EssaysForStudent.com - Free Essays, Term Papers & Book Notes
Search

American Realist Movement Essays and Term Papers

Search

1,356 Essays on American Realist Movement. Documents 801 - 825 (showing first 1,000 results)

Last update: July 12, 2014
  • American Dream

    American Dream

    It is clear after interviewing my little cousin of 13 years and my mother of 48 years that there is a distinct difference in opinion as to what characterizes “The American Dream.” Often, it is generally portrayed as a materialistic pride and having power and fame; however, an older generation will claim it as a more personal issue. The majority of the youth are concerned with money, fame, and power, whereas the elder look towards

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 435 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 23, 2010 By: Tasha
  • American Pop Culture

    American Pop Culture

    I would describe popular American culture as things we do for entertainment as a society. Something you can safely assume that your neighbor does too. Over the course of three days I compiled a list of what I assume is popular American culture. They are going to eat at Carl’s Jr., McDonald’s, Panda Express and Taco Bell. We also watched a few movies like Awake, Rendition and Just Friends. I also watched a show on

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 647 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 23, 2010 By: Mike
  • Why Americans Should Not Possess Guns

    Why Americans Should Not Possess Guns

    Picture sitting in school while people next to you possess guns. Though this may sound a bit farfetched, it can happen. Due to the second amendment of the Constitution, one has the right to bear arms. It is reasonable that people would want access to guns for the sport of hunting though. But allowing people to “carry” guns is reckless. Firearms should be outlawed because they have granted children access to kill easily, inflated the

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 544 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 23, 2010 By: Fatih
  • American Imperialism

    American Imperialism

    American Imperialism has been a part of United States history ever since the American Revolution. Imperialism is the practice by which large, powerful nations seek to expand and maintain control or influence on a weaker nation. Throughout the years, America has had a tendency to take over other people's land. America had its first taste of Imperialistic nature back when Columbus came to America almost five hundred years ago. He fought the inhabitants with no

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 921 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 24, 2010 By: Mike
  • American Revolution

    American Revolution

    Revolutionary War The revolutionary war was also know as the American revolution. The revolutionary war began in in 17 and ended in its cessation in 1783. British soldiers and American patriots fought at Lexington, Massachusetts and nearby Concord. In 1783 the Treaty of Paris ended the war. Great Britain was forced to recognize the independence of the 13 colonies of the United States. The Revolutionary War in America led to the birth of a new

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 445 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 24, 2010 By: Tommy
  • The Europeans Vs. the Native Americans

    The Europeans Vs. the Native Americans

    How can 168 Spanish soldiers defeat an army of 80,000 Native Americans? Well in the year 1532, a Spanish conquistador known as Francisco Pizarro invaded the New World. He quickly got into a conflict with the largest state of the New World and managed to capture the absolute monarch, Atahuallpa. Francisco charged a ransom for his release and even after the ransom was given, he killed Atahuallpa. They were defeated and this cycle was continued

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 619 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 24, 2010 By: Mike
  • Greed Is Good -- Selling the American Dream

    Greed Is Good -- Selling the American Dream

    Advertising is such an integral part of our lives that being deluged with ads almost appears to be our natural state. We open a newspaper or magazine and expect to find pages that proclaim the virtues of products and firms. We turn on the television and are assailed with commercials for ten minutes of every half hour. Some social annalysts even claim that the purpose of television is to round up an audience to watch

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 406 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 24, 2010 By: Tommy
  • Ernest Hemingway - a Legacy for American Literature

    Ernest Hemingway - a Legacy for American Literature

    Ernest Hemingway, A legacy for American Literature Some say that Hemingway’s personal life should disqualify him from the literature canon. They state that his torrent affairs, his alcoholism, and his mental state should preclude him from entry into the canon. These are the very things that help to make Hemingway a unique writer. Although his genre is fiction, he relies on his real life experiences with the people and places that he visited. The very

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 1,496 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: Mike
  • Why Americans Smell Funny – the Pandemic of Billions

    Why Americans Smell Funny – the Pandemic of Billions

    The reason why Americans smell funny is because they have large amounts of flab. This flab can be prone to trapping cats and other small animals in their midst and makes it hard to go to the toilet resulting in a foul aroma. Over 90% of Americans have this problem causing many other countries to reject American food. Evidence is shown that countries dislike the smell, which has built up over time slowly spreading around

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 290 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: Mike
  • Mary Oliver and North American Indians

    Mary Oliver and North American Indians

    QUESTION: Mary Oliver's representation of the culture of the North American Indian is one of celebration and lament. She celebrates a humane ecological consciousness that informs their cultural identity while also lamenting the terrible cultural dispossession that they have suffered at the hands of Western Imperialism. ANSWER: Mary Oliver's poetry is a critique of many different aspects of society, primarily the way in which nature is often devolved. She also examines the North American Indians

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 809 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: Mike
  • Marxist Analysis of the American Dream

    Marxist Analysis of the American Dream

    Marxist Capitalism and its values revolve around material possessions and their acquisition. In this society, the poor man strives to be rich, and a powerless man to gain power. Many of these people however don’t have access to these privileges, and so to be one of the few taking the limited seats of wealth and power they compete, most often times against each other. Such environments are not only often times promote conflict but confrontation

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 994 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: July
  • French and American Revolutions Compare and Contrast

    French and American Revolutions Compare and Contrast

    Every one says history repeats itself over and over in different situations. The French and American revolutions were very similar in their demands and end results however were in two different situations. In both the commoners wanted fair representation in the government and fair taxation however the French were revolting from a tyrannical government and the Americans were revolting from a tyrannical mother country. There were many causes that brought on the American Revolution. A

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 361 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: Wendy
  • Funeral Customs of African Americans and American Jews

    Funeral Customs of African Americans and American Jews

    Ў§The chaos of death disturbs the peace of the living. This unsettling fact of life has proven to be a rich source of inspiration for human efforts to find order in disorder, meaning in suffering, eternity in finitude. Religion, culture, social structures, the vitality of these rudimentary elements of communal life depends upon ritually putting the dead body in its place, managing the relations between the living and the dead and providing explanations for the

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 5,522 Words / 23 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: Fatih
  • Native Americans

    Native Americans

    Historias que no son todavнa historia The histories of the native peoples of Mexico are inappropriately termed "histories": they are not yet complete, though Europeans have thought them so since the eve of colonization. When Europeans first came to the Americas they saw the landscape, opportunities and inhabitants through their own presuppositions, derived from the Middle Ages and, for the Spaniards, the recent unification of all Spain into one nation. The Spaniards wanted to

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 908 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: Max
  • Postmodernism in American Literature

    Postmodernism in American Literature

    Postmodernism in American literature The novel Beloved by Toni Morrison often makes us question the credibility of what is being told, and uses many striking, sudden shifts between the past and present, making it difficult to distinguish between reality and fiction. This blurring of the truth is a common element of postmodern fiction. In fact, many scholars would say that Beloved is a great example of postmodernism. (Ebrahimi 2005) Morrison uses this technique to bring

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 1,230 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Edward
  • The Great Gatsby American Dream

    The Great Gatsby American Dream

    Jay Gatsby, the central character of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby symbolizes the American dream. The American dream offers faith in the possibility of a better life. Its attendant illusion is the belief that material wealth alone can bring that dream to fruition. Through Gatsby, Fitzgerald brings together both these ideas. Jay Gatsby thinks money is the answer to anything he encounters. He has the best of everything. The fanciest car, the largest house,

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 777 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Jack
  • American Federalism

    American Federalism

    American Federalism American federalism was created as a response to the unsatisfying effects of the Articles of Confederation. Delegates were sent to the constitutional convention in Philadelphia, and decided at this union that in order to create a satisfactory establishment, they must protect the safety of the citizen’s, keep civil disruption at a minimum, provide for every citizen’s well-being as well as protect their rights and freedom. A federal system checks the growth of tyranny,

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 634 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Mike
  • The American Revolution

    The American Revolution

    The American Revolution The American Revolution consists of many causes. Following these causes, there followed many aftermaths. The people of the American revolution consisted of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Betsy Ross, and Benedict Arnold. In the years following the American Revolution, the causes were quite sensible. Post revolution included the Treaty of Paris, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution. One cause of the revolution was the acts put in place to restrict

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 767 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Fonta
  • An American Requiem by James Carroll

    An American Requiem by James Carroll

    In An American Requiem, by James Carroll, Carroll describes his struggle for knowledge, individuality and separation from his father’s beliefs. The relationship between them slowly degenerates with age, and as James becomes more aware of the life happening outside of his family. Throughout the novel, Carroll focuses on many of the prominent world issues of the time, giving light to both extreme sides through his father and himself, as his father eventually comes to represent

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 1,009 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Edward
  • Manifest Destiny -- the Intangible of American History

    Manifest Destiny -- the Intangible of American History

    American history was built on a chronological record of significant events, each event having a cause and subsequent effect on another event. Historical events are presented in history as being tangible, being tied to a date, or an exact happening. Manifest Destiny on the other hand, is a phenomenon. It can not be tied to a date, event or even a specific period of time. Manifest Destiny existed and still exists as the philosophy that

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 1,413 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Monika
  • The Transcontinental Railroad: Blood, Sweat, Tears and an American Dream

    The Transcontinental Railroad: Blood, Sweat, Tears and an American Dream

    The late 19th Century was a revolutionizing period in American History evident by the Industrial Revolution and the Civil War. However, it was the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad which profoundly changed the United States. The discovery of gold, the acquisition of Mexican territories and the continued settlement of the West increased the need for a primary railway system connecting the East and the West Coasts. The Transcontinental Continental Railroad aided the settling of

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 3,049 Words / 13 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Mike
  • The Love for American Football

    The Love for American Football

    Someone who is from another country like yourself, may believe that life in the United States is very diverse from life anywhere else. Countless people from other countries have a completely distorted image of how we may live here in America and the mentalities that we all possess. Not all of us are spoiled, overweight, or are obsessed with football. All of us are completely different for the most part, and are actually concerned about

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 566 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 26, 2010 By: Yan
  • Eminem: An American Icon, Is He? or Is He Not?

    Eminem: An American Icon, Is He? or Is He Not?

    WRITTEN BY BRADIS MCGRIFF!!!DO NOT COPY MY PAPER JUST USE IT 4 RESEARCH!!!! April 3, 2007 History 196m Prof Gus Lease Eminem: an American Icon, is he? Or is he not? Eminem is one of the most if not the most talented rap artist to ever step up to the microphone. Although he may be one of the most talented rappers to ever perform, he is also one of the most controversial. Teenagers and young

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 3,153 Words / 13 Pages
    Submitted: February 27, 2010 By: Vika
  • What Is an American Citizen?

    What Is an American Citizen?

    "What is an American Citizen?" By definition, an American Citizen is a person owing loyalty to and entitled by birth or naturalization the protection of the United States. American Citizens are entitled to vote and enjoy many rights and privileges of the United States (1-p.263). When I think of what it means to be an American Citizen, I think of freedom. America is known as the land of opportunity for its freedom. Freedom is

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 589 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 27, 2010 By: Janna
  • The Controversy on Eugenics in the American Culture

    The Controversy on Eugenics in the American Culture

    Heredity improvement by genetic control. Why would people want to control heredity? What exactly is genetic control? These are some things that people have been questioning for decades. Eugenics can not be ignored because it is suddenly coming up everywhere. People are experimenting and taking huge risks not to their knowledge. At one point in time it was said that eugenics could change the world for the better. That is how some people could look

    Rating:
    Essay Length: 1,629 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: February 27, 2010 By: Artur