The sun didn’t shine as bright in the morning as it usually
did. Its light was faint and left only dim luminous beams, refracting into more
as it passed through the morning dew. It was a quaint morning, one with the
plain sky with only the yolk of the sun. Inside though, it was no less
different than usual. The mom had been successful in gathering the family
together at the table. All of four came scrambling to the kitchen counter where
they would stay there for breakfast. All but the mom, who was already there
waiting with only the patience that a mom could have. Scurrying into the
rightful places, knowing the common routine, practicing the best manners; it
was a daily task belonging to a well molded group. The perfect family had the
best chemistry anyone could ever ask for. Some chemistry that would make others
say, “the grass is definitely greener on the other side.” However, this image
is viewed by outsiders, viewed by people of lesser-knowing, because the four at
the table knew of what conundrums could be drawn between the father and the
son. Problems, that make you question their personalities, make you question if
he’s well-mannered, make you question if he’s responsible, make you question if
they’re actually related, make you question if they could be the people from
the perfect family. These things could
come out of nowhere, arguments seemingly materialized out of thin air. At
times, radical disputes ranged so ridiculously into irrational territory that
reason deemed to be useless in winning and winning would prove the better
orator. But under closer investigation, it would prove “like father like son”
to be utterly untrue.
The Jonny blog
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Summaries
Rules of the Game - Waverly finds passion in the game of chess after learning how to play from her brother. Waverly becomes progressively skilled and talented at chess and begins to compete at competitions where she wins effortlessly. She brings home trophies along with pride for her family, especially for her mom who finds much pride in Waverly's talents. Her mom, Lindo, begins bragging about Waverly, who finds it all unecessary and starts to question the fairness in their relationship.
The Voice from the Wall - Lena's dad is rewarded a promotion at work which forces the family to move to San Fransisco. This new homestead is where Lena discovers that her mother is pregnant and that her neighbors are always in constant bickering. Her mother, Ying-ying gives birth to a baby boy who dies quickly and brings grief to the family. Lena, who is having a difficult time, comforts herself by believing that she has a better life than her neighbors who are always arguing.
Half and half - Rose Hsu Jordan talks about her failing marriage and it's undeniable fate. Her mother tells her that she must have faith in her marriage and that faith can shape fate. Rose goes on and describes a family vacation to the beach in which she loses her brother from carelessness and comes to a conclusion that fate is composed half of expectation and half inattention.
Two Kinds - The sections opens with talks about opportunities in America. June's mother believes that June could become anything she wants to be; even a prodigy. When her mother urges June to work towards becoming a prodigy, their relationship suffers as June becomes resistant to her mother's wills. As June grows more resistant, her mother labels June as disobedient- one of two types of children where the other is being obedient.
The Voice from the Wall - Lena's dad is rewarded a promotion at work which forces the family to move to San Fransisco. This new homestead is where Lena discovers that her mother is pregnant and that her neighbors are always in constant bickering. Her mother, Ying-ying gives birth to a baby boy who dies quickly and brings grief to the family. Lena, who is having a difficult time, comforts herself by believing that she has a better life than her neighbors who are always arguing.
Half and half - Rose Hsu Jordan talks about her failing marriage and it's undeniable fate. Her mother tells her that she must have faith in her marriage and that faith can shape fate. Rose goes on and describes a family vacation to the beach in which she loses her brother from carelessness and comes to a conclusion that fate is composed half of expectation and half inattention.
Two Kinds - The sections opens with talks about opportunities in America. June's mother believes that June could become anything she wants to be; even a prodigy. When her mother urges June to work towards becoming a prodigy, their relationship suffers as June becomes resistant to her mother's wills. As June grows more resistant, her mother labels June as disobedient- one of two types of children where the other is being obedient.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Sentences
1. The overcooked steak was dry and arid.
2. The 4-point-student was always assiduous in his work.
3. The asylum was overpopulated with mentally ill patients.
4. Mr. Rutschman is a very kind and benevolent person.
5. The camaraderie between teammates on a championship team, such as Kentucky's, is very strong.
6. Obama's legislature sent out a censure on Monday in concern of the economic crisis.
7. His reasoning was always cyclical and circuitous.
8. Only Superman, Wolverine, and other superheroes like so are clairvoyant.
9. A great team must be able to collaborate well together to be successful.
10. The compassion that he felt for war veteran compelled and motivated him into serving the community by volunteering at the retirement home.
2. The 4-point-student was always assiduous in his work.
3. The asylum was overpopulated with mentally ill patients.
4. Mr. Rutschman is a very kind and benevolent person.
5. The camaraderie between teammates on a championship team, such as Kentucky's, is very strong.
6. Obama's legislature sent out a censure on Monday in concern of the economic crisis.
7. His reasoning was always cyclical and circuitous.
8. Only Superman, Wolverine, and other superheroes like so are clairvoyant.
9. A great team must be able to collaborate well together to be successful.
10. The compassion that he felt for war veteran compelled and motivated him into serving the community by volunteering at the retirement home.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
EC
Alan Paton characterizes the different genders by showing the difference between how the two are treated differently and how they are mentioned. Paton suggests that women are less intelligent, therefore not advanced as the men, writing : "... some with blankets over the semi-nudity of their primitive dress, though these were all women. Men no longer in primitive dress" (Paton 43), Paton writes that the women are primitive, ancient people who are not yet at the level of the men, who are "no longer primitive" by using the dress to represent their statuses. Paton also writes : "Then she sat down at his table, and put her head on it, and was silent, with the patient suffering of black women, with the suffering of oxen, with the suffering of any that are mute" (Paton 40) to further reveal the status of women in this novel. He writes that "she", who represents women, sat down and was silent with the suffering of black women, oxen, and the mute showing the reader that the women suffer just as the oxen do and just as the mute do. Just like oxen, they work the land to provide food and life for the people; just like the mute, they are unable to speak up, unable to voice opinions and fight for power in this environment. Paton in addition to these examples of sexism, he also writes : "Down in the valleys women scratch the soil that is left, and the maize hardly reaches the height of a man"(Paton 34). In this example, Paton uses diction to show the insignificance of the women, writing that they "scratch" the soil instead of dig up the soil, hoe or scoop. He also mentions that the maize that they farm, the product of their labor, barely reaches the height of man. By saying this, Paton shows the reader that the product coming from the labor of women cannot measure up to the men and their products. Writing these lines in his novel, Paton is able to establish inequality between the two sexes. This establishment further adds to the understanding of inequality throughout the novel. The inequality coming from both sexism and racism gives the reader a perception of the ranks in the societies of South Africa; that the whites, who are the people who establish cities, civilization, communities with higher advancement in technology, have higher authority than the natives, who live tribally in rural areas with lesser development, and that the women are treated with even lower respect that the native men. Paton uses this establishment and development of rankism to give the reader a sense of how people are mistreated, cheated, and abused in a social hierarchy. This sense forces the reader to think about abusive behavior that has begun in ancient times and how it has come to change as humans advance in technology and as a race. Coming across people of great accomplishments such as Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr., Paton is able to have the reader drift off into the vast archives of history and the evolution of equality in the human society to have the reader connect the dots between Paton's works and the world's past.
Jarvis
sat, deeply moved. Whether because this was his son, whether because
this was almost the last act of his son, he could not say. Whether
because there was some quality in the words, that too he could not say,
for he had given little time in his life to the savouring and judging of
words. Whether because there was some quality in the ideas, that too he
could not say, for he had given little time to study of these
particular matters. He rose and went up the stairs to his room, and was
glad to find his wife not there, for here was a sequence not to be
interrupted. He picked up the Abraham Lincoln and went down to the study
again, and there opened the book at the Second Inaugural Address of the
great president. He read it through, and felt with a sudden lifting of
the spirit that here was a secret unfolding, a track picked up again.
There was increasing knowledge of a stranger. He began to understand why
the picture of this man was in the house of his son, and the multitude
of books.
Key
Alliteration
Repetition
3rd Person Point of View
Irony
Internal Dialogue
Key
Alliteration
Repetition
3rd Person Point of View
Irony
Internal Dialogue
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Crying sexism
Alan Paton establishes that men are ranked higher and more dominant in his novel by treating the two sexes differently. He treats the women with a lower respect than the others by saying that they are ones who are down in the valley scratching up the earth to grow maize that hardly reaches the height of a man : "Down in the valleys women scratch the soil that is left, and the maize hardly reaches the height of a man"(34). This tells us that the women are treated as workers or slaves who must work for men, and also that they cannot reach the status that men have. He also writes : "European garments, some with blankets over their strange assortment, some with blankets over the semi-nudity of their primitive dress, though these were all women. Men travelled no longer in primitive dress"(43), saying that men have moved from primitive nature onto more modern lives, thus giving men a higher status than those who have not, the women. Paton also writes : "walking slowly to the door of the church. Then she sat down at his table, and put her head on it, and was silent, with the patient suffering of black women, with the suffering of oxen, with the suffering of any that are mute."(40) to show his comparison and connections that he has made between the women, the oxen, and the mute. His connection is that the women are the workers for society, more specifically men, and that the women are mute and that they have no voice, say or power in the population. Through this, he has erected this civilization where men are more powerful than women, and by this he shows the reader that the purpose of women is to serve men.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
1. The character that is in control of power in Lord of the Flies is Jack. The characters that are in control of power in the Power of One are people of lighter skin.
2. Jack gains power over the boys in the Lord of the Flies by using terror, bribery, and the fear of the beast. The boys are scared of this beast and are convinced that if they side with Jack, they will be able to defend themselves from the monster. People of lighter skin, in the Power of One, take control over others through use of force to instill terror and fear, and technology such as batons and weapons to further add to their purpose, showing their dominance.
3. Jack maintains his position in power by being the leader, the most savage of boys in the group. He leads the boys in hunts, demands dances, and punishes his prisoners to assure his authority in the group. He also is able to provide meat and food which in turn gives him even more support to be the chief from the boys. People of lighter skin maintain power by treating the suppressed poorly and oppressing with force to instill fear and despair; by doing this, the ones under suppression are surely to lose confidence and power, therefore the aggressors are able to uphold their power.
4. Jack's power is not lost nor destroyed in the novel. The power and control upheld by apartheid in South Africa is no longer enforced, so all people in Africa have equal rights and powers.
2. Jack gains power over the boys in the Lord of the Flies by using terror, bribery, and the fear of the beast. The boys are scared of this beast and are convinced that if they side with Jack, they will be able to defend themselves from the monster. People of lighter skin, in the Power of One, take control over others through use of force to instill terror and fear, and technology such as batons and weapons to further add to their purpose, showing their dominance.
3. Jack maintains his position in power by being the leader, the most savage of boys in the group. He leads the boys in hunts, demands dances, and punishes his prisoners to assure his authority in the group. He also is able to provide meat and food which in turn gives him even more support to be the chief from the boys. People of lighter skin maintain power by treating the suppressed poorly and oppressing with force to instill fear and despair; by doing this, the ones under suppression are surely to lose confidence and power, therefore the aggressors are able to uphold their power.
4. Jack's power is not lost nor destroyed in the novel. The power and control upheld by apartheid in South Africa is no longer enforced, so all people in Africa have equal rights and powers.
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