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    True love is an unconditional and a selfless emotion. Love can produce unexplainable behaviour in most individuals. Love is a very powerful emotion that can be seen in many forms of literature and music. Love can drive a person to do anything in order to either protect or please the other person. In the famous series Harry Potter by JK Rowling there are many examples where love causes the characters to do inexplicable actions. Professor Severus Snape is a victim who cannot control his actions due

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    Blackadder Deception

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    The subtle powers of deception and charm possess the potential to assert an individual’s wishes into other minds‚ as well as influencing behaviour in order to benefit the deceptive. Elton and Curtis’ Blackadder II illustrate this idealism of power through the characters within the satirical comedy who mould the minds of others through their charismatic and cunning attributes. The episode‚ ’Bells’ begins with an old man encouraging his daughter‚ Kate‚ to become a prostitute in order to gain money

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    The film RAN and the play The Tragedy of King Lear can be related to each other in many ways. Kurosawa was able to produce a film that was a valid‚ effective and relevant portrayal of Shakespeare’s play. The first way is in how they relate to each other on a plot based theme. The second way is how they can both be analyzed to themes such as; family‚ betrayal‚ loyalty‚ and selfishness. The third way that they relate to each other is how RAN uses Japanese drama to portray a Shakespearean tragedy. Kurosawa

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    to choose fools over knaves.” Discuss In King Lear virtually every character is either a fool or a knave; however these terms contain multiple layers. The crucial scene in which this idea is presented in the play is act 2 scene 4 when the Fool talks to Kent after he has been put in the stocks‚ and more specifically his line “The knave turns fool that runs away;/ The fool no knave‚ perdy.” On one level the Fool is mocking Kent for his loyalty towards Lear despite the fact that Lear’s fortunes have

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    Deception In Fences

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    Wilson explores many different types of deception in Fences. Wilson depicts Troy as the architect of deception in the play. Troy seems to have managed in betraying almost everybody in the play in a different way. He appears to have betrayed his son‚ his wife‚ his closest best friend‚ Bono. Troy betrays his wife the moment he

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    Deception In The Crucible

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    Evan Ferree Thibadeau/ English/ 11th 10/21/04 Although the sole basis of the Salem Witch Trials was deception‚ there were still the few skeptics who found hope of truth during the fabricated ordeals. The Crucible is a play by Arthur Miller that depicts the dramatized happenings of the Salem Witch Trials during the time of the McCarthy trials. In Miller’s play‚ the character Elizabeth Proctor is one of the only characters in the whole play who is associated with the truth in a time of delusion

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    Is Deception Justified?

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    Everyone characterizes deception differently. One may view it as breaking the trust of a loved one and think of it as mere deceit. Others may accept deception as a way to gain/give happiness. Some may even think of it as part of life. More commonly‚ deception stands being viewed as hand and hand with “evil”‚ this includes‚ not only viewed by people‚ but also portrayed in movies and novels from all eras of time. Frequently feelings dealing with deceit –lying or jealousy- creates anger in an individual

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    Deception In Othello

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    Colours‚ present the Art of Deception through the characters of Iago and Jack Stanton. The era in which both texts are presented gives off a different reason why both characters use deception to gain what they are looking for‚ thus context plays an important role in how deception is presented‚ and affects both the meaning and values of each text. Whilst both texts portray deception as the driving force in their plots‚ the motives‚ methods and consequences of deception in each text are different.

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    A Language of Deception

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    Pirsig touches on the strange encounter of self-deception. I know the truth and you do not; I intentionally hide the truth from you—this is the lie. But with this understanding of deception‚ how then‚ is self-deception possible? Does one know the truth about something and then‚ simultaneously‚ hide the truth from one ’s self? How could this be: what makes it possible for a single person to be both deceived and deceiver? Nietzsche makes self-deception a reality through the error of truth. Like

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    Alondra Elizarraras English IV AP/DC – period 7 Ms. Stokes October 6‚ 2013 Woolf: Shakespeare’s Sister “Shakespeare’s Sister” by Virginia Woolf describes a story about Shakespeare’s sister and how being a woman she would have been treated and what types of opportunities she would have had compared to men. What kind of life would she have? What kind of education would she be given? Would she be a playwright like her brother with the same kind of talent? During the time of Shakespeare‚ his

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