Wolves Essays

  • Wolves

    1957 Words  | 4 Pages

    Wolves The wolf was once a much slandered animal. In the western world, people feared and hated wolves, and this legacy is reflected in stories such as Little Red Riding Hood and The Boy Who Cried Wolf. In these popular children's tales the wolf is made out to be a prowler and a killer of livestock and people. There is some basis for The Boy Who Cried Wolf, for wolves have killed cattle and sheep. But what of Little Red Riding Hood? There are no records of wolves killing humans in Canada or the

  • Kill the Wolves

    633 Words  | 2 Pages

    Kill the Wolves Bang! A shot rings out in the forest. “Another one down. That’s five this week.” In the early 1900s there were predator extermination teams that were paid for every wolf, mountain lion, and bear they brought dead to the ranger station. Why were these stopped? “It’s those damn tree-huggers again.” Reintroducing Wolves into the southwest is the biggest mistake the government has made in several years. Farmers and ranchers suffer some of the most losses from wolves out of

  • Dancing With Wolves

    643 Words  | 2 Pages

    The film Dancing with Wolves takes place in South Dakota in 1863. John Dunbar is the main character who hurts his leg in battle and is sent to the frontier on a new mission as a Lieutenant. When Dunbar arrives in South Dakota he is there alone, no one else had made their way their yet. Dunbar gradually starts to live with the Indians and become one of them getting the name Dancing with Wolves. Another main character is Standing with a Fist, who marries Dancing with Wolves. Standing with a Fist is

  • Red Wolves

    670 Words  | 2 Pages

    Red wolves are an important species to our environment there are numerous facts about native, North American species. One fact is the wolves’ physical characteristics. Secondly the interesting history and survival of the animal is another interesting fact. Third of all, the fact of the amazing habitat of the red wolf. The final fact is the threat to their existence. The first fact of the red wolves is their physical characteristics. These wonderful looking animals are not as large as one might think

  • An Analysis of Singing to Wolves

    930 Words  | 2 Pages

    An Analysis of “Singing to Wolves” The poem,  “Singing to Wolves” is a modern poem,  that tries to explain to the reader how wonderful solitude is,  but also considers it’s negative side,  with the example of a lonely girl.  The poem starts off with a brief encounter into the history of Wales,  and talks about the Llanthony monks,  who the reader is told were unloved by the Welsh,  and thus driven to a lonely life in the wilderness.  By reading this poem,  it seems as though being unloved is a

  • Wolves And Huskies Similarities

    530 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wolves and Huskies are different and similar in many different ways. For example, huskies and wolves live in a completely different environment, but when a pack of each species gets together, the relationship and interaction is very similar. One of the different ways is what they eat. Wolves and huskies are used to a different eating style. Huskies are used to kibble when wolves go out and hunt for themselves. Dog food is made of a stomach lining called tripe. Most tripe is very nutritious and contains

  • Protect the Gray Wolves

    1993 Words  | 4 Pages

    Protect the Gray Wolves Long before the settlers started to make the United States their home, “American Indians lived long beside the Gray Wolf before settlers started to come here.” (Rowe, Mark) The wolf is native to the North American continent and has been inhabiting its land for centuries. It is a canid species, or member of the canine family and is a cunning, smart, fast, and sly animal. Gray wolves range in color from black, brown, gray, and white and also look like a grown German Shepherd

  • Dances With Wolves

    1119 Words  | 3 Pages

    The film, Dances with Wolves, staring Kevin Costner gives a historically accurate presentation of the Sioux Indians and their way of life. In this production, Lieutenant John Dunbar, played by Costner, is rewarded for his heroic actions in the Civil War by being offered an opportunity to see the American frontier before it is gone. Dunbar is assigned to an abandoned fort where his only friends are a lone wolf and his beloved horse, Cisco. After several weeks of waiting for more American troops, a

  • Dances with Wolves

    594 Words  | 2 Pages

    Dances with Wolves Lt. John Dunbar was lying on a hospital bed, leg totally mutilated. Barely conscious, the man over heard the surgeon say he could not amputate this mans leg as tired as he was. Dunbar didn’t like what he heard, so when the surgeons left, he grabbed his boat, and he slowly slid the boat up his mutilated foot biting on a stick to relive the massive pain. He returned to the battlefield, with only one thing on his mind, suicide. So, he took a horse, and rode it directly

  • Wolves: Keeping Nature in Balance

    1047 Words  | 3 Pages

    Everyone knows of the apocryphal evil that is wolves, hunting our children, killing our livestock, taking the best deer. Having a wolf hunting season seems like a no brainer, right? But what if that’s not how wolves are, what if they are innocent, so to say. Should they be hunted? The short answer is no. There should not be a wolf hunting season because many of the thoughts on wolves are incorrect; hunting would compromise wolf studies, and the population is already suffering. We have all heard

  • Dances with wolves

    588 Words  | 2 Pages

    The movie Dances with wolves is a movie that depicted the Indians in an unstereotypical way. Everybody in this time thought of the Indians as thieves, beggars, and savages. They took over other people’s land and killed the buffalo. I know that a lot of people have misunderstood, mistreated, or misjudged someone in their lifetime. All people are worthy of respect, you cannot just judge by first instinct or by what others say. Americans back then were small minded, revengeful, prejudiced, and swayed

  • Idaho Wolves Deserve Conversation Not Eradication

    1279 Words  | 3 Pages

    The wolves beat the hunters in the recent, and highly contested, wolf and coyote derby in Salmon, ID. Wolves eluded the participants for the entire two-day hunt, but 21 coyotes were not so fortunate. The absence of any wolf kills, however, has not lessened the intensity of the controversy, nor the temperature of the debates. Wolves are a touchy subject, no matter the stance; as with most hotly contested issues, there is an abundance of information, but not all of it is correct. So are the wolves

  • How many wolves are too many?

    770 Words  | 2 Pages

    government passed a law that allowed wolves in Yellowstone National Park to be hunted. In just four years later the last wolf was hunted. In 1995, the gray wolf was reintroduced to the park. The government started off by introducing 31 wolves in the Montana and Wyoming parts of the park. Now 116 wolves now live and more then 75 pups. The controversy surrounding the reintroduction of the wolves are many from both sides. Some local farmers are against it because some wolves hunt their animals. However, if

  • Dances With Wolves Analysis

    2122 Words  | 5 Pages

    Dances With Wolves Analysis The movie "Dances With Wolves" was produced in 1990 and directed by Kevin Costner who starred as the main character. "Dances with Wolves" tells us the story of a white man who gets acquainted with the Sioux, who learns to love and respect them as valuable people with a culture and who discovers how wrong white people's preconceived ideas about Native Americans are. A sense of adventure and drama is the feeling "Dances with Wolves" gives us. With this movie,

  • Wolves According To Western Wildlife Outreach

    1010 Words  | 3 Pages

    Wolves According to Western Wildlife Outreach, wolves can live in many different habitats such as: forests, mountains, swamps, deserts, and tundras, their territories can vary from two hundred to five hundred square miles, but can range from as small as eighteen square miles to as large as one thousand square miles (Wolf Biology and Behavior). Thats a lot of range! They can also communicate with each other over long distances utilizing their keen sense of smell. On a good day they can detect

  • Stereotypes In Dances With Wolves

    1312 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dances With Wolves Dances with Wolves offers a cinematic portrayal of Native Americans that is quite contrary to the stereotypical norm. In this film, John Dunbar, goes out to the west where he meets and becomes friends with the Sioux Indians. He is drawn more and more into their community and eventually chooses to side with the humane Indians over his fellow cruel white Americans. In an attempt to change stereotypical views, director Kevin Costner through Dunbar, presents to the audience a

  • Gender Roles in Angela Carter's The Company of Wolves

    812 Words  | 2 Pages

    Gender Roles in Angela Carter's The Company of Wolves In her transformation of the well-known fable "Little Red Riding Hood," Angela Carter plays upon the reader's familiarity. By echoing elements of the allegory intended to scare and thus caution young girls, she evokes preconceptions and stereotypes about gender roles. In the traditional tale, Red sticks to "the path," but needs to be rescued from the threatening wolf by a hunter or "woodsman." Carter retells the story with a modern perspective

  • Dances With Wolves Stereotypes

    889 Words  | 2 Pages

    following the trend of portraying Indians as ignorant fighters, the movie Dances with Wolves avoids these stereotypes by playing the Sioux tribe of South Dakota as an authentic caring people with real emotions and values. In all, the movie did an impressive portrayal of life and the way things happened in that time period; however, producer Kevin Costner failed to keep the entire movie exact in its history. In Dances with Wolves, the acting hinted that buffalo was hard to come by in the time period of the

  • Dances With Wolves Essay

    633 Words  | 2 Pages

    A synthesis of Dances with wolves from a leadership point of view. In the movie, “Dances With Wolves” the main character Kevin Costner is assigned to a remote army outpost, so remote that he is the only army personnel there. Without any contact with many outsiders, he finally becomes friends with the Indians after a long period of isolation. As the movie progresses on, the main character moves from being just friend of the tribe to an actual member of the tribe. This is ultimately a result of little

  • Shifting Perceptions in Dances With Wolves

    1805 Words  | 4 Pages

    Shifting Perceptions in Dances With Wolves In Kevin Costner's motion picture Dances With Wolves, a white veteran of the Civil War, John Dunbar, ventures to the American frontier, where he encounters a tribe of Sioux Indians. At first, both parties are quite wary and almost hostile to each other, but after some time, Dunbar realizes that they have both grown to love and value each other as friends. As the movie critic Robert Ebert comments, "Dunbar possesses the one quality he needs to cut through