Rupert Giles Essays

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer

    5070 Words  | 11 Pages

    Buffy the Vampire Slayer Mentors feature prominently in the Gothic genre. From Dr Van Helsing in Bram Stoker's Dracula, who leads the young heroes into their quest to annihilate the Count, to Rupert Giles, the Watcher in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, older and more experienced adults have provided essential guidance for the younger protagonists of the genre. The differences in media of expression and the subsequent adaptations from novel to television series has not affected the presence of this

  • Essay On Watcher

    2962 Words  | 6 Pages

    EARLY LIFE: What does the girl destined to be next in a long line of Slayers do with the first fifteen years of her life? Well, if you're Buffy Summers, and you never had a Watcher until you were called, you do what every other Los Angeles girl would do: stay pretty, shoplift lipstick, paint your nails, and think about really vapid and shallow things. Buffy excelled at it. She was even named Fiesta Queen (Hemery High's version of the May Queen). Most of her life was filled with boys and clothes,

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer as Horror Genre

    817 Words  | 2 Pages

    the social outcast showing that she can be independent. The popular girl Cordelia is shocked as she is rejected and at Buffy's intellect to outsmart her in what develops into a comic foil between the two. At the school Buffy meets her watcher Giles, at first she doesn't know that this is the case, but it soon becomes clear that she can't get away from the responsibility that being a slayer requires. This is significant as Buffy thought for a while that vampires had gone out of her life, as

  • Xander Harris Speech

    711 Words  | 2 Pages

    it was just him, Willow and Jesse, his best friend. When Buffy showed up in Sunnydale, Jesse was turned into a vampire and he fell for everyone's favorite slayer. Buffy joined their group, and with her, they started hanging out in the library with Giles, Buffy's watcher. In terms of relationships, this is where it gets a little complicated. At the beginning of the show, Xander fell instantly in love with Buffy. But at the time, Xander and Willow were best friends, and Willow had a sizable crush on

  • Dialogue Essay: Buffy The Vampire Slayer

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Have you ever thought about it? What would happen if...you could ever turn me? You can't, by the way, you couldnt' so..no bad ideas. I'm positive the universe makes Slayer-blood like...demon-infection-resistant-y or something. What ? That sounds like it should be a thing. But did you ever, you know, think about it?" Buffy didn't even know what made her ask. No matter how he answered she was pretty sure it'd make her want to hit him. But the thought had occurred to her a few nights ago, so now they

  • The Symbolism Of Communication In Buffy The Vampire Slayer

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    Buffy the Vampire Slayer is a show where there is much to expect. From monsters to high school problems and witchcraft, Buffy is a well known and well written show that hit #3 in TV Guide’s list of the “25 Top Cult Shows Ever!”. Buffy is well known for its problems that the group faces throughout the series as it also relates to the real world. There are many problems with students trying to speak what they want to say. Episode “Hush” symbolically represents the problems teens and adults go through

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer Episode 410 Hush

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    serious conversation with the people who mean the most to them. Willow and Tara talk about their similar passion in witch craft; Xander and Anya make up and talk about their relationship and how they both truly feel about each other; Giles and his lover Olivia talk about Giles duties of a watcher and fighting monsters, vampires, and demons. When Riley goes to see Buffy in her dorm room they sit down on the bed and Riley says “I guess we have to talk” Buffy replies “I guess we do” but then neither of them

  • Rupert's Land: The Division Lies Only in Interpretation

    1904 Words  | 4 Pages

    Rupert's Land: The Division Lies Only in Interpretation I sit here and I consider myself a young and developing Historian. I consider Frits Pannekoek and Irene M. Spry to be similar historians, yet with more knowledge, age, and experience. What I am sure does not differ between myself, these Authors and other related Historians, is a certain degree of ability to take a piece(s) of work and critically canalize it. I have done just that recently. I have taken the essays, The Flock Divided: Fractions

  • Danforth?s Witch Hunt, Is It J

    503 Words  | 2 Pages

    a choice. Because of this and many other miscalculations on Danforth’s part numerous people lost their lives. In addition to this, Judge Danforth has chose, very biasedly, what to admit as evidence. He used that power whenever he sought fit. When Giles Corey lacks the evidence to prove that Thomas Putnam hath prompted his daughter to falsely cry witchery on George Jacobs, Danforth dismisses the claim. Why you say? The lack of tangible evidence, yet when the young harlots claimed that invisibl...

  • Violence In The Crucible

    751 Words  | 2 Pages

    The buildup of the violence in the plot is gradual and done successfully, creeping up slowly on both the folks in Salem and us, the audience. There is always a little reminder of the darkness in Salem, whether it’s John Proctor beating Abigail, or Giles Corey slowly dying while being pressed. The evil of human beings and their nature to join in conspiracies and chaos never leaves, making The Crucible a perfectly terrifying and gross

  • Reverend Parris of The Crucible by Arthur Miller

    513 Words  | 2 Pages

    Reverend Parris of The Crucible Greed can be a very destructive part of everyone’s life. It can control our every action at times. Some people let their greed get out of control, which was exactly what happened in Salem during the witch trials. Three people’s greed brought up this whole tragedy of the trials, convictions and hangings. One person is Reverend Parris. In my opinion Reverend Parris is greedy, self-serving, and egotistical. Reverend Parris is extremely greedy. In the story he is complaining

  • Puritanism, and The Salem Witch Trials

    824 Words  | 2 Pages

    was called in. After much deliberation, Griggs concluded that the problem was witchcraft. This put into motion the forces that would ultimately result in the death of nineteen men and women. In addition to those nineteen people, one man named Giles Corey was crushed to death. Seventeen others died in prison and the lives of many were irrevocably changed. To better understand the events of the Salem witch trials, it is necessary to understand the time period in which the accusations of witchcraft

  • The Crucible by Director Nicholas Hytner

    1190 Words  | 3 Pages

    web of disagreements among them. The play condensed a heated discussion between the men in the book into a series of arguments right before the Reverend arrived. In the book, Parris, Putnam, Proctor, and Giles were standing in a room discussing general the general discontent in Salem. As Giles put it, “Wherefore is everybody suing everybody? I have been six time in court this year” (p. 37).... ... middle of paper ... ...wly dropping from the gallows, as the townspeople raised their arms in celebration

  • Justice often masks an occurrence of injustice in many forms and in

    757 Words  | 2 Pages

    Justice often masks an occurrence of injustice in many forms and in the crucible by Arthur Miller, the leaders of Salem, believe that the way that they are dealing with people of strange happenings is right and just but is actually wrong and unjust. Justice can be defined as the right and moral decision and general beliefs. Injustice can be defined as unfairness and a lack of justice. Someone who is done by an injustice may have been judged to harshly. In "The Crucible" by Arthur Miller

  • The Crucible Argumentative Essay

    1015 Words  | 3 Pages

    Witch hunts” constantly reoccur throughout history - in 1600s, 1953 and in 2014. Good morning, fellow directors. Today, I want to demonstrate that “the crucible” by Arthur Miller in 1953 is not just a play for 1953, but a play that relates to any period of time, notably to our modern society. The crucible is an allegory of 1953 McCarthyism and social chaos of the time. Today’s government manipulated the truth creates the fear of “outlawed bikies gangs” similar to 1692 theocratic government creates

  • The crucible

    580 Words  | 2 Pages

    Justice played a big role in The Crucible. In the play, a manipulative girl is infatuated with a married man and will go to any lengths to get what she wants, even accusing others of witchcraft and putting their lives at risk. Her accusations cause mass hysteria in the town of Salem. The Salem community’s obsession with trying to provide justice only caused injustice against the accused. As accusations arose, the town became so focused on getting confessions and holding trials they forgot to look

  • Comparing One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and The Crucible

    1115 Words  | 3 Pages

    Authority and power and chaos and order are the main discourses that are present in Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Arthur Millar’s The Crucible. Through the context of each novel both authors use different dialogue, plots and situations to get their viewpoint across to the audience. In comparing the two texts with the similarities and differences, it is clear that both authors have had a different effect on the audience of today. It would appear as though both texts are focused around

  • Good Vs Evil In The Crucible And The Scarlet Letter

    1304 Words  | 3 Pages

    wife and the other innocent people who have been accused. Other examples include the part of the play where Giles tells the court that Putnam is killing his neighbors for their land. “…If Jacobs hangs for a witch he forfeit up his property-that’s law! And there is none but Putnam with the coin to buy so great a piece. This man is killing his neighbors for their land!” This is a quote from Giles Corey from when he claimed that Thomas Putnam was killing others for their land. The entire play was made

  • The crucible

    675 Words  | 2 Pages

    the dynamics of the trials. One of these characters is Giles Corey, an eighty-three year old farmer who is the scapegoat for many of the bad occurrences in the town. The primary reason for this is that he is uneducated and had a fiery personality which led to many confrontations with others. Although Giles Corey’s personality antagonized him with the townsfolk, this same stubbornness is what makes Giles one of the heroes of The Crucible. Giles Corey’s strong personality allows him fight for what he

  • Outfoxed Analysis

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    Even though it is politically one-sided, I think that Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism, is a highly effective liberal activist documentary. I would recommend the film because it sets out to prove something and it does so. I'll bet anything that it will make (or has made) the blood of both liberals and conservatives boil, if for different reasons. When Rupert Murdoch launched Fox News in 1996, its CEO (or Chairman, 1 of the 2!) Roger Ailes said, "We'd like to be premier journalists and