Greek plays have acquired a lot of popularities over time in the business of entertainment. They are very much alike to modern entertainment; however they differ from each other. Greeks only did two types of dramas-tragedy and comedy-Oedipus Rex and Antigone are significant Greek plays. Today we still do plays, but have a lot more musicals. Also, the definition of “comedy” back then diverges from now. In ancient Greece it meant a happy and funny ending and tragedy was a sad ending. Based on many…
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Theatre is a form of art that has been part of our contemporary society since the beginning of time. The purpose of theatre is served for many different aspects of our cultures in ways that entertain, informs and even bring us together. Everything that correlates with theatre always has a purpose or a message. Entertainment is something many people in our contemporary society always seek. Theatre practitioners often encounter the challenge of creating entertaining content to be performed on stage…
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Physical theatre Physical theatre is a genre of theatrical performance that pursues storytelling through primarily physical means. Several performance traditions all describe themselves as "physical theatre", but the unifying aspect is a reliance on physical motion of the performers rather than or combined with text to convey the story. In basic sense, you talk through hand gestures, body language, thought track and many more physical features. Dympha Callery suggests that all physic…
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animals. In each case, we must reconsider what makes us different from animals, whether we understand each other better than we think, and how we are to live with each other. We shall begin by considering man as opposed to animal. From the ancient Greeks through the Enlightenment, Western culture defined human beings by virtue of their differences from members of the animal kingdom. Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels and some eighteenth-century political philosophy will help us understand what…
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| | |Nationalism = huge force |Japan: parliamentary capitalism | |Economy |Lots of money flowing in from Silk |Paper money |China: trade with Europeans in Qing |Provide labor for plantations/mines |Modernization of Japan, Taiwan, South | | |Roads |Credit or “flying money”…
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Chapter 1: The Invention of Writing - From the early Paleolithic to the Neolithic period (35,000 BC to 4,000 BC), early Africans and Europeans left paintings in caves, including the Lascaux caves in Southern France. - Early pictures were made for survival and for utilitarian and ritualistic purposes. - Petroglyphs are carved or scratched signs on rock. - These images became symbols for what would be the first spokenlanguage. - Cuneiform – Wedged shaped writing, created in 3000BC. Started…
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due to lack of proper utilization, post-harvest and processing technology. By converting the waste into value added products like wine is a smart solution for this problem. There are few reports on the suitability of mango for wine production. The research on this facet was initiated by Czyhrinciwk in 1966 suggesting that the mango is well suitable fruit for the production of fruit wine. In India, Kulkarni and Onkarayya and Singh have screened 20 mango cultivars for the production of wine. Strains…
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increasing role as a catalyst in enhancing the quality of the tourist experience. Today's consumers' search for an individual lifestyle is changing tourism and the 'new tourist' is using the holiday for acquiring insight into other cultures. Recent research and current market trends are examined to reveal the increasing significance of gastronomy to holiday choice. It is argued that gastronomy brings culture and cultures together. Place and setting enhance the food experience and arguably vice-versa…
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life is not linear, similarly, the place the book ends is the place it begins; “it always begins in blackness until the first light illuminates a hidden fragment of memory”. Baker does this through incorporating historical documentation based on his research as a historian, narratives of his and his parents’ memories and other forms, such as poetry and prayers. He also reconstructs narratives to provide a story which memory a history can only convey together. Through this, he’s able to question and undermine…
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EDlTH WHARTON AT THE CINEMA In 1921 Edith Wharton sold the film rights to her Pulitzer Prize winning novel, “THE AGE OF INNOCENCE”, for $15,000. Seventy-two years later, Martin Scorsese has filmed Edith Wharton’s novel at a reputed cost of $30 million. In 1920 Edith Wharton was paid $18,000 by the New York monthly “PICTORIAL REVIEW”, a popular journal of the day, for the rights to publish her next serial. She was at this time an established literary figure, a writer of travelogues, novels, novellas…
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