Day: March 13, 2023

Eileen Dunleavy, “The Art of Swaying a Hostile Crowd: Marc Antony’s Funeral Oration of Julius Caesar,” 2nd Place ENL 257

Eileen Dunleavy, Spring 2007 In William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, Mark Antony pleads with his “Friends, Romans (and) countrymen” to lend him their ears in an effort to exonerate Caesar from false charges laid against him. The three main conspirators in Caesar’s murder, Brutus, Casca and Cassius portrayed Caesar as an ambitious tyrant to the Roman… Read more Eileen Dunleavy, “The Art of Swaying a Hostile Crowd: Marc Antony’s Funeral Oration of Julius Caesar,” 2nd Place ENL 257

Sloan Piva, “The Many Definitions and Great Functions of Rhetoric: A Poetic and Pragmatic Art Form that Moves the World,”2nd Place ENL 257

Sloan Piva, Fall 2011 Throughout history, those critical of rhetoric have dismissed it as a craft of empty talk.  Perhaps most famously, Plato condemned rhetorical discourse as “foul” and “ugly” within his 4th-century dialogue entitled Gorgias.  Centuries later, John Locke advanced such negative critiques of the practice, claiming that accepting rhetors is the same as… Read more Sloan Piva, “The Many Definitions and Great Functions of Rhetoric: A Poetic and Pragmatic Art Form that Moves the World,”2nd Place ENL 257

John Michael Bell, “Analysis of Google’s ‘Parisian Love,'”2nd Place ENL 257

John Michael Bell, Spring 2010 A good commercial needs to hook its viewers, convince them to watch it, make them remember it, and persuade them into thinking that its product will be valuable in their lives. Google’s Super Bowl commercial, “Parisian Love”, did all of these things, and through unusual means. Typical Super Bowl commercials… Read more John Michael Bell, “Analysis of Google’s ‘Parisian Love,’”2nd Place ENL 257

Keith Amaral, “An Analysis of Jim Valvano’s ’93 ESPY Awards Speech,” 2nd Place ENL 257

Keith Amaral, Fall 2009 The cancer epidemic is undeniably one of the biggest exigencies the world currently faces; statistics show that it is a leading cause of death in the United States (“Cancer”). Though progress has been made in the fight to end cancer, the cure remains elusive. While there are many champions for the… Read more Keith Amaral, “An Analysis of Jim Valvano’s ’93 ESPY Awards Speech,” 2nd Place ENL 257

Angela Tieng, “Now and Then,” 2nd Place ENL 258

Angela Tieng, Fall 2011 History is the study of a human past; but, for Ireland, history is not merely that. History is as much the living, breathing present. Ireland’s people are aware of their dejected “history,” which stares them in the face every day, anew. The violence and innumerable pains Northern Ireland has suffered at… Read more Angela Tieng, “Now and Then,” 2nd Place ENL 258

LeAnne Coady, “Toni Morrison Writes on Racism,” 2nd Place ENL 258

LeAnne Coady, Fall 2007 Since childhood, we all have been taught that “racism is bad” and should be avoided at all costs. We have been told that “everyone is a child of God and we are all created equal.” In fact, Americans are praised for the so-called equality they possess. Renowned Author Toni Morrison sheds… Read more LeAnne Coady, “Toni Morrison Writes on Racism,” 2nd Place ENL 258

Sephora Marie Borges, “The Troubles of an Irish Poet,” 2nd Place ENL 258

Sephora Marie Borges, Spring 2010 Seamus Heaney was born on April 13, 1939 in Derry, Northern Ireland at the Heaneys’ family farm of ‘Mossbawn’; as the son of a potato farmer, he would have been expected to follow in his father’s footsteps, but chose a profession in writing instead (Vendler xi). Heaney lived in Northern… Read more Sephora Marie Borges, “The Troubles of an Irish Poet,” 2nd Place ENL 258

Steven Martin, “Ask the Art, Not the Artist,” 2nd Place ENL 258

Steven Martin, Fall 2009 In the Japanese arts, nothing is more revered than the idyllic balance of harmony between nature and man. Such a relationship is at the heart of the Zen-Buddhist notion of “Sattori,” or enlightenment (Suzuki 211). Whether such harmony is found in the minimalist structure of the Haiku of Basho and Myoe,… Read more Steven Martin, “Ask the Art, Not the Artist,” 2nd Place ENL 258

Kelsey Jacobsen, “The Other Native American Identity,” 2nd Place ENL 259

Kelsey Jacobsen,  Spring 2008 When analyzing Leslie M. Silko’s “Yellow Woman” through a Post Colonial lens, one must acknowledge that there is much controversy over whether or not the Native Americans were officially colonized. In this case, I have used Tyson’s definition of colonization, which says “any population that has been subjected to political domination… Read more Kelsey Jacobsen, “The Other Native American Identity,” 2nd Place ENL 259

Kristen Hall, “Breaking the Habit: Renouncing Selfish Motives in Favor of Justice,” 2nd Place ENL 259

Kristen Hall, Spring 2010 According to NAACP activist Kenneth B. Clark, “Racial segregation, like all other forms of cruelty and tyranny, debases all human beings-those who are its victims, those who victimize, and in quite subtle ways those who are mere accessories” (Massey, xi). This quote epitomizes the conflict in James Alan McPherson’s short story,… Read more Kristen Hall, “Breaking the Habit: Renouncing Selfish Motives in Favor of Justice,” 2nd Place ENL 259