José Ferrer Essays

  • Critical Analysis of Lawrence of Arabia

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    Critical Analysis of Lawrence of Arabia 'Lawrence of Arabia' is a three hour film written by David Lean. It was produced in 1962 by Sam Spiegel. The film tells the story of a young, risk-taking scholar, Lawrence, who helped the British win the war, in which the Arab tribe kicked the Turks out of Arabia, by using his initiative with the great Arab tribe leader. The film unusually starts with the end, Lawrence's motorcycle crash in 1935. It then cuts to 1915, when Lawrence worked at an office

  • Costa Rica Pros And Cons

    1003 Words  | 3 Pages

    the violent governmental abuse seen in other Latin countries, which is true, to a certain extent. The only real head turning event in Costa Rica's politics that caught attention was the ousting of Dr. Angel Calderon Guardia by the opposition led by Jose Figueres. "It was the bloodiest political event in the country's history, with a death toll of at least four thousand in only five weeks" (Palmer and Molina, 2004, P.

  • Descriptive Essay On Costa Rica

    1236 Words  | 3 Pages

    Have you ever considered taking a trip outside of the United States? If yes, let me take you to a country called Costa Rica. Now the reason I say Costa Rica is because it was a county I had no prior knowledge about, I did not even know where it was located until I did my research. After looking into this country a little deeper I wanted to know more about it like; the general overview, a brief history, the geography, the political system, the economic system, and lastly the cultures and subcultures

  • Don Pepe

    1357 Words  | 3 Pages

    Like Castro, Gueverra, and Sandino, Jose Figueres Ferrer holds a place as one of the most important revolutionary and political forces in Latin American history. This so-called “father of modern Costa Rica'; led his country to revolution and eventual democracy. Known affectionately as “Don Pepe'; by his admirers, Figueres was both an enemy of communist and a thorn in the side of the United States. While putting down a communist regime and allying himself consistently with the U.S., Figueres

  • Poverty In Costa Rica

    1200 Words  | 3 Pages

    Costa Rica is a small, democratic country, located in Central America. Nicaragua is to the north of Costa Rica and Panama to the south and it is surrounded by the Pacific Ocean to the west and the Caribbean Sea to the east. The country is very small, only about 32,000 square miles and is slightly smaller than the state of West Virginia (CIA, para. 2 2013). This beautiful country only covers about 0.03% of the earth’s surface, yet contains about 5% of the biodiversity in the world (Visit Costa

  • Cansecos Steroid Allegations

    694 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Jose Canseco’s 60 Minutes interview, he stated that he and some of his teammates used steroids in the past. With all the hoopla surrounding Major League Baseball and its connection with allegations made by BALCO president Victor Conte, this report is intriguing at the least. High profile athletes such as Jason Giambi and Barry Bonds have been under direct scrutiny over the past year because of the steroid issue. Canseco firmly states that he and former teammate Mark McGwire casually injected together

  • Folk Tales

    639 Words  | 2 Pages

    makes ends meet by growing beans and selling them to the local townspeople, who are very sympathetic to Filipa. When a rich sheep herder named Don Jose starts harassing Filipa because she refuses to marry him She wishes for him to fall off a cliff and break his neck, when her wish comes true she feels very guilty and makes penance by giving away all of Don Jose’s sheep to those poor enough to deserve them. At the end of her penance she finds her son. This story tells allot about Spanish Culture

  • one hundred years of solitude

    666 Words  | 2 Pages

    life – magic becomes more real than reality itself. The theme of religion and different perspectives on issue are introduced by different characters. The indigenous members of the Buendia family are very flexible toward religion. For example, Jose Arcadio Buendia teases the priest. Most of the Buendias have incestuous relationships. Most of the Buendia men have affairs with prostitutes. These examples do not prove that the Buendias are nonreligious but on the contrary they believe that religion

  • Characterization, Symbolism, and Repetition in Hundred Years of Solitude

    1872 Words  | 4 Pages

    contemplative, stubborn man, or the impetuous, forceful man, the patient and nurturing woman, and so on, are represented by more than one individual in the several generations of the Buendia family. All the Jose Arcadios, for example, are assumed to have at least some of the traits of the original Jose Arcadio Buendia (impetuous and forceful), and all the Aurelianos have something in common with Colonel Aureliano Buendia (tendency toward solitude and contemplation). The repetitions are not exact, but

  • Balthazar

    517 Words  | 2 Pages

    money?) ¡° Balthazar¡¯s Marvelous Afternoon ¡±, written by Gabrial Garcia Marquez, is a story about a birdcage and a poor carpenter, Balthazar. In the story, Balthazar made a beautiful birdcage that was commissioned by Pepe, the son of a rich man, Jose Montiel. However, when the carpenter took it to the boy, his father refused to pay and rather said to sell it other people. Although Balthazar got really angry, he gave the cage to Pepe as a present. At the end of the story, he told townpeople that

  • Solitude and Isolation in One Hundred Years of Solitude

    577 Words  | 2 Pages

    alone, and forgotten, is their destiny. The novel begins with geographic isolation.  Jose Arcadio Buendia shouts, "God damn it!  Macondo is surrounded by water on all sides!"  Whether it is, in truth, an island is irrelevant.  The town believed itself to be cut off from the rest of the world.   In addition, Jose Arcadio Buendia and Ursula are looking for solitude.  The founding of Macondo was a result of escaping Jose Arcadio Buendia's murder of Prudencio Aguilar.  Aguilar's ghost haunted them, eventually

  • One Hundred Years of Solitude: Linear and Circular Time

    678 Words  | 2 Pages

    plot of the novel is simple: Jose Arcadio Buendia marries his cousin Ursula, they found Macondo, the family grows, declines, and is eventually blown off the face of the earth by a hurricane. There is a beginning, and time moves the story to a total, apocalyptic conclusion (117). Within this linear background, the structure of One Hundred Years of Solitude is circular (McMurray 77). Events throughout the entire novel repeat themselves in cycles. The names Aureliano and Jose Arcadio are repeated in each

  • My Philosophy as a Teacher

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    recount that discussion about Elie Weisel’s Night to her friend on the bus, and I want them to feel enlightened and emotional about it. Years from now, I want to hear Jose tell his son about the class where he realized he wasn’t stupid and could write well. I want him to write a story about it. I haven’t taught a David, a Julie or a Jose yet, but one day I want to have that kind of effect on my students. No matter how a child feels about school, it plays a tremendous part in a child’s life. Teachers

  • Malcolm X

    982 Words  | 2 Pages

    of these areas try to create. For example, KNTV news continually reports on the thefts and shootings in East San Jose but does not make an effort to show how residents are dealing with these situations. The day a local East San Jose church helped sway the city council to put a streetlight on a very busy intersection, the news pre-empted the report with an accident on another East San Jose intersection. As a result, most people in these communities do not realize that they have power to change their

  • One Hundred Years of Solitude: Relationship between Ursual and Jose Arcadio Buendia

    1104 Words  | 3 Pages

    One Hundred Years of Solitude:  The Relationship between Ursual and Jose Arcadio Buendia In literature, a central relationship can bond a group, and serve as a measure of the vitality of the society that it bonds. One such monumental relationship is that between Ursual and Jose Arcadio Buendia in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude. In the chosen passage, the author uses imagery, metaphors, and characterization to illustrate their relationship, establishing a preview of their

  • The Narrator of One Hundred Years of Solitude

    683 Words  | 2 Pages

    able to read a character's thoughts. Generally, we get to know characters from close observation of what they say and do, and we have to infer what they may be thinking. The narrator's knowledge also fails us in the one great unresolved mystery: Jose Arcadio, elder son of the founder, is murdered in his bed, but no one ever knows by whom. The narrator is also ignorant of who guns down all of the colonel's illegitimate sons and, in fact, seems as surprised as we are when the last survivor from

  • The Theme of Death in The Garden Party

    885 Words  | 2 Pages

    ever had a chance to be a caring, sensitive person with a sibling like Jose. Jose is an unfeeling, heartless and self-absorbed person who is completely clueless to those around her who don’t have lots of money or expensive assets. She sings songs with mock passion: This life is wee-ary A Tear – a sigh A Love that Chan-ges This Life is wee-ary A Tear – a sigh A Love that chan-ges And then…good bye! This is the song that Jose sings before the garden party is held. It’s ironic how she can sing

  • 1000 years of solitude

    1111 Words  | 3 Pages

    presented with a solitary authoritative figure of a particular gender, when Macondo is at its most prosperous it is controlled not by a single figure but rather a symbiotic partnership between a male and a female. At the onset of the novel we are given Jose Arcadio Buendia as the founder of the town. Clearly as founder and discoverer of Macondo he is the leader of the community. He would give instructions to the community on everything ranging from planting to how to raise children. He was hard-working

  • Audrey Hepburn: The Life Of Audrey Hepburn

    800 Words  | 2 Pages

    compassion for those suffering from physical deprivation, broken families, and those who are not able to fulfill their dreams. Her story also gives a sense of hope to the hopeless. Her work with UNICEF displays her strong motive to help others (Ferrer). Her work as a Good Will Ambassador shows her leadership qualities, and helped her determination in leading missions around the world. She used her fame and publicity advantages not for her own benefit, but to educate the public about those in

  • Rizal the Subversive

    903 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rizal as a Rational Thinker During his life, Jose Rizal was described as a heretic and subversive, an enemy of both the Church and Spain. He has made tremendous contributions to the progress of the Filipino society. His political works and essays, being anti-clerical and anti-colonial, frankly aimed to expose the maladies of his time and cure the Philippines of what he calls “the social cancer”. Rizal had been the progressive radical thinker, and promptly answered the ailing call of his Motherland