Burma Railway Essays

  • Elephant Run Sparknotes

    2237 Words  | 5 Pages

    Burma, Japan, and World War II Byron Gough ENG 218 Professor Mulholland 29 April 2016 Nick Freestone was only a young man when the fires of World War II found him. Sent away from his home in London after the Nazi Blitzkrieg, he was sent to Burma to live with his father who owned a teak plantation. However, not long after he arrived, the brutal Japanese regime put their sights on capturing Burma and its natural resources. Elephant Run by Roland Smith fits well in the canon of

  • The Art of Ride Design

    1667 Words  | 4 Pages

    Mauch Chunk Railway was originally used to bring coal down the mountainside of a Pennsylvania mine. The now unused 2,322 feet of track was re-opened a few months later for the purpose of carrying passengers down the side of the mountain. The rail cars used did not have brakes or an engine; they simply used the force of gravity to take the train and its passengers, sometimes at speeds upwards of 60 miles per hour, down the side of the mountain until it came to a rest at the bottom. “The railway offered

  • Gustave Eiffel

    562 Words  | 2 Pages

    1885, the same year that Paris hosted the first World’s Fair. He spent several years in the southwest of France, where he supervised work on the great railway bridge in Bordeaux. In 1864 he set up his own business, specializing in metal structural work. Eiffel built hundreds of metal structures around the world. Bridges, and in particular railway bridges, were his favorite fields of work. He also won renown for his industrial installations. His career was marked by a large number of fine buildings

  • R K Narayan's The Guide

    2700 Words  | 6 Pages

    tree. Thus Raju never views Rosie in the real world but almost in a dream, and Rosie becomes the 'mohini'* of the novel. Her meeting Raju on the railway platform is significant since until then the railway has been his life, but with Rosie's entrance his familiar world will be disrupted. He will be tempted to discard his attachment to the railway for a far greater and passionate attachment. Rosie's role as the 'mohini' in Raju's life is confirmed by her obsession with snakes. The animal imagery

  • The Medium is the Message

    1077 Words  | 3 Pages

    but also by the technology itself. The basic “content” of technology is easy to recognize. The content of the railway would seem to be transportation; the content of the Internet would seem to be information. But McLuhan’s idea that the medium proclaiming the “content” is itself the message is a hard one to understand. In the example of the railway, he says that “[t]he railway did not introduce movement or transportation or wheel or road into human society, but it accelerated and enlarged

  • Hidden Fraud in Trollope’s The Way We Live Now

    4211 Words  | 9 Pages

    bring the Great South Central Pacific and Mexican Railway (or at least the prospectus) to England, but he also delimits the board members’ role in the venture. He places Melmotte, the novel’s “great financier,” in charge and repels Paul Montague’s desire to involve himself as an active director in the railroad’s daily operations (1.217). Fisker rejects Paul’s attempt to oversee the Mexican Railroad’s actualization by arguing that building railway lines does not concern an investor such as Paul:

  • gods bits of wood

    950 Words  | 2 Pages

    detailed story of the railway strike of 1947-48 in French West Africa. It contains conflicts of political, emotional and moral nature. Ultimately, Sembene’s novel is one of empowerment. It brings to light the tension between colonial officials and the African community among the railway men as well as the struggle of the African community to free itself from being subjected to colonial power. Frederick Cooper’s article, “Our Strike: Equality, Anticolonial politics and the 1947-48 Railway Strike in French

  • Determining the Importance of Tourism on the Settlement of Haworth

    658 Words  | 2 Pages

    visitors from Japan, the USA, Canadaand Europe. Many come to visit the world-famous Bronte Parsonage museum, home of the remarkable Bronte sisters. Others are attracted by the steam railway, the Keighley & Worth valley line, which runs for five miles from Keighley to Oxenhope and is one of the longest established railways in the country. Thousands come to walk the Pennines at the same time soaking up the atmosphere that inspired Emily Bronte to write her world famous book; Wuthering Heights. But

  • The Russian Civil war, 1918-21

    1372 Words  | 3 Pages

    came to attacking for they could do so from all sides. This ultimately would stretch the Bolshevik forces to a large extent, causing thin defensive lines, which the whites may have easily broken. The whites also controlled the Trans Siberian railway. This was incredibly important, as it was one of the only means of transferring troops and supplies due to Russia's enormity. The white forces had backing from various influential groups in Russia. The landowners who had been dispossessed of

  • Steam Engine Essay

    509 Words  | 2 Pages

    With the expansion of commerce, facilities for the movement of goods from the factory to the ports or cities came into pressing demand. In 1801 Richard Trevithick had an engine pulling trucks around the mine where he worked in Cornwall. By 1830 a railway was opened from Liverpool to Manchester; and on this line George Stephenson's ''Rocket'' pulled a train of cars at fourteen miles an

  • Battle of the Sexes in D.H Lawrence's Short Story, Tickets Please

    1610 Words  | 4 Pages

    between John Rayner and the women, but rather becomes, according to Paul A. Wood, a "Battle of Sexes" (Wood, 77). "Tickets Please" is a battle of the sexes because John Thomas Rayner, who is an inspector at a railway station, exploits his good looks and manipulates women working in the railway station and on the trains into falling in love with him. Rayner, according to J.P Breen, is "an amphibian, native to worlds of light and darkness," a "King" and a "Swamp Beast", who could do what he felt like

  • Education Can End Systematic Oppression

    1050 Words  | 3 Pages

    Through the doorway sits a room full of people. Though each person is fundamentally different, they have come together for a single purpose: to obtain a higher education. The general purpose for education is to encourage people to further themselves and in so doing, to secure their future. For some, the paycheck at the end of the road is the only motivating factor. For others, the motivating factor is the ability to better themselves and society. The first group, the paycheck group, is not interested

  • Journalism - From China with Love

    1210 Words  | 3 Pages

    journalism - makes me a model candidate for your Masters program. Many applicants may claim to be from an underprivileged family, but I freely admit that I was born into a middle class family. My parents are both ordinary citizens that worked for railway companies in China. Through the influences of both my father and my mother, I fell in love with reading at an early age. My mother taught me to read (in Chinese of course) when I was only four years old. This knowledge was the key to the entrance

  • Comparing A Plea for Gas Lamps and Jekyll and Hyde

    1037 Words  | 3 Pages

    which it fell. They were close to each other, indeed, they permeated each other, and each enhanced the effect of the other."(153) At the same time, however, the industrial uniformity of gas streetlighting made many uneasy. Like the railway, it represented a dehumanizing, centrally regulated urban infrastructure. "With a public gas supply, domestic lighting entered its industrial -- and dependent -- stage. No longer self-sufficiently producing its own heat and light, each house

  • About My Home Town Ooty

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    spacious Victorian houses, country-style churches and spruced gardens came into being. They even brought the English vegetation like cabbages, cauliflower, strawberries, raspberries and flowers like buttercups and rhododendrons. They built the first railway line in this area and made Ooty the summer capital of the then Madras Presidency. Before the arrival of the British Ooty was inhabited by Todas the tribal people who still inhabit the area, but only around 3000 remain. The picturesque and green

  • History of Alberta

    757 Words  | 2 Pages

    because of Manifest Destiny, the construction of an inter-colonial railway between Canada and the Maritimes was necessary since all goods were being transported on American lines. The Grand Trunk Railway needed increased traffic on its line to avoid bankruptcy. Also, transcontinental railway uniting the Atlantic to the Pacific would have to be built to open up the West and to prevent a possible takeover by the United States. Railway construction however was extremely expensive. The only way to ensure

  • Russian Mountains

    967 Words  | 2 Pages

    fleeting seconds. Mauch Chunk Switchback Railway Whereas the Russian Mountains is usually credited as the first wheeled coaster, the Switchback in 1784 at St. Petersburg is perhaps more worthy of the crown. Carriages in grooved tracks traveled up and down small hills powered by the height and slope of the initial descent. Almost 50 years later, the first tracks were laid for the American predecessor of the roller coaster, the Mauch Chunk Switchback Railway in Pennsylvania. Coney Island It began in

  • Sue Smasher: A Tennis player and Her Contract issue

    824 Words  | 2 Pages

    Q.      Sue Smasher was a promising young tennis player. In July 1991, when she was 16, she entered into the separate agreements, both of which were to run until July 1993. No. 1, with Lew Lobb, a noted tennis coach whereby he undertook to organize her training and decide which tournaments she should play in. In return, Sue agreed to act on Lew’s advice and pay him 20% of her winnings from tournaments. No. 2, with Drive Power Ltd, whereby Sue promised to use their sports equipment in return for Drive

  • Political Corruption in Bangladesh

    3147 Words  | 7 Pages

    Bangladesh is a very poor country with a lot of poverty. Approximately one third of the country floods annually which doesn’t help out matters (The World Fact Book). Nada explains that Bangladesh, “is surrounded by India with a slight brush with Burma to the southeast, and it ranks third among countries in South Asia, following India and Pakistan” (Shrestha, Nanda). (Anglican Communion) The country is 144,000 square kilometers (slightly smaller than Iowa) to give you an idea on how small this

  • A Confederacy of Dunces

    2208 Words  | 5 Pages

    examining the effects of Ignatius Reilly's cycles on situations occurring in the Night of Joy, Levy Pants, and with his mother and her acquaintances. The situation at the Night of Joy bar is, certainly, an interesting case to examine. At first, both Burma Jones and Darlene are experiencing bad luck, or a downward cycle. However, as Fortuna spins Ignatius Reilly downward, their situation begins to improve. We are introduced to Jones in the police station, early in the novel, after being arrested for