Not exact matches
Each issue focuses on a single
theme,
exploring it through
essays, art, photography, and recipes.
Wong Kar - wai: Time, Memory, Identity An
essay by Toh Hai Leong
exploring these
themes in Wong's first four films.
In this
essay from the 2017 Locarno Critics Academy, a look at three new queer films that
explore similar
themes.
As critic David Sterritt notes in his liner
essay for our edition of the film, the dazzling Brazil's «verbal and visual wit remain as incisive as ever, and the
themes it
explores — social alienation, terrorism, the hazards of high technology, and the bureaucratization of absolutely everything — are more urgent now than when the film premiered.»
Teacher resources include introductory
essays for each
theme with information for further study and discussion as well as a host of well - planned lesson plans that cover such topics as
Exploring Enumerated and Implied Powers, Clear and Present Danger, Gender Issues in the United States, and others.
This detailed and high quality unit includes: * 24 lesson plans (with 13 differentiation strategies) * 116 slide PowerPoint presentation (divided into lessons) * All resources and worksheets (20 sheets) * Homework project (7 tasks) that includes both reading and writing skills * End - of - unit reading / writing exam * End - of - unit exam mark scheme (suitable for KS3 Levels 4 - 7, with GCSE 1 - 9 conversion) Unit's lessons include: * Contexts match - up activity * Reading and discussing the whole play *
Exploring Salem society in the 1690s - power and influence *
Exploring key characters * In - depth analysis of characters - John Proctor and Reverend Hale *
Essay writing skills - writing about characters * In - depth analysis of
themes - relationships, jealousy, respect, religion *
Exploring tension across the play * Linking the play to the 1950s McCarthy Era * 2 huge 60 - question revision quizzes * Spelling tests on key vocabulary (differentiated by writing level) * SPaG starter activities * End - of - unit reading exam (GCSE English Language / Literature style) * End - of - unit writing exam (GCSE English Language style) * Teacher / peer / self assessment opportunities
This detailed and high quality unit includes: * 33 lesson plans (with 13 differentiation strategies) * 147 slide PowerPoint presentation (divided into lessons) * All resources and worksheets (9 sheets) * Homework project (9 tasks) that includes both reading and writing skills Unit's lessons include: * Cloze activity on the play's contexts * Detailed, thorough comprehension questions on each scene * Spelling tests on key vocabulary * SPaG starter activities * Character crosswords * Huge 60 - question revision quiz * In - depth key scene analyses (including group work) *
Exploring characters - Helen, Jo, Peter, Boy, Geof *
Exploring themes - marriage, motherhood, relationships * AfL activities - improving sample exam responses *
Essay planning * Writing a formal essay on a chosen character * Writing a formal essay on a chosen theme * «Closed book» mock exam to reflect new GCSE exam expectations * Teacher / peer / self assessment opportun
Essay planning * Writing a formal
essay on a chosen character * Writing a formal essay on a chosen theme * «Closed book» mock exam to reflect new GCSE exam expectations * Teacher / peer / self assessment opportun
essay on a chosen character * Writing a formal
essay on a chosen theme * «Closed book» mock exam to reflect new GCSE exam expectations * Teacher / peer / self assessment opportun
essay on a chosen
theme * «Closed book» mock exam to reflect new GCSE exam expectations * Teacher / peer / self assessment opportunities
For example, after a discussion on major
themes in novels and other works, a student might be asked to choose a novel and write an
essay about the first chapter in which major
themes of the work are
explored (VanTassel - Baska, 2002).
Farther Away:
Essays by Jonathan Franzen (FSG) This is a collection of Franzen's essays and speeches over the past five years, exploring themes of literary rivalry, environmental concern and
Essays by Jonathan Franzen (FSG) This is a collection of Franzen's
essays and speeches over the past five years, exploring themes of literary rivalry, environmental concern and
essays and speeches over the past five years,
exploring themes of literary rivalry, environmental concern and more.
'» Roy and Barrington develop a rather unusual — and for readers, perhaps, unsettling — relationship, and in the
essay, Barrington walks back and forth from childhood to adulthood to
explore themes of innocence and ignorance.
There's a ton of anxiety and disappointment that accompanies needing to
explore and compose an
essay, especially on the off chance that you don't know much about the
theme or don't especially appreciate composing.
Then along comes Chris, half of whose college
essays were on the deeper aspects of video games - story and
theme and psychology — and a whole new world is opened up in which to
explore the marriage of escapism and analytical thought.
Prosek's
essay «The Failure of Names,» which
explores a
theme that carries into his latest work, appeared in the March / April 2008 issue of Orion.
A number of events expand on the
themes explored in the exhibition including a tour led by the exhibition curator David Campany (20 July, 6.30 pm, Free); the exhibition's curator David Campany is joined by writer and critic Brian Dillon, artists Xavier Ribas and Eva Stenram for a symposium discussing notions of time, perception and the history of photography (17 June, 2 - 6 pm, # 15 / # 12.50 concs); and award - winning
essay film - maker Grant Gee presents his study of the late German writer W.G. Sebald which is a multi-layered exploration of place, memory, longing and dust (29 June, 7 pm, # 9.50 / # 7.50 concs).
With this in mind, the four ideas I
explore with this
essay and the selection of work are: (1) narrative and iconographic
themes, (2) spatial changes, (3) palette shifts, and (4) how the language and quality of shape change in relation to the experiences of hopelessness and then hope.
Accompanying
essays by the exhibition's curator, Laura Hoptman,
explore eight
themes that she perceives in the field — Drafting & Architecture, Mental Maps & Metaphysics, Popular Culture & National Culture, Fashion, Likeness & Allegory, Envisioning a City, Science & Art, Comics & Other Subcultures, Ornament & Crime — and provide key impulses behind drawing's recent resurgence.
The
essay is the inspiration for tonight's How to thrive event, where Ellen will be joined by artists AIRBNB Pavilion, Joanne Tatham & Tom O'Sullivan and Berry Patten for a discussion
exploring its
themes.
The new publication accompanying Entangled: Threads & Making includes a bold selection of
essays and interviews that
explore many different
themes and areas of research in relation to works, artists and ideas in the exhibition.
A fully illustrated catalogue is available to accompany the exhibition, with
essays by the curators on the
themes explored and entries on each exhibiting artist.
Designed by Kimberly Varella of Content Object Los Angeles, the book also includes critical
essays addressing the featured contemporary artists; a chronology
exploring themes of Prometheus; and vibrant new reproductions.
All the while, Müller - Helle develops
themes in this (her first) monograph that she had
explored in the graduate research project «Sinne — Technik — Inszenierung» (Senses — Technology — Staging) at the University of Vienna, in her dissertation and various
essays.
The catalogue
essay by Paul Hayes Tucker
explores these
themes in depth, allowing for a dynamic new understanding of Noland's art as inextricably linked to the «atomic age» in America.
Anna Lovatt
explores the role of drawing throughout; Jo Melvin introduces pivotal exhibitions during the 1960s and 70s; Anthony Bond provides an overview of the work and its relationship to art history and David Batchelor revisits his 1999
essay which describes visual and conceptual
themes throughout Law's work.
Anchored by a comprehensive introduction
exploring the main
themes of the legal history of the region, a group of distinguished historians from have contributed 11 substantive
essays (three in French), on subjects as varied as women in court, grand juries, western law and aboriginal peoples, gun use and control, Quebec legal literature, married women's property, and imprisonment for debt — The Osgoode Society and the University of Toronto Press