Emil Loteanu Essays

  • Characterization of Joy in "Good Country People"

    560 Words  | 2 Pages

    Joy Hopewell is the thirty-three-year-old maimed child of Ms. Hopewell in Flannery O'Connor's short story, Good Country People." Joy is characterized throughout the story as an ungrateful, childish adult with a bad temperament. Joy's leg has been shot off in a hunting accident over twenty years ago, and it can be presumed that at least some of her behavioral issues can be attributed to the accident. Ms. Hopewell, the eternally helpful and kind character, wakes up at seven each morning to light

  • Analysis Of The Short Happy Life Of Francis Macomber

    1029 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Death of Francis Macomber: A Deliberate Act In 1938 Ernst Hemmingway published the short story, “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber”, set on a hunting safari in Africa. The story tells the tale of a man and a woman in an unhappy marriage who have taken a safari in Africa in an attempt to repair their marriage. At the end of the tale, the titular character, Francis Macomber, lies dead on the African veldt, shot in the head by his wife Margaret (sometimes called Margot) in what appears at

  • Hermann Hesse's Demian

    724 Words  | 2 Pages

    The theme of self-discovery was explored with a Jung approach. Hermann Hesse was obviously under the influence of Dr. Carl Jung when he wrote the novel. The story was told as a lookback into the past.  By the end of the first couple of pages, Emil Sinclair explicitly revealed  this fact to the reader. The development of the two worlds of good and evil took place early in the novel.  Sinclair's home and his family symbolized the good of the world, while almost everything else outside of the

  • Sylvia Plath

    2097 Words  | 5 Pages

    tendencies, self-hatred and her traditional upbringing. She was labeled as a confessional poet and biographical and historical material is absolutely necessary to understand her work. Syliva Plath was born on 27, 1963, in Boston, Massachusetts to Otto Emil Plath and Aurelia Schober. Otto Plath was a professor of biology and German at Boston University. He was of German descent and had emigrated from Grabow when he was fifteen. Her mother was a first generation American; she was born in Boston to Austrian

  • Lessons in Leadership in Demian

    734 Words  | 2 Pages

    causing the reader to look at it from a very unique perspective. Through this comparison, the reader begins to see the mark of Cain as a positive symbol -- as the mark of those who would lead the world into the future of mankind, without fear. When Emil Sinclair first meets Max Demian, he sees that Demian is not like anyone he has ever known. Unconsciously, he views Demian as having a mark -- something that sets him apart from the others. Sinclair isn't sure if it is the adult-like manner in which

  • Relationships and Setting in Willa Cather's O Pioneers!

    719 Words  | 2 Pages

    Relationships and Setting in Willa Cather's O Pioneers! O Pioneers!(1993) by Willa Cather begins on a blustery winter day, in the town of Hanover, Nebraska, sometime between 1883 and 1890. The narrator introduces four main character: the very young Emil Bergson; his older sister, Alexandra; her friend Carl Linstrum; and a little girl, Marie Shabata. Alexandra's father, John Bergson, is dying. He tells his two oldest sons, Lou and Oscar, that he is leaving the farmland, and all of what he has accomplished

  • The Path to Understanding in Herman Hesse’s Demian

    1332 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Path to Understanding in Demian In Hermann Hesse's, "Demian," Emil Sinclair develops into a self-cognizant man after experiencing true friendship and the purity of life. Immaturity and innocence surrounds him as a child until a confidant by the name of Max Demian places him on the path to understanding himself. After opening his eyes to the feebleness of life, the boy realizes his true purpose of existence. Beginning life in the "realm of light," (7) Sinclair passes through life being criticized

  • Comparing Self Discovery in American Beauty and Hermann Hesse's Demian

    2067 Words  | 5 Pages

    There seems to be a theme running through the movie American Beauty where we see people looking to other people as a source to receive their own sense of confidence, or ultimately, happiness. This is also evident in Demian by Hermann Hesse when we see Emil Sinclair seeking out Max Demian. This paper will serve as a means to compare two similar works of art that both incorporate the idea of realizing one's dreams through self-discovery. "An enlightened man had but one duty-to seek the way to himself,

  • Edmund Emil Kemper Iii: The Life Of A Serial Killer

    1047 Words  | 3 Pages

    Edmund Emil Kemper III was born on December 13, 1948 in Burbank, CA. He was born to the union of Edmund E. Kemper Jr. and Clarnell Strandberg. After his parents divorced, Clarnell took Kemper along with his two sisters to live by her very high standards and abusive ways. She berated Kemper mentally by having him sleep in a windowless basement because she feared of the harm he may cause to his sisters. In turn, this caused the hatred that he had for her to fester and turn into hatred against all women

  • Edmund Emil Kemper III: Serial Killer

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    Edmund Emil Kemper III: Serial Killer Edmund Emil Kemper III was raised by a verbally abusive mother and her succession of abusive husbands. He was 6'9'' and therefore there was really no where that he could hide once the police caught on to his murderous activities. At a young age Edmund tortured and killed animals and had fantasies that combined sex and violence (crime library, 2000). Edmund's younger sister said that "he would stage his own execution in the form of a childhood 'game' in

  • Ferenc Farkas

    822 Words  | 2 Pages

    director during his last year there. In 1949 Farkas was appointed Professor of Composition at the Budapest Academy of Music, a post which he held until his retirement in 1975. His pupils included Attila Bozay, Axolt Durkó, György Kurtág, György Ligeti, Emil Petrovics, Sándor Szokolay and many other prominent Hungarian composers. In 1950, Ferenc Farkas was awarded the highest Hungarian government decoration for artistic merit, the Kossuth Prize. In 1979, he was given the Herder Prize by the F.V.Stiftung

  • Stones from the River

    3027 Words  | 7 Pages

    in the attic, or under the stairs. In the attic, the two would play with the paper dolls Leo gave his wife, and Gertrude would teach Trudi how to escape from the attic. Under the stairs, Gertrude told Trudi of her affair with her husband’s friend, Emil, and how she fell off his motorcycle one day, and skinned her knee. Her knee healed, but the stones could be felt beneath her skin if she let someone try to feel for them. That very same day Leo got shot in the knee in the First World War, and had

  • Eugen Bleuler and Emil Kraepelin - Pioneers in the Study of Schizophrenia

    705 Words  | 2 Pages

    Eugen Bleuler and Emil Kraepelin - Pioneers in the Study of Schizophrenia Schizophrenia is a complex syndrome characterized by cognitive and emotional dysfunctions including delusions and hallucinations, disorganized speech and behavior, and inappropriate emotions. Since there is no cure to this disorder, clinicians rely on the DSM IV to differentiate between symptoms. The symptoms of the disorder can disrupt a person’s perception, thought, speech, and movement in almost every aspect of daily

  • Demian: The Story of Emil Sinclair’s Youth by Hermann Hesse

    1526 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the story, Demian, Sinclair states that people help themselves without the help of others in such matters. When a person gets help from teachers, mentors or advisors, this support is not meant to put a person down, but to motivate and help move them along in life. People helped Sinclair get through life in many situations, starting when he was a little boy at the age of ten. There are some who may come through one's life and try to hinder him or her from getting them where it is that they need

  • Banner in the Sky by James Ramsey Ullman

    658 Words  | 2 Pages

    born in New York City in 1907. His highest-honored book was Banner in the Sky, but four of his books, including this one, were made into major motion pictures. The main characters of this story are Rudi Matt, Franz Lerner, Frau Matt, John Winter, and Emil Saxo. Rudi is the son of the legendary mountain guide of the Alps, Josef Matt. He has mountain climbing in his blood and is destined to become a guide. He is the main character of the story. Franz Lerner is Rudi’s uncle. He was with Josef Matt hours

  • Shopaholism

    1427 Words  | 3 Pages

    hand." Just as nearly every alcoholic starts out as a social drinker, a shopping addict starts out as a recreational shopper -- bringing a little color into a gray day by picking up a pair (or three) of shoes. About 90 years ago, German psychologist, Emil Kraepelin defined excessive shopping as an illness, calling it "oniomania" after the Latin onos, or price, but only recently has this disorder begun to be understood. According to Observer Magazin... ... middle of paper ... ...ed because at

  • Analysis of Demian by Hermann Hesse

    3508 Words  | 8 Pages

    Analysis of Demian by Hermann Hesse Demian is the story of a boy, Emil Sinclair, and his search for himself. Emil was raised in a good traditional home at the turn of the century in the nation of Germany. His family is very wealthy and they have a reputation as a principled, religious family. As a boy, Sinclair views the world within the walls of his home as representing all that is good, pure, and innocent. But starting at a young age, he feels an inner conflict between his own little world,

  • Schizophrenia, A splitting of the mind

    3072 Words  | 7 Pages

    Schizophrenia, A splitting of the mind Dementia Praecox, the early term for schizophrenia was presented by Emil Kraepelin in 1898. Dementia Praecox included – dementia paranoids, catatonia and hebephrenia. Whilst these different entities are symptomatically very diverse, Kraepelin believed they shared a common core. Kraepelin noted several major symptoms in his patients, these included hallucinations, delusions, negativism, attentional difficulties, stereotyped behaviour and emotional dysfunction

  • Faust Book And Movie Comparison

    1275 Words  | 3 Pages

    Even though the original story of Faust is complicated, it still has a unifying theme which is Faust’s discontentment with the limitations of man’s existing capabilities, -- his motivating forces to surpass the boundaries set on human experience and consciousness. In 1926, Faust was made into a silent movie by F. W. Murnau. “Faust” is a story of a man who sells his soul to the devil, Mephisto. It is believed that the Germans loved Goethe and so those who have seen Murnau’s film were insulted with

  • Ucizka Z Kina Wolnosc Analysis

    569 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ucizka z kina “Wolnosc”(1990) is a fascinating movie that created a simple setting with an interesting plot. The movie centered on what would happen if people stopped following their scripted rolls and simply did what they wanted to, the best way to portray this idea was to use actors in a movie that have a script that they must follow and its always the same. Ucizka z kina “Wolnosc” Is a great example to what would happened if people stopped doing what they were told and did what they wanted to