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Essays / Sample Excerpt # 1
From time immemorial, men have armed themselves, bid
goodbye to their loved ones, and gone to war. We see this in the
small intertribal battles of Paleolithic men, as well as in recent
conflicts in the Middle East. And yet the way that these conflicts
are approached, as well as the place which warfare holds in any
individual culture, varies widely from one society to another. For
this reason, there are as many definitions of a hero as there are
heroes themselves; in some societies, a hero is a person who
defends the status quo; in others, a hero is someone who defies
it. A hero may be a person who saves lives; in other
circumstances, a hero may be someone who kills. The tremendous
cultural differences in one’s definition of a hero are largely
dependent on the values which the culture itself promotes. This
can be clearly seen in an examination of the role of war and the
hero in Vergil’s Aeneid, a long narrative poem which
tells the story of the founding of Rome by the hero Aeneas.
- Heroism in the Aeneid
- Queen Mary I of England
- Urban Ecology / Baltimore
- Chopin's The Awakening
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