He didn’t tell anyone about the museum but someone added an iPhone, heels, and a snow globe there next to the objects he set up. That is the beginning of the Museum of Civilization. Over time, he would spend a lot of time in this museum of his and show people around answering questions that they had about certain artifacts. He loves his museum and would dust his beloved objects. He wants to remember what the world was like and what they had before flu
The small village of Sobibor is near the present-day eastern border of Poland, about three miles west of the Bug (Buh) River and five miles south of Wlodawa. During the German occupation of Poland, this area was in the Lublin District of the Generalgouvernement (that part of German-occupied Poland not directly annexed to Germany, attached to German East Prussia or incorporated into the German-occupied Soviet Union). German SS and police authorities constructed Sobibor in the spring of 1942 as the second killing center within the framework of Operation Reinhard, the plan implemented by the SS and Police Leader in Lublin to murder the Jews of the Generalgouvernement. It was built along the Chelm-Wlodawa railway line, in a wooded, swampy, and
The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum showcases Mrs. Gardner 's collection to the public in greater Boston area. Each room functions as a pilgrimage, as one travels through various countries and time periods ending at the chapel and subsequently the Gothic room. In this paper, I will examine the Gothic room 's theme in relation to the placement of its objects. I will also evaluate the room 's strengths and challenges in serving the public, and how the practices employed in this room fit into the context of accessibility for the entire museum.
Many people today are constantly exposed to advertisements and social media. Whether that be on television at the gym, scrolling through social media on lunch break, or in the car on the way to work, modern society has embedded constant visual rhetoric into their lives. Being exposed to such a thing has almost dulled modern day’s senses to all the elements of visual rhetoric in an ad or a magazine. Among the galleries of the online baseball book This Great Game there hides an image of the hall of famer Jackie Robinson after he had been hit in the head by a fastball. The illustrator used careful tactics of photoshop, diction, and framing to push forth the message that Jackie Robinson shone as a beacon of light for the civil rights movement and
In the 1980’s and through the 1990’s crime rates were beginning to rise and schools began to crack down on violence, disorder, and weapons in the classroom. There was a term used to justify the punishments given to children who were misbehaving, Zero Tolerance, the official definition being the refusal to accept undesirable misbehavior, typically by strict and uncompromising application of the law. Retro Report is a website that publishes documentaries on major new events and shares them to a digital audience. On October 2nd, 2016 they released a video describing the Zero Tolerance policy in depth and depicting the impact it had on schools where the policy was enforced. There were witnesses to the effect of Zero Tolerance speaking in the video, speaking against the policy and how it had an overall negative outcome.
The Romans would get their fix with their gladiators and colosseums. Seeing other citizens who possess less social currency do inhumane things to each other, reminds of us the pleasure and social security we enjoy. As time passed this became unacceptable in society and these barbaric practices were outlawed. Recently these practices have reemerged in a new and advanced way. In the twenty-first century, television and the internet have been the apparatuses of choice for unlocking society’s perversion and love for disarray and violence.
Tolerance, briefly, means the ability to accept a “different” group of people, culture, or religion from what someone may be used to. For example, during Peter Stuyvesant’s reign as governor, there was vast amount of diverse people coming to New Amsterdam because of the religious freedom that was offered. However, Peter Stuyvesant attempted to turn away twenty-three Sephardic Jews, coming from Recife, Brazil, but was unsuccessful. The Dutch West India Company chastised Peter Stuyvesant and said,” The conscience of men ought to be free and unshackled, so long as they continue moderate, peaceable,… and not hostile to government” ( Jackson and Dunbar 33). The policy of the Dutch West India Company was of open arms to all religions and in return they asked for cooperation, profit, and law abiding citizens.
Everyone has different opinions about different people, but sometimes, people take it too far. Think about it: have you ever been judged, or have you ever judged someone based on how they look or who they are? Ronald J. Allen who wrote “American Flag Stands for Tolerance,” Bill Brummel, the director of a documentary called Bullied, and Lisa Gossels, the director of My So-Called Enemy are all role models, they all showed people resisting to accept others based on who they are, similar to some people in today’s world and during the Civil Rights movement, but then those people change their attitude towards others. In the story and in the movie clips, the author and the directors believe that something good should always come out of a really bad
It was during the World War II and I understand that we wanted to win, but the US was blinded and didn’t see that they were going to kill many innocent lives. The US only cared about winning and they were going to destroy anything that got in their way; even people that didn’t have anything to do with this.
In question one, we explored how the film Duck and Cover utilized various concepts of propaganda design, as identified by Jacques Ellul, to inform children of the dangers of atomic bombs and how to be safe. The following analysis takes these concepts further by evaluating the work of Susan Sontag in her 1975 New York Book review “Fascinating Fascism”, an article on the work of Leni Riefenstahl, an infamous Nazi filmmaker and member of Adolf Hitler’s inner circle (Sontag, 1975). Sontag posits that Riefenstahl’s work for the Nazi party, starting in the 1930’s, demonstrates a true representation of what Sontag calls the “fascist aesthetic”. Riefenstahl’s work concentrated on the power of the propagandist elements of imagery and control to further
As immigration and relations between races become more influential issues in politics, there have been many opposing views on the treatment of minority groups. Some people believe that diversity and immigration is a threat to original identity while others believe that they are extremely beneficial to society. Writers Samuel P. Huntington in The Hispanic Challenge and Herbert Marcuse in Repressive Tolerance express these differing views regarding these important topics. Huntington takes the ‘threat to identity’ side when explaining how Mexican immigration is extremely different from European immigration. On the other hand, Marcuse takes a different route when explaining the idea of tolerance, claiming that majority groups who oppress the minority
In the video “How webtoons are changing movies and TV,” Hyeonmi Kim creates a persuasive TedTalk using audience interaction, examples, and inspiration. Audience Interaction Audiences think of TedTalk as a impactful and inspiration corporation (Bentley University, 2015). Feeling included in the conversation feels odd, while unique, similar to the impact of a celebrity. Kim uses their reputation to interact with the audience in multiple grand forms, using logos as the main foundation for her speech.
“The Century of the Self” is filmed by Adam Curtis. Several years ago a new theory about human nature was established by Sigmund Freud. This documentary is about how those in power have used Freud 's theories to try and control the dangerous crowd in an age of mass democracy. The main characters are Freud himself and his nephew Edward Bernays, who was the first to use psychological techniques in advertising. This theory changed our perception of the mind and its workings.
Zero-tolerance policies are more detrimental than beneficial to school environments because they are applied without proper consideration and judgment toward alleged transgressions. These policies have also been shown to be discriminatory as they are often applied more frequently to minority and disadvantaged students. Schools in the United States are facing an overwhelming wave of violence related to drugs, guns, and general bullying. The educational system is responding with zero-tolerance policies, which require strict penalties for students who commit violent or anti-social acts. Such policies are necessary given the rise in school violence.
The film features dramatic reenactments of the algorithms used by social media platforms to keep users engaged. These scenes are visually striking, and they effectively illustrate the ways in which social media companies use data to manipulate users. The film also uses graphic design to highlight key points and statistics, making the information more accessible and memorable for the audience. To continue the mode of senses used within The Social Dilemma, sound is another rhetorical strategy used.