Sunday, April 29, 2007

Book

This book has been pretty good so far. I do agree with that it is very graphic in detail and controversial. I can't believe how graphic they make the scene with the father and Bone. It's really horrible. They also explain how Bone masturbates to her fathers beating which I find very odd. The book is alright but hard to get through because it's boring. I also don't understand why the mother doesn't leave the husband and take the kids if the husband is so bad to her daughter. She knows that her husband beat her and just lets it go. That's really horrible.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Cherrylog Road

This poem was very interesting to me. It had great description of a car. The car was a '34 ford. For example it says,"Releasing the rust from its other color." That is a great description of the car. The story also has many sexual inuendos in it. For example,"So the blacksnake, stiff with inaction, curved back into life, and hunted the mouse." I didn't realize it while I was reading it but when you explained it in class I understood. It also describes the two people as doing something wrong and they have to sneak to do it.
This poem is a good poem because it has great description and good analogies.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Walking on Water Poem

This poem remined me of happiness that the person is walking on water. In the first stanza the author uses great description. An example from the passage is,"And poled off, gliding upright onto the shining topsoil of the bay." That awesome how she describes her walking on the water. The author also describes how she is crossing over between the two worlds, which are the land and sea. "Between two open blue worlds." She also describes how she doesn't make marks in the sea but when she goes onto the land she makes marks in the sand which shows that she did walk on water. She also talks about how she was alongside pelicans and beneath her was a shark. The shark was stalking her.
I thought the author was a very good writer and really has great description. In the end I made the connection that the person actually died and went to heaven. That's what it seems to me. I got this impression because it says that she's just waking. It also says that the king's grave turns you to light. It said all darkness is no more. It all relates to heaven.

Sunday, April 1, 2007

Movie vs. Book Streetcar

I thought the movie was very similar to the book. I remember all the lines were exactly the same in the book and the movie. In the movie you really saw how aggressive Stanley was. He hit his wife very hard and was very aggressive with Blanche. I don't know how somebody could be so mean.
One thing that I didn't like was how Blanche sometimes just kept going on and on and didn't let any character get a word in edgewise. It was pretty annoying. I also thought it was weird how she kissed the boy that comes to the door. It was very strange that she would kiss a stranger on the lips. Then you see Mitch come to the door and what if he caught her kissing him. Mitch would not have been happy. I also don't understand why she leads Mitch on put never lets him touch her at all. What makes Mitch not desire her anymore and stand her up is that she lies to him. He finds out that she's not straight and has slept with many people in random hotels. He says, "You're not clean enough for me."
Also, Stan finds out that she got kicked out the school she was teaching in because she had an affair with a kid that was 17.
I thought the ending in the movie and the book were weird. I didn't really understand until someone told me that she was taken off to a hospital. It was weird how Blanche thought it was someone taking her on a cruise to an island. It's really sad that she got that messed up in the end.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

A Streetcar Named Desire

I found this reading to be very uninteresting and boring. Nothing really happened. Blanch comes to visit her sister Stella. Stella's husband is messed up in the head. When he's drunk he hits Stella in front of everybody. I think that that's pretty messed up. Also we find out that Stella is having a baby.
Blanche tells Stella that her husband is an animal for hitting her. Stella tells her husband that if he hits her again she will call the cops. During the story Blanche flirts with a lot of guys. One is Jim who plays cards with the guys. She also flirts with a young man who comes to the door. I guess that's part of her character. A quote from the story is, "Has anyone ever told you that you look like a young Prince out of the Arabian nights?" I think this is very weird what she says. She also kisses him. That's weird to just kiss a person you don't know.
I really found the reading to be very boring and waste of time.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Their Eyes Were Watching God

It starts off that the girl lives with her grandma in the south. Everything is going fine until the Grandma makes the decision that her granddaughter will get married. I don't why why she makes that decision at such a young age. She has plenty more years to get married and she could've waited longer in my opinion. The gets married to this guy named Logan who makes her do a lot of work around the house which she doesn't like and tells him that to his face. She just wants to stay home and be an in house wife. This man comes along one day named Joe Starks and he tells her that he would be the best husband for her. She decides to leave Logan and go with this guy. This is a big mistake because he turns out to be just as bad. Joe Starks is the mayor of the town and runs everything. He doesn't allow his wife to speak at an open public speech he gives. The town says that they want to hear what his wife has to say and he doesn't let her. A quote from the novel is,"Thank you fuh yo' compliments, but my wife don't know nothin' 'bout no speech makin'. I never married her for notin' like dat. She's a woman and her place is de home." It seems like Joe is very degrading to woman. It annoys me that he just wants all the glory and his wife can't take any of the power. Then Joe tells her that he wants her to work in the store while he's being mayor putting her to work. It's very weird how he contradicts himself. He says that he wants her to be an at home wife then puts her to work in the store.
In the end Janie is not happy with her life and speaks her mind to Joe. She says she's not enjoying being his trophy wife.

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Barn Burning

In the story Barn Burning the father goes around town to town and burns barns. He drags the kid in with him too which is wrong. The kid knows that it's wrong and doesn't want a part of it but doesn't know how to tell his father no. He's faced with a conflict. Either he can turn his father in or continue letting his father keep burning the barns. It's a tough decision but if I was in his shoes, I would know that my father is scum and would turn him in.
Abner Snopes, the father, is just a bad spirited person. He has a lot of anger built up inside of him and feels that everybody's out to get him. An example of a bad thing that he does is that he wipes his dirty feet on the governor's rug. It's to show him that he doesn't support his gov't. The family is part of the lower class and are white trash. That's why Abner Snopes has to resort to bad things because he feels so low about himself. He also sees himself as better than black people because they are the discriminated race and that's what he does to feel better about himself. He says that he's at least not black. It's just such stupid thinking.
I'm very glad that in the end Sarty runs away and doesn't join his father and his father gets shot.It's good because his father got what he deserved. Sarty kind of becomes a man when his dad dies because he's on his own and is in control of the family.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Dry September

Dry September was an interesting story. I couldn't believe that they white men just immediately jump to the conclusion that the black man,Will Mayes, raped the white woman. They just have that tendency that if a person is of that skin color that that person is bad and should be treated differently. It's amazing that they had no evidence to jump to a conclusion like that and yet they just do it anyway. I found this quote to be amazing too. "What the hell difference does it make? Are you going to let the black sons get away with it until one really does it?" In other words he's the rape might not have even taken place but the black person probably will do it. It's about the dumbest thing I've ever heard. I think the kid was right to stand up for the black guy and say not to kill him. He knew it was wrong and I'm glad he didn't back down and didn't take part in the awful act. No matter what names they called him he just never backed down. In the car he actually jumped because he just coudn't take part in it. I really look up to him for that.
I found it weird that the woman was happy that she told them that he raped her and that they killed him. She's also seen as high and mighty because she did that. I think towards the end though she knew it was a bad thing to do and regretted it. She didn't like all the attention she got. She realized it was a bad thing and knew she shouldn't have got that attention for it.

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Kate Chopin

I think Kate Chopin is a very good writer. She introduced things that not many authors of her time said. One example was how she ended the stories. They ended with bad things happening. For example in the end of "The Storm" the two people get away with having an affair. The husband and wife don't find out. Also in "Desiree's Baby" the woman kills herself and the baby. So both those stories have not good endings as far as morals and happiness go. Kate Chopin does another thing that not many authors of her time did. In the storm she goes into great detail of a seduction scene. For example, "The contact of her warm, palpitating body when he had unthinkingly drawn her into his arms, had aroused all the old-time infatuation and desire for her flesh." I couldn't believe the detail she went into because I never have read something like that in a book before. You could picture what was going on. I thought it was very sad in the story "Desiree's Baby" that the husband left the wife because of the skin color of the baby. It's very upsetting that race had such an effect on people. Everybody should be equal no matter what color skin a person has. I'm glad times have changed now and everybody is viewed as equals. This story also reminded me of the story Thomas Jefferson wrote because it was all about slavery and how the blacks were treated unfairly. "The Storm" was like that because the wife was thrown away because the father blamed her for the baby's color. Meanwhile the father is black too and he didn't even look at his own self. He just assumes it's the wife that made the baby black because she's a woman and they were viewed as less then men.
I also found it interesting to learn about the class status that was in the stories. In "The Storm" the creoles were viewed as the wealthier group and they were the descendants of the Spanish people. The cajuns were lower than the creoles and were the peasants and farmers. It was interesting to see in the story how no matter what the classes, the creole went with the cajun. It was because they had a special connection with each other. I like how they defied the rules and, in the end, went with each other. Also they didn't get caught. They got away scot free and were very lucky that their husband and wife didn't find out.

Sunday, February 4, 2007

Frederick Douglass

Frederick was another one of the literary giants in the south. He was one of the biggest writers of the African Americans. Him along with many other of the leading black writers had to leave the south and go north to begin their writing.
I can't believe all the things that Frederick Douglass had to go through as a slave. It's really traumatizing what he had to deal with. One think that was very traumatizing was that he had to see his aunt be beaten to a bloody pulp. I don't know how he got through such hard times. A quote from the book is,"I have often been awakened at the dawn of day by the most heart-rending shrieks of an own aunt of mine, who he used to tie up to a joist, and whip her naked back till she was literally covered with blood." I can't imagine even putting myself in that situation. It's just so horrible. He even to go through many beatings of his own.
Another thing I had trouble understanding was how difficult to please the masters were. For example when the master is describing things that were not perfectly done to the horse. "He has not been sufficiently rubbed and curried, or he has not been properly fed, his food is too wet or dry." It just really annoyed how nothing would ever please them. These things are also irrelevant and stupid too. Then, because of this, the slaves would get whipped and beaten. Another thing that surprised me was that the slaves were not clothed properly for the weather. If the masters want to keep the slaves and not have them die then they should have them wear a lot of layers in the bitter cold and not a lot of clothes in the summer. As described in the story Douglass didn't even have shoes on his feet in the winter.
I really admired Frederick Douglass because even though he was going through all these hard times, he still managed to learn how to read and write. He didn't want to be illiterate, he wanted to be smart. If I was going through all that that would probably be the last thing on my mind. I wouldn't care about learning how to read at all. Another thing I admired about Frederick Douglass was that he fought back and started fighting his masters. An example from the reading is,"I seized Covey hard by the throat; and as I did so I rose. He held on to me, and I to him. My resistance was so entirely unexpected, that Covey seemed taken all aback." I'm glad he didn't feel like taking the abuse and stood up for himself. I'm also glad he ran away and made it to the north where there is no slavery. He had to make a decision to either get killed while trying to run away or continue getting beaten by the master and he chose to run away. I'm glad he did because we would of never known about this courageous man if he didn't.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Swallow Barn

Swallow Barn is the perfect american village. It has a mansion that is very old and worn out. Kennedy says that it should have been abandoned a long time ago. The roof was caving in and the door was falling off its hinges. The village has beautiful shrubs and a stream. The barn has terrible trees and a barn that is disjointed.
Kennedy was a very interesting author. He said that slave women were portrayed as being happy and liked working for him. He also stated that the women liked being home and taking care of the young, mischievous kids. Kennedy wrote about the stereotypes of the south. He wrote about people's places in society.
Frank is the owner of Swallow Barn. He has a good temper, good cheer, has a comfortable figure, and is handsome. A quote from the book states,"I think he prides himself on his personal appearance, for he has a handsome face, with dark blue eyes, and a high forehead that is scantily embellished by some silver tip locks."He dresses new and glossy. He goes to Washington one day because he wants to investigate politics there. He gets disturbed by what he hears. He comes back very pissed off at Congress. When he comes back he says he agrees with the things that John Adams says. "Frank relapsed into an indolent man of opposition." Frank became a public man and now thinks that a good citizen shouldn't solicit nor decline office. He thought that Virginia supports the Constitution very much. He agrees with the things that John Smith says. Frank still is very indecisive about congress though. When he's with his friends he goes back to his old self and the beliefs about congress that he once had before. He is all the stereotypes of a southern gentleman. He also is nice to his slaves so he's seen in good light with them. Frank thinks of himself as a high churchman and says that he goes all the time but nobody sees him there. He contradicts himself a lot.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

John Smith

It was interesting to learn about John Smith. I learned about many things that I did not know about him. I did not know that he wrote many myths and that he was one of the first ones to do that. A quote from The Literature of the American South states,"Although he was born in England and spent only three years in Virginia, Captain John Smith is generally considered not only the South's but also North America's first important literary mythmaker." In his myths he wrote about how people should colonize and that it is there duty to farm. He said if they don't do that then they're disobeying their religion and God. I also didn't realize how much John Smith was like Columbs. He behaved just like him in that he invaded the Native Americans land and took advantage of them. Killed many of them and took there land. Through all this he didn't realized that he was being the same bad man as Columbus. He lead an army and founded Jamestown. His pholosophy was that men that had good spirits and were hard working would get farther. He got recognition from England readers because he always wrote in the third person about himself and so people thought of him as a hero. He always said good things about himself and so they looked up to him. He also made many good comments about Virginia that it was a good place to live.
My feeling is that John Smith was a good man in that he taught people how to live life to the fullest and that they had a good life in Virginia. He was bad because he stole territory from the Native Americans.