The Spectator Essays

  • The Tatler and the Spectator

    2719 Words  | 6 Pages

    During the early part of the 1700's Joseph Addison, the Tatler and Sir Richard Steele, the Spectator, came together to write The Tatler and the Spectator. Through their hardships of life they came about understanding what others were feeling and the actions that they took. They documented five hundred and fifty-five essays that were depicted from the world around them. They used the feeling of   love to show about human nature and what it did to achieve its goals. Through stories, such as "Jilts

  • A Textual Analysis of a Scene from Now Voyager and its Effects on Male and Female Spectators

    2448 Words  | 5 Pages

    gaze; (ii) the spectator, in turn is made to identify with this male gaze, and to objectify the women on screen; and (iii) the camera's original 'gaze' comes into play in the very act of filming" (Kaplan 15). The gaze is associated with subjectivity and control and as Kaplan later suggests in the chapter "Is the Gaze Male?", "to own and activate the gaze...is to be in the masculine position" (Kaplan 30). Therefore the visual pleasure in cinema is mainly geared towards a male spectator who maintains

  • John Rupert Martin's "Baroque"

    1152 Words  | 3 Pages

    This book by John Rupert Martin is a good introductory book in the understanding of Baroque artists and their tremendous variety.  Martin defines the Baroque characteristics, but only very broadly leaving a significant amount of room for the reader to make his own deductions.  In general, Martin believes that the typical definitions of the Baroque are "too restrictive and hence likely to create more problems of classification and interpretation than it solves."  Even the time of the Baroque is left

  • Braveheart

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hero For The Freedom Of Scotland Most people know the famous film of Mel Gibson, "Braveheart", where an episode of the war between Scotland and England is related. It's undeniable that the film offers a worthy spectacle of Hollywood and that spectators are entertained by its scenes during all the film. The history relates how a plebeian man of the end of XIII Century, William Wallace, after the lost of his family and his wife, rebels against the British Crown and his king, Edward I. Wallace attacks

  • Tennis

    507 Words  | 2 Pages

    As we all know, America is a nation of sports enthusiasts. Most Americans participate is some kind of sporting event, either as a spectator or as a competitor. In the pantheon of great American sports, there is one that stands out. It has been called the great American pastime. Yes, that great sport known as tennis. Tennis requires a mastery of many skills to be able to play competitively, but the primary skill needed to win in tennis is the serve. The serve is the primary offensive weapon used I

  • Power Structures of Men and Women in Sports

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    in Sports As an athlete or a spectator, it is easy to both feel and see the impact sports have on people of both genders. Athletes are able to experience sports personally, while spectators usually experience sports through different channels of mass media. Realizing the effects that the world of athletics has on individuals and society as a whole is vital to the understanding of how sports can positively and negatively effect athletes as well as spectators. To deepen our understanding of

  • George Bluestone’s Novels into Film

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    George Bluestone’s Novels into Film The first chapter of George Bluestone’s book Novels into Film starts to point out the basic differences that exist between the written word and the visual picture. It is in the chapter "Limits of the Novel and Limits of the Film," that Bluestone attempts to theorize on the things that shape the movie/film from a work of literature. Film and literature appear to share so much, but in the process of changing a work into film, he states important changes are

  • Essay on Camus’ The Stranger (The Outsider): World Without Purpose

    1754 Words  | 4 Pages

    with his friend) for no apparent reason, but because his [Arab] blade light reflected by the sun.  In addition, for no good reason he shoots four more times, the body lying on the ground.  He is tried in court, during which he feels he is his own spectator.  Meaursalt gets convicted of murder and sentenced to death.  Before execution, he feels guilt for the first time because he would miss the simple things in life.  However, he is never scared to die, because for him death comes eventually.  Just

  • Automobile Racing

    1045 Words  | 3 Pages

    driving at higher and higher speeds has made automobile racing one of the world's major spectator and participant sports. Early races were held in two forms; pure speed races and the others tested engine reliability, which later became known as rallies. In rallies, cars attempt to achieve and maintain a set speed between points. The first races were held on public roads, but with increasing concern for spectator safety, special closed-circuit tracks were built for rally racing. The most common racing

  • Serious Trauma

    1034 Words  | 3 Pages

    in the gym. The object of this game, as made by Gates and Tyler Shaklee, the "basketball stars", was to run, jump on a plyo box, and dunk the ball in the basketball hoop, suspended from the gym ceiling. This was amusing to us, the spectators. One particular spectator thought he would join in the fun. The third contestant, Jim Pratt, made his first attempt but lost his grip and fell onto the gym floor on his stomach knocking the air out of him. He got up holding his stomach, gasping for air, and

  • Rodeo State Finals

    2103 Words  | 5 Pages

    get from sitting on the bleachers for so long, but every time I approached them, I would remember and smile. During, the whole rodeo season I looked forward to going to the State Finals. I didn't attend the finals as a participant, but as a spectator. As President of the "Saddle Bronc Fan Club" for my friend Cole, there was no way I would miss this experience. We both had been looking forward to this day for a long time. Everything about going to this rodeo was fantastic: the food, the fun

  • Dunciad: Mock epic and parallels to Rape of the Lock (another satire)

    675 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Dunciad: A Mock Epic? Honors English The fourth book of the Dunciad describes the fall and slow death of the English society that once taught him all the things he knew. He lashes out at his critics, accusers, and nay Sayers in his allegorical poem. It symbolizes a mock epic because of the elaborate use of words, calling on inspiration from a higher force, and using his work not so much to tell a story, but to point out the faults of a social order that can’t or chooses not to see what they’re

  • Mercutio in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

    596 Words  | 2 Pages

    by flying over someone she can make them dream their wildest dreams therefore because Mercutio can paint such a picture like that, he is demonstrating his poetic ability. Mercutio uses his imagination to make Romeo realize that life is not a spectator sport.  He talks of Queen Mab and paints a picture to Romeo that dreams are a waste of time and if you want something you have to get it yourself.  In Act I, scene iv, page 348, Romeo says, "I'll be a candleholder and look on; the game was ne'er

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer

    5070 Words  | 11 Pages

    subversive themes feature strongly in periods of cultural insecurity. In addition to the century that separates Buffy from the Count, there has been a plethora of vampire movies and books of various merits. As a result, the late-twentieth-century average spectator knows the basic facts of vampirism. Therefore, the creators of Buffy the Vampire Slayer need to challenge their audience through another aspect of the series. Turning to their advantage what might have been a serious hindrance, they adopt a self-reflexive

  • American Beauty by Sam Mendes

    2030 Words  | 5 Pages

    able to implicate us in the construction and make us active viewers by exploiting our voyeuristic nature. In American Beauty Mendes uses the voyeuristic tendencies of the spectator to acknowledge the permeating constructed images. Mendes, through the use of narration, the mise en scene and cinematic techniques implicates the spectator in to using their voyeuristic tendencies to deconstruct the images in order to reveal the true image. From the start of the film the construction of images is evident.

  • Spectator Sports In The 1940s

    1715 Words  | 4 Pages

    and recourses to the war, sports played a major role in keeping the morale up and providing much needed entertainment and recreation for Americans on the Homefront and in the military. The idea around spectator sports was to improve everyone's morale during the war. People who played spectator sports would be any of the famous athletes from the 1940’s. Many viewers would forget about the war during a game, and instead, focus on the thrill and excitement of rooting for their favorite team to win

  • Brecht

    2059 Words  | 5 Pages

    Brecht proposed his theory of “Epic Theatre”, writers, directors and actors have been focused on the vitality of entertaining the audience, and creating characters with which the spectator can empathize. ‘Epic Theatre’ believes that the actor-spectator relationship should be one of distinct separation, and that the spectator should learn from the actor rather than relate to him. Two contemporary plays that have been written in the last thirty years which examine and work with Brechtian ideals are ‘Fanshen’

  • Reassemblage: Challenging the Relationship between Women and Visual Pleasure

    908 Words  | 2 Pages

    simultaneously looked at and displayed. That is to say, the woman is both an object of desire and a spectacle for the male voyeuristic gaze. The male's function is active; he advances the story and controls the gaze onto the women. Interestingly, the spectator identifies with the male through camera technique and style. In an effort to reproduce the so-called natural conditions of human perception, male point-of-view shots are often used along with deep focus. In addition, camera movements are usually

  • Investigating the Effect of Concentration on the Temperature Rise, Heat Evolved and Heat of Neutralization for the Reaction Between HCl and NaOH

    4395 Words  | 9 Pages

    Since all these reactions reduce to H+ + OH-→ H2o, the energy change accompanying both should be the same. Because, in all the three reactions only 1 mole of water is produced, and the metallic ions and the negative ions in the acid are rather spectator ions and do not participate in the reaction so much as to give an energy change. If aqueous acidic solutions are made up containing one mole of ½ H2So4, HNo3, and HCl in 25 cm3, and alkaline solutions containing one mole of NaOH in 25 cm3 (strong

  • Soap Operas and Reality TV Dating Shows

    1762 Words  | 4 Pages

    these statements more likely. Modleski argues that soap operas are essential in understanding women’s role in culture. She claims that in viewing soap operas, the spectator simultaneously identifies with each of the characters, and is able to jump between loyalties instantly, as she aligns herself with all characters. The ‘good mother’/spectator is thus privy to all plot developments and events, although even in this omniscient state of narration she does not, or perhaps cannot, generate a particular