"Arthur c clarke award" Essays and Research Papers

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    2001: A Space Odyssey The following paper will analyze the movie‚ "2001: A Space Odyssey" by Stanley Kubrick" and "The Centinel" by Arthur C. Clarke. Although there are many themes present between the story and the film‚ the following are the most dominant. I will be discussing Scientific themes‚ Religious and Moral Themes‚ and Clarke’s development of the short story into a full-length film. The first issue‚ I will be discussing the scientific themes of the movie. The movie‚ "2001: A Space

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    Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is considered one of the most impressive science fiction films in the modern era and is a critically acclaimed masterpiece. To begin this analysis I will first give a synopsis of the films plot and key points to help lay a foundation for the film. The movie is broken into 4 acts‚ each focusing on a different event and time in the story. We first start with “The Dawn of Man”; we are greeted by what appears to be a tribe of early hominids foraging for food in

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    Although Moira’s role in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is subtle she is actually a very important and crucial character to the novel. Moira is the Gilead’s most extreme case because of her personality and personal beliefs. She embodies everything that her best friend and the main character‚ Offred does not. Moira is rebellious‚ which will not be tolerated by the regime; independent‚ which is strictly against the morals and way of life in the Gilead‚ and; she is also a lesbian‚ which defies

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    In chapter 41‚ it starts out with Offred saying how much she hates the story she is telling and that she wishes that it could be different and that it could be more civilized or happier. She gives a very graphic metaphor ¡°like a body caught in crossfire or pulled apart by force¡±. This show just how much it pains her to tell this story and how gruesome and inhumane the story is to her. But then she goes on the say that she has tried to put in some good things that would make the story better. This

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    HaidMaids Tale The novel‚ The Handmaid’s Tale‚ by Margaret Atwood focuses on the choices made by the society of Gilead in which the preservation and imprisionmeny of mankind is more highly regarded than freedom or happiness. I think that Ms. Atwood believes that the possibility of our society becoming as that of Gilead is very evident in the choices that we make today and from what has occurred in the past. Our actions will inevitably catch up to us when we are most vulnerable.In The Handmaid’s

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    Divided: The Women of Gilead The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood depicts a dystopian society where the United States has been taken over by a monotheocracy and transformed into the country of Gilead. The majority of the woman in this society have been split into three basic categories: Wives‚ Marthas‚ and Handmaids. There are also Econowives‚ Aunts‚ and Unwomen. The main character‚ Offred‚ is a Handmaid. The Handmaids’ sole purpose in this society is to provide babies for powerful households where

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    In Handmaid’s tale (novel) there are couple symbols such as Handmaid’s red habit‚ flowers‚ scribble‚ and Harvard’s Wall. As we can notice in Novel‚ Offred often uses the symbols such as different colors. For example‚ the red color of costumes which were worn by Handmaid’s symbolizes fruitfulness‚ which they bear a child and it’s also a uniform color for the Handmaid’s. According to Offred” red: the color of blood‚ which defines us” (p. 8‚9). Red also symbolized the menstrual cycle and childbirth

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    Throughout our world’s history‚ there have been many oppressive regimes; much of these share many of the same methods of control. In Margaret Atwood’s‚ The Handmaid’s Tale‚ the government in power uses various methods to keep control over the people. In this story‚ the United States has been overtaken by a theocracy called the Republic of Gilead. The story follows a young woman through her struggles in this new oppressive nation. The Republic of Gilead displays its dominance by implementing a caste

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    In Offred’s world‚ she is oppressed and controlled. She’s forced to live in a society that’s controlled by a religious regime that forces its citizens to live under a strict set of rules. Over the course‚ there are a series of events and allusions that show that the world Offred lives in is similar to an event of history. The novel The Handmaid’s Tale connection to colonial-age America is due to the existence of old religions relevant at the time and the events within the books. The strongest

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    Nine Billion Names of God

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    Renowned British writer and inventor‚ Arthur C. Clarke is most known for his thrilling stories that bring into play several of the scientific and technological advances of his day and those to come. Many of his stories would have the underlying theme of technology and its relationship with another factor. The Nine Billion Names of God published in 1953 demonstrates just this‚ in which the story’s main characters are caught between their logic and that of another group. Clarke’s short story addresses

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