Immediate Essays

  • Immediate Family Struggles

    634 Words  | 2 Pages

    My immediate family is composed of my mom, my brother, and me. We are a lower-income family living paycheck to paycheck. Often times we have to use food stamps or other resources to make ends meet. Over the course of my life, I have witnessed my family struggle financially, and have been homeless three times. Whenever I face a challenge, I see how I can grow from it and how I can take the opportunity to become a better person. Some of my most influential struggles have been ones I have faced involving

  • With No Immediate Cause Summary

    1738 Words  | 4 Pages

    world from the outside of their homes to the streets. In her poem “With No Immediate Cause”, Shange talks about her horror related to the violence against women and protests against the unfair treatment of women in relation to the law. In the start of the poem, Shange states that “every 3 minutes a woman is beaten/ every five minutes a woman is raped/ every ten minutes a lil girl is molested” (Nappy Edges, With No Immediate Cause, p. 111) showing the plight of the women’s suffering. This is a harsh

  • Little Women

    650 Words  | 2 Pages

    Little Women, Louisa May Alcott Book Theme: In the arduous journey from childhood to adulthood, a young woman is faced with two things that need great attention and balance - the progress of her individual social standing, and the welfare of her immediate family. Main Conflict: The book does not really follow the traditional single plot line characteristic of many stories (especially during the time it was written). Alcott illustrated the roads the four March girls Amy, Beth, Jo, and Meg take in

  • Fichte's Subjective Idealism

    615 Words  | 2 Pages

    without there being a mind that dreams." Following the same path of reasoning as the dialogue, the Spirit begins by asking Fichte how he knows of external objects. In answering that the knowledge of external object arrives as a result of direct, immediate sense perception, Fichte concedes that he possesses no direct consciousness of outside objects, but only of himself. "In all perception you only perceive yourself," since perception is merely the conscious recognition of observation statements such

  • Applying the Hot Stove Rule of Discipline in the Workplace

    1589 Words  | 4 Pages

    managers is known as the "Hot Stove Rule of Discipline." This rule can be defined as the concept that disciplinary action should have the same characteristics as the penalty a person receives from touching a hot stove; that is, the discipline should be immediate, consistent, and impersonal (Gardner 1). Before any disciplinary action can be implemented, a manager must first give advanced warning. Employees must be informed clearly that certain actions will result in disciplinary actions. This is a very

  • Deep Ecology And Religion

    1205 Words  | 3 Pages

    as sacred throughout the history of humanity yet infidelity and divorce remain severely high. While society’s view of nature, as a revered and animated character is still frequently unfamiliar and unpracticed. Therefore, it seems implausible for immediate action to occur because based on the history of mankind’s slow and inflexible ability to change their behavior and conduct. Max Oelschlaeger claimed in The Sacred Earth that “the modern person has lost sight of the sacredness of creation”(539). This

  • Creating Other Worlds in Fly Away Peter

    1687 Words  | 4 Pages

    Creating Other Worlds in Fly Away Peter In the novel Fly Away Peter, David Malouf explores the individual’s ability to transcend the immediate, and create ‘other worlds’ of his or her own: "Meanwhile the Mind, from pleasure less, Withdraws into happiness: ...it creates,... Far other worlds..." Malouf uses the continuity of life to highlight the importance of the individual’s mind set against the meaning of human existence. Malouf’s three main characters, Jim Saddler, Ashley Crowther

  • Affirmative Defences

    891 Words  | 2 Pages

    force than what is reasonable. Another fact is that the danger the defendant felt has to be Affirmative defenses 3 immediate. What this means is that the defendant cannot claim that they committed the crime because they felt they would be in danger in the future. The laws are different in every state as for some states will allow you can use self-defense if the danger is not immediate. Another requirement for most states to accept this defense is that the defendant had tried to escape before committing

  • Cycles of Violence in The Battler

    1121 Words  | 3 Pages

    Adams breaks of a listless relationship with Marjorie, his girlfriend. Nick reveals his disgust with being committed to Marjorie during a fishing trip, and the proximity of the two in the boat coupled with the inability for either to escape the immediate situation results in moments of tense humiliation for both. Indeed, the scene percolates with subdued violence. In the case of "The Battler," the violence is not so heavily subdued. Nick is traveling on a train, probably as a vagabond, and

  • King Thrushbeard and Lessons Behind Fairytales

    1238 Words  | 3 Pages

    know of qualities in men that are pleasing. At this stage she would not have the ability to look for qualities in a man that are ually satisfying for a woman who is ready to marry. The only traits the princess takes note of and relates to are the immediate physical characteristics of the men, which are common things for pre-teens to focus on. There was never an initial attraction or subsequent attractions to follow with any of the men because of the fact that she was not aware of her own ual nature

  • SELLARS AND THE "MYTH OF THE GIVEN"

    8691 Words  | 18 Pages

    excitement, though never wholly extinguished, has been adulterated by numerous second thoughts, some of which will be expounded here. Having already taken issue with Sellars' general argument against immediate knowledge in section VIII of EPM and elsewhere, in my essay "What's Wrong with Immediate Knowledge?"1, I will concentrate here on his complaints about "the given". But I must admit at the outset that it is not easy to pin down the target to which Sellars applies that title. At the beginning

  • Pesticides

    514 Words  | 2 Pages

    found in twenty-three state’s water supplies right now. Scientists at Cornell University conclude that 99% of pesticides miss the intended source and find their way into the water, air and soil. Most of the pollution isn’t strong enough to create an immediate impact on humans so the wildlife is the primary target to these contaminates. Animals such as the European Starling birds are constantly being tested and found that they are greatly affected both behaviorally and psychologically. Farming practices

  • The Odyssey

    1391 Words  | 3 Pages

    passage supported by motifs, the theme of deception helps to reaffirm the extract’s importance to ‘The Odyssey’ as a whole. Through the employment of deception, supported by the motifs of lies, Odysseus’ Machiavellian trick ensures not only immediate, but future security. Questioned as to his name, Odysseus conscious of the imperative importance to his greater plan of escape cleverly lies, “My name is Nohbdy” (397); the sole reason for his survival. Blinded, Polyphemus’ howl beckons the other

  • Romeo And Juliet Character Analysis - Mercutio

    1396 Words  | 3 Pages

    ultimately his quick and volatile nature lead to his untimely death. Mercutio was first introduced to us in Act I, Scene 4; when Romeo, Benvolio and the gang are on the way to the Capulets' feast. Although it was only his first appearance, he captured immediate attention with his comments. We get the feeling that Mercutio will not stay a sideline character. He is shown joking and punning with Romeo on heaviness and lightness as well as how it relates to love. Mercutio and Romeo's friendship and obvious

  • I Will Be a Writer

    521 Words  | 2 Pages

    have to invest any time or intellectual energy in actually reading something enjoyable. While I attribute this partially to a decrease in the attention span of successive generations of Americans, it is also due to an increase in the desire for immediate rewards by writers. It is not enough to write a good book; it must be a bestseller, with a movie deal, an audio book, a book tour, and a round on the talk show circuit. I would be perfectly happy writing what I consider high-quality works without

  • Art as Communication

    592 Words  | 2 Pages

    From the dawn of humanity, mankind has made and been fascinated by a strange and unique concept: the idea of art. This phenomenon has no immediate, practical use; it feeds no mouths and protects no young. Yet even in the most primitive cave-dwellings of 30,000 years ago, we have evidence of artwork. Though these cave drawings may be completely different from the naturalistic masterpieces of the Renaissance, and those still very unlike the abstract images of today, all fit into the broad genre

  • Disaster in Elizabeth Bishop’s One Art

    559 Words  | 2 Pages

    coda; “disaster” impels the poem “One Art.” Fittingly, the crescendo begins softly. The poem’s opening stanza assumes a fairly impassive tone, which transpires from the speaker’s feigned indifference toward the prospect of losing. Though the immediate clash between Bishop’s title and its implication briefly upsets the mind from a logical standpoint, the speaker’s hasty assurance that loss is “no disaster” seem...

  • Diversity Incident Analysis

    548 Words  | 2 Pages

    particular involves a person using his sick days to take his wife to the doctor, even for just a scheduled check-up. Although company policy states that sick days may only be used for the illness of an employee or the illness of a member of his/her immediate family, this is a case where multiculturalism in the workplace plays a big role. Due to the fact that in the Mexican culture it’s the husband’s responsibility to take care of the well being of his wife and family, the employee sees his behavior as

  • The Significance of Inappropriate Laughter in Dry September and That Evening Sun

    570 Words  | 2 Pages

    Significance of Inappropriate Laughter in Dry September and That Evening Sun When one laughs, a public expression of feelings is being made. One’s guard is let down, and the act of laughing and the emotion that catalyzed it often appears to leave the immediate control of the laugher. Ironically, the more inappropriate the situation, the more full bodied and unstoppable one’s laughter can become. Both Minnie of “Dry September” and Nancy of “That Evening Sun” laugh at seemingly ill-timed occasions. Minnie

  • The Causes of World War One (1)

    514 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Causes of World War One (1) If you were to look back at WWI, you would see that there were direct and indirect causes to the war. The assassination of Archduke Ferdinand was an immediate cause. Gavrilo Princip, working with a Serbian anti-Austrian secret society called “The Black Hand” shot Archduke Ferdinand on June 28, 1914 in order to make way for a Slavic revolution. The assassination didn’t do as Princip hoped, and it was used as an excuse for Austria to take hostile action against Serbia