Sunday, May 4, 2014

Chapter 13 Sound and Sense

I felt the poem "Blackberry Eating" would be an interesting poem to explicate in contrast to the poem on blackberries we wrote an in-class essay on. In Galway Kinnel's poem, "Blackberry Eating" he describes the joys of eating ripe blackberries and connects sounds and meanings throughout the poem.Throughout the poem Galway is able to illustrate the richness of language by comparing it to blackberries. He says the words "strengths" or "squinching" are like blackberries because they have many letters but only one syllable. Just like a blackberry is made up of many little clusters, but only one blackberry. However, the blackberries are tangible while the words are not. Galway is able to describe all the pleasures of eating blackberries, the way in which they fall to his tongue, how they feel in his hands, and how they feel to eat. All of this is a very enjoyable experience that Galway seems to wish he could have with words. However, through sound Galway almost does achieve this tangibility. In the very end of the poem Galway repeats the s sound "squeeze" "splinch" "surge" and so on. These s sounds are very pleasing to the ear and emphasize how pleasing the experience is of eating blackberries. This poem follows the patterns of a sonnet and this further adds to the enjoyment of the poem. At some points, Galway creates lists within a line of the poem. The lists within the lines are kind of like the shape of a blackberry, small clusters that create a blackberry. I believe the comparison between the berries and the "peculiar words" is appropriate. Reading/writing and eating are two things that people tend to do naturally and can miss the enjoyment in. Sometimes we read to pass time or to pass classes, while really we could be missing the true beauty of the language. Similarly, eating we do to stay alive and often miss all the beautiful flavors and colors.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Chapter 12: Sound and Sense

In Sylvia Plath's poem "Old Ladies Home" she uses a omnipresent speaker to portray death through a journey in the home of  elderly women.  The poem slowly leads up to the concept of death. In the first stanza, the speaker observes what the surroundings. Most of the words she uses to describe the house relate to nature like "beetles," "earthenware," "sun," "rocks," and "heat." I think this is to show how connected to the earth the elderly women are. In a really dark way....they will soon be in the earth, but on a lighter note they are so old and distracted by so little. Plath even writes that the pictures of their grandchildren are distant, showing they dont care so much about things anymore.Also, the pieces of nature she chooses to describe seem to be very frail like the breath and the beetles. If someone just steps on a beetle it will die and that echoes the condition the women could be in.  Next, the speaker observes what they are doing like knitting and the different sounds of their voices. I think this is a retirement home where maybe a funeral is taking place. She uses the word black a lot and writes about bonneted ladies, which makes me picture a funeral. One of the questions pointed me to the last line of the poem in which there are only 6 syllables in the last line. Throughout the poem each stanza is 7 lines with 7 syllables in each line, except for the last line of the last stanza. This represents death. It is all of a sudden and goes along with a line that talks about a shortening of breath. I really liked how Plath did this because it made me appreciate how rythm and meter can do more than just make the poem sound pleasing to the ear, but they can really have a deep meaning.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Gabriel Garcia Marquez: The Third Resignation

After reading some of Marquez's work it became clear to me he has a fascination with death. I still don't know much about his personal background, but if I had to guess he must have had a very interesting life. Maybe a conflict with religion or maybe many family members dead. In the Eyes of a Blue Dog, the story begins with the description of a man struggling to move. He writes how he wants to squeeze his temples and how he wishes he could catch a cat. The language is very descriptive and vivid. It was kind of hard to decipher that the person being described was dead for a while. At first, it is clear there is some sort of paralysis holding the person back but its not that clear whether it is physical or mental. While the narrator of the story is seemingly dead, he seems to have a grip on everything going around him. He mentions the stench of the rotting corpse and the sounds of the dishwasher. The boys mother orders him an extra large coffin for him to "grow" into. I don't know if maybe this is a cultural or a religious tradition, but I found this part hard to understand. I took it literally at first thinking maybe the boy was on some sort of life support and wasn't actually dead, then i thought that maybe he is dead and his mother bought a large coffin to take away the pain of  small boy dying...Not really sure. Then, the last paragraph of the story changed everything for me. I thought that maybe the narrator was someone looking at a coffin realizing that could be them. The story was complicated and hold deep meaning. I believe that after more research on Marquez and applying his life to this story will make it easier to understand and help me derive more meaning from it.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Chapter 10 Sound and Sense

The poem For a Lamb by Richard Eberhart has a very dark and vivid tone at the start. The poem gives a vivid image of a dead and mangled lamb lying atop daisies. Daisies are a white flower and white things often represent purity. At first I thought that maybe the lamb was tarnishing the purity and innocence, but a lamb is white also. The figure tarnishing the purity and innocence is whoever hurt the poor, sweet lamb. Eberhart notes that "the guts were out for the crows to eat" creating another disturbing image of an animal being eaten. The author tries to cover these descriptions up with the fact that the sheep is asleep. Erberhart says, "the sleep looked deep" implying that while it may sound painful, the lamb is asleep so it doesnt matter. This image immediately made me think of an image of Jesus Christ when he is on the cross. Jesus is presented with a crown of thorns around his head, like the lamb has daisies. While daisies and thorns are slightly different, I believe the image of jesus is still prevelant. The second stanza of this poem is much more ambiguous than the first. In the first stanza the reader knows exactly whats happening, but as it progresses, the lamb seems to lose its clarity. The first few words are "Where's the lamb" maybe implying that however this lamb died, it may still have an owner still looking for it. The lamb is "in the wind" showing that the owner or whoever proposed the first question could not handle hearing that it had died. The author again changes the reality of the gruesomeness by saying "there's a lamb in the daisies" in the last line.

Thursday, February 27, 2014

"How to Write About Africa"

"How to Write About Africa" was a hilarious article. The authors sarcastic sense of humor made the subject much lighter, while still being able to convey his message. The idea he brings forward, that Africa is always portrayed as in need and suffering, is one I have thought about a lot. In 2012, when the KONY video went viral, a man spoke at Model UN on the African response to this video. I had seen the 30 minute KONY video and had found it inspiring and a great cause, but after learning about how the African people felt about it, I had to think again. Many people responded saying they didn't need the help and the problems caused by Josef Kony were greatly exaggerated in the video. I have never been to Africa so I don't know the truth about the video, but it was hard not to trust the words of the African people. I think as American people, we always see African in a sad and struggling light, like the author sarcastically suggested that when writing about Africa we must overlook all the natural beauty and the beauty of all the different cultures represented in one nation. The author is able to point out different flaws in literature about Africa by telling the reader what to and what not to do. Basically, everything he says not to do is pointing out what they should do and vice versa. One line that stood out to me a lot was, "animals, on the other hand, must be treated as well rounded, complex characters." I've never realized how true this is. While watching apocalypse now, I think I was the saddest when they brought the puppy into the scene. Even though its Vietnam and not Africa, it's still a similar concept. It also reminded me of the Lion King and how the animals in it are so heroic and brave, but I have never seen a movie about actual African people where this is the case.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Chapter 9 Sound and Sense (paired poems)

"My Number" and "I had heard it's a fight" are two poems that deal with the topic of death in different manners. Billy Collins' poem, "My Number" personifies death as human like. He goes through different actions that a human would do like, "breathing," "reaching," "scattering," etc. His relationship with death seems much more casual; the speaker knows that death will come, its human, but he doesnt really want it to come. The speaker in Collins' poem can be seen as cowardly. Rather than confronting death and fighting it, he hopes that death is too busy with other people to notice him. Instead of using his last bit of energy to fight off death, he hopes to "[talk his] way out of this." The speaker also seems distracted by death. He writes all about the things death has done, like "scattering cancer cells," instead of writing a poem about his life. While the speaker spends a lot of his time thinking about what death is like he is distracted from his own life.  In Edwin Denby's poem, "I had heard it's a fight" the speakers relationship with death is much more strained. He seems to be less familiar with the idea, but ready to fight it. Denby seems to have learned a lesson that Collins hasnt yet, and that is not to pay too much attention to death. Denby describes an incident where he let death come a little too close, but like a schoolboy drinking for the first time, quickly put it to an end. He uses the words "crazy" and "quick" to show how important it is to lead a meaningful life in his last two lines. Unlike Collins, he doesnt see death as devious, but something that will just happen. While Denby seems to be less scared of death, I thought that Collins poem was enjoyable also. Collins is able to make it kind of comical, despite his clearly negative view.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Apocalypse Now and Heart of Darkness

I watched Apocalypse Now before reading the last part of Heart of Darkness and I was able to some similarities and some differences. The most notable difference was that the first hour and a half of the movie was pure violence. It became hard to pay attention because of all the blood and gore. Also, another small difference was the way Kurtz looked. In the movie, while its clear he isnt sane, he doesnt seem unhealthy or sick. Maybe I was missing something, but in the book they seem to describe him as sickly and kind of scrawny. The first scene where we really meet Kurtz he's being carried out on a stretcher and I didn't see that side of him in the film. One scene that matched up perfectly was the skulls that Kurtz placed to intimidate people, which was seen in both the movie and book. Another difference is that the relationship between Kurtz and Marlow or captain willard in the movie is much more indirect and quiet. Right away in the book, Marlow threatens Kurtz, but in the movie I did not see this. The way the Kurtz's territory is in the movie was very similar to the description in the book. Another difference is that Captain Willard's mission is to kill Kurtz, while Marlow just has to find him. This expands the story in the book because Kurtz and Marlow develop a different bond on the steamer back home and Kurtz actually trusts Marlow with some papers. I thought it was really interesting how they kept small details from Heart of Darkness, like Kurtz saying, "the horror." While first watching the movie, it was hard to see how to two lined up because the beginning plots seem very different. In the movie, Willard is pretty much presented to us as crazy as the beginning, but I never got that from Marlow in the book. However, the biggest similarties are seen within the themes of the two, like imperialism.