Gillian Essays

  • Gillian Anderson

    1244 Words  | 3 Pages

    Gillian Anderson has exceeded the point of recognition, and has become a role model for young and old alike. Her popularity has evolved over the years due in part for her notorious role as Special Agent Dana Scully, on the once cult hit television series The X-Files. With the show now entering its 7th season, presumed to be its last, the concern of the once apprehensive Gillian losing the role of Scully is no longer an aspect. The reputation of the character has brought the actress apperception,

  • Gillian Armstrong

    1641 Words  | 4 Pages

    The first reason I chose Gillian Armstrong for my research paper is because I admire her dedication and ambition to become a director even though it was a male-dominated job at the time. She is an extremely ambitious and independent woman that didn’t let anything get in her way of pursuing her goal to become a director. The second reason I picked Gillian Armstrong is because she is the director of Little Women, which has been an all-time favorite film of mine since I was little. Armstrong has explored

  • Digging by Seamus Heaney, Catrin by Gillian Clarke, Little Boy Lost,

    1057 Words  | 3 Pages

    Digging by Seamus Heaney, Catrin by Gillian Clarke, Little Boy Lost, Little Boy Found by William Blake and On My First Son by Ben Jonson. POEMS The four poems that I have chosen to study are Digging by Seamus Heaney, Catrin by Gillian Clarke, Little Boy Lost, Little Boy Found by William Blake and On My First Son by Ben Jonson. All of theses poems express an issue of love and are all indirectly linked by some way or another on the issue of love. Digging is a poem about admiration, how

  • Miracle on St David’s Day by Gillian Clarke

    1298 Words  | 3 Pages

    ‘Miracle on St David’s Day’, written by Gillian Clarke in 1975, is a personal account of the author’s experiences as she visited a mental hospital. A calm peaceful mood is set at the beginning of the poem, as Gillian Clarke describes the countryside and country house. However, the poem leads straight from this gentle nature to the harsh reality of life. ‘I am reading poetry to the insane’ Gillian Clarke is at a mental institution, reading poetry to the patients as a form of therapy. Through the

  • Gillian Clarke's Catrin tackles one of the well-considered themes in

    805 Words  | 2 Pages

    Gillian Clarke's Catrin tackles one of the well-considered themes in feminist writing - the mother-daughter relationship. CATRIN ====== Gillian Clarke's "Catrin" tackles one of the well-considered themes in feminist writing - the mother-daughter relationship. The aspect of the relationship that Clarke explores here is the bond ("rope") that ties them together and from which they try to free themselves from the very beginning, even before birth. Freeing yourself as an individual within

  • In These Two Poems, Gillian Clarke Gives The Impression Of Someone Who

    866 Words  | 2 Pages

    In These Two Poems, Gillian Clarke Gives The Impression Of Someone Who Is Uncomfortable With Her Surroundings. Compare And Contrast Clarke's Feelings About Violence, Change And The Attitude Of Those That Perpetuate These Themes. The intention of this essay is to compare the corresponding themes of violence, change and the attitude of those who influence these themes in the poems 'Jac Codi Baw' and 'No Hands'. Both poems are by Gillian Clarke and give an insight into her feelings on modern

  • With it’s tight structure, poetry can accommodate great passion. Do

    1105 Words  | 3 Pages

    disagree with this statement. The two poems I have chosen to examine, ‘Marged’ by Gillian Clarke and ‘Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night’ by Dylan Thomas, show different emotions that I believe disprove the statement. The first, ‘Marged’, is lacking in emotion and the second, ‘Do Not Go Gentle’, does more than accommodate the passion, it emphasises and releases the feelings felt by the poet. ‘Marged’ by Gillian Clarke is a Shakespearean sonnet, with three quatrains and a couplet at the end

  • Discophobia, By Gillian Frank: An Analysis

    1621 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the article “Discophobia” by Gillian Frank, Frank discusses the parallels between the rise and fall of the disco movement and the gay rights movement of the ‘70s. Disco began its rise in popularity at around the same time that the American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality

  • Overhead In County Slogi and Woman Work

    812 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Woman Work" by Maya Angelou and "Overheard in County Sigo" by Gillian Clarke In this essay I am going to discuss two poems. "Woman Work" written by Maya Angelou, is about a woman who works all the time and just wants to rest. The second poem is called "overheard in County Sigo" written by Gillian Clarke which is about a married woman having a conversation with her friend about her life and looking back at what her ambitions were. "Woman Work" is a regular 5 stanza, rhyming poem, It is set

  • Gillian Rose Artifact Essay

    932 Words  | 2 Pages

    Search and Research This presentation will deal use Gillian Rose’s Visual Methodologies to analyze my chosen artefact. My chosen artefact is the album cover to the beatles album Abbey Road. In this presentation i will outline the key aspects of Visual Methodologies that relate to the photograph used as the album cover. Those key aspects are Semiology and content analysis. In this presentation i will first outline the important characteristics of the album cover, the message behind it and the significance

  • Gillian Flynn's Sharp Objects

    735 Words  | 2 Pages

    Love is Powerful but Fear Could Safe Your Life Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn, is a novel about Camille Preaker, a young reporter from Chicago, who is sent to her home town, Wind Gap, to report on two murders. Ann and Natalie were both abducted and made beautiful by Amma and her friends. Amma is Camille’s step sister who is considered the perfect sibling in the family. Adora is Camille’s mother who does not care about her and only Amma. Adora treats Amma like a baby doll because she never wants her

  • Gillian Crowther's Argumentative Analysis

    689 Words  | 2 Pages

    species were hunters and gatherers collecting their foods from the wild and hunting animals for meat. However overtime as the world and individual societies developed they moved away from this method and more to producing their own foods. Based on the Gillian Crowther reading there three possible explanation to why hunter-gatherers moved from collecting food to producing their own foods.     The first explanation why hunter-gatherers moved to producing food was because they were able to invent new ways

  • Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl

    785 Words  | 2 Pages

    attachment to another person, but this passion could lead to dire consequences. There are those that seem to find the love of their life, but realize that finding that person might have been the worst mistake of their life. In the novel, Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn, when Nick and Amy Dunne met each other for the first time, it was almost love at first sight. From there, the pair became husband and wife to embark on the journey of life together. However, their seemingly perfect marriage began to fall apart

  • Middlemarch: The Web of Affinities, by Gillian Beer

    806 Words  | 2 Pages

    In ‘Middlemarch: The Web of Affinities’, Gillian Beer traces the influence that Darwin had on the work of George Elliot. In her analysis of Darwin’s metaphor of ‘the inextricable web of affinities’, Beer quotes the central notions inherent in “The Origin of the Species”, as well as its implications for Eliot’s writing. Darwin writes that we it is possible for us to see, distinctly, the manner in which all ‘living and extinct beings are able to be linked together in one extensive classification

  • Gillian Flynn's Yours Truly, Gone Girl

    2233 Words  | 5 Pages

    Yours Truly, The Gone Girl Authored by The New York Times bestselling novelist Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl is an alarming look at the downfall of a fragile and crooked marriage characterized by infidelity, discontent, resentment, and, ultimately, psychopathy. The couple’s toxic relationship culminating in tragedy, Nick Dunn arrives home on his fifth wedding anniversary to find his house ransacked and his wife Amy missing. As the police dive into a high stakes investigation in the presumed kidnapping

  • Characterization And Figurative Language In Gillian Shields's Immortal

    547 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Immortal by Gillian Shields, Evie is thrust into an unusual world when her grandmother gets sick, her dad gets employed in the army. She is sent to a remote, all girls boarding school called Wyldcliffe. On her way, she bumps into a mysterious boy named Sebastian. Everyone at Wyldcliffe seems to despise her, so to escape from her life at the school, Evie has regular meetings with Sebastian, but he seems to be hiding something from his past. Evie has a necklace that has power stored inside of it

  • Masculinity And Gender In Gillian Flynn's 'Gone Girl'

    1759 Words  | 4 Pages

    homemaker, the softer, weaker one. It’s still seen in the work force: is it still odd to see a male nurse? It’ seen everyday, in nearly every culture; even in the 21st century, civilization still puts male and female traits into set, concrete boxes. Gillian Flynn, in her best selling novel Gone Girl, utilizes the common association people have of masculinity and femininity to present a contradiction of these widespread roles. She does this mostly through her main characters Nick and Amy Dunn, who represent

  • Daffodils by William Wordsworth and Miracle on St. David's Day by Gillian Clarke

    2052 Words  | 5 Pages

    Daffodils by William Wordsworth and Miracle on St. David's Day by Gillian Clarke Each of the Wordsworth and Clarke poems show how the poets have been inspired to write about daffodils. In 'Miracle on St. David's Day', Gillian Clarke actually refers to Wordsworth's poem within her own. The poems however differ in structure and their responses to the daffodils are different. All of the poems use personification but the poems are written in contrasting style. William Wordsworth was born in

  • Comparing The Daffodils by William Wordsworth and Miracle on St. David's Day by Gillian Clarke

    924 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing The Daffodils by William Wordsworth and Miracle on St. David's Day by Gillian Clarke In this essay I will attempt to compare two very contrasting poems, William Wordsworth’s `The Daffodils' which was written in pre 1900s and Gillian Clarke’s ‘Miracle on St David's Day’, written in the 20th century. Strangely enough Gillian Clarke’s ‘Miracle on St David's day’ was actually inspired by ‘The Daffodils’. In 1804 William Wordsworth wrote ‘a masterpiece’, two years after his experience

  • Comparison of Miracle on St. David's Day by Gillian Clarke and Daffodils by William Wordsworth

    1988 Words  | 4 Pages

    Comparison of Miracle on St. David's Day by Gillian Clarke and Daffodils by William Wordsworth 'Daffodils' was written by William Wordsworth approximately a century before 'Miracle on St. David's Day' was written by Gillian Clarke. Due to this, the poems differ greatly in their style and language. Observing the poems at first glance, it is obvious that they also contrast in content, however at greater depth, the connections between them are made obvious. In this essay, I will be discussing