Don Juan Matus Essays

  • Journey to Ixtlan: Getting the Message Across

    686 Words  | 2 Pages

    Carlos Castaneda was smoking while he wrote Journey to Ixtlan: the Lessons of Don Juan, but it sure did bring out his creative side. Throughout Journey to Ixtlan, the reader is constantly perplexed and confused by the enigma that is don Juan. Don Juan is a teacher, if you want to call him that, and he teaches Castaneda how to stop the world and how to erase personal history. In reality I really do not think don Juan existed, he was merely a figment of Castaneda's peyote-influenced imagination

  • Byron's Don Juan - No Formal Ending is Needed

    1463 Words  | 3 Pages

    Byron's Don Juan - No Formal Ending is Needed Lord Byron's chief masterpiece is probably the comic epic Don Juan, which occupied its author from 1818 until nearly the end of his life (Trueblood 14-15). The sheer length of the poem is in itself impressive; its seventeen cantos take Juan through a variety of adventures, including the famous affair with Donna Julia, the sojourn with Haidee, experiences in Turkey and later in Russia as a slave, and finally episodes in England among high society

  • The Acoma

    1299 Words  | 3 Pages

    “From the very outset Acoma excited the curiosity and even the fear of pioneers because of the strangeness of its position and the reputation of its inhabitants for ferocity” (Sedgwick preface). Although Acoma had such a reputation, it did not stop Don Juan de Onate from taking over such a magnificent place. Once Onate gained control, the Acoma reputation vanished and all lives of the Acoma Indians changed politically, economically, and especially socially. “The settlers in New Mexico still felt connected

  • Romanticism In Literature

    513 Words  | 2 Pages

    these new ways discouraged and didn’t tolerate the more classic way of literature. Other significant writers of the Romantic Age are noted still as shaping an age of open-mindedness and freedom. Lord Byron was one of these authors, he wrote “Don Juan';. Another is Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote in terza rima, a three line iambic pentameter set up of bcb, cdc, ded, and so on. Johan Keats created his own fairy tale land in the lyrical poem “Ode on a Grecian Urn';. Nature and the natural surroundings

  • Garrison Keillor's Don Giovanni

    628 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Garrison Keillor’s short story “Don Giovanni'; the main character, Don Giovanni, is portrayed as a self centered, self serving, seducing womanizer. The story focuses on conversations held between “The Don'; and Figaro. In these conversations “The Don'; attempts to erode Figaro’s positive views on marriage. The attitude that “The Don'; has about women is negatively viewed by most societies, and it’s because of this attitude that he ends up at the fiery

  • The Earthquake in Chile

    678 Words  | 2 Pages

    The story starts off in Santiago, Chile in 1647 with the main character Jeronim Rugera where he is preparing to hang himself while he is in prison. Jeronimo was a tutor at the Don Asteron household in till it was discovered that Jeronimo was having an illicit relationship with Josephe, the daughter of Don Henrico Asteron, by her brother. Josephe was then promptly sent to the convent of Our Lady of the Mountain but she was still able to keep up the illicit relationship with Jeronimo in till Josephe

  • Man and Superman, by George Bernard Shaw

    2292 Words  | 5 Pages

    reason to the making of this Don Juan play because of how he questioned why Shaw did not make a play with this type of scenario. The dedicatory goes on talking about how, “ Arthur will acknowledge the play, how Shaw starts his plays showing to puritans his predicament of his contemporary english drama, he goes on to blather about aspects of life, which leads to how arthur will react to the play, the Epistle veers into talking about other playwrights and how the Don Juan theme has lost it’s touch, and

  • Analysis Of Sören Kierkegaard's Apphetic Stage Of Life

    1972 Words  | 4 Pages

    “The thing is to understand myself, to see what God really wishes me to do; the thing is to find a truth which is true for me, to find the idea for which I can live and die” (Kierkegaard 95). Søren Kierkegaard was a clear supporter of expressing our own personality. He wanted us to take the time to find our true selves. Even though he acknowledged there were social systems in our society, he still believed we were our own individual human being. The only way to make sense of our life and find our

  • Simon Bolivar

    597 Words  | 2 Pages

    THE BEGINNING Simon Jose Antonio de la Santisima Trinidad Bolivar was born in Caracas on July 24, 1783 to don Juan Vicente Bolivar y Ponte y dona Maria de la Concepcion Palacios y Blanco. Simon received an excellent education from his tutors, Simon Rodriquez and Andres Bello. By the age of nine Bolivar lost both his parents, and was being taken care of by his uncle don Carlos Palacios. At the age of fifteen in 1799 he traveled to Spain to receive a better education. In Spain, Bolivar met Maria Teresa

  • A Story of Don Juan and The Red Room

    963 Words  | 2 Pages

    Which text, A Story of Don Juan or The Red Room is the more effective ghost story? Discuss with reference to structure, character and language. In this essay, a comparision will be made of two texts, 'A Story of Don Juan' by V.S Pritchett, a twentieth century text and 'The Red Room' by H.G Wells which is a pre- twentieth century text. In order to compare them it will be necsessary to analyse the character, structure and language of each text to determine which text is the more effective

  • Gringo by Sophie Treadwell

    1924 Words  | 4 Pages

    Gringo became a sensation on Broadway soon after it was written. This play has three acts that all take place in Mexico between the lives of Mexicans and Americans. The first act of Gringo takes place at a mine that is owned by an American named Don Juan Chivers. The mine is located in Mexico where Mr. Chivers discovers what he assumes is a new ore deposit. Mr. Chivers has a daughter named Besita (meaning "The Little Kiss") who is half-Mexican by a Mexican mother. Besita's mother is not around.

  • Don Juan As Byron Introspective

    1181 Words  | 3 Pages

    therapy. Throughout his writings and life history there is much evidence to suggest that his poetry was greatly influenced by his mental instability. In many ways, Byron seems to use his work as an escape from a difficult reality. The lengthy poem Don Juan offers an especially intimate glimpse of Byron’s psyche.In order to understand the depth of Byron’s psychological troubles and their influence on his poetry, it is important to examine Byron’s heritage and his upbringing. Young George Gordon inherited

  • Don Giovanni's Tension In Different Operas

    1061 Words  | 3 Pages

    Throughout the three stylistically different opera acts, Don Giovanni constantly served as a character who created tension through his seductive nature at a wedding. Masetto and Zerlina were about the wed, but Giovanni rudely interrupted by commanding to move the wedding to his house with chocolate and wine served. Naturally, this made Masetto extremely angry, leaving Zerlina and Giovanni alone on the stage. He continued to seduce her, until she agreed to marry him. Obvious differences throughout

  • Man And Superman

    1308 Words  | 3 Pages

    George Bernard Shaw wrote his play Man and Superman in response to calls for him to write a play based off the Don Juan theme. Don Juan is a fictional character, said to be a womanizer, whose story has been told many times by various authors. George Bernard Shaw wrote for the Realism time period of theater, where the actions and speech of the characters were similar to that of everyday life. The plays and the actors themselves aimed to use the stage as an environment, rather than an acting platform

  • Structural Power In Donna Elvir's Don Juan

    657 Words  | 2 Pages

    Don Juan is a patriarchal story that perpetuates conventional gender relations by continuously presenting men and women as unequal. This gender imbalance is enforced through the power relationships between Don Juan and the women he encounters, as well as the manner in which these women are displayed. Although in some instances within the story, some women possess the opportunity use their agency. There are two forms of power that Don Juan is able to use that strips the women of his stories of their

  • Use of Irony to Portray Morality in Lord Byron's Don Juan

    2508 Words  | 6 Pages

    Portray Morality in Lord Byron's Don Juan In Don Juan, George Gordon, Lord Byron, diverges from his name-sake characterization with an un-Byronic hero, Don Juan. The poem has been viewed as nihilistic and immoral. Actually there is plenty present in the first canto to show morality and hope for humanity. The poem should be viewed as the author intended: "a satire on abuses of the present state of Society, an not an eulogy on vice..." (Bostetter 9). Don Juan is a satire and therefore the morals

  • The Many Faces of Johnny Depp

    1664 Words  | 4 Pages

    other hand, is able to always surprise his audience and leave them on the edge of their seat. Three movies that truly show Johnny Depp’s true dedication to method acting and wide range of characters throughout his career are Edward Scissorhands, Don Juan de Marco, and Pirates of the Caribbean. His roles in these films are very different, and they show his ability to explore and develop varies characters. That is what makes him the astounding and eccentric actor he is today. Johnny Depp had a very

  • The Trickster Of Seville And His Guest Of Stone: Summary

    1256 Words  | 3 Pages

    social order of the Golden Age of Spain. Molina focuses his play on the life of a sinner and the inescapable consequence that comes from living a sinful life. The protagonist of the play is Don Juan, a nobleman and womanizer who gets pleasure from dishonouring women by seducing them through trickery. Don Juan freely leaves multiple women in dishonour including the duchess Isabel, Thisbe, Amnita, a bride to be, and Ana. Being part of the nobility allows him to pleasure himself in taking women’s virtue

  • Comedy of Ideas Illustrated in Shaw's Man and Superman

    2413 Words  | 5 Pages

    Man and Superman: A Comedy of Ideas Shaw’s Man and Superman is a comedy of ideas. He has presented a good number of ideas in Man and Superman but his treatment of these ideas is comic rather than serious. Serious ideas have been presented with wit and humour. For this comic treatment of serious ideas the play is regarded as a comedy of ideas. Shaw’s aim was to make certain ideas, which were unpalatable to the early twentieth century society, receive attention among the thinking public. In

  • The Life of Saint Ignatius

    1812 Words  | 4 Pages

    his mother. The reason for that belief was because he was nursed by a common woman who lived in one of the villages and her name was Maria Garin. His grandfather, Don Juan Perez de Onaz, was married to Dona Sancha and they had to three children from that union, one of which was Saint Ignatius’s father Beltran, and two daughters. Don Juan Perez de Onaz also had two other children out of wedlock to a woman by the name of Hermosa. The history of his grandfather described him as being the pillar of the