Post your topic sentence on your blog.
The Bridegroom in Fredrico Garcia Lorca's Blood Wedding, is displayed as a weak-willed character that can't do much without others; illustrating the ignorance of a male characters to the truth around them.
IB English
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Monday, May 7, 2012
Journal #4 - Blood Wedding
Journal #4: Choose any two symbols that emerged in this scene and discuss their significance. While you are certainly welcome to connect that significance to the entire text, I want you to focus on the details of how they are used in these first 12 pages. Look at the stylistic choices surrounding their use and build up to a discussion on the role they play or will play in developing theme/character/setting/tension...
The two major symbols in the first 12 pages is: flowers and the knife. The knife is observably a weapon of murderous deeds. It has caused grief to a family, who has lost a brother and a father; a son and a husband.
To my understand, the description says "yellow room", but by the uneasiness and the fact they mention breakfast and needing a knife makes the setting into aged-yellow kitchen. The beginning follows through two main topics: the family's tragic and the marriage. Flowers were uses to describe the characters and scenic view. The true importance of them, I am not totally sure, but they appear as often as water and the horse throughout the play.
The two major symbols in the first 12 pages is: flowers and the knife. The knife is observably a weapon of murderous deeds. It has caused grief to a family, who has lost a brother and a father; a son and a husband.
To my understand, the description says "yellow room", but by the uneasiness and the fact they mention breakfast and needing a knife makes the setting into aged-yellow kitchen. The beginning follows through two main topics: the family's tragic and the marriage. Flowers were uses to describe the characters and scenic view. The true importance of them, I am not totally sure, but they appear as often as water and the horse throughout the play.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Journal #5 - The Stranger
- You will demonstrate your understanding of the importance of one's world view by scrutinizing your thoughts on how the world works and indentifying guiding principles for your own philosophy.
- A. Give it a name
- B. Identify seven to ten guiding principles: These should be clear and thoughtful – no clichés
- C. Explain from where each principle developed and why it is important
My name is I. I have many principles I follow. They are:
- Optimism is the base of all sources of logic.
- This holds a negative view to everything, making you question the facts and make attempts to rationalize, creating personal truths. This is mostly the based to a logical process, which in turn is the source to all logical understanding
- There is a contradiction to everything.
- There are both light and dark in life. There is good and bad. Everything includes none-thing, and none-thing eats everything.There is always something to argue and counter. Truth is a spectrum to reasoning.
- Learn your enemy; because your enemy can be an enemy in a friend.
- Life is full of angry or dislike people. Many of us just think of them as enemies because of things we heard, not know as a truth. This will create discrimination against others, leave a hate with no base.
- Equality is a dream of the masses.
- People try to strip their identities and subject to the masses, which will create standards. If an individual can guide a large section of the masses, then they can create revolutions or diction or a dominate power hold. It is believe that you must subject to the masses to not be destroy.
- The Force is always with you.
- Life is always believed that there is some higher power or mystery power. These Forces help us accept the facts of life with an easier ease. An live with a know purpose through things.
- Open-minded is the best way to acceptance.
- Many things in life are hard to accept. These hard to accept truth or lies, can make things difficult to deal with and learn from. It creates narrow views of things and people. It creates criticisms and stereotypes. All leading to more difference and dislike.
- Try moving forward, learn from the past, and be open to the future
- Things are hard. Some drive us. Some destroy us. Life is full of valleys and cliffs. By learning, you grow. Growing is important to finding yourself.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Journal #4- The Stranger
- What conclusions does Mersault come to at the end of the novel. Does Camus want the reader to come to the same conclusions?
Meursault at the end of the novel comes to the conclusion of 'no regrets'. Camus seems to be leading the reader to believe that Meursault, as strange as we see him, has actually had a purpose to his life. Camus is saying that Meursault had lived the way he wanted with no regrets. For he accepts the fact that he is being punishment for the crime he committed, as had the Arab that died received punishment for his actions.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Journal #2 - The Stranger
- Pick one of the following two prompts to respond to
- Option 1: What symbolic role does the sun/light play in the novel? What themes does this symbolism develop?
- Option 2: Evaluate the author's use of first person point of view. Why didn't Camus choose third person omniscient? How is his choice of point of view related to Camus' purpose/themes in the novel.
Option #2
The author uses first-person view point to push a personal experience from Camus, himself. By writing in first-person, Camus is able to use his personal beliefs, like absurd, and personal experience, like his time in Paris. Although Camus does not get convicted to death, he uses first-person to demonstrate criticisms to those who don't follow society. For during his time of life, WWII had started and there was criticism against the Jews, and other effected races. In The Stranger, Camus uses many characters to illustrate this point. Monday, March 19, 2012
Journal # 1 - The Stranger
- Closely examine 3 of the minor characters Camus has introduced. How are the characters described and what role do they play? What is Camus trying to accomplish/reveal with each of these characters?
Raymond Sint'es: a self-confedent "warehouse guard", rumored to be a "pimp" or "a man to live off woman". He becomes Meursault's pal, and means to break the strandard of society. While we, the reader, can see the expressed bits of existentialism; it pushes the reasons why the Western culture views existentialism as the "beleif of immorality".
Old Salamano: an aging, yellowing old man and his skin diseased, beaten dog. He is Meursault's neighbor, and a reflection of interal expression vs. external expression. While outwardly Salamano appears to be voilent to his dog, he expresses himself to Meursault, after losting his dog, deeply passionate and caring affection to his dog. This displays to the reader that even if Meursault doesn't outwardly states that he loves his "Maman", small hints in describe languages shows that he cares.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Journal #5 - Their Eyes Were Watching God
- Create a pastiche of Janie's description of Death on page 84. Match Hurston' style and themes as closely as possible. After you complete your pastiche, write a statement explaining some of the decisions you made in order to match Hurston's writing and objectives.
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