So I've decided to do my final blog on Flannery O'Connor's "Good Country People." The story is a classic case of appearences being decieving. The mother of the family believes that good country people are the salt of the earth. She wants to make herself look good by hiring people who are poor to work in her household. On the other hand she considers them stupid and beneath her. The bible salesman is who she immediately connects with because who doesn't think a bible salesman who is poor is the ultimate man of trust? The man ends up being more evil than normal since he hurts the daughter and steals her leg. The theme of the story seems to be that while people may have limited means they are just as capable of evil and turning on those who trust them. Even the servant woman who works in the house pushes the daughter's buttons because she can. She immediately sees through the bible salesman since she isn't blinded by wealth or poverty. The bigger idea of deception runs throughout and shows that everyone can be blind to what's in front of them no matter what.
Critical Thinking Question: What other themes do you see in this story? How do both parties come across, do you see a positive to their actions?
Monday, April 20, 2009
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Critical Thinking Blog #11
I decided to look at Sylvia Plath's poem "Morning Song" because it seemed the most cold. In comparision to Ariel which went a bit over my head, Morning Song seems very detached and cold. The woman is talking about having a child, yet feels no connection to her offspring, "I am no more your mother/Than the cloud that distills a mirror to reflect its own slow/Effacement at the wind's hand." She seems to be saying the child is merely a reflection of the mother, much like a mirror, but has no real depth or personality of its own. She also seems to show the burden of childrearing, "...I stumble from bed, cow-heavy and floral" yet still just seems to be stringing pretty words along. The last lines were the most confusing to me, "Whitens and swallows its dull stars. And now you try/Your handful of notes;/The clear vowels rise like balloons." To me it just seems like the child is crying but it also conveys the image of maybe putting something new out in the world. Balloons tend to symbolize belief, change, freedom. Maybe with this child comes freedom of some kind. It just seems kind of symbolic that Plath killed herself with her children in the house and this poem seems to have a detachment to children.
Critical Question: What do you think is the meaning of Plath's poem? Does it say something different about motherhood, or is it even about motherhood at all?
Critical Question: What do you think is the meaning of Plath's poem? Does it say something different about motherhood, or is it even about motherhood at all?
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Critical Thinking Blog #10 - Going to Meet the Man
In the story Going to Meet the Man you follow Jesse as he recounts his racist thoughts and the story of how he witnessed a black man killed and tortured by his father and the townspeople. Throughout Jesse maintains that what he is doing is just and right. While racism is condemned far and wide the story forces you to look at how a racist justifies their actions. Jesse himself even wonders at times whether he is a good person. I think the most powerful indictor of Jesse's racist thoughts come from his tale of watching the black man killed. The townspeople make a big specatcle of going, much like a party, and Jesse eventually considers it a thing of honor to be trusted with watching this event. It boils down to a case of nature vs. nurture. Jesse is raised in a racist enviornment and the racism trickles down to him. His father, being the sheriff, instills in Jesse a sense of pride and eventually Jesse himself becomes the sheriff as well. He takes pride in his father's job, wants to be him, and decides to follow his thoughts wholeheartedly. If Jesse's parents had been against racism things might not have changed at all since the town was behind the decisions as well. When a person is drenched completely in a particular viewpoint it's hard to change and be different. The fact that Jesse has moments of questioning shows that possibly the enviornment is changing and he's being given different views. This concept could also be applied to The Adventures of Augie March since Augie's grandmother is racist, which could cause him to be one as well.
Critical Question: Does enviornment play a big role in Jesse's personality? How does this compare/contrast with the character in Adventures of Augie March?
Critical Question: Does enviornment play a big role in Jesse's personality? How does this compare/contrast with the character in Adventures of Augie March?
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Critical Thinking Blog #9 - The Swimmer
I had an extremely hard time understanding The Swimmer because of the almost whimsical nature of it. The hero tries to swim through everyone's pool in order to get back home. In discussing the story it becomes apparent that this is a pilgrimage in which to seek redemption. In applying that I came to see it as the man was an alcoholic and the water symbolized him coming to grips with that. He swims through the pools of the rich noticing how they're all fake and pretending to be happy and the water (alcohol) allows him to mingle with them. Eventually he discovers one of the neighbors does not drink anymore and that his family has fallen into harsh time. Apparently his drinking has caused things to move on without him and he seeks to swim, free of alcohol, in order to win back his family sober. The most interesting scene is when he's at the public pool. He's uncomfortable because he's thrust into situations with normal people, unlike the "fake" people who live in a nice community away from prying eyes. His dirty laundry is aired for normal people to see. When he finally gets home the house is up for sale and is disarray with his family missing. The message I ended up getting is that, since this is written after WWII, we may have nothing to fear from enemies outside our country, the greatest fear is losing everything over something stupid. The hero loses his family because he could not get past his drunken haze. All he has is this never ending journey to find them and the memories of what they used to be. The fact that he only has a few scattered memories of his family shows he is starting to forget who they even were.
Critical Question: If this is not the message of the story then what is? What clues and scenes can be used to come up with an alternative theme?
Critical Question: If this is not the message of the story then what is? What clues and scenes can be used to come up with an alternative theme?
Monday, March 23, 2009
Critical Thinking Blog #8 - Streetcar Named Desire
In watching the movie and reading the play they were both incredibly similar. I've read The Glass Menagerie and for me I saw several similarities in how the women are portrayed in both versions. In the film version of Streetcar Named Desire Stella is utterly in love with Stanley, her passion for him is so intense he could probably murder someone and she'd be fine with it. It isn't until Blanche reveals that Stanley raped her that she leaves him. I prefer the play version because it shows Stella's need and dependence on Stanley, in the movie she just seems to do it because it is "the right thing" (as deemed by the Hayes Code of Hollywood at the time). In Blanche you see a character who wishes to return to the old days of the Southern belle, something often seen in Williams' plays. Blanche wants romantic love with someone who can protect her and finds Stanley's brute nature a sign that he's beneath her. She considers him and Stella's baby as "diluting the bloodline" in a way but finds it a necessary fact of life in the current time. Stella lives in reality while Blanche dreams of an old world sensebility with manly chivalry. And I'm not gonna lie...Marlon Brando's pretty hot throughout the movie even though he's an ass.
Critical Thinking Question: How is the rape of Blanche the final break in her worldvie, eventually driving her to madness? Would she have gone mad without the rape? And just how hot is Marlon Brando?
Critical Thinking Question: How is the rape of Blanche the final break in her worldvie, eventually driving her to madness? Would she have gone mad without the rape? And just how hot is Marlon Brando?
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Critical Thinking Blog #7
So since there's only one reading this week I wanted to talk about the age barrier in Steinbeck's Leader of the People. Throughout the novel you have the four male characters who represent various age groups. There's the young Jody, the impressionable boy with his childhood innocence, who enjoys hearing about all these great people doing great things and envisioning he might do them someday. Then you have Billy Buck, the young adult ranch hand who seems to be the living incarnation of the grandfather in his younger days to Jody. Carl, the father, is the responsible family man who lives in the here and now and doesn't dwell on things past and then there's Grandfather who constantly talks about his days of former glory. Steinbeck shows all the different generations and the way they interact shows how society views the different stages of life. Jody reveres his grandfather and finds his stories a source of comfort while Carl thinks they're annoying and just the wild tales of an old man who has nothing left in life. Billy seems to go about things with no opinion but it's implied that he find the grandfather someone worthy of looking up to and respecting. The Grandfather is the most heartwrenching character since all he has left in life are his stories. The theme seems to be, when your sole purpose in life is over what is left to do? The Grandfather is shuffled to different areas and unfortunatley his son-in-law can't stand him and it stresses his daughter out to keep everyone happy, the man has to know he's a burden. The only one he makes happy is Jody and even then there's a sadness in the Grandfather's stories because he knows he's nothing in this new and fast paced world.
Critical Question: What does Steinbeck intend to say with all these different men, how do their interactions uncover the main theme of the story?
Critical Question: What does Steinbeck intend to say with all these different men, how do their interactions uncover the main theme of the story?
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Critical Thinking Blog #6
I noticed many similarities with Hemingway's "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and Faulkner's "Barn Burning." The main issue I noticed was the main male characters who seemed like incredibly bitter and selfish men. In Kilimanjaro, Harry is constantly belitting his wife, drinking when she asks him not to and flat out saying he doesn't love her, "I don't think so. I never have" (1985). I never felt anything for Harry except his regret about never writing about the things he should have and his impending death. In "Barn Burning" Colonel Snope's father has bitterness against the upper class and torches their wealth whenever he's taken advantage of. Colonel could also be seen as the wife in Kilimanjaro because they both try to help their significant other and end up being the worse for wear. The wife in Hemingway's story is no wilting flower, capable of hunting and such, but is in a loveless one-sided marriage. Colonel in Burn Burning loves his father and wants to help but is constantly torn between familial duty and doing the right thing. Both of the characters have this sense of regret and hatred, more expressly stated in Kilimanjaro than in Faulkner's story. Both stories focus on fear and also that the men are in powerless positions, the father is lower class and Harry is dying. Both are unable to do anything about their situation, yet have family trying to support and reassure them.
My critical thinking question is what do you think Hemingway and Faulkner were trying to say with their main characters? How does regret and loss come into the plot of both characters and create their actions?
My critical thinking question is what do you think Hemingway and Faulkner were trying to say with their main characters? How does regret and loss come into the plot of both characters and create their actions?
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