1. All the colors are really similar and bleak, indicating the perceived equality of all people, as in the ideology of communism.
2. He thinks that communism is bad and that it's ruining something that was once good - our society.
3. He's saying that this is what a communist's perfect world would be. Also, he's trying to be ironic by saying that there is no perfect communist society- that communism can't work and could never create a perfect society.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Friday, November 23, 2012
November 15, 2012 ("Soma")
(1) The message that "Soma" by the Strokes is trying to leave us with is that relationships can be very painful and unpredictable. (2) People take soma to relieve themselves from pain, and it is needed in relationships that are painful/ hurtful because they need to try to forget. (3) The song says, "Soma is what they would take when/ Hard times opened their eyes/ Saw pain in a new way". (4) Soma is needed to cure the relatively new and different pain that people experience when they are hurt by others in a relationship. (5) You never know what is coming next when you're interacting with others, especially in a relationship. (6) In the song, the author shows this by saying, "Well I am stop/ And Go/ In your eyes". (7) Since stop and go are opposites, it emphasizes how confusing and unpredictable relationships can be. (8) Due to this unreliability and pain that can be felt, soma can be taken to make it less real and more ideal.
(1) This sentence is the topic sentence, and it introduces the subject of the paragraph: the theme of the song "Soma".
(2) This sentence is support #1 for the claim, and it introduces the first argument: that soma is taken to cure people from hurting relationships.
(3) This sentence is a direct quote from the song used to back up support #1.
(4) This sentence is an explanation of the quote used in sentence (3) to back up support #1.
(5) This sentence is support #2 for the claim, and it introduces the second argument: that relationships are unpredictable and confusing.
(6) This sentence is a direct quote from the song used to back up support #2.
(7) This sentence is an explanation of the quote used in sentence (6) to back up support #2.
(8) This sentence is the conclusion, which wraps up the entire paragraph, and puts everything together in a neat little box.
(1) This sentence is the topic sentence, and it introduces the subject of the paragraph: the theme of the song "Soma".
(2) This sentence is support #1 for the claim, and it introduces the first argument: that soma is taken to cure people from hurting relationships.
(3) This sentence is a direct quote from the song used to back up support #1.
(4) This sentence is an explanation of the quote used in sentence (3) to back up support #1.
(5) This sentence is support #2 for the claim, and it introduces the second argument: that relationships are unpredictable and confusing.
(6) This sentence is a direct quote from the song used to back up support #2.
(7) This sentence is an explanation of the quote used in sentence (6) to back up support #2.
(8) This sentence is the conclusion, which wraps up the entire paragraph, and puts everything together in a neat little box.
November 9, 2012 ("2+2=5")
Subject
The subject of this song is conformity.
Tone
The tone of this song (the author's opinion toward conformity) is that it is bad and shouldn't occur.
Theme
The theme (what the author wanted us to think about) is that you shouldn't conform to outside pressure. You should definitely go your own way, even if other people aren't doing it. We are being fed lies (such as that "2+2=5") and we shouldn't accept them as truth.
The subject of this song is conformity.
Tone
The tone of this song (the author's opinion toward conformity) is that it is bad and shouldn't occur.
Theme
The theme (what the author wanted us to think about) is that you shouldn't conform to outside pressure. You should definitely go your own way, even if other people aren't doing it. We are being fed lies (such as that "2+2=5") and we shouldn't accept them as truth.
October 25, 2012 ("Loss of Innocence")
- innocence- not having experienced enough to be well aware of how things work and their consequences
You can lose something that's not tangible because you no longer have that characteristic. If you no longer can be described that way, you lose it. You lose your innocence by gaining knowledge and experience.
1) One thing in Botacelli's "Loss of Innocence" that symbolizes losing innocence is the mother trying to put a blanket over her, because she is no longer innocent and is out in the open, so she needs to be covered up.
2) A second thing in "Loss of Innocence" that symbolizes losing innocence is the clam opening. This is because she is no longer covered by the shell of innocence, and it has opened and she came out.
3) A third thing in "Loss of Innocence" that symbolizes losing innocence is that she is trying to cover herself up. She has lost her innocence and now she is attempting to regain it, to no avail.
October 22, 2012 ("Don't You Want Me")
What's going on in the song?
The man thinks that he helped her and that she wants him, but she thinks that she was already on her way to becoming something and that she didn't need him. The guy and the girl are breaking up.
How is it possible to have such different takes on the same situation?
When we tell our side of the story, we protect ourselves and paint ourselves and those we love in a favorable light. We all have different perspectives and culture, too.
Example from my own life
When we watched the Presidential debates, different people think different candidates did well, won the debate, etc, due to their own personal bias.
The man thinks that he helped her and that she wants him, but she thinks that she was already on her way to becoming something and that she didn't need him. The guy and the girl are breaking up.
How is it possible to have such different takes on the same situation?
When we tell our side of the story, we protect ourselves and paint ourselves and those we love in a favorable light. We all have different perspectives and culture, too.
Example from my own life
When we watched the Presidential debates, different people think different candidates did well, won the debate, etc, due to their own personal bias.
October 2, 2012 ("Young Life")
3 claims about this painting:
1) The artist grew up in a family where he had to be very independent and fend for himself.
FACT: The little boy is off by himself in the painting.
2) The man and woman in the painting are the boy's parents.
FACT: They are the only ones around, they are transporting the child, and they are significantly older than him.
3) The man just killed the deer.
FACT: It is on top of the truck and he has a shotgun in his hand.
1) The artist grew up in a family where he had to be very independent and fend for himself.
FACT: The little boy is off by himself in the painting.
2) The man and woman in the painting are the boy's parents.
FACT: They are the only ones around, they are transporting the child, and they are significantly older than him.
3) The man just killed the deer.
FACT: It is on top of the truck and he has a shotgun in his hand.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
September 27, 2012 ("Blackbird")
- The single effect is probably the Civil rights movement and that people of all races should be equal.
- "Take these broken wings and learn to fly."- This means that black people (and people of all other races) have been disadvantaged, but that they need to use the fact that they have been broken to pick themselves back up again and keep going.
- "Into the light of the dark black night."- This probably means that they should try to find the light (goodness) in every dark and bleak situation they find themselves in.
- "Blackbird singing in the dead of night."- This means that they have to cry out and try to get better conditions in the black of night (all alone), since no one will help them or stand by their side.
September 25, 2012 ("Shame")
- The subject of this song is an apology for treating a girl badly in the past, and an attempt to make amends.
- The tone of this song is remorseful.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
September 14, 2012 ("Sign Language")
3 Things the Author Does to Push a Single Effect
- the music is feel-good and romantic
- the shots follow each sign for a choppy delivery
- the shots are looking down at the people from the level of the signs
The single effect (how the audience feels after the film) is happy and warm/fuzzy.
One aspect of the film I would change is that I would add background noises, since they are in a busy, high-traffic area. This would change the single effect because it would create less of a feel-good atmosphere and create more of a busy one, which is less romantic, etc.
September 19, 2012 ("Love Language")
1. The purpose of this film is to get the idea that deaf people are the same as we are, except for that they can't hear. Also, I think it is to inform us about deaf youth.
2. The film is effective in achieving this purpose because it gets us emotionally involved in the story because it introduces us to the emotional relationship of the boy and the girl. It also gives us an example to follow because the boy doesn't let her deafness become a problem.
3. I am left with a good feeling, kinda warm and fuzzy. This is because of the choice in music (upbeat, happy, feel-good) and the way the information is presented to us. It's choppy and through writing on sticky notes. This elongates the amount of time between each sentence/ phrase.
2. The film is effective in achieving this purpose because it gets us emotionally involved in the story because it introduces us to the emotional relationship of the boy and the girl. It also gives us an example to follow because the boy doesn't let her deafness become a problem.
3. I am left with a good feeling, kinda warm and fuzzy. This is because of the choice in music (upbeat, happy, feel-good) and the way the information is presented to us. It's choppy and through writing on sticky notes. This elongates the amount of time between each sentence/ phrase.
Monday, September 10, 2012
September 6, 2012 ("Semeadores")
S-The subject of the painting is manual laborers working in the fields.
N-The artist thought that the worker was the best; he was very pro-labor. He was all about fairness in pay & working conditions.
A-The audience of the piece is the employers of laborers. They are probably the most accessible audience.
P-The purpose of this piece is to connect the employer to the worker and make them understand what hard work the worker has to do.
N-The artist thought that the worker was the best; he was very pro-labor. He was all about fairness in pay & working conditions.
A-The audience of the piece is the employers of laborers. They are probably the most accessible audience.
P-The purpose of this piece is to connect the employer to the worker and make them understand what hard work the worker has to do.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
September 5, 2012 ("Good Old Desk")
S-The subject of this is a good old desk, or God, depending on if you view it with the symbolism or not.
N-The narrator probably works in an office building in a cubicle. I think it would be safe to say the desk is his.
A-The audience is people who listen to this genre of music, specifically Harry Nilsson fans.
P-The purpose of this song is to describe a relationship, maybe a symbolic one, between a man and his desk (or something else).
It changes my impression of the song to know that Good Old Desk is an acronym for God because I thought that it was just a weird song about a man who liked his desk. Now I understand the deeper feelings he has about God and the real life connections he is able to make to relationships.
Lyrics that point to this symbolism:
1.) "it's always there"
2.) "the one thing I've got, a huge success"
3.) "keep my hopes alive"
N-The narrator probably works in an office building in a cubicle. I think it would be safe to say the desk is his.
A-The audience is people who listen to this genre of music, specifically Harry Nilsson fans.
P-The purpose of this song is to describe a relationship, maybe a symbolic one, between a man and his desk (or something else).
It changes my impression of the song to know that Good Old Desk is an acronym for God because I thought that it was just a weird song about a man who liked his desk. Now I understand the deeper feelings he has about God and the real life connections he is able to make to relationships.
Lyrics that point to this symbolism:
1.) "it's always there"
2.) "the one thing I've got, a huge success"
3.) "keep my hopes alive"
September 4, 2012 ("The Pinch of Poverty")
S-The subject of the painting is a poor homeless family on the streets on a rainy day.
N-The narrator maybe grew up poor or has a similar experience because he seems to know exactly what these people feel like and wants to portray that.
A-He is painting to upper class people, the people who at the time were the only ones with enough money to buy paintings.
P-The purpose of this painting is to get rich people to understand how poor people feel and what they are going through. It is also to get them to help people who are impoverished instead of just passing them by and not thinking anything about it.
2 artistic techniques that help the artist achieve his vision:
1.) Contrast- parts of the painting are brighter than others showing that there is a glimmer of hope in an otherwise gloomy world.
2.) Positioning - with the family in the foreground, it brings attention to them and makes the mood a bit gloomier
N-The narrator maybe grew up poor or has a similar experience because he seems to know exactly what these people feel like and wants to portray that.
A-He is painting to upper class people, the people who at the time were the only ones with enough money to buy paintings.
P-The purpose of this painting is to get rich people to understand how poor people feel and what they are going through. It is also to get them to help people who are impoverished instead of just passing them by and not thinking anything about it.
2 artistic techniques that help the artist achieve his vision:
1.) Contrast- parts of the painting are brighter than others showing that there is a glimmer of hope in an otherwise gloomy world.
2.) Positioning - with the family in the foreground, it brings attention to them and makes the mood a bit gloomier
Monday, August 20, 2012
August 20, 2012 (Culture)
Culture is the way a group of people acts and what makes them different from everyone else. The things that make up culture are beliefs, art, dance, music, religion, traditions/ holidays, clothing, and food. I think that culture is extrinsic because it is the other members of the group that affect you. If you were born in Brazil and grew up in the United States with an American family and in an American community, you probably wouldn't display any aspects of Brazilian culture.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
August 17, 2012 (The Runaway)
3 facts about the painting:
- both the police officer and the boy are sitting on stools
- the man behind the counter is smoking
- the boy's feet don't touch the floor
3 claims about the painting:
- the policeman is trying to convince the boy to return home
- the boy is the runaway
ANALYSIS:
- Norman Rockwell was trying to portray himself running away as a child, an experience he had
The Pearl Journal #2
As Kino becomes more and more protective of the pearl, it seems he is no longer trying to take care of his son like a good father, but is trying to pave a road for his son materially. It seems his wife is doing all the good parenting (watching the baby, singing him to sleep, calling the doctor, etc.) while Kino is just trying to protect his precious pearl. I think he allows himself to do this because of greed and because he convinces himself that he is doing something good for his son by keeping the pearl safe. He also makes a shift from being peaceful in his village and enjoying the music/ rhythm of life to being suspicious of anyone and anything who might separate him from his pearl. I think we can also point to his greed for the pearl as the reason for this shift.
I think that Kino shows he is foolish, headstrong, and again greedy as he gets his pearl appraised. 1000 pesos is a very large sum of money, and used to be large to him before he got such a big head. Now it seems he is even sticking out in comparison to his neighbors now. Juan Tomas seems to be a very smart man, giving Kino good advice and explaining to him what he should do. Kino would not have such a problem if he listened to Juan Tomas about getting the pearl appraised and about going to the capital. Once Kino beats Juana, his wife who has always loved him, the mother of his child, things go downhill for him very fast. He has very obviously changed drastically as a result of picking up that pearl. He has now turned himself against everyone and everyone against himself. At the beginning, I would not have believed such a gentle and caring man could be so violent and hateful.
The last chapter was by far my favorite chapter because it shows their true colors. Kino and Juana are devastated by the loss of their only son and throw away the only thing that had value to them (and the real reason he was killed in the first place)- the pearl. I was very glad that they threw it away and the trouble was over, but it seemed like a very sad way to end the book. The thing that they had lost so much for, including their only son (who they had wanted it for) was safely in the sea. It leaves the reader with an eerie sort of satisfaction- not that the baby died, but that everything was going to go back to normal.
I think that Kino shows he is foolish, headstrong, and again greedy as he gets his pearl appraised. 1000 pesos is a very large sum of money, and used to be large to him before he got such a big head. Now it seems he is even sticking out in comparison to his neighbors now. Juan Tomas seems to be a very smart man, giving Kino good advice and explaining to him what he should do. Kino would not have such a problem if he listened to Juan Tomas about getting the pearl appraised and about going to the capital. Once Kino beats Juana, his wife who has always loved him, the mother of his child, things go downhill for him very fast. He has very obviously changed drastically as a result of picking up that pearl. He has now turned himself against everyone and everyone against himself. At the beginning, I would not have believed such a gentle and caring man could be so violent and hateful.
The last chapter was by far my favorite chapter because it shows their true colors. Kino and Juana are devastated by the loss of their only son and throw away the only thing that had value to them (and the real reason he was killed in the first place)- the pearl. I was very glad that they threw it away and the trouble was over, but it seemed like a very sad way to end the book. The thing that they had lost so much for, including their only son (who they had wanted it for) was safely in the sea. It leaves the reader with an eerie sort of satisfaction- not that the baby died, but that everything was going to go back to normal.
The Pearl Journal #1
At the beginning of The Pearl, when Kino first woke up, I thought that he was very odd. For one thing, he saw his wife's eyes wide open and didn't say anything to her, which isn't really normal. Instead, he says he's never really seen them closed, and they just get up separately, which I think is weird. They don't really have any dialogue at all. For another thing, he stares at ants, trying to observe them and figure out what they are doing, which is also a little odd. Also, he beats the scorpion to the ground, which really didn't accomplish anything. If I was him, I would have sucked the venom from him immediately instead of taking out my anger first.
I do think that Kino is happy in his own territory, even though he doesn't know a lot about the world in general. He knows the familiar beat of the drum and is very familiar with his routine (and the routine of those around him), but he marvels at small things like ants. Steinbeck also points out that for the natives, there is no way of knowing if what you are seeing is really existing or not. I begin to notice that the sentences are very simple and rudimentary, and the dialogue is simple and to the point. It kind of seems like the language was written by a middle school student for a while. I think the reason for this is that Kino is a simple guy who lives in a simple village, and this theme is kind of represented by the simple language.
I think they are pretty confused about what religion they are and what they believe. When a scorpion appears, his wife chants some ancient prayers. When he goes out to the sea to look for a pearl, she calls out to a monotheistic god, polytheistic god, basically whoever will listen. I think they are trying to stay with their native beliefs but are embracing some new ones desperately. However, when they find out the worth of the pearl, it is like they are not really natives, but are very cultured. He now wishes for his son to be educated, for them to be married in a church, and for him to get some fancy new weapons. It seems like the wealth has gone to his head and he has forgotten his roots. Maybe the pearl will make him become evil. This story seems to be setting up the moral that greed is the root of evil and begets destruction.
I do think that Kino is happy in his own territory, even though he doesn't know a lot about the world in general. He knows the familiar beat of the drum and is very familiar with his routine (and the routine of those around him), but he marvels at small things like ants. Steinbeck also points out that for the natives, there is no way of knowing if what you are seeing is really existing or not. I begin to notice that the sentences are very simple and rudimentary, and the dialogue is simple and to the point. It kind of seems like the language was written by a middle school student for a while. I think the reason for this is that Kino is a simple guy who lives in a simple village, and this theme is kind of represented by the simple language.
I think they are pretty confused about what religion they are and what they believe. When a scorpion appears, his wife chants some ancient prayers. When he goes out to the sea to look for a pearl, she calls out to a monotheistic god, polytheistic god, basically whoever will listen. I think they are trying to stay with their native beliefs but are embracing some new ones desperately. However, when they find out the worth of the pearl, it is like they are not really natives, but are very cultured. He now wishes for his son to be educated, for them to be married in a church, and for him to get some fancy new weapons. It seems like the wealth has gone to his head and he has forgotten his roots. Maybe the pearl will make him become evil. This story seems to be setting up the moral that greed is the root of evil and begets destruction.
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Pygmalion Journal #2
When Higgins and Pickering come in to see Mrs. Higgins in the last act, it seems as if they are actually worried about Eliza's well-being, and may be dynamic characters after all, changing from cold, heartless, and selfish to caring and worried about others. But my expectations were put in their place when Higgins continues to treat her as a lower being or a slave, calling her the "worthless creature we picked out of the mud" and "this thing", and insisting he has "created her". I realized he has not changed at all from the beginning when he took her in.
I was surprised when Alfred Doolittle came in, furious about being turned into a middle-class moralist. This was normally something that poor people of the time would embrace wholeheartedly, yet he is furious about his apparent bad luck. I think this encounter between Doolittle and Higgins shows us a glimpse at how the real world works; as a middle- class man, he has more stress, responsibilities, and people asking him for handouts. I think this shows how the middle and upper classes work even in this day and age.
I was confused, however, at why the author made it unclear whether Eliza would come back to Higgins or go her own way. She made her feelings clear about him, saying that she thought he was horrible and worthless, once even threatening to go and work for his major competitor and rival. In the last act, they insulted each other every which way until I could no longer see any reason why either one of them would want to see the other again. But I did like the ending being questionable because it leaves the reader in the position to figure out what actually happened.
Pygmalion Journal #1
At the beginning of Pygmalion, they don't use the characters' names, but roles in the story so far (GENTLEMAN, NOTE TAKER, FLOWER GIRL, etc). I suppose this is because we have no need to know, for instance, Eliza Doolittle's name; her role in the story at that point is just to be the poor flower girl. I found the MOTHER going to such lengths to find out how Eliza knew her son's name was very interesting. I think it is because she's a snobby old upper class lady who wanted to make sure her son wasn't associating with riffraff like a poor, uneducated flower girl. I think at that point, many of us can associate with Freddy because people (not necessarily our mothers) put labels on us based on class, etc. and try to dictate who we can hang out with based on that. I also find it strange that the woman protagonist is introduced as "not romantic at all" and Higgins seems to have no concern for romance, as a romance seems to be the general pattern for stories such as this.
When Eliza first comes to ask for Higgins's help and her father drops by, I think Higgins is further characterized as uninterested in anyone but himself. When Eliza came by, he was disappointed because he already had tapes of people with her accent. When Alfred Doolittle came by, he was excited to let him in and meet him because he wanted to hear a new accent. He only seems to care about his work in linguistics and how people can be of service to him, not how he can be of service to other people. This is strange because he is not the traditional male protagonist, who is generally heroic and unselfish.
I like the addition of Colonel Pickering to Higgins's one-man-team because as a gentleman, he is a strong character foil to Higgins. I wonder why they put up with one another, seeing that they're so opposite, but the friendship seems to be purely in the interest of linguistics. It makes me glad that Pickering is there when Higgins picks on Eliza and he is there to comfort her. I think if he wasn't there, readers would focus too much on the treatment of Eliza, and not on the real major issues of the book because they would be so shocked at her abuse.
When Eliza first comes to ask for Higgins's help and her father drops by, I think Higgins is further characterized as uninterested in anyone but himself. When Eliza came by, he was disappointed because he already had tapes of people with her accent. When Alfred Doolittle came by, he was excited to let him in and meet him because he wanted to hear a new accent. He only seems to care about his work in linguistics and how people can be of service to him, not how he can be of service to other people. This is strange because he is not the traditional male protagonist, who is generally heroic and unselfish.
I like the addition of Colonel Pickering to Higgins's one-man-team because as a gentleman, he is a strong character foil to Higgins. I wonder why they put up with one another, seeing that they're so opposite, but the friendship seems to be purely in the interest of linguistics. It makes me glad that Pickering is there when Higgins picks on Eliza and he is there to comfort her. I think if he wasn't there, readers would focus too much on the treatment of Eliza, and not on the real major issues of the book because they would be so shocked at her abuse.
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