Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Tender is the Night so far!
The world that F. Scott Fitzgerald creates in Tender is the Night is one of beauty and warmth. The opening chapter is set on a crowded, sunny beach in France. It is here, at an upscale resort amongst new friends that Rosemary will learn things that will give her a new perspective on life. She is an up and coming movie star and is recognized most everywhere she goes. She is too pretty for her own good and most of all she is young, just 18. Rosemary is determined and knows what she wants. More than anything she wants Dick Diver, a wealthy man who lives in the resort where Rosemary is staying. But he has a wife, Nicole. When Rosemary first meets the DIvers, she is captivated. They are the greatest thing she has ever seen. They are beautiful, wealthy, and seem to have the perfect life. Throughout her stay at the resort, Rosemary learns things that she never planned to about the Divers. And she and Dick fall in love, while he is still in love with his wife Nicole, who we learn is mentally unstable and was hospitalized for her illness when she and Dick met. So far, Tender is the Night is a very interesting love story with a few twists and turns here and there. I am about halfway through and am excited to finish the story. Most of all I enjoy the language that Fitzgerald uses. It is simplistic and pretty and his imagery is so effective.
Monday, March 1, 2010
Antygokneeez Dillema
Antigone is a story about listening to your heart rather than abiding by the established law. When her brother is killed in battle, Antigone goes against King Creon's law that forbids anyone to bury him. However, Antigone believes there is a higher law that needs to be recognized. So, she buries her brother, even against the wishes of her sister and the wishes of Creon, but it is what she believes is right. Throughout the story, the idea of whether Antigone's actions are right or wrong is wrestled with. There are two sides, Antigone's and Creon's. Antigone's sister does not support her in her act and Creon's own son is against him as well. It seems blood does not take sides. Interestingly, the Chorus takes the side of Creon, saying "You have passed beyond human daring and come at last into a place of stone where Justice sits....Reverence is a virtue, but strength lives in established law: that must prevail." What defines right and wrong? What makes each character take the sides they take? And when can one throw aside state laws and go by a moral code instead? These are some questions that Antigone sparks.
There is no real answer to this question, I think it varies from person to person. There are times when the law should be taken very seriously and there are times, such as Antigone's situation, where it is necessary to take alternate action. Antigone had to bury her brother or he would have been lost in the Underword.
Creon is displayed as the villan in the story. He has sound leadership qualities and rules as a great king, in terms of his enforcement. The law he made about Polyneices is not necessarily unjust because he was an enemy of the country. However, it was a little harsh to punish Antigone for sprinkling dust over he brother for closure and insurance for him in death. This harsh punishment was what brought his downfall in the end. He, himself was punished with the suicides of three people. Creon, in the end, gets his retribution.
There is no real answer to this question, I think it varies from person to person. There are times when the law should be taken very seriously and there are times, such as Antigone's situation, where it is necessary to take alternate action. Antigone had to bury her brother or he would have been lost in the Underword.
Creon is displayed as the villan in the story. He has sound leadership qualities and rules as a great king, in terms of his enforcement. The law he made about Polyneices is not necessarily unjust because he was an enemy of the country. However, it was a little harsh to punish Antigone for sprinkling dust over he brother for closure and insurance for him in death. This harsh punishment was what brought his downfall in the end. He, himself was punished with the suicides of three people. Creon, in the end, gets his retribution.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
A woman like that is not ashamed to die
I go out at night, a possessed woman. Possessed, that is what I would have to be to do what I do as a “job.” I pull on my fishnets one leg at a time, wondering if I will make it through one more night. My tight leather skirt feels even tighter than usual, it’s suffocating me. I can feel the layers of makeup on my face. I look sloppy, but I don’t even care. No one cares. People say a woman like me isn’t really a woman.
I make my way to the dark alley where I usually work. It is damp, lit only by one streetlight. There I am surrounded by girls both older and younger than me. If I am surrounded by people, why am I so lonely? After a few minutes a black Mercedes slides up to the curb. The passenger’s side window rolls down and a man, about late twenties, leans over from the driver’s seat. He looks us all up and down. He chooses one of the newer girls. I examine her young face and decide she is about seventeen. I want to shake her and scream at her, “why are you here!!?”
Then I ask myself, how did I get here? More importantly, how do I get out? I hate my life. I am an outcast in society with few friends and no family. I live alone, I depend on no one but myself, and no one depends on me…thank god. I have made this “job” my own now.
I have been caught once, burned like a witch at the stake because of my occupation. I can still feel those cold, hard handcuffs around my wrists and that ear-splitting sound of a siren will never leave my head. It was alright though, I survived it. I thought I would never go back to that dark alley after that. But it’s hard to get out once you’ve been there. I have ruined my life, and nothing more can shame me.
Therefore, I am not ashamed to die.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDcARJqtqFs
I make my way to the dark alley where I usually work. It is damp, lit only by one streetlight. There I am surrounded by girls both older and younger than me. If I am surrounded by people, why am I so lonely? After a few minutes a black Mercedes slides up to the curb. The passenger’s side window rolls down and a man, about late twenties, leans over from the driver’s seat. He looks us all up and down. He chooses one of the newer girls. I examine her young face and decide she is about seventeen. I want to shake her and scream at her, “why are you here!!?”
Then I ask myself, how did I get here? More importantly, how do I get out? I hate my life. I am an outcast in society with few friends and no family. I live alone, I depend on no one but myself, and no one depends on me…thank god. I have made this “job” my own now.
I have been caught once, burned like a witch at the stake because of my occupation. I can still feel those cold, hard handcuffs around my wrists and that ear-splitting sound of a siren will never leave my head. It was alright though, I survived it. I thought I would never go back to that dark alley after that. But it’s hard to get out once you’ve been there. I have ruined my life, and nothing more can shame me.
Therefore, I am not ashamed to die.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDcARJqtqFs
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Characters of Waiting for the Barbarians
J.M Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians is narrated by a man called the Magistrate. He is magistrate of an empire supposedly being attacked by barbarians. We see him as an older man with sympathetic and sound views. He is a reliable narrator, I believe, evident through his disapproval of Colonel Joll. Colonel Joll is the only character in the novel with an actual name and is often depicted wearing sunglasses. Because of the concern over the barbarians attacking the empire and pillaging livestock, Joll is called upon to “investigate.” “Finding the truth” is his main concern with these investigations, but from the eyes of the Magistrate, Colonel Joll is way off the mark. He interrogates all the wrong people and beats them until they tell him what he wants to hear, which is that the barbarians are preparing an attack on the Empire. This is, in other words, the “truth.” Colonel Joll is a corrupt leader and the Magistrate is seemingly the only one aware. Everyone else is won over by the propaganda about the barbarians coming to attack and the urgent need for information in order to prevent a war. The Magistrate is the main character and Colonel Joll is his antagonist in the first section.
We see everything through the Magistrate’s eyes and tend to sympathize with him. Waiting for the Barbarians is like his diary entry. He does not trust Joll and finds him very useless against the cause. It is hard to tell whether the Magistrate thinks that there are barbarians waiting to attack or not. However, he shows suspicions with reflections like, “in private I observed that once in every generation, without fail, there is an episode of hysteria about the barbarians.” The Magistrate is smart, observant, and also sympathetic of the unfairly beaten prisoners. He seems to have a good head on his shoulders and that is why we trust him as a narrator.
We see everything through the Magistrate’s eyes and tend to sympathize with him. Waiting for the Barbarians is like his diary entry. He does not trust Joll and finds him very useless against the cause. It is hard to tell whether the Magistrate thinks that there are barbarians waiting to attack or not. However, he shows suspicions with reflections like, “in private I observed that once in every generation, without fail, there is an episode of hysteria about the barbarians.” The Magistrate is smart, observant, and also sympathetic of the unfairly beaten prisoners. He seems to have a good head on his shoulders and that is why we trust him as a narrator.
Monday, November 16, 2009
Conrad: Symbolist or Impressionist
Ian Watt Article, "Impressionism and Symbolism in Heart of Darkness"
- Discusses whether Conrad is a Symbolist or an Impressionist with various definitions of each
- Impressionism: can be identified with the Impressionist movement in painting, characterized by artwork that had an obscured subject.
- It is the depiction of a subject that is blurred by the atmosphere or environment it is in, seen in Monet's work a lot.
- Heart of Darkness can be considered an Impressionist piece of literature because the Marlow's tale is kind of enveloped, making its overall meaning a little hazy.
- The word hazy or misty is used many times in the opening pages describing the Nellie as it moves down the Thames, which can be applied to the meaning of Marlow's / Conrad's story as a whole.
- The primary narrator "warns us that Marlow's tale will be not centered on, but surrounded by, its meaning.." and the meaning will be difficult to figure out.
- Virginia Woolf quote: "Life is not a series of gig lamps symmetrically arranged; life is a luminous halo, a semi-transparent envelope surrounding us from the beginning of consciousness to the end."
- Impressionists aimed to portray what is actually seen rather than an idealized or imagined view of things.
- Apparently though, Conrad was did not consider himself an Impressionist because he was more into realism stuff. Somewhat anti-impressionist.
- However, Heart of Darkness seems very Impressionist because it "it accepts...the bounded and ambiguous nature of individual understanding."
- Another Impressionist characteristic is that Conrad presents something and then holds off on explaining it until later, known as delayed decoding.
- This technique gives a more realistic feel to the narrative = more Impressionist
- Symbolism: objective is to discover coherent meanings and values for which was inwardly yearned, but not found in reality.
- The same argument is made that Heart of Darkness has very Symbolist characteristics, but Conrad himself did not consider himself a symbolist at all.
- Some of his quotes on the subject: He says he wrote the story "straight from the heart," in an attempt "to give a true impression." But he also says, "that [he] wanted to connect the small world of the ship with that larger world carrying perplexities, fears, affections, rebellions, in a loneliness greater than that of the ship at sea." = symbolist attitude!
- There are symbolist aspects of the novel, for example Watt discusses the title.
- The title is compelling in that it make us think about deeper meanings of it beyond the center of Africa.
"How can something inorganic like darkness have an organic centre of life and feeling? How can a shapeless absence of light compact itself into a shaped and pulsing presence? And what are we to make of a 'good' entity like a heart becoming, of all things, a controlling part of a 'bad' one like darkness?"
Monday, November 9, 2009
Marlow's Fresh-Water Sailing Story
Marlow is an explorer. "He is the only man of us who still 'followed the sea," says the unknown narrator who seems to be a crew member on the Nellie. The sea is greatly revered by the sailors who share the "bond of the sea" as well as the bond of the Nellie. It is a lazy day on the Thames River as the Nellie lazily lulls closer and closer to the ocean when Marlow begins his tales of his time as a "fresh-water sailor" on a long, snake-like river in Africa. As a child, Marlow constantly studied maps. He "had a hankering" after Africa as a young boy, and as he grew old, this fascinating, mysterious place became a "place of darkness." When he scores a job on a French steam boat that moves along the coast of Africa, what he sees shocks him. He becomes "acquainted with a flabby, pretending, weak-eyed devil of a rapacious and pitiless folly." He witnesses a cliff being repeatedly blasted for no apparent reason. Marlow's interpretations of what he sees are never stated, but rather implied. When he sees the native people being enslaved and crawling off to die, turning into "black shadows of disease and starvation," he clearly thinks the methods of buisness in this part of Africa to be more destructive than productive. There seems to be a conspiracy working with the buisness Marlow is involved in but he cannot figure it out. It has something to do with Mr. Kurtz, who we learn about through the dressed-to-impress Chief Accountant. The flabby, weak-eyed devil is present in all aspects of this situation in which Marlow finds himself.
What do you think of this conspiracy? and Mr. Kurtz?
What do you think of this conspiracy? and Mr. Kurtz?
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
June Second, 1910
It is evident that Quentin is obsessed with both time and Caddy. Time haunts him always, specifically his shadow and the ticking of his broken clock. Is he driven to commit suicide because it is his only escape from his constant awareness of time? Also, the question of virginity comes up in this section, along with the emphasis on Caddy's promiscuity, which angers Quentin. Does Quentin's anger come from jealousy because he loves Caddy as more than a sister? Or because her promiscuity is embarrassing and shameful for him and the family?
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