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Compare Contrast Essay Topics

Writing an essay on "Compare Contrast Essay Topics" can be a challenging task that requires a
thoughtful approach and careful analysis. The difficulty lies in selecting relevant and interesting
topics for comparison, ensuring a meaningful contrast, and presenting a well-structured and cohesive
essay.

Firstly, the process of choosing suitable topics can be time-consuming. It involves identifying two or
more subjects that share similarities yet have significant differences, making the comparison
meaningful and engaging. Researching extensively to gather enough information about each topic is
crucial to provide a comprehensive understanding for the reader.

Crafting a clear and organized thesis statement is another challenge. It should succinctly express the
main points of the comparison and contrast, guiding the reader on what to expect in the essay.
Developing a coherent structure is equally important, as it helps to present the information logically
and facilitates a smooth flow of ideas.

Balancing the comparison and contrast is also a delicate task. It's essential to provide an equitable
amount of information on each subject, ensuring a fair analysis. Striking the right balance helps in
creating an unbiased perspective and allows the reader to draw informed conclusions.

Moreover, maintaining the essay's focus throughout the writing process can be demanding. It's easy
to deviate from the main theme and lose the thread of the argument. Staying on track and avoiding
unnecessary details is crucial to delivering a concise and effective essay.

In conclusion, writing a compare and contrast essay on various topics requires careful planning,
extensive research, and a keen eye for detail. It demands a structured approach to present the
information coherently and engage the reader. While it may pose challenges, the end result can be a
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Compare Contrast Essay TopicsCompare Contrast Essay Topics
Rhetorical Devices In Speech To The Redfern Speech
Undoubtedly it is through the form and content of a text that authors communicate
universal values in light of the contextual experiences of their time

By utilising rhetoric, convincing speakers are able to portray the unjust human
experience of their context captivating the audience expounding values such as peace,
unity and justice. Anwar Sadat s Speech to the Israeli Knesset and Paul Keating s
Redfern Speech reinforce the significance of injustice within their societies, prompting
for social change. By engaging the audience through rhetoric devices these speeches
evoke a personal response from the audience, transforming the practices and perspectives
of their audience, bringing to the fore universal values in the light of their present
contextual discriminations.

Through intellectual and rhetoric qualities, intuitive responses are able to provoke social
change. In 1977 on the 20th of November Anwar Sadat s radical Speech to the Israeli
Knesset emphasised achieving justice on fair terms, ultimately establishing a basis for
international peace and Peace in the Middle East during the tense Arab Israeli conflict.
Sadat utilises various devices of repetition to reinforce the main thematic concern of
permanent peace and justice , expounding Logos through the immense detailed when
laying out the conditions for peace. Moreover, as both countries were highly religious
Sadat utilises the Pathos of religion to unite individuals, Muslims, Christians and Jews
(who all)
Contemporary Art Essay
Contemporary Art: Dealing with Post Modernity

− Art worlds consist of all the people whose activities are necessary to the production of
the characteristic works which that world, and perhaps others as well, define as art. ...
By observing how an art world makes those distinctions rather than trying to make them
ourselves we can understand much of what goes on in that world.... The basic unit of
analysis, then, is an art world.
Howard Becker (Art Worlds)
Postmodernism deconstructs Modernism like Modernism deconstructed art
Like the Simpson s episode that explained Po Mo as weird for the sake of weird ,
Postmodernism accepted the philosophy art for the sake of art . A very free and
democratic practice, a natural response ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Postmodernism embraces hypertext and hyperplicity, or the rejection of centralized
control. It looses trust in the media and public communication, embracing simulacrum as
a hyper reality that was only long ago based on some sort of truth. Most importantly,
Postmodernism rejects the
Modernist idea of high art as normative and dominant. Instead, it merges the concept of
low and high art, effectively canceling them both. Where Modernism saw a work of art
as a finished product, signed by the artist and authenticated by the art market,
Postmodernism sees art as a recycling of culture, authenticated by whatever audience that
may be. Where Modern art is a separate dichotomy of contrasting themes (organic
/nonorganic, realist/abstract), Postmodern art mixes all available ideas into a sensational
pastiche. Finally Modernism clearly divided normity versus sexual difference and
pornography. Postmodernism embraces whatever ideas have an audience, and mixes
polymorphous sexuality and pornography with mainstream media. Postmodernist art and
media reject the linear way of working, building upon a specific discourse and ideology.
It embraces instead, an anything goes attitude, expanding mediums and messages into
multiple directions. As long as there s an audience somewhere, the work can be
considered legitimate art.
Modernist trends in the Postmodern Art World
It is important to note since the work is still authenticated by its audience, art still
Characters In Night By Elie Wiesel
Elie Wiesel: Night Character Analysis Essay on Eliezer What would it do to a person
to go to a concentration camp, see the horrible things, and come out alive? This book,
Night, is about Eliezer Wiesel, who is both the main character and the author. Elie s
book is a memorial about his experience in Hitler s concentration camps, what he went
through, and how he survived. This paper is going to be about Eliezer s horrific
experience and the ways that it changed him. One of the horrific moments that Eliezer
went through is the time the small boy got hung and it took half an hour for him to
die. But the third rope was still moving: the child, too light, was still breathing... And
so remained for more than half an hour... (Weisel 65) This changed him a lot because
he knew how brutal the world could be. It was also when he, along with quite a few
others, started to lose faith in God. Where is merciful God, where is He?... For God s
sake, where is God?... Where He is? This is where hanging here from this gallows...
(Weisel 64,65) These things are said by other random Jews who are watching the
scene of the hanging of the little boy. These people are losing faith in God because
they are blaming Him for not being merciful on the Jews and the little boy. This is one
of the most important parts of the change that Eliezer goes through. Sometimes, he
doesn t realize he has changed until he sees the change in himself. Another important
event that Eliezer went through was the death of his father. I climbed into my bunk,
above my father, who was still alive... (Even if he was, he would be dead soon) His last
word had been my name. He had called out to me and I had not answered. (Weisel
112) He pretty much watched his father die, and later, he thought: Free at last! (Weisel
112) He felt free from responsibility, rather than mournful of his father s death. This is
when it is revealed that he will lose his father without grieving, if it means he didn t
have to drag him around and have the responsibility. This is not as much a change as it
is a realization of change. He also sees change in others at the camp, which has a pretty
big impact on him. An event very related to his feeling after his father s death was when
he saw

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