"Sociological view of the film trainspotting" Essays and Research Papers

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    Outline and evaluate sociological views on the role of the family in society (33 marks) There are three main different sociological view points on how sociologists view the family these are Functionalist‚ Marxist and Feminist Views. The functionalists think the role of the family is extremely important and that the nuclear family is the best form‚ they think the nuclear family runs more smoothly as they learn the correct norms and values so our society can live in a consensus

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    the following essay I will look at ‘The Sociological Imagination’ and Durkheim’s Sociological Perspective on suicide. I will do this by using two texts‚ ‘Sociology in Today’s World’‚ chapter one ‘The Sociological Compass’ (Furze‚ B. Savy‚ P. Brym‚ R.J‚ Lie‚ J. 2012) and ‘The Sociological Imagination’ chapter one ‘The Promise’‚ (C. Wright Mills). C. Wright Mills wrote a book in 1959 called ‘The Sociological Imagination”. Mills coined the term Sociological Imagination and it has since been used

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    few work backwards. They strive for complete unhappiness and eventually get their happiness. This is also extremely hard to do because you have to abandon your morals and watch your life go to ruins before you can get your bliss. In the books Trainspotting and Fight Club this method of happiness is demonstrated by Rents‚ a heroin addict‚ and the narrator‚ a businessman who’s happiness is not a perfect life. The characters achieved their happiness by accepting petty illegal activity‚ participating

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    This essay examines Irvine Welsh’s portrayal of addiction in Trainspotting versus Hubert Selby’s portrayal in Requiem for a Dream. I began my research by defining the word “addiction” and according to the Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine‚ addiction is a “dependence on a behavior or substance that a person is powerless to stop.” The concept of “power” really intrigued me and influenced my rhetorical analysis of both novels. Through my research and analysis‚ I have concluded that Selby portrays addiction

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    the film Erin Brockovich‚ several different social theories can be related to the storyline of the film. Although different‚ theories from Karl Marx‚ Emile Durkheim‚ and Max Weber can all adequately describe what happens in the film. The film is about a small law firm that takes on an extremely powerful organization‚ PG & E (Pacific Gas & Electric)‚ on the account that they were knowingly polluting Hinkley‚ California’s water supply and harming the citizens. From Karl Marx‚ the film can be

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    "The Color Purple" is a very powerful film that tells the story of Celie‚ a poor black woman living in the old south. The film begins at her childhood and follows her up to old age. She was raped and abused by her father as a young woman and was sent to marry and equally abusive man‚ Albert. The various people in Celie’s household may seem strange in their actions to an outsider. However‚ if one examines the actions of the characters‚ their behabiors can be explained‚ and sometimes justified‚ by

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    This report is about how films work. In this report‚ I will give examples from the book and movie called ‘The Outsiders’. I will be using examples from ‘The Outsiders’ because the film has a lot of examples on camera movements‚ for example‚ close-ups‚ camera turning around‚ downward views‚ colored screen‚ camera edits‚ etc.‚ and how films work. In the movie of ‘The Outsiders’‚ there were a lot of camera movements. At the beginning of the film‚ the music lyrics restate the word gold‚ the opening

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    Nature Versus Nurture: A sociological view Introduction “At birth‚ we are – each one of us – hurled into a social world we never ever made.” (Plummer 2010‚ p1). The question of structure (Macrosociology) or interaction (Microsociology) is probably hotly debated amongst sociologists‚ almost as much as the chicken or the egg. Humans develop recognisable individual identities from both social interaction and social structure. But which is the more important? Social structure plays an important part

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    social era. I will apply theories introduced by theorist like George Herbert Mead‚ Karl Marx‚ and Emile Durkheim to a film that was released in 2006 titled V for Vendetta. Legal Authority‚ according to Max Weber rests on the belief that the legality of enacted rules and the right of those in authority to issue such rules and commands (Appelrouth & Edles‚ 179). The film begins with a loud announcement over speakers that a 9:00 pm curfew is in effect for everyone in London. These orders

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    long been a part of British film culture‚ from Hitchcock’s 1929 picture Blackmail to 1996’s Trainspotting (Dir. by Danny Boyle)‚ they all aim portray the lives of those ‘living with crime’ as well as their inevitable consequences. The two aforementioned contemporary social-realist films do the same. They both highlight themes of youth crime‚ drugs‚ violence‚ as well as sociopolitical debate - and both do so in their less than five minute openings. Although the two films showcase differing storytelling

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