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Search results 1931 - 1940 of about 4850 matching term papers
- 1931: Analyzing Curse Of The Starving Class
- ... is a story that I don’t come across very often. I believe Mr. Shepard wrote this play to bring a variety into the theatre, as well as writing about something he knows and has lived through. Just the fact that this story is his life memory brings feeling and passion to the script. Perhaps I’m digging this too deep, but it is one thing to make up a story ...
- 1932: Ancient Japanese Art
- ... do family of Soechow scholars and artists. He did not seek an official career in government, but chose a quiet life devoted to his interests in poetry, painting and calligraphy, and to his mother who lived to be almost 100 years old. Shen enjoyed the friendship of the most outstanding scholar-officials of his time. In his art as well as in his life the contrast with the academic painters of ...
- 1933: A Look At Post Modern Architecture In California
- ... soaring space was imperative, and the most important aspect of the house. The rooms were to stay as a conglomeration instead of a series of small rooms. The living room had to be: "spacious, truly lived in (and not a formal appendage), comfortable, appropriate for looking at art and listening to music, perhaps incorporating the dining area as well as the kitchen, seductive for parties and entertaining, even large gatherings." (Steele ...
- 1934: Art
- ... how each work of illustrates its respective culture. An appropriate work of that reflects its culture is the Outer Coffin of Henettawy. Hennetawy was a mistress of the house and chantress of Amen-Ra. She lived in the Third Intermediate Period of Egypt. Her coffin is a simple one, made out of wood and white gresso, and is inundated in religious symbolism and imagery. These images reflect a style and "iconography ...
- 1935: The Holocaust
- ... had given up hope for rescue. They committed suicide by throwing themselves into or holding onto the electrified fences that surrounded the camps. Many people were starving to death. There were many people who barely lived on their small rations. Some days there was no food at all. If they happened to be fed that day, they were fed a thin bowl of soup with almost no nourishment whatsoever, and a ...
- 1936: Tradition And World War 1
- ... The population of France declined by 1,300,000, and hence massive drops in the birth rate between 1914 and 1918. The war also had social impacts on the Republic. The majority of the generation lived and experienced times of war, leaving life-long marks on all concerned. Tradition, in this sense, would be one of the only means of keeping a country together. France also experienced an economic depression in ...
- 1937: The Spanish Inquisition
- ... government could be obtained if all of the population of the society were “pure” and Catholic The Medieval Inquisition started in France and Italy. During this time a group of people called the Albigensies lived in northern Italy and southern France. They had established a religion called Manichaeanism, which was the belief in two gods, one for good and one for evil. Pope Gregory IX felt that it was right ...
- 1938: The French Revolution's Affect On Romanticism
- ... presented. The cultural values of The French Revolution and Romanticism will then be linked. Finally, literary examples will be shown to support this connection between the two movements. Before the Revolution, the citizens of France lived in a strict, confined society with no freedom to express their feelings. Government had imposed strong, unfair laws on the common people (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia "French Revolution"). They wanted a voice in a stable ...
- 1939: A Histographical Analysis Of Four Central Asian Leaders And Their Role During The Mongol Age
- ... the type of explanation and detail that Adshead brings to his readers. Adshead then goes into the different battles that Chinggis embarked on. He shows us that he revolutionized the way in which the nomads lived and conducted war or booty raids. For these reasons, Adshead concludes that Chinngis was the first Great Khan and leader of the Mongol Empire. He also dives into the lineage of Chinggis and follows the ...
- 1940: The Impact Of The Second Industrial Revolution On Europe
- ... hundreds of thousands country dwellers, who were once farmers, moved off their land into the cities across Europe. With factories located in major cities these farmers went in search of jobs as unskilled workers. They lived in overcrowd tenements or factory barracks, working long hours, often for very low wages. These new city residents and workers both drove the Industrial Revolution and Europe’s new prosperity and were its principal victims ...
Search results 1931 - 1940 of 4850 matching term papers
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