Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Responsibility

Responsibility is taking ownership of your actions and the consequences of those actions.
When you decided to come to Classic City High School, you decided to take greater personal responsibility for your education.
The decisions you make in my absence can have a large effect on your grade or your credit.
Please be RESPONSIBLE.
I will be checking work in the next few days, so it may be a little while before you receive a response from me. Continue checking this blog and your e-mail daily.
In the meantime, read post below this one that has some examples of excellent work, or you can check out this cuteness.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri pages 1-198



I keep a list of all the books I finish every year, and every year when I get to the end, I realize a read very few books written by women or people from other cultures. This year was the same, and that is why I bought this book.

I was wanting to read a novel, so I may not have chosen this book of short stories if I had not been in a hurry. I enjoyed Lahiri's stories better than most, though.

The best thing about reading literature from other cultures is what you learn about different people. Most of the characters in these stories are married couples, so you get to learn a lot about Indian marriage traditions through these stories. I was also exposed to other cultural elements like Indian clothing, jewelry, and food as well as their special significance.

I would reccomend this book to others.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Very Nice!

I am very pleased with the work I have seen from all of you this semester. Please keep it up right until the end.
Here are a few examples of the best work I have seen lately:
Johnny Wallace: Why Auburn is Going to Beat Georgia this Year (good writing, but a bad prediction)

The Transcendentalists can be one of the most confusing groups to study in American Literature, but they did not slow down Natasha Long or Jamal Arnold.

Jim Hayes got Medieval.


Monday, November 13, 2006

Modernism

What is the American Dream?
Can you define it?
Is the American Dream a Reality for all Americans?
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The Great War (World War One) lasted from 1914 until 1918, and The United States became involved in 1917. The war was fought to protect humanity around the world, but became a bloodbath before long at all. Nearly 1,000,000 soldiers were killed in the Battle of Verdun alone. This was one of the first times modern technology like airplanes, poison gas, tanks, and other machinery were used to kill large numbers of people. World War One was a turning point for America and the rest of the civilized world, and it had major effects on the literature of our country.
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One of the biggest themes of Moderist American Literature is disallusionment. Disillusionment is defined as freeing oneself, or getting away from an illusion, or getting away from ideas that have no logical basis. One of the most common targets of disillusionment was the American Dream -- the idea that the United States of America was a land of opportunity and that all its people were virtueous. Many writers were beginning to see that this wasn't all true, and they were not afraid to attack this ideal in their work.
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This idea of disillusionment set the stage nicely for the Harlem Renaissance, when African-American artists were beginning to enjoy some mainstream success. These artists expressed the illogical nature of the American Dream since they especially were not permitted to enjoy the lifestyle it seems to guarantee. Many black soldiers who came home after serving in Europe immediately recognized that they were not treated with the same respect in their own homeland as they were in Eurpe. Many of these artists were the children and grandchildren of former slaves, and they too were ready to show that the American Dream was not quite the reality people thought. In their writing, music, and painting Harlem Renaissance artists either focused on the inequities that black Americans faced or celebrating the black American culture many people had not seen in art until this time.
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Throughout the United States there was increased interest in the field of psychology, and this also showed up in the new literature. Look for instances where the author is inviting readers to look inside the minds of the charaters to figure out what may have contributed to their struggles.
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The United States government also decided that alcohol was central to the social evils in the country, so they made its distribution and manufacture illegal in 1919. This contributed to the prevalence of speakeasys (illegal bars) and gangsters who became good at distributing illegal booze. You have probably heard these people refered to as "bootleggers". This shows up in Modernist literature as well. Many people call this the Jazz Age, and you can see many examples of speakeasys, jazz music, and an illegal lifestyle that was pretty common amoung social Americans.
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Many American artists who had served in Europe during the war decided that Europe had more to offer than the United States. These people thought that the American Dream that they had heard about so much was not true, and they enjoyed the more lively and inexpensive lifestyle in Europe. This group, who chose to live mostly in France included writers like F. Scott Fitzgerald, Earnest Hemmingway, and Gertrude Stein came to be known as the Lost Generation.
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Please post the following to your blog:
1. Choose one of the topics above that you are most interested in studying: Disillusionment, the Harlem Renaissnace, The Jazz Age, or Phychoanalysis. Write a paragraph that describes why you made this choice and how you expect to see the topic you chose represented in the literature you are about to read.
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2. Read the story that coresponds to the topic you chose. Chose a topic according to your interests, not the length of the story. Choosing a story because of its length is not the wisest way to approach this assignment.
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The Harlem Renaissance -- Sweat or The Gilded Six-Bits by Zora Neale Hurston can be found here.
The Jazz Age -- Choose a story by F. Scott Fitzgerald here.
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When you are through reading, you should type a two-paragraph response to the story you read, and then provide another two paragraphs in which you analyize the topic you chose and how it is represented in the story. You need to be sure to provide quotes from the story to support what you claim.
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3. Read the followin poems. When you study poetry, it is a good habit to read each selection MORE THAN ONCE.
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Richard Corey by Edwin Arlington Robinson
Mending Wall by Robert Frost
A Dream Deferred by Langston Hughes
The Negro Speaks of Rivers by Langston Hughes
Incident by Countee Cullen
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Write a paragraph response to each poem in which you explain your opinions about what is being written as well as identify one of the elements of Modernism in each. These paragraphs must contain direct evidence from the poetry to support whatever claims you make. Please be thorough enough in this section so not to have to go back and make adjustmetns after I read your work.
SELF-EVALUATE YOUR WORK!!

ELAALRL1 The student demonstrates comprehension by identifying evidence (i.e., examples of diction, imagery, point of view, figurative language, symbolism, plot events and main ideas) in a variety of texts representative of different genres (i.e., poetry, prose [short story, novel, essay, editorial, biography], and drama) and using this evidence as the basis for interpretation.

ELAALRL2 The student identifies, analyzes, and applies knowledge of theme in a work of American literature and provides evidence from the work to support understanding.

ELAALRL3 The student deepens understanding of literary works by relating them to their contemporary context or historical background, as well as to works from other time periods.

ELAALRL5 The student understands and acquires new vocabulary and uses it correctly in reading and writing.

ELAALRC2 The student participates in discussions related to curricular learning in all subject areas.

ELAALRC3 The student acquires new vocabulary in each content area and uses it correctly.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Will in the World by Stephen Greenblatt p 200-390


I am relieved to be finished with this book. It was interesting for the most part, but I am ready for something a little less dense.

My favorite of the last chapters was the one about King James and how Shakespeare used the knowledge of the King's superstitions to write Macbeth. Apparently, King James wrote a book about withcraft, so the witches in Macbeth surely would have interested the King.

The end of the book mostly concerns some of Shakespeare's land deals and his will.

This was not a real page-turner, but I am glad I read it.