Holger Ernst Essays

  • Staging the Boxing Scene in A View From The Bridge by Arthur Miller

    3381 Words  | 7 Pages

    Staging the Boxing Scene in A View From The Bridge by Arthur Miller Arthur Miller is a famous dramatist in around the 1940’s and 50’s. His popularity developed as a result of his plays regarding social issues. The play “A View from the Bridge” focuses on an Italian community that is suspicious of outsiders. Many of the men from foreign countries work on the docks as Eddie Carbone does. The play narrator is a lawyer: Alfieri, he tells the tale of how two men come to Carbone’s house from Sicily

  • Creative Expression in Hunduism

    1120 Words  | 3 Pages

    Creative expression in Hinduism is often incorporated through rituals and daily tasks. Hindu women have the opportunity to express themselves creatively through the daily creation of kolams, also known as Rangoli. Kolams are intricate drawings that serve as a proclamation to the world of various meanings, and also a unique form of communication, dependent on their design. These kolams can express many meanings such as announcing that their home is welcome to others, announce special events, worship

  • Spoiler Alert

    679 Words  | 2 Pages

    Andrew G. Kaufman, esquire, smiles and waves at his neighbor, who is walking her ridiculous/yappy/rat of a toy poodle, as he drives through the repetitive cycle of houses that make up his shitty suburban neighborhood. His eyes are on the road, but his head, his head is in the stars. He reminisces about his time performing for children at birthday parties and he reminisces about Elvis and he reminisces about magic and he reminisces about singing; he remembers his father telling him, “A smart, good

  • Contemporary Art: Marina Abramovic

    1380 Words  | 3 Pages

    Marina Abramovic was born in Yugoslavia in 1946. In the early 1970’s she pursued Fine Art in Belgrade where she established the importance and use of performance as a visual art. Marina considered body as being her medium and subject. Having found the mental limits of her existence, she bore severe pain and danger in the search for emotional transformation. Marina’s work is more typical rather than traditional. It avoided artwork such as paint and canvas; however the aim was to eradicate the distance

  • Theme Of Masculinity In Drown By Junot Diaz

    1397 Words  | 3 Pages

    Masculinity is an idea that people, usually men, set, to achieve their ego. From generation to generation, men put on this mask of masculinity to hide their true self, to put up a front that’s made up of lies and discomfort. In the collection of stories Drown, by Junot Diaz, Diaz portrayed, through the perspective of Latino men, an overall idea of masculinity, and how masculinity is being used and misunderstood. From Ramon to his two sons, Yunior and Rafa, Diaz portrayed a pass of this idea of masculinity

  • Hurricane Monologue

    2535 Words  | 6 Pages

    It’s times like these where I realize just how great my life is. Hanging out with my family, watching TV, and laughing. I wouldn’t change my life for anything, I love it. I love spending time with my 7 year old brother Jacob, my father, and my mother. I don’t know what I would do if anything happened to them. I look around at my family with a smile on my face as I sit on the faded brown couch in my living soaking in just how great my life is. Suddenly a loud alarm sounded from the TV jerking

  • My House Was Destroyed by Fire

    876 Words  | 2 Pages

    December came quietly that year, not blinding us with a blanket of snow, but creeping through the landscape with a cold that ached in the bones. Every blade of grass was held captive by a sheath of frost, as were the glacial branches that scraped at my windows, begging to get in. It is indeed the coldest year I can remember, with winds like barbs that caught and pulled at my skin. People ceaselessly searched for warmth, but my family found that this year, the warmth was searching for us. My

  • We have always lived in the Castle

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the story We have always lived in the Castle, by Shirley Jackson, the reader is presented with only one perspective and that is Mary Katherine "Merricat" Blackwood's point of view. While many aspect were present, the one that really stood out was that the Blackwood family does not appreciate change. Everything is preserved: objects, food, routines, rooms, etc. So, it is clear that when facing situations that cause change, both Mary Katherine and Constance Blackwood, the two sisters who survived

  • Descriptive Essay On A Unusual Wedding

    1627 Words  | 4 Pages

    A Disastrous Wedding It is the day of my wedding. Seems like it has taken forever for it to get here, more like two weeks. I wake up next to my beautiful 1 ½ year old daughter Emily. Today is the day and I am ready. I go over my mental checklist checking things off. Dress and shoes, in my closet…check. Veil…check. Makeup bag and hair stuff ready to go…check. I take a deep breath and get dressed so I can go to get my hair and makeup done. Waking up my daughter is a breeze, she’s so well behaved.

  • Slavery in Beloved, by Toni Morrison

    1972 Words  | 4 Pages

    Beloved “Beloved” is the story of a young black woman's escape from slavery in the nineteenth century, and the process of adjusting to a life of freedom. Most people associate slavery with shackles, chains, and back breaking work. What they do not realize is the impact of the psychological and emotional bondage of slavery. In order for a slave to be truly free, they had to escape physically first, and once that was accomplished they had to confront the horror of their actions and

  • My magical visit

    957 Words  | 2 Pages

    My Magical Visit I remember the visit like it was yesterday. The year was 1990, and it was the month of June. I hadn’t been off for more than two weeks, and I was bored out of my mind. It really takes a lot to keep a seven year old busy. That’s when it happened. My dad told me that tomorrow we would be going to visit somewhere special. He told me that he also visited this place when he was a kid. I remember the night before we left, I couldn’t sleep at all. That somewhere special was his family’s

  • The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing

    1612 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing The character of Ben Lovatt in Doris Lessing's "The Fifth Child" is one that is very powerful, and also extremely interesting. He is violent, and unbelievably strong, yet he would not be able to fend for himself in the "big, bad World". Doris Lessing's use of a very effective mixture of characterisation, symbolism and language use result in a very intriguing and fascinating novel. At the start of the novel, the reader is lulled into a sense of happiness

  • The Journey in A Good Man Is Hard to Find

    1210 Words  | 3 Pages

    In “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” it is time for a trip to Florida for a family vacation. About half way through their journey, Bailey, the father within the family, reluctantly falls for the convincing of his children, John Wesley and June Star, and takes them to see the old plantation home the grandmother had previously mentioned. He turns on to the dirt road the grandmother says the house is on and drives for quite some time; the grandmother realizes the house is actually in Tennessee and not in

  • Narrative Essay: Building A Robot

    2361 Words  | 5 Pages

    Beep Beep Beep i hear my alarm going off and my parents yelling at me to wake up. As i slowly open my eyes i cringe at the thought of going to school and being surrounded with a bunch of immature people . As i wake up even more i slowly walk over to my drawn down shades and grab ahold of the yellowed stained string that was once crisp white like the first fresh snowfall. i pull the dust filled shades up to let some light into my room. Now that i am fully awake i walk over to my door and unlock

  • House Of The Seven Gables

    2920 Words  | 6 Pages

    The House of the Seven Gables “[The] sympathy or magnetism among human beings is more subtle and universal than we think; it exists, indeed, among different classes of organized life, and vibrates from one to another” (Hawthorne 178). Loosely based on the events of Hawthorne’s own life, The House of the Seven Gables attempts to show the suffering of descendants forced to repent for the sins of their “father”, while they are unknowingly renewing the curse by nurturing the ancestral greed that has

  • Winter's Bone Analysis

    1268 Words  | 3 Pages

    Debra Granik presents the unforeseen and diametrically opposed stereotypical, Hollywood representation of America in her film Winter's bone. She provides the audience with multiple visual elements (key scenes). She outlines the idea that, “in the land of opportunity, opportunity is not given”. This means that many in America such as Granik’s character “Ree Dolly” have no ability to pursue their hopes and dreams. They face difficulty standing on their own two feet, without being so reliant on society

  • Suffering In Fever 1793

    1537 Words  | 4 Pages

    Suffering is apart of life, just like joy and love is. We can never choose how life treats us but we can always choose how we react and get back up again. Through Fever 1793 we see up close and personal how suffering can affect us, and how sometimes it can affect us in positive ways. How suffering can help turn the page to the next chapter in our lives. How suffering doesn’t always mean losing but also gaining. Laurie Anderson clearly lays out the Yellow Fever through the eyes of 14 year old Mattie

  • Of Mice and Men and Steinbeck’s Life

    2032 Words  | 5 Pages

    and the Gabilan Mountains, Steinbeck found the materials for his fiction (Tedlock 3). John Steinbeck's agricultural upbringing in the California area vibrantly shines through in the settings and story lines of the majority of his works. John Ernst Steinbeck was born in Salinas, California, on February 27, 1902. His father's family, originally called Grossteinbeck, had come from Wuppertal, about twenty miles east of the German city of Düsseldorf. During summers he worked as a hired hand on nearby

  • Origins of Expressionism

    908 Words  | 2 Pages

    mostly in Germany, one of the most important Expressionist groups was “originated by a Dresden group called Die Brücke, which included painters Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Erich Heckel, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Emil Nolde, Max Pechstein, and Otto Müller” (History of Expressionism). After viewing a Munich show of Impressionist and Post Impressionist paintings, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, founder of the Brücke group, felt that the paintings were lacking significance in content and execution. This led to his decision

  • Max Planck

    896 Words  | 2 Pages

    Max Planck On April 23, 1858 Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck was born in Kiel, Germany. He was the sixth child of a law professor at the University of Kiel. At the age of nine his interest in physics and mathematics was developed by his teacher Hermann Muller. When he graduated at the age of seventeen he decided to choose physics over music for his career. Although he is know for physics he was an exceptional pianist who had acquired the gift of being able to hear absolute pitch. His favorite