This is AcaDemon AU

Home Sellers Area Buy Term paper FAQs Custom Term Papers Contact Us Go to AcaDemon.com Go to AcaDemon Canada Go to AcaDemon UK Go to AcaDemon France

Papers [1-16] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>

Search results on "HUNGER MANAGEMENT":

Essay # 38031 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Hunger Theories, 2002.
Compares and contrasts "victim-blaming and "charitable" approaches to hunger with structural explanations of inequality, poverty, and hunger.
1,650 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 5 sources, AU$ 90.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper discusses how the mass media distracts us from the problems of inequality, poverty and hunger. In this way, there is "victim-blaming" process occurring because the victims themselves are held to be responsible for their own victimization, when in fact it is the structural models of the society that have caused these injustices. The system creates an ideology which it disseminates through the mass media. That ideology entertains its audience in such a way as to make the suffering of victims invisible. 7 pgs. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Essay # 98073 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"A Hunger Artist", 2007.
This paper discusses Franz Kafka's work "A Hunger Artist".
1,374 words (approx. 5.5 pages), 2 sources, MLA, AU$ 66.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
In this article, the writer analyzes the book "A Hunger Artist" by Franz Kafka. The writer notes that as a symbol for alienation, A Hunger Artist is one of the most explicit stories related to the condition of the artist in a world he does not feel he belongs to. The writer points out that it is also a reflection on the condition of the artist constantly needing attention, but also willing to stay apart from the crowd. The writer discusses that both, Kafka and the Hunger Artist are condemned to a life imprisoned inside their own feelings and universe, unable to communicate with the world, kept prisoners by their inner universe, a microcosm inside a macrocosm. The writer concludes that like other characters of Kafka's literary work, the main character in this story is trapped by his own condition and by his lack of ability to escape it.

From the Paper
"The cage he willingly exposes himself in to the masses stands both for anathema and protection from direct contact to the rest of the world. Who were those exposed in a cage to the public opprobrium, in ancient times? The villains, the criminals, the thieves were subjects to such a treatment. And yet, the artist puts himself in a cage expecting the world's admiration and approval, or even more, its understanding. The Hunger Artist in the cage is not likely to be seen in reality, but it is the perfect image of alienation in a world that does no reflect anything of the artist's soul. Every artist is craving for understanding and for approval in this sense. The Hunger Artist also symbolizes the artist's love for sensational. The author himself seems to see the world through the Hunger Artist's eyes. He is aware that his existence is useless unless the world understands, approves and constantly admires him. On the other side, he seems unable to understand the world in his turn. He chooses fasting as a life career, admitting at one point, that it is easier than it seems. He chooses being different as a carrier, on the other side it seems that he cannot help it, it seems the carrier chose him. Anything can be brought to the rank of an art, so fasting is the art of the Hunger Artist."
Essay # 98037 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"A Hunger Artist", 2007.
An analysis of the levels of understanding of "A Hunger Artist," written by Franz Kafka.
1,256 words (approx. 5.0 pages), 1 source, MLA, AU$ 62.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper analyzes the book "A Hunger Artist," written by Franz Kafka. It describes the analogies presented by Kafka in the book and the reactions of the spectators who come to see the hunger artist. The paper also discusses how "A Hunger Artist" can be considered on many different levels of understanding, as well as some of the questions that arise upon reading the book.

From the Paper
"Yet, perhaps Kafka is noting that the true artists, the best ones, are those who remain popular long after these passing fancies, long after many, many different kinds of freaks and abnormalities. In fact, Kafka, himself, is one of these. Decades later, he is read and appreciated more than when he was alive. He speaks for humanity today, just as he spoke for humanity in his times. This is the true artist--Not one who craves power and attention or devotes every minute to his art to prove how different he his, but the one whose work lasts and is viewed, or listened to, or read over and over again for decades or centuries to come."
Essay # 104469 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Free Trade and World Hunger, 2008.
This paper discusses why free trade, as it is presently constituted, does not diminish world hunger.
1,447 words (approx. 5.8 pages), 4 sources, MLA, AU$ 70.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The writer of this article, notes that as trade barriers come down and as the world grows more inter-connected and inter-dependent, it is tempting to suggest that free trade is the antidote to world hunger. This paper explores how free trade globalization has compelled some areas of the globe to specialize or concentrate in the harvesting/cultivation of foodstuffs that are anticipated to sell well in foreign (western) markets or have done so in the past. The writer argues that free trade has not, and will not, as it stands right now, reduce global hunger inasmuch as those markets that have sufficient wealth to "fatten" the bottom lines of agricultural corporations will continue to be catered to, while the economic and health-related needs of the global poor will be cast aside in the quest for profits. The writer concludes that unregulated free markets that do not demand a social conscience on the part of producers or corporations do nothing to alleviate world hunger.

From the Paper
"One other thing that happens is that free trade as it is presently constituted advantages the wealthy populations of the world while disadvantaging the poor peoples of the globe. This occurs because, as we in a free market global economy relentlessly define food productivity by production per unit of labor, any technological or business "advance" that can be implemented in a developing part of the world with the end goal of boosting food production - or at least foodstuff production when it comes to a desirable commodity - is coveted to the exclusion of all other concerns, such as fears of environmental displacement and social/labor dislocation. Suffice it to say, new adaptations may include the aforementioned introduction of new pesticides as well as new forms of bio-engineering; not to be overlooked, food producers may look at the re-deployment of the infrastructural or manufacturing resources of a region in ways that facilitate the production of one or a few types of "in-demand" foodstuffs as opposed to deployments that facilitate the production of many different types of foodstuffs. These so-called "innovations" frequently do little more than result in over-specialization, resource exhaustion, and in a loss of jobs for those who are not involved in the cultivation of in-demand goods."
Essay # 53180 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Hunger, Food Insecurity, and Nutritional Deficiencies, 2004.
This paper discusses that hunger and food insecurity are two related concepts with many of the same causes and affecting many of the same populations.
1,060 words (approx. 4.2 pages), 4 sources, APA, AU$ 54.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper explains that food insecurity describes a situation in which there is uncertainty in a household?s food supply. The author points out that the difference between hunger and food insecurity is related to where they fall on a continuum of food scarcity in a household; if food intake has not actually been reduced, but the possibility exists that it may be, then the situation is food insecurity, and hunger results. The paper relates that, when children suffer from hunger, their bodies are deprived of critical nutrients required for proper functioning, which puts them at increased risk of being deficient in vital nutrients. This is important because children?s bodies are still developing.

From the Paper
"In the U.S., households are categorized into four groups based upon the reliability of their food source. Ideally, a family is considered ?food secure?: intake is not reduced and food supply is not a concern. Food insecure (without hunger) reflects concerns ?about adequacy of the household food supply? with no reduction in intake reported. Food insecure (with hunger) is further broken down into two categories. If the reduction in intake applies only to adults in the household, the insecurity is moderate. Food insecurity with hunger becomes severe when children in the household are not getting enough to eat."
Essay # 68857 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Hunger in Industrialized America, 2004.
This paper discusses issues of hunger in industrialized America.
1,500 words (approx. 6.0 pages), 2 sources, MLA, AU$ 72.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper relates that, while hunger is considered to be a topic of third world countries, hunger exists in the United States despite the countries long history of food production. The author points out that part of the hunger problem is the lack of real nutritional value in processed foods that are popular and readily available in the United States; sugary, heat-and-eat processed food are cheap forcing many families, including the hungry, to purchase this type of meal instead of the necessary staple foods children need to grow into healthy adults. The paper stresses that American families, who are going hungry from lack of money, are not only the poor living from government assistance but also working families, who fall below the poverty line, but earn too much to be eligible for available assistance.

From the Paper
"Advances in agricultural science and techniques, food processing technologies, and storage systems have impacted our society both in positive and negative ways. On the one hand, we can now feed more people from less land than ever before. But on the other hand, food processing and the manufacture of snack food, junk food, and the sales of the fast food industry have created a nation of fat, but still yet hungry individuals and families. Unfortunately, even in the most advanced civilization the world has ever known and with grocery stores and restaurants on every corner, there are still those in America that are going hungry several nights of the week."
Essay # 9656 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
World Hunger, 2002.
A discussion of factors which contribute to the terrible phenomenon of world hunger.
935 words (approx. 3.7 pages), 3 sources, MLA, AU$ 48.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines social and economic factors which have assisted in spreading world hunger. The writer provides many shocking statistics about the plight of famine driven nations and how famine always seems to hit third world countries. The paper also looks at efforts made by the UN and other organizations to assist these nations. The phenomenon of hunger in America is analyzed as being one of non-caring, more than environment or political problems.

From the Paper
"World hunger has invaded our universe with the tyranny of a thousand Napoleon armies. This agent of destruction exists all around the world and affects millions of people. It is my determination that world hunger is eradicated in every corner of the world. The removal of this dreadful quandary is of the utmost importance if we are to ensure a hunger free environment for generations to come."
Essay # 95623 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
'The Hunger Artist', 2006.
A review of Franz Kafka's 'The Hunger Artist'.
1,151 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 0 sources, MLA, AU$ 57.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper takes a look at the 'The Hunger Artist' by Franz Kafka. According to the paper, 'The Hunger Artist' is an unforgettable story that recounts the pain and anguish of an artist who earns money through public fasting. The paper discusses how this mordant tale is highly symbolic in nature and signifies the rapid though subtle death of the artist and his art.

From the Paper
"The artist also shares a weird relationship with the public. This is an interesting point to understand. The artist is in love with his profession but his love is fleeting. It is not based on his true passion for his art but on the fact that it gives him public adulation and respect. He is craving for public's love and when that love is taken away, his passion for his art diminishes to the point that it becomes non-existent. Kafka is trying to explain that art never dies and the artist doesn't have to starve if he feeds on his passion. But if it is people's adulation that he is craving, he is always vulnerable. The conversation with the supervisor highlights this sickness. "
Essay # 33326 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"World Hunger, Twelve Lives", 2002.
This book discusses the myth that world hunger is the unavoidable result of the forces of nature.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 1 source, AU$ 51.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The thesis of the book is that the popular reasons, which are used to explain world hunger, are simply false. This book stresses the way that people think about hunger is the greatest obstacle to ending it.
Essay # 26782 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Poverty and Hunger in Literature, 2002.
Examines the views of authors John Steinbeck and Ayn Rand on poverty and hunger.
1,248 words (approx. 5.0 pages), 4 sources, MLA, AU$ 62.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper explores the themes of hunger and poverty in "The Grapes of Wrath" by John Steinbeck and "Anthem" by Ayn Rand. It compares the authors' views on the subject and shows that while Steinbeck would choose to clothe the poor and feed the hungry, Rand feels that it is a person's choice to be in a state of poverty.

From the Paper
"This attitude was expressed well in her short novel Anthem. To appreciate Anthem, it is necessary to realize the context against which it was written. The United States was firmly entrenched in New Deal philosophies and social programs to aid the unemployed. Rand, who moved to America in the 1920s, had spent the first years of her life in Communist Russia, where she had grown up with the revolution, and its ideas of collectivism.

She found these distasteful, as she found the growing socialism in America distasteful. She saw great danger in the idea of the "one-ness of mankind." When she wrote Anthem, therefore, she set it in a modern advanced society of the future, one in which great collective goals had been achieved. No one was hungry and no one was sick. The government took care of everything. As you read the book, however, you realize that you do not see the word "I" used. Everyone is addressed as "you" and "we" and "us.""
Essay # 103786 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Solving World Hunger, 2008.
This paper discusses solutions for eliminating hunger in third world countries.
1,421 words (approx. 5.7 pages), 4 sources, MLA, AU$ 69.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The paper argues that instituting democracy and establishing stable economies are necessary in order to resolve the chronic political and economic problems that cause hunger and poverty. The paper argues further that globalization undermines democratic institutions and, therefore, people should be aware of the dangers of globalization in order to avoid being exploited by the wealthy and the powerful.

From the Paper
"Comprehensive solutions to resolving world hunger have been elusive because of the multitude of economic and political factors which cause hunger and poverty. Some solutions have been offered based upon establishing the provision of foreign aid and the establishment of food security, but these measures cannot guarantee self-sufficiency, which is one of the fundamental prerequisites for maintaining a sufficient food supply in underdeveloped countries."
Essay # 44535 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Sacred Hunger", 2002.
A look at Barry Unsworth's novel, "Sacred Hunger".
650 words (approx. 2.6 pages), 1 source, AU$ 38.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines and analyzes internal and external threats in Barry Unsworth's Booker Prize-winning novel, "Sacred Hunger", in which the survivors of a ship-board revolt try to create a humane community in which people can live with each other in mutual respect.
Essay # 60014 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Hunger Artist", 2005.
An examination of the artist's role in society according to "The Hunger Artist" by Franz Kafka.
1,690 words (approx. 6.8 pages), 6 sources, MLA, AU$ 79.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper provides a summary, review and analysis of Kafka's "The Hunger Artist." It also includes a personal reaction in the summary.

From the Paper
"Franz Kafka was a Czech-born author whose short story, "The Hunger Artist," provides us with a glimpse into humanity's soul. According to the research, Kafka suffered from poor health and depression all of his life, and he spent several years in sanitariums. Although he devoted all of his spare time to writing, none of his novels were published during his lifetime. Before his death from tuberculosis in 1924, Kafka asked a friend to destroy his manuscripts. They were preserved, however, and "The Hunger Artist" was published in 1924. According to Dr. Felice Aull, in this work, Kafka tells a story of a "hunger artist" who finds himself at the pinnacle of his career with nowhere to go. Dr. Aull says that, "In the old days people would enthusiastically observe the artist as he fasted, some of them watching carefully for surreptitious snacking. In those times 40 days was the limit of fasting; on the 40th day, the artist's cage was decked in flowers as he emerged to the ministrations of doctors and the crowd's applause" (Aull, 2000, 3) However, as the public interest in the art of fasting as a medium of entertainment begins to decline, the hunger artist (let's call him "Art") looks for a way to keep performing while perfecting his act -- at least that is what Franz would have us believe."
Essay # 72915 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Susan Bordo's "The Ideology of Hunger", 2004.
A discussion of the theme of Susan Bordo's book, "The Ideology of Hunger".
675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 2 sources, APA, AU$ 34.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper discusses Susan Bordo's book, "The Ideology of Hunger" about the female relationship to food. As examples of the theme of the book, the paper cites advertisements from the magazine "Gourmet", and looks at how the ads reflect the duality of women and men, with women as preparers of food and men as the primary consumers of food.
Essay # 73395 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Recursive Image in "The Hunger", 2004.
An account of the recursive image of the mirror in the film, "The Hunger".
2,925 words (approx. 11.7 pages), 7 sources, MLA, AU$ 150.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines the various sequences in the film, "The Hunger", in which the image of the
reflected image in mirrors occurs.

From the Paper
"The purpose of this research is to examine the use of the recursive image of the mirror in the film, "The Hunger", directed by Tony Scott. The plan of the research will be to set forth a breakdown of sequences in which the image occurs and then to discuss how the recurrence of mirror imagery in the film supports its narrative structure and the manner in which the mirror images locate the film in the context of the vampire and horror cinema genre as well as signify commentary..."
Essay # 88625 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
World Hunger, 2006.
A look at how the sociological theories of modernization and dependency can be applied to the problem of world hunger.
675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 2 sources, AU$ 38.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
In this paper, the sociological theories of modernization and dependency are examined to realize how world hunger can be altered and changed to feed more people. By limiting the ability of powerful, first world nations to restrict profits for third world farmers on the new global market, a wider distribution of food would be seen allocated to a wider variety of countries. Due to the power of first world economies to economically impoverish third world countries, the issue of food distribution is being channeled excessively to the powerful few.

From the Paper
"This sociological study will analyze how first world countries (United States and Europe) attempt to use modernization and dependency theories to manipulate developing countries in the third world. Through the problem of world hunger, the basis of solving world hunger will be analyzed within this sociological criterion. In essence, the basis for modernization theory will be the solution for raising health and nutritional standards for poor countries to prevent world hunger. The modernization theory holds that a country can learn through modern farming technologies, social programs, and nutritional guidelines how to feed to the most people efficiently. In the case of world hunger, it becomes apparent that this sociological process would be applicable in designing new ways for food distribution and agrarian independence. The process of 'modernization' relies on the advanced food growing and distribution techniques, which many larger, more powerful countries..."
Shopping Cart
Cart total : AU$ 0.00

Find Essay
Search Guide

Search :


Category :
Paper No. :

Options
Show papers between
and pages
Display results per page
Currency :

Enter Coupon Code :
Papers [1-16] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>