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540 Essays on Art My Heart. Documents 326 - 350

Last update: July 10, 2014
  • Heart of Darkness

    Heart of Darkness

    In the novel, Heart of Darkness, the author Joseph Conrad makes some comments, and he uses different terms to describe people of color that may offend some people. Also the readers can see how racist the Europeans were toward blacks not only because they were turned into slaves. We can see how the European people seem to think the Africans are not equal to them. There are many examples of discrimination towards woman in this

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    Essay Length: 553 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: March 4, 2010 By: Mikki
  • Pathophysiology of Congestive Heart Failure

    Pathophysiology of Congestive Heart Failure

    Pathophysiology Paper Pathophysiology of Congestive Heart Failure I. Description: Congestive Heart Failure is more of a syndrome than a disease. Heart failure may be classified according to the side of the heart affected, (left- or right-sided failure), or by the cardiac cycle involved, (systolic or diastolic dysfunction). (Schilling-McCann p. 176). The word "failure" refers to the heart's inability to pump enough blood to meet the body's metabolic needs. (Schilling-McCann p. 176). When the heart fails

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    Essay Length: 1,396 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: March 5, 2010 By: Steve
  • Joesph Conrad Heart of Darkness

    Joesph Conrad Heart of Darkness

    Heart of Darkness tells the story of Marlow, a sailor, who describes to his shipmates the unusual experience he had traveling upriver in the Congo and the effect it had upon him. Hired by a Continental trading company as a steamboat captain between the outer stations and the interior, Marlow's primary mission was to visit and, if necessary, retrieve the mysterious Kurtz, an extraordinarily successful agent who had lost contact and reportedly fallen ill. Marlow

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    Essay Length: 389 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: March 5, 2010 By: Jack
  • Renaissance Art

    Renaissance Art

    I am Marco Petrucci, artisan in the bottega of Paolo Uccello, in the city of Firenze in the year 1442. I have been apprenticed in this workshop since I was 10 years old. My family chose this profession for me because it provides steady work in our city that is becoming known as a place of beauty and learning because of the support and commissions of the wealthy families such as the Medici. My family,

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    Essay Length: 1,631 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: March 5, 2010 By: Janna
  • Huck Finn: Listening to Your Heart or Listening to Society

    Huck Finn: Listening to Your Heart or Listening to Society

    Ernest Hemmingway once described a novel by Mark Twain as, “…it is the ‘one book’ from which ‘all modern American literature’ came from” (Railton). This story of fiction, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is a remarkable story about a young boy growing up in a society that influences and pressures people into doing the so-called “right thing.” It is not very difficult to witness the parallels between the society Huck has grown up in

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    Essay Length: 361 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: March 6, 2010 By: Mike
  • The Art Institute of California - San Diego

    The Art Institute of California - San Diego

    The courses I have taken at The Art Institute of California-San Diego (AICASD) really have varied a lot in the past year and a half along with the instructors. Some of the classes have been fun and others have been so boring and dry I thought I would not be able to last through one full quarter. There are certain categories that all the classes fall into such as; neutral, advancing, and regressing. One of

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    Essay Length: 1,081 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: March 6, 2010 By: Edward
  • Heart of Darkness and Apocalypse Now

    Heart of Darkness and Apocalypse Now

    Heart of Darkness written by Joseph Conrad and "Apocalypse Now" a movie directed by Francis Coppola are two works that parallel one another but at the same time reflect their own era in time and their creator's own personal feelings and prejudices. "Apocalypse Now" was released in 1979 after two years in the making, as Coppola's modern interpretation to Joseph Conrad's novel, Heart of Darkness (Harris). Conrad's book is an excellent example of the advances

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    Essay Length: 779 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: March 6, 2010 By: July
  • Art

    Art

    All cultures throughout history have produced art. The impulse to create, to realize form and order out of mere matterСto recognize order in the world or to generate it oneselfСis universal and perpetual. ASPECTS OF ART Every work of art has two aspects: it is a present experience as well as a record of the past, and it is valued, preserved, and studied for both identities. As present experience, artworks afford people the pleasures, the

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    Essay Length: 5,824 Words / 24 Pages
    Submitted: March 7, 2010 By: Mike
  • Heart Attacks

    Heart Attacks

    How To Tell If You Are Having A Heart Attack Everyone knows that the heart is a vital organ and that we cannot live without it. This year about 1.2 million Americans will have a first or recurrent heart attack. About 479,000 of these people will die. Most people who have experienced a heart attack have never felt a symptom, or recognized what the symptoms are. Heart attacks happen in many different ways and the

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    Essay Length: 260 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: March 7, 2010 By: Mike
  • The Metamorphosis as a Piece of Art

    The Metamorphosis as a Piece of Art

    Franz Kafka is considered by many to be one of the most prominent and influential writers of the twentieth century (Votteler 204). Many of his works, mostly short stories, met with critical acclaim only after his death in 1924. His stories usually present ? a grotesque vision of the world in which alienated, angst-ridden individuals seek to transcend their tormented condition? (204). One critic has referred to him as ?the classical painter of the estrangement

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    Essay Length: 2,111 Words / 9 Pages
    Submitted: March 7, 2010 By: Tommy
  • Florence: Works of Art

    Florence: Works of Art

    Walking down the narrow, stony and hilly roads from the campus to the center I begin to wonder if all the pain is worth taking just to view a few sculptures and paintings. However, half way through this walk I realized the enriching experience I am undergoing. It is not only the museums that hold exquisite pieces of art, but the very city Florence itself is a living museum. This city is an exceptional testimony

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    Essay Length: 2,326 Words / 10 Pages
    Submitted: March 8, 2010 By: Mikki
  • Heart of Darkness

    Heart of Darkness

    In Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, there is a great interpretation of the feelings of the characters and uncertainties of the Congo. Although Africa, nor the Congo are ever really referred to, the Thames river is mentioned as support. This intricate story reveals much symbolism due to Conrad's theme based on the lies and good and evil, which interact together in every man. Today, of course, the situation has changed. Most literate people know that

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    Essay Length: 882 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: March 8, 2010 By: Stenly
  • Heart of Darkness Vs. Apocalypse Now

    Heart of Darkness Vs. Apocalypse Now

    When Joseph Conrad sat down to write Heart of Darkness over a century ago he decided to set his tale amidst his own country's involvement in the African Congo. Deep in the African jungle his character would make his journey to find the Captain gone astray. Over eighty years later Francis Ford Coppola's Willard would take his journey not in Africa but in the jungles of South Asia. Coppola's Film, Apocalypse Now uses the backdrop

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    Essay Length: 876 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: March 8, 2010 By: Janna
  • My Mournful Heart

    My Mournful Heart

    *<A short story on a poem>* A Dirge (by Percey Shelley) Rough Wind, that moanest loud Grief too sad for song; Wild wind, when sullen cloud Knells all the night long; Sad storm, whose tears are vain, Bare woods, whose branches strain, Deep caves and dreary main, Wail, for the world's wrong! There I stood, alone in the darkness, weeping. Surrounded by what used to be a mansion. No longer were there luxurious lounges to

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    Essay Length: 1,060 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: March 9, 2010 By: David
  • Art Appreciation

    Art Appreciation

    Art Appreciation - Project Two Horses have been present throughout our history for hundreds of years. Charlemagne created the Roman Empire on horse back, farmers during colonial period helped start this great nation with the help of horses, and still today horses are an ever present part of our society. It is for these reasons that no other animal has been painted as much as the horse. I compared two paintings from two different time

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    Essay Length: 963 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: March 9, 2010 By: Edward
  • Censorship in Art

    Censorship in Art

    Censorship in Art Censorship has existed in the United States since colonial times. In the early history of American culture censorship’s emphasis was on political statements and actions, banning literature, music and even people from being heard in this country. This leading too more closed-minded views about different cultures and society, which we are still fighting to over come in the present day. Today a better-informed America has switched their views to a more sexual

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    Essay Length: 747 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: March 9, 2010 By: Tommy
  • Heart of Darkness - Comments

    Heart of Darkness - Comments

    Joseph Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” is the story of two men that work for an ivory company in Africa. The protagonists of this story are Marlow and Kurtz. Marlow and Kurtz come to see the horror that hides behind the trimmings of civilization and every day life, the true darkness inside of all mankind. Characterization, symbolism, and tone are important in Joseph Conrad’s construction of the main idea behind the “Heart of Darkness”. The

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    Essay Length: 1,272 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: March 9, 2010 By: Wendy
  • Prehistoric Art

    Prehistoric Art

    Prehistoric art is art created before written history, often the only record of early cultures. (Thefreedictionary.com) Prehistoric art is in three classifications, Paleolithic, Neolithic and thee Bronze Age. Paleolithic is the Old Stone Age. Neolithic is the New Stone Age. The Bronze Age is when metals such as copper, iron, and gold are used. An example of Paleolithic art is the cave painting, Hall of the Bulls. The surface on which it is painted is

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    Essay Length: 433 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: March 9, 2010 By: Janna
  • Art

    Art

    Canada has a well established tradition of regulating the cultural activity of television broadcasting. It is my intention in this paper to look critically at these regulations and the social implications that they may have on the democracy of Canada. I hope to defend the thesis that the Canadian Broadcasting Act and the Canadian Radio-Television Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) has failed to promote public space and a cultural identity within Canada. In my first paragraph, I

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    Essay Length: 887 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: March 11, 2010 By: Victor
  • Baroqe Art

    Baroqe Art

    Our Assignment asks us in to begin by defining the word “art”. As this is a basic overview I’ll begin by citing that art is art, fine art (the product of human creativity; works of art collectively) "an art exhibition"; "a fine collection of art" (n) art, artistic creation, artistic production, the creation of beautiful or significant things. (Princeton.edu 2008) There are too many aspects to the basic descriptive view of “art” as it is

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    Essay Length: 567 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: March 13, 2010 By: Andrew
  • Zen Art Work

    Zen Art Work

    The Chinese Zen strive to reach enlightenment through there life. This principal of enlightenment is an individual achievement, having neither a set path to take nor a final destination to arrive at. Reaching enlightenment, in a Zen belief, doesn't mean you have reached a state higher than that of the non-enlightened. You just have an understanding of what that enlightenment is. This Zen idea of enlightenment is expressed in all that the Zen followers do,

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    Essay Length: 2,014 Words / 9 Pages
    Submitted: March 13, 2010 By: Jack
  • Poetry the Endangered Art

    Poetry the Endangered Art

    “I, being born a woman and distressed…” Those are the beginning words of a poem wrote by one of America’s most renowned poets, Edna St. Vincent Millay. Literarily avant-guard for her time, she was the recipient of a Pulitzer Prize for her works in 1925. Yet with trend setters such as Millay, why is poetry an endangered art form? Having disappeared from the literary reviews, found in anthologies and circled among a privileged few, it

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    Essay Length: 968 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: March 14, 2010 By: Edward
  • Heart of Darkness

    Heart of Darkness

    Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness does not explicitly deal with a struggle between war and peace: the conflict is a psychological, moral one; however, the text’s implications that society is a thin veil over our innate savagery, the darkness at the roots of Western civilization, reveals disturbing truths about the peaceful, orderly lives we take for granted. The key to understanding Conrad’s novella lies in ascertaining the metaphorical significance of the “heart of darkness,” a

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    Essay Length: 2,530 Words / 11 Pages
    Submitted: March 14, 2010 By: Tasha
  • Comparison of “the Black Cat” and “the Tell-Tale Heart”

    Comparison of “the Black Cat” and “the Tell-Tale Heart”

    Comparison of “The Black Cat” and “The Tell-Tale Heart” Both “The Black Cat” and “The Tell-Tale Heart”, written by Edgar Allan Poe, depict how murderers can conceal the remains of their victims. The cover-ups in these two stories show two similar, but different cover-ups. Both men buried their victims within the structures of the homes, in the same rooms they killed them in. They also shared the same arrogance and pride in the work they

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    Essay Length: 351 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: March 15, 2010 By: Janna
  • O Brother Where Art Thou

    O Brother Where Art Thou

    The Coen brothers movie “O brother, where art thou?” is an exciting story, full of adventure and comedy, and if nothing but its comedic and entertainment value were taken into account, it would still be considered a great film. However the movie is not just an entertaining story. More so it is a vastly rich tale, which provides great insight into human nature, with many parallels to life in the modern world. Originally, it would

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    Essay Length: 1,161 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: March 15, 2010 By: Jessica