Lim Goh Tong Essays

  • Lim Goh Tong Leadership Analysis

    1095 Words  | 5 Pages

    LEADERSHIP LESSONS How did Tan Sri Dato Seri Lim Goh Tong manage to attract followers and inspire them to try their best in achieving a shared goal? How did he manage to convince all his followers that they can reach beyond the ordinary expectations together? These questions can be answered through the visionary leadership style that Uncle Lim possessed, a name he was fondly known as. According to Kirkpatrick in Visionary Leadership Theory, visionary leader is someone who inspires astonishing levels

  • Poem Analysis: Because I Could Not Stop Death

    713 Words  | 3 Pages

    Name: Mark Vicars Instructor: Date: Essay 2 Analysis Because I could not stop Death “Because I could not stop Death” by Emily Dickinson talks about the day when death came calling her. In this poem the narrator is dead although it is clearly depicted in the last stanza and the reader cannot realize it form the first stanza. The narrator is consequently a spirit recalling the date of death and is not scared about its manifestation. The narrator still remembers the incidents of the death, how she

  • I Felt A Funeral In My Brain Poem Analysis

    750 Words  | 3 Pages

    Two elements that any good poet understands and uses well are imagery and figurative language. Both are used in poetry in order to aid the reader in the understanding of the purpose of the poem. “I felt a Funeral, in my Brain” by Emily Dickinson is a great example of the use of imagery in a poem. In contrast, “Metaphors” by Sylvia Plath uses figurative language to show the reader what the meaning of the poem is. The two elements are necessary for a poet to have in their arsenal of tools for writing

  • House Of Mirth Reflection

    775 Words  | 4 Pages

    I thought this was an interesting read because it gave insight to what it might have been like in the twentieth century. The House of Mirth was written by Edith Wharton, who was very big into naturalism. The story revolves around the female lead character, Lily Bart, and her struggle to find what she deems as happiness. Through Lily’s story we see what it was like to be a woman and the importance of marriage and social status in the time period. In our class discussion we brought up how the early

  • Disadvantages Of Water Desalination

    927 Words  | 4 Pages

    Water Desalination Everyone in this planet needs to be able to access water in order to live. 71% of the earth is covered by water, so accessing water from anywhere must be easy. However not all of the water on earth is freshwater. Only 3% of the world’s water is freshwater and ⅔ of the freshwater is tucked in glaciers. Everyone requires freshwater in order to live, as a result about 1.1 million people in this world lack access to freshwater. In India alone, only 18% of the population has access

  • The Power Of Inhumanity In Shirley Jackson's The Lottery

    1025 Words  | 5 Pages

    When you hear someone talking about the lottery, a positive image of a winner normally comes to mind. When you participate in the lottery, the worst thing you can lose is just some hard-earned cash. If only this was the case in Shirley Jackson’s story, “The Lottery.” In Jackson’s story, the lottery is not a prize that people want to win. The lottery in Jackson’s story is an annual tradition in which a name is randomly chosen and the winner is “awarded” with a death by stoning. Jackson uses the theme

  • Robert Frost Figurative Language Analysis

    1418 Words  | 6 Pages

    Figurative Language Demonstrated by the Idea of Choice in “The Road Not Taken” Choice can be defined as making a decision when faced with two or more possibilities. Robert Frost composed “The Road Not Taken” for a friend, Edward Thomas, intending for the poem to be a joke. Although Frost had opposite intentions, many critics in the modern day interpret the poem as a complex writing about making meaningful decisions and choices. “The Road Not Taken” was created in 1916 and originally titled “Two

  • Brown Girl In The Ring Analysis

    1102 Words  | 5 Pages

    Brown Girl in the Ring, written by Nalo Hopkinson, is set within a Caribbean-Canadian community in Toronto and it is a reflection on the unique national and ethnic identities of the Caribbean diaspora. The language plays an important role in the story, since it serves as a means to identify not only the various national distinctions within this Caribbean community, but also the relationship between the Caribbean community and the larger Canadian society. However, through Hopkinson’s description of

  • Case Study Jenifer

    786 Words  | 4 Pages

    Jenifer is a busy stay at home mother of three children (2,4,7). Jenifer has some casual friends that are other mom’s but say she has not had any close friend senses she stopped working. Jenifer’s husband is a physician and was offered a job here in Maine 3 years ago, which cause them to move to Scarborough. Jenifer grew up in home with her mother, brother and step father after losing her father at age three. Jenifer describes being fearful of her step father’s outbursts and made a concussions decision

  • Gender Stereotypes In Train Wreck

    1300 Words  | 6 Pages

    When one sees through the hinge side in the history, seemingly endless ebbing away of days and a slow but steady decay of time, one is reminded of a quote of Dwight David Eisenhower, “The history of free men is never really written by chance, but by choice - their choice”. In a similar manner, love is something that happens by chance but is defined by our conscious and the movie, ‘Trainwreck’, proves it. Starring Amy Schumer, as a free-willed, but commitment fearing woman, and Bill Hader as Dr. Aaron

  • Durkheim's Notion Of Social Solidarity Essay

    1276 Words  | 6 Pages

    Abstract Durkheim’s idea focuses mainly on how societies are glued together and how they maintain order, stability and identity within that community, both as a community and as an individual. According to Durkheim because solidarity is a non-material social fact, changes in social structure are affected and can be seen by changes in law and legal practice. This paper seeks to illustrate how Durkheim’s notion of solidarity correlates to Singapore’s social changes and what the celebration of the Golden