| Papers [1-14] of 14 | Search results on "GARIBALDI GIUSEPPE": |
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Giuseppe Garibaldi, 2001. A examination of the life of Giuseppe Garibaldi and his accomplishments. 950 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 6 sources, MLA, AU$ 35.95 »
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Abstract The Italian Prime Minister visited New York City on the 100th anniversary of Garibaldi's death. This paper focuses on the life of this man, what he achieved and why he was considered as such a hero to the Italian people of the time. It uses the above visit as a take-off point.
From the Paper "As I went through the New York Times for April 2, 1982, I came across some very interesting stories. One that caught my attention was entitled, Italy's President Tours City. It was ironic that the day I was born, the President of Italy came to the United States. I thought maybe it was foreshadowing my future. At first, I was going to write about Sandro Pertini, the Italian president at the time of my birth; but, as I read on, I realized he came to New York City to visit the museum for Giuseppe Garibaldi. April 2, 1982 was the 100 year anniversary of his death, which is celebrated with much enthusiasm in Italy."
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Giuseppe Garibaldi, 2005. An overview of the political views and achievements of this 19th century Italian leader. 948 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 6 sources, APA, AU$ 35.95 »
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Abstract Giuseppe Garibaldi's popularity, his skill at rousing the masses and his military exploits are all credited with making the unification of Italy possible. He also served as a global example of mid-19th century revolutionary nationalism and liberalism. This paper shows that following the liberation of southern Italy from the Neapolitan monarchy, however, Garibaldi chose to sacrifice his liberal republican principles for the sake of unification.
From the Paper "For many years Garibaldi lived the life of a farmer on Caprera. In 1870 he offered his services to the French government and fought with his two sons in the Franco-Prussian War. Rome was annexed to Italy in October 1870, and Garibaldi was elected a member of the Italian parliament in 1874. In his last years he sympathized with the developing socialist movement in Italy and other countries. Giuseppe Garibaldi died on the Italian island of Caprera in 1882, where he was interred. Five ships of the Italian Navy have been named after him, among which a World War II cruiser and the current flagship, the aircraft carrier Giuseppe Garibaldi."
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Giuseppe's Original Sausage Company, 2002. The strategic position of Giuseppe's Original Sausage Company. 2,150 words (approx. 8.6 pages), 5 sources, AU$ 85.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses the strategic position of Giuseppe's Original Sausage Company and the marketing techniques adopted by the founder Joe Cotrone. The company has been very successful in introducing various varieties of sausages in the Memphis area, which were hitherto unknown.
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Giuseppe Verdi's "Otello", 2002. This paper discusses in detail Giuseppe Verdi's opera, "Otello," based on the play by William Shakespeare. 2,115 words (approx. 8.5 pages), 6 sources, MLA, AU$ 70.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses that, unlike the Rossini version of the same story, Verdi and Boito's opera "Otello" keeps the plot of the original Shakespeare story intact. This paper presents the opera in detail and denotes that the music and operatic forms are in keeping with the nature of each character. The author believes that the music and the drama are perfectly balanced in "Otello" because Verdi uses the music to further the drama and to create tones for each shift in dramatic emphasis.
From the Paper "Act II begins with an orchestral introduction that mirrors Iago's energy. Iago delivers his famous soliloquy "Credo in un Dio crudel" and expresses his credo of evil. Continuing to find ways to express Iago's shifting energy, Verdi orchestrates the credo in a way that hovers between arioso and aria, "its devious harmonic and formal twists continuing to the last." When Otello arrives, the two sing a duet that continues to the end of the act, lining the action and words of the entire act around this specific confrontation and the way Iago manipulates Otello during it."
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Requiem Masses of Giuseppe Verdi & Gabriel Faure, 1996. Compares late 19th Cent. composers' interpretations of "Mass for the Dead." 2,700 words (approx. 10.8 pages), 9 sources, AU$ 101.95 »
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From the Paper "The requiem mass is a curious case of a text that has been given hundreds of different musical settings in many different forms -- from plainsong to polyphonic to orchestral -- and styles. The words of the traditional Latin form of the mass are, in themselves, very moving. But the choices composers have made over the centuries have contributed enormously to the emotional and spiritual impact of the text. Each composer who addressed the problem of setting this text had his own motivations and produced a work that bore his individual stamp. A comparison of two requiems, those by Giuseppe Verdi and Gabriel Faure, demonstrates how the same subject and the same words can be given radically different interpretations by two fine composers. Curiously, in a religious form, neither man was a believer. Yet their Requiems possess the same or even greater spiritual..."
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Ungaretti and Montale, 2006. This paper examines the works of poets Giuseppe Ungaretti and Eugenio Montale, as they relate to the issue of existentialism. 2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 4 sources, AU$ 94.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses two twentieth century poets and looks at what their works say of existentialism. The two poets discussed are Giuseppe Ungaretti and Eugenio Montale, of whom John Pilling writes, "Only two modern Italian poets, Giuseppe Ungaretti and Eugenio Montale, have had a profound impact throughout Europe." The writer points out that both poets show an authenticity in their work that emerges from their own inner life and that also demonstrates the artist struggling to find meaning in a world that blocks much meaning and that ultimately leads only to death and a form of negation.
From the Paper "Existentialism was a highly influential philosophy in literature in the twentieth century. Two of the leading figures in the movement in France were also literary lights of the time, Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre, and a number of other European writers also show the influence of this philosophy on their work. Two important Italian poets fit into this category, these being Giuseppe Ungaretti and Eugenio Montale, of whom John Pilling writes, "Only two modern Italian poets, Giuseppe Ungaretti and Eugenio Montale, have had a profound impact throughout Europe". Giuseppe Ungaretti was both in Egypt of Tuscan parents, and he was schooled in the best French tradition and wrote his first poems in French."
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"La Traviata", 2005. Explores a scene in Giuseppe Verdi's opera "La Traviata." 1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 3 sources, AU$ 47.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses a scene in Giuseppe Verdi's opera "La Traviata". The paper considers the First Act and how it introduces the characters and the situation, foreshadowing much of what is to come while also showing the conflicts within the two main characters and between them as well. The paper notes how both action and music express the same ideas and emotional attitudes.
From the Paper "In the nineteenth century, the role of women in the theater was often either as victims or as sinners, often at one and the same time. As a rule, women who rebel against the strictures of their society were destroyed. An example is Violetta in La Traviata by Verdi: Violetta ValJry. . . finds she rebels without even trying. . . All around her, members of the family judge, execute, and lay down the law. She dances, she drinks. But the champagne she swallows has none of the grandiose vainglory of Don Giovanni's goblet; her steps are numbered and her lifetime."
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The Movie Malena, 2005. This essay looks at the film "Malena" by Giuseppe Tornatore and discusses how the character was shaped by her surrounding culture. 675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 3 sources, AU$ 28.95 »
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Abstract This paper presents a brief cultural autobiography of the character of Malena, in the film by Giuseppe Tornatore, examining how gender, race, and class shaped the character's life and her choices. The paper discusses the "lesions" that Malena experienced, and looks at how they affected her life, and whether Malena was able to overcome them. The paper looks at whether Malena was somehow transformed by her experiences, and explores the notion of transformation by discussing how she successfully overcame her oppressive forces. The writer discusses, in particular, the tools with which she managed to do this.
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Pope Pius XII: A Man of Peace?, 2004. This paper describes the life of Pope Pius XII (Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli) and questions his motivation in not stopping the atrocities associated with WWII. 3,225 words (approx. 12.9 pages), 13 sources, MLA, AU$ 98.95 »
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Abstract This paper explains that journalists, statesmen, and historians claim that, during World War II, the Pope remained impassive and silent, despite the fact that he knew about the atrocities committed by the Germans. The author reports that, years after he died, it was discovered that the Pope was close to publishing a major encyclical on racism; but the question remains if it was just lost within the bureaucracies, or if it was purposely lost by Pacelli or someone else who did not want to rock the boat. The paper stresses that, finally, on Christmas Eve 1944, when the outcome of the war was decided, the Pope made a statement condemning the war, but not the atrocities.
From the Paper "When he assumed the highest office, Pope XII had to decide what to do with the prior pope's encyclical. "The decision was momentous, because Humani Generis Unitas would finally, and publicly, have the church defend the hounded Jews by explicitly condemning the Nazis' anti-Semitism and calling for the cessation of the German prosecution of the Jews". Within the report, Pope Pius XI said, "It becomes clear that the struggle of racial purity ends by uniquely the struggle against the Jews. Save for its systemic cruelty, this struggle is no different in true motives and methods from prosecutions everywhere carried out against the Jews since antiquity."
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Lampedusa's "The Leopard", 1988. Reviews Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa's posthumous novel THE LEOPARD. Describes the book as an epic & complex examination of death & dying. 2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 5 sources, AU$ 84.95 »
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From the Paper "Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa is known for one work published after his death, The Leopard, a novel with an unusual structure and a mixture of historical truth and fiction. The novel does not have a conventional plot and instead emerges as a complex series of incidents and events which take on the aura of an epic drama. It might in fact be called an epic examination of death, for death and dying are its true subjects. the book is pervaded by a sense of impending death both of characters and of historical eras and movements. There are a number of literary influences evident in this work, and the epic nature of the story can be compared to the great epic style of Homer.
The novel is set in a period of change, a period of national and social readjustment which brings with it turmoil and upheaval. The period involved is the early period of the Risor(...)"
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"The Leopard", 2002. This paper discusses the Italian Revolution and Unification as presented in the great Italian novel 'The Leopard' by Giuseppe Di Lampedusa. 1,620 words (approx. 6.5 pages), 3 sources, MLA, AU$ 55.95 »
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Abstract The following paper examines the novel, 'The Leopard' , a story that takes place in the backdrop of the Italian Revolution of the 1860's highlighting the views of the aristocratic class at the time when the demise of the monarchy was imminent. Concepts such as monarchies, elite feudalism, the industrial revolution and Nationalism are discussed. The way in which the critics reviewed this novel, which was published in 1958, is also discussed.
From the Paper "The Leopard was written by Giuseppe Di Lampedusa much before his death but was published posthumously in 1958. The first English translation of the book appeared in 1960 after which it gained worldwide fame and became one of the very few novels from Italy to reach such heights of recognition. Lampedusa was praised for his intelligent writing style, his vivid imagination and his good command over the Italian history. But the last part was not exactly difficult for the man who himself was a prince and has based the story on his own experiences and observations. The story takes place in 1860 Italy when unification was taking place and this meant end to a long dynasty of monarchs. The society was rapidly changing and this led to the demise of aristocracy in Italy."
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Verdi's "Otello", 2007. An analysis of Verdi's musical interpretation of William Shakespeare's "Othello". 1,200 words (approx. 4.8 pages), 0 sources, AU$ 44.95 »
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Abstract Written in 1603, "Othello" by William Shakespeare, is a tragedy that was transformed into an opera by Giuseppe Verdi. "Otello" is considered to be Verdi's greatest opera and was performed in Milan on February 5, 1887. This paper discusses how throughout the opera, Otello and Desdemona's relationship changes dramatically and how their relationship change is most evident when contrasting the end of Act I with scene two of Act III. The paper also looks at how Verdi uses many unique musical techniques to match the dramatic needs of the libretto in these two scenes.
From the Paper "At the end of Act I Otello, the protagonist of the opera, walks into the bedroom where Desdemona is lying clearly enjoying the solace and quietness of his bedroom with his new wife. This scene contrasts directly with the scene before it. With all of the uproar outside now broken up, Otello is now enjoying the peace and quiet with his adored wife. While Otello is walking toward Desdemona, the focus is placed on Desdemona while violins are playing very softly. The soft violins playing in the background give Desdemona even more of a romantic quality to her. As Otello sits down on the bed he reaches to touch her face and once again soft violins are playing without any drums or horns in the orchestra. "
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The Life of Alessandro Volta, 2001. This paper gives an autobiographical account of the life of the famous Italian scientist Allesandro Volta. 1,550 words (approx. 6.2 pages), 2 sources, MLA, AU$ 53.95 »
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Abstract This paper studies the great Italian scientist and inventor of the electric motor, Alessandro Giuseppe Antonio Anastasio Volta, who is considered among the pioneers of the modern science. It includes an historical overview of his life and his greatest inventions including: Electrophorus, isolating the compound methane and many gadgets. It discusses his many contributions to the scientific world as well as the recognition and rewards he received for them.
From the Paper "Though the invention of Electrophorus was a huge success for Volta but his continuous research work brought several other successes to him. He became the first person to isolate the compound methane in the year 1778. His journey of success continued as he accepted a proposal to work as a professor at the University of Pavia in 1779. In the meantime he continued his research in the field and made several other inventions such as gadgets which were invented on the basis of the principles of static electricity. Because of his great inventions and high contribution in the field of electricity he was awarded the Copley Medal of the Royal Society in 1791. His works were not restricted to static electricity but he also worked in the area of dynamic electricity. His works in the area of dynamic were primarily an idea derived from the results of the experiments conducted by Galvani, who was a friend of Volta."
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Italy and Germany, 2004. An analysis of the process through which political unification of Italy and Germany was achieved. 3,485 words (approx. 13.9 pages), 3 sources, MLA, AU$ 104.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses the process that led to political unification of 19th century Italy and Germany. The paper explains that Italy was dominated and influenced by the personalities of politicians Camillo Cavour, Mazzini, and the revolutionary Garibaldi, while Germany's political situation was shaped by King William I of Prussia and by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. The paper elaborates on the national efforts made by each of these personalities.
From the Paper "The national sentiment was developing at the time, so the need for a unified state for each nation was evident. Piedmont and Prussia had the historical role of coagulating the Italian and the German nations around their power, the latter being considerably influenced by the former. According to an author, "two separate stories intertwine: on the one hand, the new nation-states, Italy and Germany, took shape; on the other, a significant adjustment took place in the relation between politics and culture. Challenging the legitimate, dynastic authority, and doing so in a historical context where the mobilization of public opinion has taken on new importance, the new political order derived its legitimacy from cultural claims; and culture in turn found its erstwhile apolitical status -- the aestheticized Italy of the unpolitical Germans -growing increasingly untenable.""
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