Shillong Essays

  • Kaitholil's Coping With Loneliness In College

    892 Words  | 4 Pages

    The population of college students in the town of shillong grows drastically with students coming from all corners of North Eastern States and other states as well. It is presumed that a shift from familiar circumstances to new surroundings will generate some kind of feelings of loneliness on individuals. Concept of loneliness and isolation: Being alone is different from being lonely. Loneliness relates to the inner feeling in the deep recesses of the soul. According to Kaitholil (2010) in Coping

  • Loneliness John Donne Analysis

    947 Words  | 4 Pages

    The feeling of loneliness is fundamentally experienced by persons irrespective of all differences. There is, however a general consensus among researchers about the inevitability of loneliness. John Donne asserted that: No man is an Iland, intire of it selfe; every man is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine; if a Clod bee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse . . . In this poem, John Donne explores the idea of the connectedness of people. People are not isolated islands. We are all

  • Summary Of How To Read Literature Like A Professor By Jhumpa Lahiri

    975 Words  | 4 Pages

    sequentially generated was the feeling of relief when Mr. Pirzada flies back to Dacca to find that all of his family “. . . were well, having survived the events of the past year at an estate belonging to his wife’s grandparents in the mountains of Shillong” (Lahiri 469). Once Mr. Pirzada was reunited with his family, there was a sense of comfort. Furthermore, the author uses elaborate details in this short story to make the segments about tradition more descriptive. According to Pfeiffer, “the author

  • Personal Narrative: My Rule

    1022 Words  | 5 Pages

    We can take the instance of rat-hole mining. We are well versed with why the practice is bad and how people are being exploited but have we ever stopped to ask ourselves if the decision to ban the practices has had an impact on those going into the mines? Yes, they are risking their lives. Yes, they are being abused by the overlords who couldn’t care less about their well-being so long as they turn a profit. But what about the miner who was able to put together something that kept him and his family

  • John Donne: Research Analysis: Loneliness And Behaviors

    1119 Words  | 5 Pages

    a. Upbringing b. Behaviour c. Morality d. Social set up e. Experiences f. Types of alienation g. Cultural practices While conducting a study to achieve the 2nd Objective the following variables could be incorporated by the researcher: a. Withdrawal b. Anti social behaviours c. Depression d. Silence e. Self esteem; High/low Under the 3rd Objective the following variables will be looked at a. Family background b. Environment c. Course of study d. Gender e. Financial status To fulfill the 4th Objective

  • Essay On Loneliness And Alienation

    1243 Words  | 5 Pages

    2. RESEARCH QUESTIONS: 1. What are the different forms of loneliness and alienation? 2. What are the factors that led to a sense of loneliness and alienation? 3. What are the effects of loneliness and alienation? 4. How do lonely and alienated individuals approach life? 5. How do individuals cope up with loneliness and alienation? 6. To what degree can one withstand the effects of loneliness and alienation? 3. RESEARCH OBJECTIVES: • To determine the causes and types of loneliness and alienation

  • Media Literacy: Scenarios

    3195 Words  | 13 Pages

    Media Literacy Picture this scenario- It’s the early 90s. The FIFA World Cup finals are being broadcast on television. More than 25 youngsters have crammed into the living room of my grandparents’ house in a small locality in Shillong. They are among the privileged few that can afford a television set. The enthusiasm is palpable and in the moments leading up to kjkjdfkjkdj scoring the final goal, the tension in the room is thickened by the pungent combination of tea, waiwai, sweat and tears. Goal

  • Theory Of Forced Migration

    3468 Words  | 14 Pages

    The phenomena of migration have been constant since time immemorial. The study of human movement as a field of anthropological enquiry has been considered a departure in the conventional practices to understand migration. Today the subject matter of this field is not only comprehended in terms of its nature i.e. movement of one place to another but as a platform to understand the genesis of such kind of migration. Migration, permanent or temporary change in residence is a movement of people from