Endgame Essays

  • Endgame Isolation Essay

    1113 Words  | 5 Pages

    Phillip Pacheco Lit. Matters Final Paper 5/1/17 Isolation in Samuel Beckett’s Endgame In terms of bleakness, Samuel Beckett’s Endgame is a hard one to surpass. Not limited by its intricacies, Endgame is a one-act play that depicts the wretched and monotonous interactions between figurative characters in a post-apocalyptic world. Beckett uses several powerful themes throughout the play including the true meaning of life and death, but I believe the most important to be the idea of loneliness. This

  • Summary Of Haruki Murakami's The Elephant Vanishes

    1480 Words  | 6 Pages

    Time is an element in the creation and development of a narrative. Time can be used to express events in different styles and to enrich a timeline with details. In magical realism and surrealism, which deal with the extraordinary as part of the ordinary, time is elongated, overturned, and set in different forms, jumping from one event to another without it immediately making sense. In Haruki Murakami’s short story collection, The Elephant Vanishes, it is as if time were an antagonist at first, a

  • Foolishness In Oscar Wilde's The Importance Of Being Earnest

    1026 Words  | 5 Pages

    Foolishness is a theme that plays a huge part in Oscar Wilde’s play, The Importance of Being Earnest. Foolishness is defined as ‘lacking good sense or judgement’, and there is definitely a whole of that shown in many, if not most, of the characters in the play. This play is, however, a comedy, and when not taken seriously, all the empty-headedness adds a huge part in the hilarity of the play. Lady Bracknell, Gwendolen, and Algernon are characters in this play who do an exceptional job of displaying

  • Anger In Edward Albee's The American Dream

    1820 Words  | 8 Pages

    Thesis Statement The research studies Anger in Edward Albee’s The American Dream focusing on dissatisfaction, lack of love, cruelty, false values and losing norms through using repetition, aggressive language, fictional characters, irony, ambiguity, and the technique of alienation. Outline I. Theoretical Part: Anger in Literature 1. Definitions: a. Linda M. Grasso claims that Anger is “vital political tool. It enables new perspectives, new understanding of oppressive

  • Endgame By Jensen Analysis

    1329 Words  | 6 Pages

    Industrialized civilization is destroying the natural world. That’s what Jensen argues in “Endgame”. Through a series of simple, yet increasingly provocative premises such as "civilization is not can never be sustainable "and" Love does not involve pacifism, Jensen believes in the destruction of industrial civilization, and not only does he believe it is inevitable, he thinks it is desirable and he encourages each of us to make it a reality as soon as possible. Most people rarely even question the

  • Art Analysis: Endgame

    299 Words  | 2 Pages

    This piece was named “Endgame”. It’s oil on canvas that was created in 1944 and it is 17 inches by 17 inches. This painting is a surrealist style. The painting is a chess board with four rooks displayed in the upper right corner and they are white and light blue. From the rooks, there are faint white lines representing the queens moves on the board. These lines lead up to a satin heeled female shoe that represents the queen. The shoe is crushing a bishops mitre (representing the bishop chess piece)

  • The Structure Of Existentialism In Samuel Beckett's Endgame

    872 Words  | 4 Pages

    Samuel Beckett’s prevalent play, Endgame, which was written in 1957, portrays a prison- like room with two windows that demonstrate a dead existence and cadaver universe. Throughout the play, Beckett utilizes notions, themes, and actions to reflect a termination (Kennedy 48).The title of the play is definitely equivalent to life in a box because Endgame clarifies that the wall represents a skull and the characters stand for memory ( Byron xi). The title of the play, Endgame, is associated with the motif

  • The Transformative Essay: The Sport Of Chess

    382 Words  | 2 Pages

    Chess, a strategic game played between two people, calls for many different pieces that represent people on a battlefield ("Chess Pieces”). The board being played on, which has a checkerboard pattern, is the “battlefield.” Every piece on the board is in the “battle.” The fact that all the pieces on a chessboard are in battle shares a common idea that all the people on the earth are in the battle; one single piece or person does not go into battle by its lonesome self. One metaphor that refers to

  • Symbolism In Jeremy Robinson's Pulse

    1184 Words  | 5 Pages

    1. King infiltrates manifold Beta as Queen attempts to fight off seven regens in secret lab. As King fights his way through the regens, he finds Dr. Pierce, who has been turned into a more intelligent and evolved version of the regens, who is slowly dying. Pierce draws a symbol on the floor, then goes into a coma. As Knight, Rook, Bishop, and Karn fight regens in the town of Tristan da Cunha, Queen rescues Bishop from imprisonment. King, Queen, and Bishop meet up with Rook, Knight, and Karn in order

  • Twilight: A Very Brief History Of Poker

    1032 Words  | 5 Pages

    In 2010 I wrote a series of essays decoding some ideas about Twilight and included the chess analogies. Here is the chapter about it. The world famous chess was conceived as a war game for two players, played on a board of 8x8 squares, alternating the colors, white and black, which are the 64 possible positions for game development. At the beginning of the game, each player has sixteen pieces: one king, one queen, two bishops, two knights, two rooks, and eight pawns. The objective is to overthrow

  • The Ideas Of Existentialism In Samuel Beckett's Endgame

    945 Words  | 4 Pages

    This is an attempt to understand Samuel Beckett’s characterization, use of language and setting in his play 'Endgame' and to explore the manner in which it reveals his tendency to employ some existentialist concepts such as despair and anxiety. Existentialism is a philosophical movement which focuses on an individual's existence rejecting the absolute reason. There are a number of reasons for the concept of 'Existentialism' to come in the history of thought. Firstly, rational sciences could not prove

  • The Role Of Family In Samuel Beckett's Endgame

    1175 Words  | 5 Pages

    parents and their children are very unique and individualized. Some families are very close and have many shared memories. Other families have faced hardship and choose to put distance in their relationships. In fact, Samuel Beckett’s absurd play, Endgame, is full of unique family dynamics. Nell and Nagg are the parents of Hamm, and Hamm acts as a father to Clov, although it is unclear whether they are blood related. These four characters live together and their parent-child relationships are apparent

  • The Documentary Endgame: AIDS In Black American

    1772 Words  | 8 Pages

    society acted against disapproved notions allowed HIV to thrive as people kept things to themselves. The government was ineffective and unprepared to stop the virus while religion only made it worse by labeling it as God’s wrath. The documentary, “‘Endgame: AIDS in Black American”, shines light on all these issues and how it all negatively impacted African Americans. The documentary is mostly about HIV and AIDs in the African

  • Endgame: AIDS In Black America Directed By Renata Simone

    1750 Words  | 7 Pages

    “Endgame: AIDS in Black America” directed by Renata Simone is a documentary that features the obstacles that Black people with AIDS have encountered throughout the history in the United States. The documentary describes the history of where the stigma of the epidemic comes from and also reveals the excerpts from men, women, and youth born or have contracted the virus. In addition, the documentary reveals how AIDS affects Black communities today. The documentary focuses on the urban communities, as

  • A Comparison Of The Family Dynamics Within Six Characters Looking For An Author

    1285 Words  | 6 Pages

    Comparison of the Family Dynamics within “Six Characters Looking for an Author” and “Endgame” The characteristics of modernism entail literary works with new perspectives on changing culture and society in reaction to a world experiencing a series of cataclysmic wars in the early 20th century. Modernists challenged societal expectations through their expression in literature, architecture, and art. Notable playwrights like Pirandello and Samuel Beckett expressed their modernist perspectives through

  • Ap English Language Essay

    2580 Words  | 11 Pages

    Samuel Beckett once said “every word is like an unnecessary stain on silence and nothingness.” The irony lies on the fact that words are necessary to explain that words are unnecessary. In Beckett´s Endgame, actions do not match those words. The play was originally written in French, and Beckett himself chose to translate it into English, hence there would be no mediators. We can then assert that all the words have been carefully chosen by the author. The absurdist plot is developed confined to a

  • Rules Of The Game Waverly Jong Character Analysis

    1253 Words  | 6 Pages

    why it is essential in the endgame to have foresight...all weaknesses and advantages become evident to a strong adversary and are obscured to a tiring opponent..for the whole game one must gather invisible strengths and see the endgame before the game begins.” (3), the reader is able to decipher how Waverly’s thoughts work to elicit a greater meaning

  • The Communication Calendar: Stakeholder Messaging Strategy

    1642 Words  | 7 Pages

    The importance of being clear on the endgame cannot be overstated as it provides the bedrock for a successful change program. It becomes the foundation for all messaging and provides the criteria against which the change program is shaped, delivered, and measured. It also defines the hand-over criteria to business as usual. When there is a clear endgame in place, the role of a change program is simply to establish a schedule of work that will deliver the endgame whilst bringing the organisation

  • Dennis Mccallum And Jim Leffel Of Xenos Christian Fellowship

    1127 Words  | 5 Pages

    Almost anyone on the street would agree that stealing is wrong, but many who adhere to Postmodern philosophy could not explain why it is wrong, except that they just know that it is wrong. Christians can explain their basic knowledge of right and wrong from verses such as Romans 2:15, which says, “They show that the requirements of the law are written on their hearts, their consciences also bearing witness, and their thoughts sometimes accusing them and at other times even defending them” (New International

  • Argumentative Essay: A Lethal Shot Too Far

    1667 Words  | 7 Pages

    Ursula Turner Mrs. Baker English 4 21 November 2017 A Lethal Shot Too Far A shot ends a life. One single, lethal injection ends a convicted felon's life. The death penalty has been a punishment for serious crimes for as long as cultures have been around. “Since the earliest recorded execution in the United States in 1608, our country has put to death approximately 16,000 men and women” (Sarat). Yet Mr. Hostutler, a senior government teacher at Bishop Sullivan Catholic High School, brings up