Saturday, May 14, 2011

Tell Tale Heart Analysis

The Tell Tale Heart is one of Edgar Allan Poe's most renounced and mist popular pieces. The story has been interpreted in numerous ways through out history and the details of the story are still debated today. One of the main themes in the story, sanity versus insanity, is examined and intensified with Poe's lack of detail and use of many words. It shows the unnamed murder's true mental deterioration and paranoia. Without detail, it shows the murder's true obsession with only specific details featured in the story including the old man's supposed evil eye, the ever pounding heart beat coming from under the floor where the remains of the dead body are hidden, and the murder's many claims to his own sanity. Is Poe using The Tell Tale Heart to illustrate his own insanity and his wanting to only be a nervous person. After all he did commit suicide resulting from his dark and feisty universe. Poe seems to want to catch the murder in his evil plot possible in the same way he wants to catch the evil that can be lying inside of him wanting to commit the same insane acts as the murder in the Tell Tale Heart.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Short Story First Draft

He was slimy, green and wet. He was mine. I had managed to convince my first grade teacher to give me the class pet turtle for break. He was perfect, the most beautiful box turtle a seven year old could ask for. I had watched him many times before burrowing under wood chips, wading in the small water bowl or nibbling on a strawberry, thinking about how much I would like to have him as a pet. Sweet talking Ms. Leonard only promoted my efforts to make him my own. My parents we excited at my enthusiasm that they also hopped on the box turtle band wagon. My father paid a visit to the local pet shop and purchased a turtle habitat which he later installed in the backyard harden that same day. My mother ventured out to the public library and withdrew various book concerning turtle care and maintenance. The afternoon I brought him home I was as thrilled as ever. He had no name as I can remember but he had found a small place in my heart. As the night fell and I could no longer remain outside or awake with my turtle. It was time to leaving him alone outside in his new turtle habitat mad especially for him. As I laid down in my bed listening to the soft sounds of nature pouring in from the open windows. I could only think of how much I wanted to be with my turtle, how much I would love him. Sunrise seemed to take years to arrive and once I awoke, I immediately woke my parents. I sleepily shuffled down the stairs and ran out to the back yard. To my surprise, my turtle was not in the same spot of which I had left him. In fact he was no where to be found in his tiny habitat. I informed my parents of this discovery and they began to search for the little critter. Eventually, my mother cried out that she had found the turtle, only to be followed by a small squeal of disgust. I soon learned that my mom believed that she did find the turtle that is until she picked up the empty shell, free of any turtle. The barren holes of which were ones occupied by four little legs and a little head were now left open. It seemed as if the raccoon and opossum that over populated my yard during the midnight hours managed to get to my turtle before I could.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

The Magical Mystery Kind

The song "40 Day Dream" by Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes tells the story of Edward Sharpe in a relationship with a woman who is his everything and more. They are living in a surreal dream like world where everything, including their relationship, is perfect and amazing. The song has a theme of love happiness and contentment. In "40 Day Dream", Alex Ebert, the lead singer of Edward Sharpe uses a lot of metaphoric verses and imagery. When Edward turns his girl's gold doorknob eyes, he sees what he truly longs and what he always wants.

Because of this symbolism, the song is able to have many different interpretations and various meanings. Though one may believe the "magical mystery kind,' is the sort of love that Edward Sharpe shares with his girl when really he can be high of a magical mystery kind of drug that he "inhaled just a little bit." which gives him, "no fear of death." The meaning of the song is truly up to the decision of the listener/reader like any good work of poetry is. And oh, now I can die.
Oh I've been sleeping for forty days and Yeah, I know that I'm sleeping cause this dream's too amazing She got gold doorknobs where her eyes used to be, yeah One turn and I learned what it really means to see, yeah  It's the magical mystery kind Must be a lie Bye bye to the too good to be true kind of love Oooooh I could die Oooooh now, I could die  Now I've been sleeping for sixty days and Nobody better pinch me Bitch I swear, I’ll go crazy She got jumper cable lips She got sunset on her breath I inhaled just a little bit Now I got no fear of death  It's the magical mystery kind Must be a lie Bye bye to the too good to be true kind of love Oooooh I could die Oooooh now, I could die  It's the magical mystery kind Must be a lie Bye bye to the too good to be true kind of love Oooooh I could die Oooooh now, I could die

Saturday, April 2, 2011

On the Reservation

Life on a Native American reservation is a very different lifestyle than the modern lifestyle of Americans. Reservation life is very rural and contained. After the much mistreatment of Native Americans in the United States, it was declared that they would have an area of land where they would be allowed to live outside of the rules of the government. Although this may seem all peachy, most of the land that was given to the Native Americans was extremely undesirable. Many reservations are located on soil that is not fit for farming, very far away from other forms of civilization, and in terrible climate zones.

How would you feel if you were a Native American living on one of these reservations? Would you shared the same hatred and bitterness that others do for Americans and the United States government for taking away their land? 

Be Back Later to Finish.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Modern Propaganda 2011

Propaganda as defined in Webster’s Dictionary is information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group, movement, institution, nation etc.; a form of communication that is aimed at influencing the attitude of a community toward some cause or position, but as I see it, it’s definition is a modern day four letter word -  S-P-I-N and during this very heated mayoral race in Chicago,  the spin is out of control!  

Every time I turned on the television in the past week, there was one of the candidates pandering to the camera in a commercial, in a debate or in an interview. Each one attempting to be more charming and believable then others.  Each one claiming that they are the only candidate who promises to tackle unemployment, revamp Chicago’s school system, and put more cops on the beat if elected.  Each one claiming the others have no interest in the poor and working class of Chicago.  In fact, one candidate claims another wants to actually raise the taxes on the poor, while giving the wealthy a pass on paying taxes!  Another candidate claims her opponent is a self proclaimed crack-head!  

I realize mayor of the City of Chicago is a very desirable job, but do the candidates, or should I say their spin doctors, really think the voters believe this stuff?  Do they really think the voters believe that their candidate is the only one that wants safer streets,  smarter kids and booming businesses?   I guess they must, or is it the only way their candidate will get noticed!!

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Beat Street

Beat Street is a 1984 drama film, featuring New York City hip hop culture of the early 1980s. The movie focuses on break dancing DJ-ing and graffiti. From 1984-2011, hip hop has changed drastically.

When hip hop was first forming, it was a new underground style of music, fashion, dancing; a new way of life. It was new to many people outside of urban areas and Beat Street was able to introduce hip hop to the world. Hip hop was about smooth beats, rhythmic delivery, and the clever rhyming of the lyrics.

Now, instead of funky beats, wild outfits, and spinning on your head on linoleum, hip hop, or rap, artists talk about getting high, getting girls, and getting money. The substance beats that started this movement have been replaced by bass rhythms and auto-tune. It seems now that rappers and hip hop artists make music no longer for what they believe in, but for what will sell and make them famous. No longer do they sport puffy jackets and crazy sunglasses; instead they wear their pants at their knees and tattoos as their attire.

Has the original hip hop movement that once was only found in the Bronx move on and forever been transformed into something else? Has Beat Street been closed?

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Hungry for Attention

In Black Boy, by Richard Wright, we see from the very beginning, how young Richard does crazy, outlandish things in order to receive attention, positive or negative, from his mother, father, brother or anyone else around him. He accidentally burns the house down, kills a kitten, and complains of hunger all in order to win over the attention from his family members which is being used on something else. Although Richard's actions are extreme, are we all really so much different from him?

Are we all just hungry for attention? Do we strive for acknowledgment and recognition to make our life complete and satisfy our search to be noticed? Attention is the feeling of approval, that someone cares to give you their time and respect. All people have a narcissistic craving for the world and all of the people in it to revolve around them, the "American Hunger," which Richard clearly amplifies. 

So look into yourself. Do you feel a part of you is always craving the attention of others? Don't fall under Richard's spell where it becomes your life. As we read on we will see how Richard evolves and matures, seeing if he is always starving for attention.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Response: On Being a Mexican American

"On Being a Mexican American" is told from the viewpoint of a man looking back on his childhood. He was raised in America, but being a Mexican immigrant, he always was told to remember his Mexican culture and roots. The author, Mendoza, reflects on how by living in America, he has forgotten parts of his Mexican culture and customs and taken to new Americanized ones.

We recently discussed this essay and this idea in class. Do we all leave behind the culture that we once had? My teacher referred to this idea as a melting pot, where all sorts of ingredients are thrown in but end up mixing and melting together. Is America a cultural and social melting pot? 

Other people said America is seen to be more of a salad bowl, where everyone is their own person and unchanged in any way. Personally, I see America as a kind of chopped salad, like the kind you would find at Portillo's where you can see what the ingredients but they are mixed together as well. Americans try to be their own person and hold on to their cultural roots, while at the same time finding commonalities with others and taking to new ways of life as well. I consider myself an American citizen with Polish ancestry and heritage. How do you see yourself? Have you been stirred into the melting pot or do you lay free in the salad?

Response: Children of the Sea

"Children of the Sea," is a short story in a book entitled Krik, Krak written by Edwidge Danticat. Danticat is a Haitian-American immigrant who frequently chronicles issues or even personal vendettas occurring in Haiti. Haiti is a country in such a depressing state of turmoil that not many people are aware of.

In "Children of the Sea," Danticat writes as two young Haitian lovers writing letters to one another. The boy is on an illegal boat hoping to find it's way to America while the girl remains in Haiti with her family. The boy is fleeing from the corrupt and propaganda filled terror that is the Haitian government. He writes of the hardships of life on a small makeshift boat, over crowded with people, sickness, and little to no food. She tells him of the terrible happenings in Haiti with people being slaughtered and tortured for speaking out against the government. As you read on you find that they are not receiving these letters which is truly heart wrenching and depressing.

Above all in this except is the lawless love the two share. Their unknowable separation makes their love the only thing and everything they have left to share. They fight to live on only for the one last hope they have which is each other. 

Dantitcat writes in an a compatible essay, We Are Ugly, but We Are Here, that on small boats, such as the one the boy is voyaging on, people would throw themselves into the water after days of hardship and starvation, to sacrifice themselves to the Gods. They give up their life to God because they seek the love and power that a new life can give to them, while the boy Danticat depicts sees to it to stay alive for as long as he can because the love he shares with his girl in Haiti is more powerful that the love of God. When you have nothing, to have something, or someone, is more than everything.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Up From Below: Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros Music Review

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros is an American band led by Alex Ebert. Their first full-length recording, "Up From Below," was released July 7, 2009 for digital download and July 14, 2009 in plastic. Many people have hear their most popular single, "Home," which has been featured in a YouTube video, "Guy Walks Across America," an NFL commercial, the movie Cyrus, and various television episodes, but Edward Sharpe is much more than that.

They are the modern hippie version of Arcade Fire with ten members. Their sound and presence are unique. Sharpe and his Zeros dip their one hundred toes into the, "sounds of the 1960s." There are handclaps and horns, sprightly choruses and thousand-part harmonies to give the music a very loose, loving, free feeling. Ebert and Jade Castrinos, the other lead singer, have very unique accents with a sort of whiskey and cigar sound, especially Castrinos. This is music that you typically won't hear on the radio which I like. It is fresh music rather than over played radio garbage. I think everybody should have at least one Edward Sharpe song in their music library. It gives you a sense of music out of the mainstream

Jay & Nick

Nick Carraway and Jay Gatsby are two men who are friends under unlikely circumstances. Nick has lived in his small eye sore house, a neighbor to Gatsby, during his time in West Egg but does not meet Gatsby until he receives an invitation and attends one of Gatsby's parties. They do not immediately hit it off until Gatsby discovers that Nick is a distant cousin of Daisy Buchannan, Gatsby's long lost love. Gatsby then takes more interest to Nick, hatching plans in his head to win Daisy over by using Nick. From there Nick and Gatsby are inseparable.

Many readers believe that this is not a genuine relationship. It would be easy to say that Jay is simply using Nick in order to become closer to Daisy. They come from such different backgrounds, one would think it would be impossible for their classes to mix. Although that may be partially true, Gatsby does share a special bond with Nick that we might not be able to see yet. Gatsby always seeks Nick's opinion or approval before taking action, and also share similar qualities. They are still in the acquaintance phase of their relationship, but with out a doubt, it will soon evolve to more.

Thankful For a Classmate

In the spirit of thanksgiving, we are asked to be thankful for one of our classmates. I am thankful for Dominick Tagler. I am thankful that he lives close to me so that if there is anything that I need or I forget a book or an assignment, I can easily get a hold of him. 

Also I am thankful that he is my friend. Because I am a freshman in a mostly sophomore class I did not know many other people when I walked into class on the first day of school. When I saw he was in the same class as me, it was a sign of relief that I had a friend to talk with or do group work with. 

He is always kind to me which is refreshing, and when he makes a joke, I know he is always kidding. Being able to just complain to him or talk with him is always good. It's pretty funny when he is the butt end of a joke, but probably not to him.

And once again, at this time of year we are asked to look at more than ourselves and be thankful for things in our lives. To be thankful for a classmate, a peer, or a colleague is a way to begin to look within yourself to see what you are thankful for.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

King, Still King

"I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."

These words were delivered 28 August 1963, at the Lincoln Memorial, Washington D.C. These words, along with many others were words that moved a nation. But how much effect does Martin Luther King Jr. have on the present? Is he still prominent figure in American society?

Today, Martin Luther King is more of a legend. Young people have heard about him, and understand what he did in a historical sense, but have no inkling of the emotion behind his work. We have come so far and things are significantly better than what they were. He saw a future for equal rights, not only for African Americans, but equal rights for all. 

You don't see people like Martin Luther King. He did not incite violence; his main focus was peace. Although people have respect for him and respect his work. If you think about what he did while the country was in such a volatile state, it can take your breath away.

"I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation."