Shift Essays

  • Ontological Shift

    1771 Words  | 4 Pages

    Ontological Shift In Michael Heim’s essay “The Cyber Space Dialectic”, he discusses how our culture is going through an ontological shift fashioned by the Internet. Heim articulates his theory of what dialectic is and how this ontological shift is creating a new dialectic. The Internet is the main place today where people from all over the world exchange and communicate their ideas and feelings. The Internet is a new community in itself. The ontological shift into the cyberspace times will change

  • Shifts in Sensibility

    636 Words  | 2 Pages

    During the end of the seventeenth century and early eighteenth century a socio-political shift occurred. Sensibilities transferred from the logic of the Enlightenment, or Neo-classical Period, to those feelings and emotions of the Romantic Age. During the Enlightenment authors such as Moliére & Swift used reason and rational to present their ideas. They address broad socio-political issues with their writings. Moliére in his satirical work, Tartuffe, focuses upon hypocrisy within the clergy. He uses

  • Macbeth - Power Shifts

    953 Words  | 2 Pages

    DRAMA OFTEN EXAMINES THE WAYS INDIVIDUALS STRUGGLE TO DOMINATE AND/OR MINIPULATE EACH OTHER. DISCUSS THE TECHNIQUES USED IN ONE OR MORE PLAYS, WHICH DRAW OUT ATTENTION TO THE POWER SHIFTS BWTWEEN CHARACTERS. The text Macbeth by famous playwright William Shakespeare portrays a dramatic power struggle by the careful employment of various literary techniques. "Authority poisons everybody who takes authority on himself" (Vladimir Ilyich Lenin) aptly describes this prominent theme of Macbeth. Techniques

  • The Shift in Abortion Policy in the 1800s

    5428 Words  | 11 Pages

    The Shift in Abortion Policy in the 1800s "In 1800 no jurisdiction in the United Sates had enacted any statutes whatsoever on the subject of abortion... Yet by 1900 virtually every jurisdiction in the United States had laws upon its books that proscribed the practice sharply and declared most abortions to be criminal offenses" (Mohr p. VII). Societal Changes from the Early 1800s to the Mid 1800s During the early 1800s, abortion at the beginning of a pregnancy was neither immoral nor criminal

  • The Second Shift-Women in Society

    1354 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Second Shift-Women in Society Women have pushed forward in the struggle for equality. Today women are staples in the professional world. More women are attending college than men as proved in recent studies. Women have outnumbered men on college campuses since 1979, and on graduate school campuses since 1984. More American women than men have received bachelor's degrees every year since 1982. Even here on Haverford's campus, the Admissions Office received more applications from women for

  • Night Shift Essay

    1070 Words  | 3 Pages

    Overnight shift work, although highly important, tends to result in a lack of sleep. The great importance of sleep on cognitive functioning, specifically memory, has been shown by several researchers. Payne, Stickgold, Swanberg, and Kensinger (2008) demonstrated that sleep aids memory retention, especially of negative memories. Overnight work can be more convenient for various reasons, but the work comes with a price. Consistent overnight shifts, even when regular sleep occurs during the day, can

  • paradigm shift in utopian fiction

    1851 Words  | 4 Pages

    Utopian fiction or the imaginary projection of a perfect society in which all need and want have been removed and conflict is eliminated, has a long history. Sir Thomas More’s Utopia is a focal point in the tradition of the genre, and More’s contemplation of a society removed from daily struggle to a place of ease, has had a powerful and lasting effect on subsequent visions of the future. Dystopian fiction is the natural correlative of this literary mode and presents visions of imaginary worlds in

  • Longer Shift Lengths Essay

    688 Words  | 2 Pages

    Studies have shown that those who experience longer shift lengths suffer from various ailments at a much higher rate, such as: pain, numbness, aching, and stiffness of the musculoskeletal. Longer shift lengths tend to lead to more fatigue in officers due to the high demand of police work and very little down time between shifts. On average, those working 12 our shift lengths got six and a half hours of sleep a night (Amendola, Weisburd, Hamilton, Jones, & Slipka, 2011). Six and a half hours is well

  • Working Hours and Shift Work

    2178 Words  | 5 Pages

    1. Working hours and shift work Nurses are working under in a variety of shift work systems to be able to provide continuous care for patients. However, 24 hours workplace organizations are now very common, such as in the healthcare and industrial sectors. This requires the staff to be adapted with many various forms of shift work schedules. In terms of healthcare sector, the shift work schedules are considered shift duration which highlights two main categories of shift systems, each system

  • The Negative Impacts of Shift Work on Nurses

    1630 Words  | 4 Pages

    these changes has been the assimilation of shift work systems and the flexibility in work schedules. The need for 24 hour care makes the healthcare professions to work with different shift systems such as 12 h, 8 h, 9 h or 10 hour shifts. However, the common shift work systems divide a 24-h day in two (12-h) or three (8-h) shifts. Nonetheless, this requires the staff to be adapted with the various forms of shift work schedules. The negative impacts of shift work on workers’ health such as fatigue

  • Analysis Of Arlie Hochschild's The Second Shift

    1115 Words  | 3 Pages

    Arlie Hochschild wrote The Second Shift to bring attention to the demands placed on two parent working households with children. Arlie’s struggle as a woman in her attempt to work, advance in her career and be taken serious while doing so, along with maintaining a home and providing adequate quality time raising a family became apparent with her first child. Hochschild began to take note of peer’s reactions to her bringing her son to the office, the reactions of students, both male and female, and

  • An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge

    573 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bierce weaves a tale of intrigue and captivation, by using shifts of voice and time in the story “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge�. In the first four paragraphs, Bierce begins the story using third person, and in this point of view, he creates reality. We can view the situation and all aspects while it is written in third person; we know precisely what is going on, we know it is real. Near the end of the fourth paragraph, the author shifts cleverly from third person to limited omniscient. After

  • Analysis of A.E. Housman’s Terence, this is stupid stuff

    700 Words  | 2 Pages

    A.E. Housman’s “Terence, this is stupid stuff” is a poem that starts out as a friend of Terence talking to him, but it then shifts to Terence talking to his friends. Then shifts from a humorous tone to a more serious tone. It also shifts in setting, time, place, and idea. This poem demonstrates figurative language which is language employing figures of speech; language that cannot be taken literally or only literally. This poem also has several different poetic devices, which is a device that contributes

  • Employees at Sonora Foods are organised into teams. These include:

    2841 Words  | 6 Pages

    department running smoothly. The operations staff at Sonora Food are organised to work with different shifts. These are: day shift, 40 hours a week (7am-4pm). Afternoon shift, 35 hours a week (4pm-midnight) and night shift, 32.5 hours a week (midnight-7am). These are the shifts and working hours for the operatives. The wage is £5.35 during the day and rises to £10 for staff working on the night shift. This is how the operatives are organised, this has been successful for Sonora as all the operatives

  • Lottery

    728 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Mood Shifts" Many authors use mood shifts in their stories to leave a greater impact on the reader and make it easier to understand. The particular state of mind or feelings of a person is one’s mood. Various aspects of one’s surroundings can alter a mood. A story often creates a specific mood or even causes a number of different moods to arise in a short period of time. Shirley Jackson’s short story, "The Lottery" does just that, by forcing different moods to surface in various sections of the

  • The Role of the Heath in Hardy's Return of the Native

    1154 Words  | 3 Pages

    Horace Binney. Egdon Heath, in Thomas Hardy's Return of the Native, behaves as Nature does in this quotation -- it undergoes seasonal shifts, but its essential quality remains. The heath takes on the role of a static influence on the characters' relationships and circumstances, demonstrating the unchanging nature of human experience through its own seasonal shifts, but still unaltered essence of tragedy. As the story opens, it is November fifth, in the early winter. The beginning of winter is

  • Working At Starbucks

    1056 Words  | 3 Pages

    gets no business at all. Of course, I work at Starbucks, not the ones that you see on the corner of the streets, but I worked at the one in Target. At my Starbucks, we would have one person working each shift. We had three shifts per day, the opening shift, the midday, and the closing shift. With all my luck I got to either open the store, or close the store. I really didn’t like opening or closing, but I said to myself, money is money, and I can’t go wrong with making money. Another thing that

  • The Night Nurse

    830 Words  | 2 Pages

    she went into surgery. After this is when her attitude begins to change. After surgery Grace just lied in bed in so much pain. She cried out “help me…. I’m so cold, I’m so frightened” (654)! This is when the reader notices the shift in Graces attitude. Her attitude shifts into a tone that can practically be heard by the reader. As many times as Grace cried out for help the reader could tell she was desperate. Once the day was over, Grace was about to go through a night that she would never forget

  • Daniel Quinn’s Ishmael - The Destruction Continues

    583 Words  | 2 Pages

    allusions, Ishmael begins his lesson with the history of his evolution from "Goliath" (17) to Ishmael. He explains this evolution as a time of realization where he shifts from blindly accepting the infamous reputation of Goliath, an evil giant from the Bible, to the quiet, thoughtful being of Ishmael. After his brief history, Ishmael shifts his attention to the creation. "A culture is a people enacting a story" (41), and the story of the Garden of Eden opened up new thoughts on man's transformation

  • The Nature of Dream Activity

    615 Words  | 2 Pages

    memories, with frequent shifts of scene. This broad characterization includes a great variety of dream experiences. Many dreams collected in sleep laboratories are rather ordinary, but most people have at least some bizarre dreams. At the start of the 20th century Sigmund Freud proposed that a mental process quite different from that used in the waking state dominates the dreaming mind. He described this “primary process” as characterized by more primitive mechanisms, by rapid shifts in energy and emotions