Princess Zelda Essays

  • Taking a Look at the Legend of Zelda

    1395 Words  | 3 Pages

    Legend of Zelda created by Japanese video game designer and producer Shingeru Miyamoto. Through Zelda, gamers are exposed to and are able to play through a hero’s journey filled with mythological motifs such as the idea of creation and destruction, the struggle between light versus darkness, the subconscious in relation to reality, and the idea and distortion of time. Creation and destruction are two ideas very central to mythology. Every culture has its own creation story, and so does Zelda. The land

  • The Legend of Zelda: A Perfect Religion

    1516 Words  | 4 Pages

    who wants to call themselves a gamer has to have some idea as to what Zelda is. It is among one of the most popular video game series out there and has created its own cultural wellspring. There have been spin off cartoons, websites, walkthroughs, forms, etc…but strangely enough the story for one of the video games doesn’t change much. You are this elf looking boy or adult named Link that is on a quest to rescue Princess Zelda, reunite the Triforce, and save the land of Hyrule from evils such as

  • Promotional Strategies

    1542 Words  | 4 Pages

    “How do I get my product/service out there?” This is a question that many people who plan to begin their own businesses, or even larger companies who have already established a name for themselves, frequently ask. Your product or service may be the latest and greatest on the market today, but that doesn't help you if no one knows it exists. You need to find someway to make yourself and your product known. That is where promotion comes into play. But what exactly is promotion? Well, www.dictionary

  • Princess Charming

    1453 Words  | 3 Pages

    Princess Charming Methodology I started thinking about an appropriate topic for my Field Report months ago. I considered the world of Punk culture in Chicago. Then I decided I knew too much already about this so I considered perhaps skateboard culture. At least this way I could learn something that I wasn't familiar with firsthand. But still, I have had a significant amount of exposure to skateboarding so I kept searching. I considered the already approved topics and looked specifically at

  • The Grandmother in the Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald

    2072 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Grandmother in the Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald The characterizations of women have, throughout history, been one of the most problematic subjects in literary tradition. An extraordinary dichotomy has existed with women as being both the paragon of virtue and the personification of evil. Ancient Greeks feared women, and poets such as Hesiod believed the female sex was created to be the scourge of the gods and the bane of men (Fantham 39). Romans, on the other hand, incorporated

  • Princess of the Kingdom of Dweven

    667 Words  | 2 Pages

    Once upon a time in the Kingdom of Dweven there was a princess, her name was Amelia. Amelia had just turned 21 and it was time for her to wed. Amelia was not your run-of-the-mill princess; she was sly, clever and cunning. Instead of just hosting a ball to find a proper suitor she decided to put eligible princes through an evaluation. She gathered ten princes from different kingdoms and invited to stay at her castle to compete for her hand in marriage. The ten princes were, Alexander, Baudouin, Casmir

  • Life as A Princess: Grace Kelly

    1131 Words  | 3 Pages

    Life as A Princess: Grace Kelly Even before Grace Kelly married a prince, she had the characteristics of a princess. Frank Sinatra once commented, "Grace was a princess from the moment she was born." She had remarkable elegance and sophistication that made her different from other Hollywood actresses. Some say she had a bit of fire beneath her charm. Alfred Hitchcock, who directed her in three films, called her "a snow-covered volcano". Grace was born into a family of fame and success. Her father

  • Paradise American Dream

    776 Words  | 2 Pages

    “The American Dream has become a death sentence of drudgery, consumerism, and fatalism: a garage sale where the best of the human spirit is bartered away for comfort, obedience and trinkets. It's unequivocally absurd.” –Zoltan Istvan. In both This Side of Paradise and This Beautiful and Damned, F. Scott Fitzgerald comments on the corruption of the American Dream. Throughout the beautiful text and prose of his first and second novels, respectively, Fitzgerald mocks the ghastly nightmare the American

  • Women's Role In The 1920s

    782 Words  | 2 Pages

    did. For instance, Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald was a famous flapper who married F. Scott Fitzgerald, the author of The Great Gatsby. She struggled against her traditional southern upbringing and its societal restrictions to create a new, independent identity not just for herself, but for all American women (Willett, Ericka). Zelda is still an influence in modern society today. Her name even inspired Shigeru Miyamoto to create the first-person role-playing game called The Legend of Zelda. Another influential

  • F. S. Fitzgerald's Fighting the Past and Self-loathing in Babylon Revisited

    1730 Words  | 4 Pages

    his tales correlates with his private life with his wife Zelda, his trouble with alcohol, and their lives in Europe. Fitzgerald wrote the story "Babylon Revisited" - perhaps his most widely read story - in December of 1930, and then it was published in February of 1931 in The Saturday Evening Post. Mathew J. Bruccoli writes in "A Brief Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald" that "The dominant influences on F. Scott Fitzgerald were aspiration...Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, and alcohol," and each of these influences

  • Potiki - Is Toko Maui?

    2292 Words  | 5 Pages

    She blew his mouth and nostrils, and with two fingers lightly massaged his chest until the mucus began to drain freely. She took a pendant from her ear and put it on the blanket beside him. ‘Tokowaru-i-te-Marama. Ko Tokowaru-i-te-Marama te ingoa o tenei,’ she said. (Grace 36) The passage above comes from the book Potiki. It’s when granny Tamihana breathes life into Toko and gives him the name of her deceased brother. In Potiki, a novel written by Patricia Grace, we are introduced to a family that

  • George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin

    1238 Words  | 3 Pages

    George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin Like many other renowned novels aimed at children, George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin draws extensively from the folk tradition in his telling of the tale. Many of the figures presented, such as the nurse and Curdie, have precedent in the tradition, but the grandmother in particular stands out. Archetypally, she is a variant on the Old Man, though she bears the undeniable touch of the supernatural as seen in common folklore - at times

  • George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin

    1318 Words  | 3 Pages

    George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin In his novel The Princess and the Goblin, George MacDonald has cleverly crafted an underground society populated by a distorted and "ludicrously grotesque" race. Within the body of his tale, he reveals that these people are descended from humans, and did in fact, once upon a time, live upon the surface themselves. Only eons of living separated from fresh air and sunlight have caused them to evolve into the misshapen creatures we meet in this story

  • George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin

    1170 Words  | 3 Pages

    George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin The moon has been worshipped as a female deity since the beginning of time. Not only is the moon a feminine principle, it is also a symbol of transformation due to its own monthly cycle of change. With this in mind, it is clear upon a close reading of The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald that the grandmother figure is a personification of the moon, and as such is a catalyzing agent for Irene's maturation and transformation through the

  • The Origins and Purpose of the Goblin Queen in George MacDonald´s the Princess and the Goblin

    2303 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Origins and Purpose of the Goblin Queen in George MacDonald´s the Princess and the Goblin Whatever the purpose of a story may be, whether the tale is a philosophical, moralizing or merely entertaining one, an assortment of characters with sufficient depth, notability and believability is vital to shoulder the burden of the author’s intent. George MacDonald, in one of his most famous novels, The Princess and the Goblin, displays an acute awareness of this fact, presenting us with some of

  • Leonilla, Princess of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn By Franz Xaver Winterhalter

    1172 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Leonilla, Princess of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn” By Franz Xaver Winterhalter, 1843 Franz Xaver Winterhalter was born of peasant stock, in Mensenschwad, a small village in Germany’s Black Forest. His early training, as an apprentice in a studio in Freiburg, began when he was thirteen. He learned engraving and he supported himself as a lithographer, while he studied painting in Munich (nga, par.1). Even though he is known to be an academic painter, this seems to be a contradiction, as Webster’s Dictionary

  • Dragons: Misunderstood Beauties

    1951 Words  | 4 Pages

    us from the monster that some evil force has enforced to keep us trapped in a castle forever. I am certainly no prince or princess, at least in the metaphorical sense. I am certainly not about to go out and slice off the heads of whatever stand in between myself and my desires. Because what good would that do? We cannot merely overcome one obstacle in our lives, save the princess, and live happily ever after. Life does not work the way a fairytale does. We are supposed to learn from the obstacles,

  • The Role of the Princess in Jean Cocteau’s Film Orpheus

    1047 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Role of the Princess in Jean Cocteau’s Film Orpheus “As he lay in his bed, Orpheus’ Death would watch him sleep.” This is one of the most notable reoccurring behaviors of the princess of death in Jean Cocteau’s Orpheus. As made apparent, one of the many differences between Cocteau’s version of Orpheus and the Greek version is that death is personified through a female princess, rather than that of a male god. How does Cocteau embody death through the princess, is she all powerful, does she

  • An Analysis of Tennyson’s The Princess

    859 Words  | 2 Pages

    Analysis of Tennyson’s The Princess Alfred, Lord Tennyson is the most influential poet of the Victorian Age. He was named poet laureate of England by the Queen, and the first poet to receive a title Lord. In his lifetime Tennyson has produced many works which are considered great. Such one is The Princess which is a long narrative poem with a number of songs. One of these songs is “ Tears, Idle Tears”, a poem full of sorrow and grief. In this fragment of The Princess the speaker is desperate because

  • Confucius and Confucianism

    850 Words  | 2 Pages

    China is a country with a vast cultural and historical background. It is a country with four billon people with extreme cultural diversity, which is nourished by different philosophies of its own. These philosophies are the beginning ideas of Chinese morality and spiritual belief, which were enriched by different intellectual heroes like Confucius. Confucius was born in 551 B.C at the end of the Chou dynasty as a descendent of dispossessed noble family. “His ancestors were of lesser aristocracy