| Papers [1-14] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 8] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 —> | Search results on "MYSTERY STONEHENGE": |
|
|
The Mystery of Stonehenge, 2007. This paper discusses the unknown builder and purpose of Stonehenge, the ancient archaeological site in England. 1,255 words (approx. 5.0 pages), 3 sources, MLA, £ 29.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper examines opposing viewpoints on who possibly built Stonehenge, why they did and what the site was used for. The paper relates that Stonehenge is one of the most famous ancient archaeological sites in the world. The paper explains that many believe it holds religious significance, especially for the Druids, while others believe it was a sort of "sky map" that showed the positions of the sun and moon. The paper concludes that whatever its purpose was, Stonehenge is still magnificent and awesome today.
From the Paper "Stonehenge was built on the Salisbury Plain in Southern England. It lies about eight miles north of the town of Salisbury. Just about everyone is familiar with the look of Stonehenge - giant boulders moved to the site and arranged in a circle, with long boulders placed on top of the upright stones to form a type of lintel. However, there is more to Stonehenge than this famous image of upright stones. Stonehenge actually encompasses several different sections of building and development, from the ditch (now almost entirely filled in with silt) that surrounds the area to the bank rising up from the remains of the ditch and the Aubrey Holes and cemetery at the site."
| |
|
Stonehenge, 2002. This paper discusses the mysteries of Stonehenge. 2,150 words (approx. 8.6 pages), 12 sources, £ 55.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper traces the construction, enigma, and current cultural role of the Stonehenge in Salisbury, England.
| |
|
"The Big Bow Mystery" - A Locked Room Puzzle., 2002. An analysis of Israel Zangwill's mystery novel "The Big Bow Mystery". 1,650 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 1 source, £ 42.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper dissects Israel Zangwill's mystery novel The Big Bow Mystery and analyzes it in terms of other mystery-novel standards: logical consistency, character evenness, and distraction (e.g. "red herrings"). It concludes that although the novel also functions as a critique of Victorian society, the novel itself has great worth as a mystery due to its supreme internal consistency, hard to achieve in the "locked room" subgenre.
| |
|
"Pride and Prejudice": A Mystery Novel, 1996. An analysis of the element of mystery in Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice". 1,958 words (approx. 7.8 pages), 0 sources, £ 43.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper reviews Jane Austen's novel "Pride and Prejudice" with an emphasis on how the element of mystery in it serves to give depth and development to the characters. It examines how the related mysteries of "Pride and Prejudice" are the Wickham-Darcy relationship and the "mystery of character." It is no mystery from the beginning that Elizabeth Bennet and Darcy are fated to be together, the mystery is their feelings and motivations and their characters, as they evolve and are revealed throughout the novel. It shows how, like many a mystery novelist, Austen leaves ample clues from which the reader could discern that all is not what it seems, which seem obvious only on a second reading.
From the Paper "There are two central and intertwined mysteries in the novel: the traditional mystery of Wickham?s relationship to Darcy, and the more subtle mystery of Darcy?s (and Elizabeth?s) true character. The author?s treatment of the Wickham mystery is not that of the conventional mystery story, as a modern reader might understand it. The clues Austen gives are not material to the direct verification of one side?s or the other?s story, but to the respectability and trustworthiness of Wickham and Darcy. We are not given, for example, accounts of Wickham?s behavior in London while he is pretending to study law. It is only through an understanding of the two men?s characters that we discover the truth of their relationship."
| |
|
?The Mystery of Edwin Drood?, 2002. Discusses the mystery element in Charles Dickens' novel. 1,500 words (approx. 6.0 pages), 2 sources, MLA, £ 34.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract One of the mysteries of "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" is the question that lies at the heart of all mysteries ? Whodunnit? But there is another, at least as compelling question at the heart of this mystery, which is: How did author Charles Dickens intend for this novel to end? And, why does this unfinished novel read so very much like a finished novel? The paper shows that despite the fact that the story is often performed by theater companies that allow the audience to guess what the intended ending might have been ? thus emphasizing the unfinished nature of the book ? the novel itself seems oddly complete. This paper proposes one possible solution to the unfinished novel ? one that is consonant with the tone and intent of what Dickens himself wrote.
From the Paper "This improvised ending takes up where Dickens laid down his pen and assumes ? as do many of the proposed endings to this novel ? that Edwin is not really dead. To understand why this is the logical solution, we must go back in time to John Jasper?s Christmas Eve party. During this party, Neville finds his antagonism toward Edwin diminishing because of Edwin?s own friendliness and disarming openness to Neville. They are also drawn together by the fact that each of them believes that there is something peculiar about Jasper: Their increasing distrust of him draws the two of them together."
| |
|
Mystery Literature, 2004. This paper reviews two children?s mysteries: ?The Shore Road Mystery? from Franklin W. Dixon's Hardy Boys series and ?Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Sleeping Dog? from Donald J. Sobol's Encyclopedia Brown series. 2,160 words (approx. 8.6 pages), 2 sources, MLA, £ 46.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper explains that the Hardy Boys, in 1964, in ?The Shore Road Mystery" are mere boys who can think like crafty adults, can go out and challenge crooks and thieves, and find a farmhouse to call for help with just old-fashioned land-based phones. The author points out that a young man learns that hard work and perseverance plus brainpower and the use of good instincts lead to success, even for kids. The paper relates that ?Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Sleeping Dog? leaves the reader wondering how a seemingly normal kid named Encyclopedia Brown could come up with this kind of skullduggery and carry it off.
From the Paper "The irony here is that Chet is on a research mission seeking information about car thieves, a felony crime that any kid could think about, but few could actually follow through. Still, he can?t keep his hands out of the cake Aunt Gertrude gave him to deliver. A reader learns here that young men are always young men in most predictable respects (in this case, Chet is tempted by chocolate cake, and can?t keep his hands off the cake notwithstanding the promise to deliver it); but in other areas, Chet is acting more like being a criminal investigator than a green-behind-the-ears / snot-nosed kid who can?t keep his fingers out of a chocolate cake."
| |
|
Edgar Allan Poe?s ?Mystery Man?, 2002. An examination of the mysteries surrounding Edgar Allan Poe's strange graveyard character in ?Mystery Man?. 2,405 words (approx. 9.6 pages), 3 sources, APA, £ 50.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines the mysterious visitor who pays tribute to Edgar Allan Poe at his grave in Westminster Churchyard in Baltimore, Maryland.
From the Paper "Within the weathered brick walls of Westminster Churchyard, at the corner of Fayette and Greene Streets in Baltimore, Maryland, a cold marble shrine marks the final resting place of a tormented soul. 1 In life, he was haunted by torturing memories--memories of wrong and injustice and imputed dishonor and from a sense of some strange, impending doom. In death, his memory endures in the hearts of those who still honor his great literary genius as a poet who eternally searched for supernal beauty in a world filled with poverty and abandonment and produced some of the world's finest tales of the macabre and the supernatural"".
| |
|
Mystery Religions, 2004. This paper examines how the mystery religions have influenced Christianity. 2,260 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 10 sources, MLA, £ 54.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract In this article, the writer discusses how the mystery religions influenced the religion of Christianity. The writer explores a number of the ancient mystery religions. The secret rituals of these mystery religions as well as their similarities are discussed. Most importantly, the writer examines the impact of these religions on Christianity and discusses why they are no longer practiced.
From the Paper "By the end of the first century small communities of Christians could be found in many of places in the Greco-Roman world. According to Jeffrey Sheler, writing for U.S. News World Report as the movement expanded during the second and third centuries, it proved to be anything but simple to deliver a consistent message. The early Christian church was torn by persecution and internal division as Christians struggled to understand and apply the meaning of Jesus' life, death and resurrection in the religious ... "
| |
|
Stonehenge, 2002. Explores the historic Stonehenge within an ancient astronomy context. 3,150 words (approx. 12.6 pages), 14 sources, £ 80.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines the historic megalith in England known as Stonehenge. It focuses on archaeoastronomy and the astronomical influences on the design of Stonehenge.
| |
|
York Mystery Cycle, 2005. This is a creative assignment/historical research paper on the York Mystery Plays that were performed in medieval England. 3,104 words (approx. 12.4 pages), 4 sources, MLA, £ 62.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper begins with a historical fictionalized account of a young man apprenticed in medieval York and his first experience in seeing the York Mystery Cycle, one of the oldest and best preserved English cycles. It has a great number of details that were researched from medieval texts, including information on guilds, the city of York, interesting facts, and the actual procession of the York cycle.
From the Paper "The York Cycle of Mystery plays (1376-1569), also known in singular form as the Corpus Christi Play, is one of the oldest and best preserved of the surviving English cycles. There are four complete or nearly complete extant English cycles: The York Cycle of forty-eight pageants; the Towneley cycle of thirty-two pageants, the N Town cycle of forty-three pageants, and the Chester cycle of twenty-four pageants. Each pageant was presented by different guilds of craftsmen, which were also known as the 'mysteries', hence the name of the Plays. The feast of Corpus Christi is performed on the second Thursday after Whitsun, and depending on the date of Easter, it could fall any time from 21 May to 24 June*."
| |
|
"The Mystery of Samba", 2002. A review of Hermano Vianna's "The Mystery of Samba". 1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 1 source, £ 30.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract A book report on Herman Vianna's "The Mystery of Samba", a cultural anthropology study of music in Brazil, particularly the use of 'racially-mixed' culture as a symbol for all of Brazilian culture.
| |
|
Classic Mystery Novels, 2001. A critical comparison of pre-twentieth century stories showing how they reflect the literary tradition of the 19th century ?mystery? genre. 1,700 words (approx. 6.8 pages), 0 sources, £ 38.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper is a discussion of two of the most popular and respected author's of modern times. This essay compares short stories showing how they reflect the literary tradition of the 19th century ?mystery? genre. The stories examined are ?The Judge?s House? by Bram Stoker and ?The Speckled Band? by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
From the Paper "In the 19th century short stories were of interest owing to three major factors: a high crime rate; scientific and industrial advances; and the serialisation of novels into magazines. Public concern with high crime rates opened the door for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to publish his Sherlock Holmes stories owing to public desire for a successful detective. This was also a period of scientific and industrial advances. This led to a questioning of formal religious beliefs and increased interest in the supernatural and the afterlife. Bram Stoker’s “The Judge’s House” is trying to promote belief in God, Malcolmson’s mathematics book missed the rat, the Bible struck. The short story format became popular owing to the increasing number of magazines. These were widely accessible causing big novels to be serialised."
| |
|
Film: "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery", 2007. This paper analyzes the film "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery", which was released in the United States and Canada on May 2, 1997. 1,105 words (approx. 4.4 pages), 0 sources, £ 26.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper explains that the film "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery" was inspired by a slew of sixties spy movies including the James Bond films. The author points out that most of Mike Myers inspiration came from the spy spoofs "Helm Series" produced by Columbia Pictures and loosely based on Donald Hamilton's novels. The paper explains that, in the part described by the author, the producers purposely switched the female character with a male character just after Austin hits the woman, setting the stage for the classic good versus evil theme of the film. The author underscores that the costumes play a huge role in the film with Austin dressing a bit on the feminine side, unlike the masculine 007 Sean Connery. The paper concludes that the film seems to reinforce stereotypes of men and woman in both space and time.
From the Paper "The scene I will look at is at the five minute and 18 second mark. It is in the beginning of the second chapter. The atmosphere is electric because Austin is at a club called the Electric Psychedelic Pussycat Swingers Club. Pink Floyd himself would be proud of the colors mixed in at the club. Lighting is very high for a club. The only effects are the different colors and shapes of light to signify a psychedelic mind-tripping club, which was typical in the sixties. The music was The Strawberry Alarm Clock "Incense and Peppermints" which are from southern California and was popular in 1967."
| |
|
Genres: Horror and Mystery, 2004. This paper discusses ?The Yellow Wallpaper? by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and ?The Cask of Amontillado? by Edgar Allan Poe as examples of the horror and mystery genres in literature. 1,075 words (approx. 4.3 pages), 2 sources, APA, £ 25.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper explains that most of the literary works under the horror and mystery genres provide insightful depictions and illustrations of social criticisms that the writers want to critique symbolically or figuratively. The author points out that, while Poe in ?The Cask of Amontillado? uses both themes of insanity and murder in his story, Gilman?s ?The Yellow Wallpaper? effectively uses the protagonist?s downfall to insanity to portray the grotesqueness not only of psychological instability, but also of emotional repression the woman character experiences in the story. The paper reviews various forms of irony that are used in both stories to create the monstrous feeling within the tales and to state the authors? position on social issues.
From the Paper "The short story ?The Cask of Amontillado? illustrates both themes of the protagonist?s downfall to insanity and celebration of death through the commitment of murder. The story shows how Poe, through the main character?s (Montresor) narration, behavior, and action, is able to generate fear and the air of mystery, especially in illustrating the shocking narration and illustration of the death of Fortunato, the man Montresor despised and considered as his enemy and competitor."
|
|
|