Power gain Essays

  • How To Gain Power In To Kill A Mockingbird

    604 Words  | 3 Pages

    People obtain power in ways that can be good, bad, or very manipulative. Power is not always used for good and in the case of Mayella vs. Tom, Mayella was able to gain power and she used it in the wrong way. Mayella Ewell uses her gender, race, and class to gain power in her life and more control over the trial. Mayella uses her gender in a very manipulative way. She is able to make others sympathize her due to the fact that women are viewed as more vulnerable than men. Mayella accuses Tom Robinson

  • How Did Mussolini Gain Power

    1064 Words  | 5 Pages

    To a large extent, I disagree with this statement. Authoritarian and single-party leaders unsuccesfully attempted to use force as a means of rising to power and, once this proved to be unsuccesful, reverted to democratic methods in order establish power. This is evident when looking at how Mussolini established his role as Prime Minister in Italy. Mussolini initially used the “Blackshirts”, members of the paramilitary wing of the Fascist movement, as a means of intimidating people into supporting

  • The Smuggler Analysis

    888 Words  | 4 Pages

    stories to be related in one way. Geraldine, Tasso, and Millicent the outsiders, are all three very divergent people, but they all have one goal in their everyday life, to have more power. The Smuggler by Victor Canning, is a short story about a man called Tasso who smuggles goods, because he lacks economic power. Tasso lives on an island in the Adriatic Sea in his boat. One day

  • Character Deception In Hamlet

    1929 Words  | 8 Pages

    Polonius, as they do whatever it takes to keep the power in their hands. In the fifth scene, the audience is introduced to the first use of deception against Hamlet, with Claudius. The ghost of King Hamlet tells Hamlet that “The serpent that did sting thy father’s life/Now wears his crown.”( Hamlet 1.5.38-9) These lines demonstrate the deceit Claudius has towards Hamlet. Claudius killed Hamlet’s father in order to wear the crown and gain the power of the title, “King”. Not only did Claudius kill King

  • The Importance Of Power In Shakespeare's The Tempest

    1699 Words  | 7 Pages

    Power is a driving force that can lead to happiness or misery. The idea of someone looking to another for guidance is frightening. When done right, the guidance can lead to major successes. However, when a person is corrupt and power-hungry, those around him are affected negatively. The Tempest serves as a great example of how power can be used to do the wrong or the right thing. The play is a change to most avid Shakespeare readers, as it contains aspects of magic and power that ultimately lead

  • Marcus Brutus Character Analysis Essay

    1464 Words  | 6 Pages

    ANALYSIS OF MARCUS BRUTUS Though Julius Caesar is the title-bearing character of the play, he is assassinated in scene 3.1; the remaining three acts of the drama centers around the internal and external conflicts of another character—Marcus Brutus. In fact, the play not only devotes its latter half to his tragedy—the entire play, including the plot up until Caesar’s assassination, all describe the gradual psychological development of Brutus and lay out the background for his larger tragedy, which

  • Julius Caesar Manipulation Analysis

    1108 Words  | 5 Pages

    In the end, this allows Decius to accomplish his task of getting Caesar to the Senate House. Likewise, Decius attempts to gain Caesar’s sympathy in hopes of making Caesar give in and go against his wife who begs him to stay behind. In order to gain Caesar’s sympathy, Decius mentions how he wishes to avoid the humiliation of entering the Senate House without Caesar; Decius mentions, “Most mighty Caesar, let me know some cause, / Lest

  • Selfishness In Lord Of The Flies Analysis

    1163 Words  | 5 Pages

    First of all, in Lord of the Flies, William Golding demonstrates selfishness from the theme of power. Power is one of the factors that can make people express their selfishness. In Lord of the Flies of William Golding, boys decide to elect their leader who will earn the power to control the group of boys. At the beginning of the story, Ralph is chosen to be the leader of the boys, while Jack is appointed to be the leader of the hunter. Jack and his hunters think that they are the special group of

  • Brutus Funeral Speech Analysis

    742 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Funeral Speech of Julius Caesar In Williams Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Antony has a more successful speech than Brutus because Antony appeals to the desire of the Romans. Antony uses sarcasm and verbal irony but Brutus decides to use rhetorical devices. Brutus uses gravitas and his honor but Antony does not. Also, Antony decides to use pathos to appeal to the Romans emotions, but Brutus chooses to use logos. Antony uses sarcasm, pathos, and verbal irony because those appeal to the Romans greed

  • Comparing King Lear And Frears The Queen

    1230 Words  | 5 Pages

    backgrounds, and to gain a deeper and heightened understanding of these ideas we can study people through texts, both fictional and historical. These universal ideas are evident in two texts; Shakespeare 's “King Lear”–written between 1604 and 1606– in a time of social disturbance that shook England & Europe, and Frears’ “The Queen”–based on historical events in 1997– during the difficult times of Princess Diana’s suspicious death, and the royal family 's reaction. Both power, leadership, and familial

  • Struggle For Power In Lord Of The Flies Essay

    991 Words  | 4 Pages

    desire for power is one of the strongest human drives. In Lord of The Flies by William Golding there is a constant struggle for power between the main characters, Ralph, Jack, and Piggy. Ralph has power because he was voted chief and uses his power in an ugly way. Jack is struggling to get out of Ralph's power and gain his own power. The boys’ struggle for power is an ugly struggle and the author uses this to demonstrate the ugly struggle for power that is human nature. Hunger for power is an ugly

  • A Brave New World Character Analysis

    1019 Words  | 5 Pages

    Abusing power is capable of ruining many lives, including the individual’s. Having power can be a good thing, but misusing it, such as characters from the works Brave New World, Oedipus the King, and the movie, The Giver causes destruction. In each work, a character possesses great power and misandles it. In Brave New World, Mustapha Mond is able to dehumanize an entire civilization with the use of many practices and drugs. Oedipus, in Oedipus the King, lets his hubris get the best of him, and results

  • What Does Jack Symbolize In Lord Of The Flies

    1428 Words  | 6 Pages

    absolutely no adults on the island, they quickly stray from justice and overall peace. Jack is the origin of most of the conflicts on the island that lead to fear and death. He has absolutely no control over his obsessions and desires for blood and power. William golding uses Jack’s character as a symbol to convey the theme that when an individual strays away from what is known to be their civilized self and becomes an entirely different and savage human being, they tend to sacrifice innocence, morality

  • The Tragic Hero In Julius Caesar

    802 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the play Julius Caesar, there is more than one tragic hero. Some believe that Brutus is the tragic hero while some believe that Caesar is the tragic hero in the play. While both demonstrate qualities that a tragic hero possesses, only one is the true tragic hero in the play Julius Caesar, Brutus. There are many reasons why Brutus is the tragic hero in the play instead of Caesar. Brutus shows to be the tragic hero of the play since he has a tragic flaw that killed him, he is too gullible. Brutus

  • War And Peace By Tim O Brien

    2320 Words  | 10 Pages

    seems very far from the words that would be used to describe peace, but ironically the gruesome and disturbing wars that take place, are in fact how we obtain that tranquil state of mind. There are many reasons to go to war; religious purposes, to gain power and land, or for security to protect one’s territory from dangerous threats. Multiple wars have begun due to religious conflicts, but ultimately

  • Snowball And Napoleon In Animal Farm

    730 Words  | 3 Pages

    Napoleon holds aloof, he declares himself “against the windmill”, through an egocentric word choice accentuating the idea of gaining power through the rejection of Snowball’s brilliant ideas. Snowball and Napoleon both have conflicting intentions, one with a selfless nature while another is self-centered. They display a discrete image publicly, undermining each other’s power in front of the other

  • Trust And Deception In Othello Analysis

    861 Words  | 4 Pages

    Deception and suspicion are powerful tools that can use trust and mistrust as weapons. Many think that the most powerful weapon is trust and honesty in a relationship but unfortunately suspense and deception over power it in most cases. This can be seen in the play Othello by William Shakespeare, when Othello gets tricked by Iago into thinking his wife is cheating on him and many more cases. In the article How Iago Explains the World, by Lee Siegel it highlights the fact that Iago’s deception and

  • Epic Of Beowulf Essay: The Role Of Women

    984 Words  | 4 Pages

    counterparts. However, recently women in the poem and also in Anglo Saxon society have been seen as characters whose functions are nearly just important of the male's. They are seen as powerful and active in their own realms as they do all within their power to fight for what they believe. While answering this question I will pay my attention on Grendel's mother, Wealhteow, and Hygd as they have attracted the most

  • Lord Of The Flies Summary

    819 Words  | 4 Pages

    can do anything they want. Social order rises quickly as one of the boys, Ralph, is named chief. Whispers of a beast on the island begin to emerge and the boys set off to find and kill it. In the process, one boy, Jack, becomes jealous of Ralph’s power. Two groups begin to emerge, the hunters, led by Jack, and the builders, led by Ralph. Gradually, the hunters become more and more barbarous and bloodthirsty. Social order begins to fall faster than it was built.

  • Public Life In James Joyce's Dubliners

    1197 Words  | 5 Pages

    2.4 Public life The final stories of the collection, consisting of “Ivy Day in the Committee Room,” “A Mother” and “Grace” each depict a condition of Irish society – politics, culture and religion. They view the drabness of Irish society. “Ivy Day in the Committee Room” displays Joyce’s attitude towards politics, with the main character of having autobiographical features and indirectly representing Joyce’s loss of political ideals. He views the characters in these stories to only have one desire