Compare the ways the distinctively visual is created in Lawson’s short stories and one other related text of your own choosing.
In your answer, make detailed references to at least two short stories set for study.
Composers in everyday situations use distinctively visuals through the use of elaborate techniques and complex word choice. These visuals are vivid and very clear; so it helps the responder visualise the text and therefore relate to the texts and also deepen their understanding of the short stories. Two short stories composed by ‘Henry Lawson’ that use techniques and word choice to portray distinctively visuals are ‘The Drover’s Wife’ and ‘In A Dry Season’, these two texts are strongly opposite to the visual ‘The English Countryside’ by an unknown composer. Both ‘The Drover’s Wife’ and ‘In A Dry Season’ use distinctive visuals to deepen the responders understanding of place; the situation of the story, where the stories are set. People; the characters of the story and how they evolve throughout. Ideas; the message that the composer is trying to get across to his intended audience. ‘Henry Lawson’ creates images of isolation, stoicism and the struggles for survival in the harsh rural Australian outback in his two well known short stories ‘The Drover’s Wife’ and ‘In A Dry Season’. In contrast, the visual, ‘The English Countryside’ creates images of tranquillity, serenity and freedom through the composer’s use of colours, brush strokes and positioning.
Distinctive
PlebeianSenate ConsulsCenturiate Assembly Tribal AssemblyTribunes Veto- Who had it?Praetors- How many? Twelve TablesCitizenship- who had it? Women?Times of emergency, who ruled? “Real Power”Geography? Punic WarsHannibal? Scipio? Tiberius & Gaius Gracchus?Civil War Period? Shift from Republic to Empire? DescribeLoyalty of soldier? Julius CaesarTriumvirate CrassusPompey Ides of MarchOctavian? Augustus?Pax Romana? Trade system? Basis?Succession to throne? Gladiators?Entertainment? Problems…
Antigone • Social relationships • Leader ship and heroism Conflicts and relationships between characters in Antigone There are two basic conflicts in the play • Between Antigone and Creon • Between Creon and Gods While there are two main characters(protagonists), Antigone and Creon, it is Creon who has the central figure of the play; he feature throughout the play. Once Antigone is taken away to be imprisoned, she is not seen again. Antigone’s opposition to Creon invites…
had. The first crisis involved Tiberius Gracchus and the fact that his land distribution program became a law and this caused instability between Gracchus and the senate thus causing him and his 300 supporters to be killed. The second crisis involved Gaius Gracchus, he implemented programs and laws that helped the commoners, and provided for the economic development of Rome as a whole. Violence was used by the senators and wealthy plebians to rally against. Gracchus and 3,000 people died due to the…
latifundia. The small farmers that were once the backbone of the Roman state lost their lands to the rich and their estates. These farmers that lost land then moved to big cities, such as Rome, and formed a class of landless poor. Two brothers, Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus, tried to fix this by having the Council of Plebeians bypass the Senate and pass land reform bills that called for the government to reclaim land held by large landowners and distribute it to landless Romans. Another change that Rome went…
seditio o The familia o Expansion into Italy • C.) Middle Republic (264-133 BC) o The west, Carthage (Punic Wars) o The East, the successors of Alexander o New Ideas (Rome becomes involved in the affairs of Greece) • Cato the censor • Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus • E.) Empire (27 BC- AD 476) o Augustus*, res publica restitua II. Roman “Constitution” during the Middle Republic • A.) Mos Maiorum o Not Written o Imperium • fasces o Collegiality of office (No office can be held by one person…
Tiberius says “The savage beasts,” . . . “in Italy, have their particular dens, they have their places of repose and refuge; but the men who bear arms, and expose their lives for the safety of their country, enjoy in the mean time nothing more in it but the air and light; and having no houses or settlement of their own, are constrained to wander from place to place with their wives and children” (Par. 3) According to Plutarch, Tiberius took action in the peoples favor…
Assembly Tribal Assembly Tribunes Veto- Who had it? Praetors- How many? Twelve Tables Citizenship- who had it? Women? Times of emergency, who ruled? “Real Power” Geography? Punic Wars Hannibal? Scipio? Tiberius & Gaius Gracchus? Civil War Period? Shift from Republic to Empire? Describe Loyalty of soldier? Julius Caesar Triumvirate Crassus Pompey Ides of March Octavian? Augustus? Pax Romana? Trade system? Basis? Succession to throne…
Sicily, the territory north of African the Romans were interested in. (U.S History – The Roman Republic) And the Gracchi, Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus, were brothers who took leadership in an attempt to politically and socially reform the Roman Republic so the Plebeians can have significance in the Republic. The Gracchi led the fall events of the Roman Republic.5 Unfortunately, Tiberius and Gaius took on overwhelming reforms that backfired and later involved riots. This resulted in the death of the both…
Fertile Crescent- area of land/region that Mesopotamia was established on. Tigris and Euphrates River flow through Sargon of Akkad- initiated program od conquest--- conquered cities of Sumer, established direct control over Mesopotamia--- and transformed Sumer and Akkad into first known empire. Middle Kingdom- reestablishment of central government—pharaohs represented good shepherds—secured border with Nubia Hatshepsut- woman pharaoh—launched military campaigns and extended trade and diplomacy—most…
Study Guide for Test Three Rome (geography) Romulus and Remus Etruscans Consuls/ Praetor Senate Patricians Plebeians Struggle of the Orders Law of Twelve Tablets Carthage Punic Wars Hannibal Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus Sulla First Triumvirate Julius Caesar Octavian (Caesar Augustus) Second Triumvirate Marc Antony Pax Romana Juilo-Claudians Five Good Emperors Zealots/ Essences Pontius Pilate Paul of Tarsus Nero Germanic people Emperor Diocletian Emperor Constantine…