JACK MILLER- THE PHOTOGRAPHER I wish to take this opportunity to introduce myself. My name is Jack Miller, a photographer by profession. Ever since my youthful years, I have had this growing obsession with shooting and sharing photography works and I have over time worked on it day and night for perfection. I have spent enough time, effort and all necessary resources to enhance my skills in this area to ensure that I not only deliver quality work but that I also present you unique, dazzling and magical shoots that surpass your expectations. I adore animals too, I enjoy their presence and I am enthralled by their unique behaviors and simple yet beautiful ways of life. I like telling the different stories about them and I find the diverse emotions
First, I would like to clarify my point of view on the statement made by Mr. Henry I. Miller and Gregory Conko, from “Scar Food,” policy Review (June/July 2006). The statement by Mr. Henry I. Miller and Gregory Conko of the Hoover Institution argue that genetically modified (GM) crops are safer for the consumer and better for the environment than non- GM crops. And also they discusses about topics such as Americans take food safety very seriously, Do not trust Mother Nature and also about property damage and personal Injury from the naturally produced foods. In addition to this Mr. Henry & Mr. Gregory is trying to say that genetically produced food are much safer than naturally produced food. As I went through this article I understood that it is about the advantages of introducing genetically modified foods are safer to consume than naturally produced food. So this part of the argument can be considered as the opinion of a one side of a coin.
Michael J. Fox amazed the world in 1985 in the sci-fi film Back to the Future. The timeless motion picture told the story of a teenager, Fox, who traveled back in time in a mission to unite his parents to preserve his future survival. Throughout the film, Fox’s comedic nature ensured the film’s wide acclaim and success. In 1998, Fox publicly announced that he had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease and in 2003, released a book discussing his experience with the disease. In Lucky Man: A Memoir by Michael J. Fox, Fox uses his naturally comedic perspective to show the reader how he has dealt with Parkinson’s Disease in a positive light.
Since the beginning of the Industrial Age, Americans have idealized the journey towards economic success. One thing people do not realize, however, is that journey is not the same for every individual. Media often leads its viewers toward a “one size fits all” version of success that may help themselves, but will rarely help the viewers. This is seen in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman. Miller includes multiple instances of symbolism and personification to reveal to the reader the situational irony in Willy’s life, underlining the theme of self-deception in regard to the American Dream. This American Dream, fueled by money, is the main source of anxiety in Willy’s life. The anxiety of income is reflected today in the issue of minimum wage. James Sherk, a writer of the Tribune News Service, plots thoughtful points against raising the minimum wage. However, his use of over-exaggeration and odd comparisons leave his argument less than convincing.
the tragic feeling is evoked in us when we are in the presence of a
'A View From The Bridge' is set in early 1950's America at a time when
Death of Salesman by Arthur Miller The Requiem seems to simply conclude the play at the funeral and let us see the other character's view of events with some retrospect. However, with closer scrutiny, we see that old issues and resentments. are still very prevalent in the U.S. The Requiem can be split into two halves.
Arthur Miller, in his plays, deals with the injustice of society's moral values and the characters who are vulnerable to its cruelty. A good majority of these plays were very successful and earned numerous awards. According to Brooks Atkinson, a critic for the New York Times, Miller's play Death of a Salesman was successful because the play "is so simple in style and so inevitable in theme that it scarcely seems like a thing that has been written and acted. For Mr. Miller has looked with compassion into the hearts of some ordinary Americans and quietly transferred their hopes and anguish to the theater" (Babusci 1261). This play, in 1949, received the Pulitzer Prize, the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, the Antoinette Perry Award, the Donaldson Award, and the Theater Club Award (A Brief Chronology of Arthur Miller's Life and Works, http://www.ibiblio.org/...). Miller has said that he could not have written The Crucible at any other time for it is said that a play cannot be successful unless it speaks to its own time; hence McCarthyism was widespread when this play was written. Everyone was afraid of Communists, just like everyone was afraid of witches during The Crucible. This play won the Antoinette Perry Award and the Donaldson Award (Bloom, Modern Critical Interpretations: Arthur Miller's The Crucible 55). His play All My Sons was concerned with a man, Joe Keller, selling defective cylinder heads to the Air Force during World War II, causing the death of twenty-one pilots, one of whom was his elder son. The play focuses around this act and the consequences that arise from it. The play won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. All of Miller's plays focus on one central idea, this idea being ...
Irving Penn has always strived for the best presentation of his work, he has become a master printer, revitalizing the platinum-palladium process as well as working with new techniques. The combination of innovative photography and meticulous printing has made Irving Penn one of the most significant photographers of the twentieth century.
“Figure it out. Work a lifetime to pay for a house. You finally own it, and there’s no one to live in it.” This line was from the 1949 play Death of a Salesman. In his early years Miller wrote plays, but none of them were produced. Death of a Salesman was not his first success, but was still widely admired. He grew to become one of the century’s greatest American dramatists. However this title was not easily achieved. After growing up in Harlem and working the Brooklyn Navy Yard to becoming a Pulitzer Prize winner, Arthur Miller is held with high respect. Miller had a lifelong dream. That dream was to become a famous playwright. With a lot of hard times and struggles, he reached his goal.
A View From the Bridge by Miller "A view from the bridge" is a play scripted by Arthur Miller in 1955.
Arthur Miller states in his essay, "Tragedy and the Common Man," " . . . we are often held to be below tragedy--or tragedy below us . . . (tragedy is) fit only for the highly placed . . . and where this admission is not made in so many words it is most often implied." However, Miller believes " . . . the common man is as apt a subject for tragedy in its highest sense as kings were" (1021). It is this belief that causes Miller to use a common man, Willie Loman, as the subject of his tragedy, Death of a Salesman. Miller redefines the tragic hero to fit a more modern age, and the product of this redefinition is Willie.
commenting on events; he also plays a part in the play as a lawyer and
I am here today to help you wade through the mazes of equipment and composition, hopefully showing you how to make better pictures.
All My Sons by Arthur Miller produced by Scrappy Coco Productions, is based on the modern representation of an American tragedy about the Keller family in 2010. Family man Joe Keller, a middle-aged, successful entrepreneur makes a decision which leads to tragic outcome. Under government contract he was to produce a fleet of Toyotas for members of the military. Joe approves the use of faulty parts on a production of these automobile’s resulting in the death of hundreds of military men. To protect his freedom Joe frames his business partner. With all that is going on, Joe’s wife mourns their deceased military son, his business partner’s daughter in soon approaching her marriage to his son and his entire life begins to totally become unhinged.
Arthur Miller was a prominent American playwright and essayist in the twentieth century who received quite a number of awards. He wrote some very famous plays like Death of Salesman, Who Has Seen the Wind, How I Spent My Summer Holidays, All My Sons, The Crucible, and Broken Glass. The play Death of a Salesman received exceptional recognition all over the world. This play has attained tremendous popularity because Arthur Miller reflected his life experiences in the play: Miller was represented by Biff; the settings were all familiar to Miller; both Miller and Biff failed math; and both Miller and his main characters are womanizers.