Connected space Essays

  • The Connections Of The Connection Between People (Draft)

    612 Words  | 2 Pages

    Name: AO YANG PID: A98101484 Connections between people (Draft) People are all connected in some ways. Either they are close-minded or social. There always exist a kind of bond that connects people with other people and the society. The fact that people are all connected in different ways is not unique, it can actually be applied in many other living organisms’ groups-working such as the ants moving heavy stuff together, or predators chasing for their preys. In fact, the connections between living

  • The Laban Movement Analysis

    2659 Words  | 6 Pages

    take on human movement. (Konie 2011) The LMA helps one to understand one’s body and to use it to its fullest potential. There are four major sub-divisions in the LMA which are body, effort, shape and space (BESS)(Adrian 2008). The following academic review will analyse the body, effort, shape and space and then apply it to my character, Nora, and her monologue from Brighton Beach Memoirs. Body: The body is the first concept of Laban’s four components of movement. Body can be defined as the human

  • The Issue of Jurisdiction in Cyberspace

    1934 Words  | 4 Pages

    computer networks especially the internet”. The word “cyber” refers to cybernetics which means in Latin means to steer which represent the notion “to govern”. It emphasizes on the navigation through space of electro... ... middle of paper ... ...ation devices, the cyber world is increasingly being connected to the lives of not just the elite class but also of the countless millions of people. Today internet and social media is not a luxury but has become the very necessity of human lives. Regarding

  • The Strange New World of Virtual Reality

    624 Words  | 2 Pages

    characterized by 3D virtual systems created by computer graphics. In the concept called Virtual Reality (VR), the virtual reality engineer is combining computer, video, image-processing, and sensor technologies so that a human can enter into and react with spaces generated by computer graphics. In 1969-70, a MIT scientist went to the University of Utah, where he began to work with vector generated graphics. He built a see-through helmet that used television screens and half-silvered mirrors, so that the

  • Story in the Floor Plan

    1517 Words  | 4 Pages

    one after another, leaving spaces for doors, naturally. The house is built. In The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka, the narrator’s voice shadows this architect’s hand, ingraining the familial relationships and intentions of the Samsa family into the walls. The rooms of the architect are the vessels that the narrator fills with the virtuous and appalling intentions of the members of the Samsa family. In sum, the floor plan of the Samsa apartment and the family’s use of space in the apartment parallel

  • Concrete Poetry - A Unique Genre

    2413 Words  | 5 Pages

    fill in the gaps left when traditional grammar and syntax are eschewed. One particularly useful cross-disciplinary element employed in concrete poetry is the use of space. The poetry of Emmett Williams, Seiichi Nikuni, and Ilse and Pierre Garnier in particular, make use of spatial relationships in their poetry. The use of space can be employed in place of traditional grammar and syntax to convey meaning in concrete poetry, particularly when the spatial position of one element is taken into consideration

  • The Representation of Time and Space on the Clear Presentation of a Cause and Effect Narrative Structure

    2039 Words  | 5 Pages

    In this essay through textual analysis I will be describing how the representation of time and space can either facilitate or hinder the clear presentation of a cause and effect narrative structure. Firstly, I would like to discuss the representation of time and space in the Tony Scott’s film True Romance (USA, 1993) written by Quentin Tarantino. The story of the film has a linear narrative structure. The events are presented in temporal order which facilitate the clear presentation of the cause

  • A Kantian Interpretation of Demonstrative Reference

    3142 Words  | 7 Pages

    remote objects, the scope of our demonstrative reference is severely restricted by intuitional immediacy. I wish to develop a global Kantian intuition in order to extend the scope of demonstrative reference. Kant's ontology of space entails that the global representability of space be given to an intuiting subject as a form of intuition. According to Melnick, Kantian intuition is a kinematic operation which involves directing attention and moving about. To make contact with the world, the subject must

  • How Television and The Internet Have Changed The World

    1570 Words  | 4 Pages

    be recreated by members of the private through their re-telling of the story, allowing engagement and a sense of presence of the event. The newspaper, limited in how it was able to pluralize space within society, nonetheless provided the foundations of what was to be a whole new way in how we occupy our space within the world, and how society was to give and receive information through media broadcasting. The televisions impact has been so great it’s become a normative in society. Almost all households

  • Analysis Of Bakhtin's Bildungsroman

    2216 Words  | 5 Pages

    figure is related to the particular type of plot, to the particular conception of the world and to a particular composition of a novel Indeed, a striking element of the Bakhtinian theory is the emergence of the protagonist in the context of time and space: emerging here as a result of the entirely changing life circumstances and events. The emergence of man’s life-destiny fuses with the emergence of man himself. The presence of this emerging theme is most intriguing when considering it is traced altogether

  • Interpretation In Architecture Essay

    2837 Words  | 6 Pages

    edu/studioworks/launch.html (accessed on 10th January 2010) 66 Adrian Snodgrass and Richard Coyne,2006,Interpretation in architecture , design as a way of think... ... middle of paper ... ...oblems and cities potential. • Natural influence and character of the space, to facilitate the seeker of solitude and spirituality. • Vastness of views to and from the site , to raise the building on a pedestal and give it a monumental position. 5.b) SITE INTRODUCTION: The site is situated at Shahdara ,near Barakaho and Bani

  • Analysis Of High Maintenance

    1024 Words  | 3 Pages

    the episodes uses space while linking it

  • The Tropics Of New York, By Claude Mckay

    1447 Words  | 3 Pages

    The meaning of space? What is it and how do we explain it? When it comes to understanding the meaning of space there isn’t just only one way of doing so. There are many different ways of interpreting space. For instance, a meaning of space is a place where one feels security, and freedom. The person in control is basically the treasure of their own space. The meaning of spaces and places get established through the person-to-place bonds that evolve through emotional connection, and understandings

  • I Hate Myself

    1762 Words  | 4 Pages

    to convey that the male sense of entitlement to women was both heavy and constricting. The beginning of my performance used as little of the stage’s space as possible. Even within the first movement piece, I created a small area and stayed within it. After I cut my hair, however, I began to make more use of the space. I especially focused on the space to my left at this point, because at the beginning ... ... middle of paper ... ..., love, or anything else from a woman. Mostly, however, I want

  • Birds

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    varieties of colors and sizes. Birds are warm-blooded, egg-laying creatures from the aves class. Along with the obvious feathers and wings, birds have other adaptations for flying such as a wide keel on the sternum, with large wing muscles attached, air spaces and sacs throughout the body and bones, to decrease their weight, and they have various bone fusions and reductions to strengthen and streamline their body. There are more than 8700 species of birds. Their habitats range from icy shores of Antarctica

  • Moby Dick: Subjective Space

    2847 Words  | 6 Pages

    Moby Dick: Subjective Space Oh! my God! what is this that shoots through me, and leaves me so deadly calm, yet expectant, ---fixed at the top of a shudder! Future things swim before me, as in empty outlines and skeletons; all the past is somehow grown dim. (Chap. 135: 463) The sublime moment is the ultimate subsumption of the self. It is frightening in its intrinsic need to consume the experiencer and then emancipate him upon the consummation of the event. Melville composed a story that could

  • The Mirrors of Classic Physics

    4852 Words  | 10 Pages

    conceptions of mirrors are not so different from models in middle school physics. The mirror is a line dividing the ‘real’ from the ‘virtual’, and the image is the same on both sides. It is a plane in three-dimensional space, a slash in textual space, and a boundary to fluid spaces. In physics class, rays of light go from each point of the image and bounce off the mirror in such a way that they seem to have come from the virtual object. These are not the only mirrors. These are instead the only

  • Obsessive-compulsive Behaviors

    1936 Words  | 4 Pages

    thoughts about nuetral questions or behaviors. What are their rituals about? There are several possible ways to list symptoms of OCD. All sources agree that the most common preoccupations are dirt (washing, germs, touching), checking for safety or closed spaces (closets, doors, drawers, appliances, light switches), and thoughts, often thoughts about unacceptable violent, sexual, or crude behavior. When the thoughts and rituals of OCD are intense, the victim's work and home life disintigrate. Obsessions are

  • MP3

    3496 Words  | 7 Pages

    MPEG is the acronym for Moving Picture Experts Group. This group has developed compression systems used for video data. For example, DVD movies, HDTV broadcasts and DSS satellite systems use MPEG compression to fit video and movie data into smaller spaces. The MPEG compression system includes a subsystem to compress sound, called MPEG audio Layer-3. We know this as MP3. The music industry distribution medium of audio CD's, or "packages of audio information" (approximately 10 songs), preserves its

  • Metropolitan vs. Colonial Space in Forster’s A Passage to India and Lawrence’s Women in Love

    1713 Words  | 4 Pages

    Metropolitan vs. Colonial Space in Forster’s A Passage to India and Lawrence’s Women in Love At first glance, it seems easy to state a definitive distinction between what Said calls “metropolitan space” and “colonial space.” In its simplest form, metropolitan space is the space occupied by the colonizers. Examples of this include England, France and the places these people reside in while living in these colonies. Likewise, colonial space is that which is occupied by those who are colonized