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Sunday, October 12, 2014

Essay #4 Canterbury Tales: Transmedia (Prewrite)

Humans have judged their surroundings, judged others, and even judged themselves. Its no false conception to see the value of man degrade by what they think in the definition of judgments. As history takes the toll of making excuses for people's character, it was either race goes with this or that. Books came along and somewhat changed the perceptions of most people. Nowadays, people have access to the internet, where networking contains no privacy and so individuals are truly seen behind the curtain by just a few words written in 140 characters or a Facebook status. It used to be different back then in Geoffrey Chaucer's time, when observations explained in Canterbury Tales were based on a bemused narrator. The narrator expected nothing more about the common man and his mission to find their own piece. One of the characters would experience networking with an interested face if it were introduced back in his heyday. An unusual character like the monk would change his cultural appearance based on the new things he is offered through media and isn't defined by what he is labeled

"I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but the content of their character," is what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. enterprised for everyone to be equally satisfied with who they are and not based on malicious polemic.


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