Need this for my assignment.
Whats the word for one person going on a long speech, like a rant?
It's not a monologue.
I think it might be used in theatre for when a character steps forward and gives a speech of his own.
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Need this for my assignment.
Whats the word for one person going on a long speech, like a rant?
It's not a monologue.
I think it might be used in theatre for when a character steps forward and gives a speech of his own.
Got it. Soliloquy or sermon I'm going to use.
Words make assignments.
Word of the day - bellicose.
Was going to start a thread on the following.
Has anyone done anything interesting and readable in college?
I've always been a poor student but starting my first (possibly only) dissertation atm and I'm mad for working at it. Can't get enough of it.
Might throw a link up here in a few months when i'm finished.
Or
Oratory...Public speaking marked by the use of overblown rhetoric.
I did my dissertation on Enid Blyton - The Famous Five as Cultural Product! Good for a laugh anyway ;)
A soliloquy is not necessarily a rant. Its usually an aside to let the audience in on something a central character is plotting or to give them an insight into the character's thoughts.
Filabuster?
Sorry dfx, though i'm sure your job prospects are much greater than mine.
Might like a look at that Soc if you still have it. Did you put a survey up on foot.ie for that?
Passing Interest, would definately be interested in reading that if you could throw it up somewhere or pm me.
Just the Famous Five?
Preferred the Secret Seven myself and then the Three Investigators.
thats how billy used it anyway....Quote:
A soliloquy is not necessarily a rant. Its usually an aside to let the audience in on something a central character is plotting or to give them an insight into the character's thoughts.
Really lads I was expecting everyone to laugh at me. I can't seem to find a full version of it but I'll give ye a quick summary.
I look at how Famous Five conforms to all the norms of childrens literature and the adventure story. Look at other adventure stories that follow similar patterns. Argue that Famous Five reflects a certain set of cultural values that were prominent at the time Blyton was writing.
Basically say that arguments to amend, rewrite and ban the stories are just denying history basically. That the books can still be read by children, without turning them into gypsy hating racist freaks, especially if the racist undertones of the books are explained to them.
Never really get into that much depth becuase it's only 10,000 words, I'd probably do a lot different if I was to start it over.
I look at books like Five Children and IT, The Riddle of the Sands and The Jungle Book as comparisons.
If I find a copy of it I'll send it to anyone that's interested.
Myself, my older bro, and my cousins used to play the Famous Five all the time. I was always Anne coz I was the youngest and the more feminine of us 2 girls. The downside to that was that I always had to go last on anything we were doing including the time we were climbing over a half barn door at my granny's. There was a fertiliser bag thrown over the door and as the other 3 climbed to other side, it loosed from where it was resting so when I climbed over it slipped taking me face first onto concrete! God I was a mess for months!
Some would say you can still tell that I had that accident! (combined with my pony standing on my face they have good grounds!)
I recently completed a minor dissertation on the Causes of the Great Jewish Revolt 66 A.D. Comes in handy when people are talking nonsense about Jews of the 1st Century AD/BC on messageboards.:p
I loved researching it and hated writing it. Didn't even get to put down half the stuff I wanted and knew as I flew too close to even my extended deadline.:rolleyes:
I used watch the (1970's) Famous Five on Telly and although unsure as 7 year old Lionel was of what "a proper seeing to" was exactly -he was nonetheless certain he'd like to give that piece of posh totty Jennifer Tanner/Tannish (Anne) exactly that.:eek:
At art college I threatened to write a dissertation asserting that Football was a legitimate performance art ...my lecturers, knowing I was a chancer, threatened to fail me without reading it ...deciding discretion was indeed the better part of valour I backed off and wrote about John Hartfields photomontages instead.
Great. Pm it to me if you can.
I did a course on Israel/Palestine conflict, have a huge interest in it yet still would be very slow to give my opinion on it. There's a lot to know.
[QUOTE=Risteard;637191]
I'm not familiar with these allegations of racism.
QUOTE]
i heard this recently....i was an avid reader of enid blyton books when i was a nipper...of course i didn't see it then but i'd love to read your study of it even if it only touch's on the racist undertones.....might root out some of the old books and read them again just to see if i can spot anything...did the same apply to the secret seven i read them too!!!
but now im a big hard man..girls and booze and the like...
I sent you a PM. It's too far removed in time from the modern conflict to tie in too much to it, though it does explain the initial exodus of Jews from the region which would lead to the large decline of the Jewish population in the area before the Jewish repopulation of the area in the late 1800s/early 1900s. It's also fascinating to see what the Jewish religion looked like before the crushing of the revolt.
Good man.
Bedtime reading for me.
Enid Blyton's books are of their time. When she wrote them Britain had an Empire and imperialist ideas including master race type undertones were de rigeur. Fortunately a lot of those nonsensical racial superiority ideas got a deserved bad name thanks to the Nazis atrocities. Reading those things with the benefit of hindsight is not fair. What is also unfair is the attempt to make them PC. Perhaps they should be dropped into the dustbin of history. Not all literature transcends it's time. Enid Blyton, or at least some of her works, fall into this trap.
I mean for example the Noddy series has a character called Big Ears, which could be seen as being cruel to people like Gary Lineker...for instance....