A little Chrystal
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
The Truth Shall Set You Free
So...I haven't read out of our texts in about a week, but I have to say that I have read a SHIT load. That's right, I said shit. I read Anne "Essie Mae" Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi this weekend, actually in less than 16 hours, and it was actually fantabulous. It really opened my eyes to the realities of living as a young poor black person in the 50s and 60s. Anne was the oldest of 9 kids, could hardly afford clothes to go to school (her segregated school) and couldn't wear shoes because the one pair she owned was strictly for school. She made great grades in school and actually tutored her white boss' children in math. Anne Moody went to college at a few different institutions and became a civil rights activist and participated in famous sit-ins and marches, including on Washington, where MLK Jr. gave his "I have a Dream" speech.
Anyways, great book--everyone needs to NEEDS TO read it.
Also, I've read The Castle of Otronto by Horace Walpole. That one...not as great. Pretty weird, and I don't think that someone would really gain too much intelligence from reading this, which is reportedly one of the first ever horror stories. A preview: The son of a king gets squished by a GIANT helmet...and then the monarchy falls into chaos. EH. Alright, but not too great.
But, I have been working on my new blog about "A Good Man is Hard to FInd." Check it out ladies and gents! My renderings are pretty sweet. :)
Anyways, great book--everyone needs to NEEDS TO read it.
Also, I've read The Castle of Otronto by Horace Walpole. That one...not as great. Pretty weird, and I don't think that someone would really gain too much intelligence from reading this, which is reportedly one of the first ever horror stories. A preview: The son of a king gets squished by a GIANT helmet...and then the monarchy falls into chaos. EH. Alright, but not too great.
But, I have been working on my new blog about "A Good Man is Hard to FInd." Check it out ladies and gents! My renderings are pretty sweet. :)
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Checker out!
Check out my new blog at www.goodfindchrystal.blogspot.com!!!
I'm pretty proud of my flabulous artwork, but the blog isn't done yet--it's still a work in progress!
I'm pretty proud of my flabulous artwork, but the blog isn't done yet--it's still a work in progress!
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Responses to Barn Burning Questions
1. I think the number one way American teenagers find their own individualiy is to expirement with it. Who are they? Teenagers go through many phases, all in the form of rebellion from their parents, which tests their limits as well as their own selves as to who they are and what they really stand for: Some go through a 'gothic' stage, in which they refuse to conform to society's views of 'normal.' Some go through the drug stage, in which they try to tap nto their rebellious and higher conscious to find the truth in what is right and wrong morally. Some go through the sexually intense 'slut' phase, where they attempt to prove that their bodies are in fact their own possessions and not to be ruled by their parents--the same with piercings and possibly tattoos. I went through a lot of things as a teenager, and I think that if I were to try to rule it down to one particular thing I did to find my own values as a teen, it would be really hard, because I had both my mother's values and my father's values, which were totally different things (they were divorced when I was 12). I went through the 'Goth' thing, which was totally against my mother's values, but not beyond her understanding, and then I went through a bi-curious/bisexual period (I was with a girl for 3 years in highschool) to my father's horror, but my mother's ____<--I'm not sure what word goes there.
2. As someone with 2 other sisters, we destructed a LOT of eachother's things to get back at eachother, but we all felt terrible afterwards. I could never destroy purposefully somebody else's hard earned possession and feel justified. Never. I don't think it's really possible.
3. I don't think the story would have much of an impact if it weren't through Sarty's consciousness. The father's consciousness would have left much less of an imprint on anybody's mind I think, and I believe that his only other option if he watned to make this tory a good one, would have been to write it from his wife''s perspective in trying to deal with her husband's compulsive childlike behavior. Captivating her having to pick up the pieces each time he went on one of his rampades would have been good, and maybe even equally as epic, but he didn't do that--Sarty's perspective was a good choice on behalf of Faulkner.
4. I think the number one symbol in the story is the destructive power of fire, which destructs everything in it's path, including the childhood of Sarty. The initial court hearing of Mr. Snopes drove Sarty crazy. He didn't know whether he should lie, or tell the truth or lie...it was complete chaos in his mind, which is exactly what fire is--chaos. You can not predict the path fire is going to take, who it is going to kill, and what it is going to destroy. All you know is that it is dangerous in many different ways. The father tore apart the family by burning things down. His son was dirty and hungry; it is doubtless because his father couldn't keep a steady job for thef act that he took personal matters into his own hands and grudges led him to destruction of property. When it got to the point when Sarty knew he could no longer either look up to or defend his father, it was too late and everything was ruined.
5. Do the class issues ahve any parallels today...good question...I'll have to think about that one. I think that those who destruct property are those who don't understand the value behind that property. Does that make sense? The father in this story doesn't have any worldly possessions--he has a wagon and a family. Burning barns is easy for him, because he never had to earn the money to build a barn. The money he earns goes to feeding his family, and maybe burning others' possessions helps him feel better because he is hurting someone who, in his eyes has all the money in the world to build another one. On the other hand, because he has never experienced that money, maybe he is hoping to devastate that family as much as he is devastated on a day to day basis so that they see that what they ask of him is far too steep. In today's day and age, it seems like the ones to destrcut others' property are teenagers, who have been given every penny they've ever spent and don't know the value of a dollar. Furthermore, upper class teens don't tend to cause that sort of trouble (surely, they cause trouble, but of different kinds) and it is the lower class teens who seem to devalue possessions--possibly because they see them as unattainable, and also that they will be not be held accountable for those actions because they lack the necessary funds to make up for the loss they've caused somebody else.
6. This is one of those questions I will have to answer after I read it again, because, to be honest, it took me three days to read this story because it started off so...unreadable.
2. As someone with 2 other sisters, we destructed a LOT of eachother's things to get back at eachother, but we all felt terrible afterwards. I could never destroy purposefully somebody else's hard earned possession and feel justified. Never. I don't think it's really possible.
3. I don't think the story would have much of an impact if it weren't through Sarty's consciousness. The father's consciousness would have left much less of an imprint on anybody's mind I think, and I believe that his only other option if he watned to make this tory a good one, would have been to write it from his wife''s perspective in trying to deal with her husband's compulsive childlike behavior. Captivating her having to pick up the pieces each time he went on one of his rampades would have been good, and maybe even equally as epic, but he didn't do that--Sarty's perspective was a good choice on behalf of Faulkner.
4. I think the number one symbol in the story is the destructive power of fire, which destructs everything in it's path, including the childhood of Sarty. The initial court hearing of Mr. Snopes drove Sarty crazy. He didn't know whether he should lie, or tell the truth or lie...it was complete chaos in his mind, which is exactly what fire is--chaos. You can not predict the path fire is going to take, who it is going to kill, and what it is going to destroy. All you know is that it is dangerous in many different ways. The father tore apart the family by burning things down. His son was dirty and hungry; it is doubtless because his father couldn't keep a steady job for thef act that he took personal matters into his own hands and grudges led him to destruction of property. When it got to the point when Sarty knew he could no longer either look up to or defend his father, it was too late and everything was ruined.
5. Do the class issues ahve any parallels today...good question...I'll have to think about that one. I think that those who destruct property are those who don't understand the value behind that property. Does that make sense? The father in this story doesn't have any worldly possessions--he has a wagon and a family. Burning barns is easy for him, because he never had to earn the money to build a barn. The money he earns goes to feeding his family, and maybe burning others' possessions helps him feel better because he is hurting someone who, in his eyes has all the money in the world to build another one. On the other hand, because he has never experienced that money, maybe he is hoping to devastate that family as much as he is devastated on a day to day basis so that they see that what they ask of him is far too steep. In today's day and age, it seems like the ones to destrcut others' property are teenagers, who have been given every penny they've ever spent and don't know the value of a dollar. Furthermore, upper class teens don't tend to cause that sort of trouble (surely, they cause trouble, but of different kinds) and it is the lower class teens who seem to devalue possessions--possibly because they see them as unattainable, and also that they will be not be held accountable for those actions because they lack the necessary funds to make up for the loss they've caused somebody else.
6. This is one of those questions I will have to answer after I read it again, because, to be honest, it took me three days to read this story because it started off so...unreadable.
Final Projectimundo
So...my understanding is that we are supposed to pick any short story from our text and firstly take photos of the elements of fiction with quoted captions from the story itself; pictures of characters, plot, setting, symbols and theme (can we do theme?). We are to know the story inside and out, so that we then can teach that story to the class in a designated amount of time. Also, we should create a blog about and for the story, and write a paper about our experience with this assignment. I'm sort of excited about this project--I just wish there was more time to do it in...My story to follow......
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Barn Burning
So...I was impressed by Faulkner's writing style and thought he was pretty (not just pretty--very) talented in the craft of building fiction in the form of short stories, but he sure confused me. Hepworth said in class that it was very obvious who the antagonist was in the story, "Barn Burning," but I think it was obviously NOT obvious, because I thought the first half of the story's antagonist was the Justice of the Peace. The boy in the story, the protagonist (obvious), looked up to his father for most of the story and sided with his father, as most of us would have done, which leads us to believe that those who went against him or his father would have to have been the antagonists. It is not until the end of the story when we actually get proof that the father really did set fire to the barns, and even then, it wasn't entirely clear to me that it was the father ar all at first, or rather they were innocent victims of coincidence. I'm not completely narrow-minded, however, and gathered that it had to have been the father who set the fires, and the son, once enlightened had a huge problem with it, and ran away forever. What a sad ending--he had a mother who loved him very much as well as an Aunt who surely would have taken care of him with or without his father, as is maternal instinct, BUT the fact that they held him while his father took off toward the barn leads me to believe that they were willing participants. Any takers? What does anyone else think? Were they in on it, or were they just simply victims of a patriarchal society in which whatever the 'head of the household' decides is doable is what becomes done--right or wrong. I'm curious.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Updated Readin' List
Updated Calendar
WEEK ONE
Emily Dickinson
WEEK TWO
Emily Dickinson
Walt Whitman
WEEK THREE
Robert Frost
Walt Whitman
WEEK FOUR
Raymond Carver
Ezra Pound
WEEK FIVE
Raymond Carver
Charles Reznikoff
Katherine Anne Porter
WEEK SIX
Amy Lowell
Ernest Hemingway
WEEK SEVEN
John Steinbeck
WEEK EIGHT
Elaine Goodale Eastman
Poetry
WEEK NINE
Spring Break
WEEK TEN
Sarah M.B. Piatt
Poetry
WEEK ELEVEN
Gary Snyder
William Carlos Williams
WEEK TWELVE
Updike
Faulkner
WEEK THIRTEEN
Faulkner
WEEK FOURTEEN
WEEK FIFTEEN
WEEK SIXTEEN
WEEK ONE
Emily Dickinson
WEEK TWO
Emily Dickinson
Walt Whitman
WEEK THREE
Robert Frost
Walt Whitman
WEEK FOUR
Raymond Carver
Ezra Pound
WEEK FIVE
Raymond Carver
Charles Reznikoff
Katherine Anne Porter
WEEK SIX
Amy Lowell
Ernest Hemingway
WEEK SEVEN
John Steinbeck
WEEK EIGHT
Elaine Goodale Eastman
Poetry
WEEK NINE
Spring Break
WEEK TEN
Sarah M.B. Piatt
Poetry
WEEK ELEVEN
Gary Snyder
William Carlos Williams
WEEK TWELVE
Updike
Faulkner
WEEK THIRTEEN
Faulkner
WEEK FOURTEEN
WEEK FIFTEEN
WEEK SIXTEEN
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