredible amounts of energy to implement in a state today. Works Cited Hobbes, Thomas. The English Works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury; Now First Collected and Edited by Sir William Molesworth, Bart. Vol. 3. London: Bohn, 1839-45. Electronic. Locke, John. The Works of John Locke in Nine Volumes. 12th ed. Vol. 4. London: Rivington, 1824. Electronic. “Defender,” “Protect.” English-Greek Dictionary. 2nd ed. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul