2 research outputs found

    Trinity Restoration Inc.: Southside Cultural Center Economic Impact Study

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    Economic development has shifted from location-oriented business models towards a more all-encompassing model that recognizes the advancement of human capital or intellectual property as continuously increasing in value. This microcosmic characteristic of development extends to aid in the growth of society as a whole. The Arts and Culture attract a demographic of inspired and motivated people to the area. It results in the development of the society surrounding art venues. The general population will always seek out entertainment, by installing a venue of artistic expression in South Providence that will motivate the community and propel development. This phenomena has been proven, as denoted through the historical evaluation of artistic venues across America that have generated economic growth in their respective communities

    Yes, Women Are Human: Gender Confusion in Daniel Defoe\u27s Moll Flanders and Thomas Hardy\u27s Tess of the D \u27Urbervilles

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    Abstract This critical essay examines how literary narration can function as a strategic tool in the presentation of a social critique. Both Daniel Defoe’s 1721 Moll Flanders and Thomas Hardy’s 1891 Tess of the D’urbervilles are novels that enlighten the reader about the suppression of female voices, particularly as that suppression is catalyzed by economic realties of the era during which each text was written. Moll is an economic individualist who very realistically presents her experience from the authority of a first person narrative perspective. As a novel, Moll Flanders provides its female protagonist with an individualized voice. Over a century later, Tess is portrayed as a victim of the social structure that disallows her voice. Thus Tess\u27s story is presented in third person narrative perspective. The novel\u27s resolution suggests that the disregard of a woman’s voice in society has serious social consequences. The difference in narrative perspective between the two novels represents a diverse but common urgency for women to have a platform for self-expression in order for a society to maintain a moral footing. The history of life is not necessarily progressive; it is certainly not predictable. The earth\u27s creatures have evolved through a series of contingent and fortuitous events.’ -Stephen Jay Goul
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