Stephen Gregory 's book "The devil behind the mirror" is an ethnographic study of the Dominican Republic. The Dominican Republic is located in the Caribbean Sea and occupies the western half of the island, but Haiti occupies a part of the east. Gregory tried to research and analyze the political, social and cultural aspects of the country by interviewing and observing tourists and local people in Boca Chica and Andres' town. Gregory's research focuses on globalization and the international process that influences the political and socio-economic aspects of the Dominican Republic.
In "Devil and Sam Oliver", the devil was forced to accept the quarterly game, challenging to regain his soul from Sam, and they ended with a draw. In the second game, he was distracted by the face inside the mirror, only one quarter of the ball was placed in the glass of the goal. When Sam's hand broke through Steve and Sam could not score at all, the devil won Andy's soul. Played by Donavon Stinson, Ted is a brilliant and great manager of Work Bench (and he is recovering gambling addicts) and gave his staff, especially Sam, Andi, Ben, and Sock a tough time It was. In Episode 20 ("Dirty Sexy Mongol"), Ted was fired for a secret shopper sent from a sexual harassment company because he was a manager of the workbench. The company appointed Andy as a new store manager. She expressed sympathy for Ted, hired him as a workbench intern, and Soc as his coach. When Andy was driven to "My brother's reaper", Ted re-elected manager
Among his seven sins, Hieronymus Bosch depicts a bourgeois woman who highly appreciates himself in the mirror of demons. There is an open jewelry box behind her. The picture of Nicholas Tournier hanging at the Ashmore Museum is "a fable of justice and vanity." The young woman is well-balanced and symbolizes justice; she does not see the mirror or skull above her table in front of her. The famous picture of Vermeer, "a girl with pearl earrings" is sometimes thought to depict the sin of vanity. All this is a vanity made by Charles Allan Gilbert (1873-1929), and it inherits this theme. This is a visual illusion that depicts a skull that looks like a grin. As a result of careful study, she found out that she was a young lady looking at her reflection reflected in the mirror.
Plath wrote, "I drowned a young girl"; it was swallowed by it as if a young woman slowly entered the depth of the specular reflection of the lake, leaving behind an old lady. For women, this is what she can not select. She became a slave to the mirror as she was worried more and more about reflecting her way of aging. The drowning girl is stealing something from his youth lake, but the real mirror just shows her woman, truth - she is older. She feels "irritating" in the performance in the mirror, but she really can not stop watching, Plath says "I am very important to her."