Friday, March 12, 2010

Desire

Desire is a topic that remains ever present in the play a streetcar called Desire by Tennessee Williams. Each character in the play is driven by the desire that they want fulfilled. Blanche and Stella are two sisters that have very different desire. Blanche desires stability, a new start, and a second chance. While Stella desire to have a happy marriage, to help her sister and for peace in her house. To achieve all her desire Blanche believes that all she needs a husband. For Stella the only way to see her desire come to true is by deciding to either side with her husband or her sister.

Blanche’s desire for a second chance and a fresh new start in anyplace other than Laurel leads her to Elysian Fields, where she falls for another character named Mitch. She see him as a chance to finally get the love she missed out on in her first marriage and also as hope that when she cannot hide her age anymore she would not be an old maid. However what awaits her when she gets to Elysian Fields its nothing like she expected. She does not get along with her sisters husband and he can see past her lies. And because of Stanley everything did not go according to her plans. For Stella her sister showing up in her house was the beginning of the troubles in her marriage. The peace and tranquility her and her husband shared because their marriage was based on their attractions for each other was destroyed. In her house there was constant fighting, always between her husband and her sister or sometimes even them to. Stella only wish was to help her sister not to have to choose between them during their fights. After this all she desired was to have peace in her house and for happy life with her husband.

These characters desires are all lead by their want to make their current situation better. For Blanche in fulfilling her desire for stability by getting married she would no longer have to worry about being a thirty years old woman with no husband, no place to live and no way to financially take care of herself. In getting herself a husband it would have ensure that all her fears would go away, but the deceit she was playing made it impossible for that to happen. Her disappointment at not being able to achieve her desires led to her revealing just how much she was living in her own reality and made sister who was already struggling with the decision of what to do help send her to a asylum. Stella had to decide on what was best for her, her baby and her marriage. She could not keep harboring her sister who was running her marriage. Stella had realized that there was no way to have her desire of having a peaceful house with her sister and husband living in the same house.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Blanche Revealed

Tennessee William wrote the play “A streetcar named Desire” with characters that all have very different personalities. The character Blanche is the aging older sister of Bella. She is portrayed as a high maintenance, weak person. She plays the part of a Southern Belle effortlessly because she grew up in a ranch style house, Belle Reve, located in Laurel.
When she arrived at Bella's house after getting fired from her job she criticized everything, complaining about how small the rooms looked and how Bella had lowered herself to marry a “common” man. However regardless of how Blanche reacts to Bella Life in New Orleans she cares and loves her sister. This side of Blanche is revealed in scene 3 when Blanche goes to look for her sister the morning after Bella’s husband had beat her even though she was pregnant. Blanche went to her sister with real concern for her well-being because she believes that Bella is living with a “mad” man. To help her sister she came up with a plan to get both her and her sister away from Stanley. Blanche actions revealed her in a new light, no longer was she the sister that is self center and only cares about her self and looking young. She acted like an older sister should, she wanted to protect her little sister from her abusive alcoholic husband. As we read about what she did we her actions shed light on how much she actually cares for her sister by trying sincerely to get her away from her brute of a husband. Her actions showed that she knew how a husband was to treat his wife and being drunk does not give him an excuse to treat a pregnant woman the way he did.

Another scene where we can also infer that there is more to Blanche that we as the readers initially saw is in scene 6 and 8 where talks about her marriage to Mitch. She tells him what happened between her and the boy she married when she was only eighteen. She also tells him the truth about why she came to Elysian Fields. She was a woman in love who married the person she love only to find out that he had been lying to her. The way Blanche describes what happened makes the reader sympathize with her and in way understand why she is the way she is. After going through that pain because of love she just wants to find someone to really love her so that she will not be alone. We can also infer that the lies she told were because after losing everything she had nobody and believed that as she gets older she will not be able to find someone to settle down with so she had to do what she could to make sure that did not happen.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Eveline's Epihany and Paralysis

In the short story “Eveline” by James Joyce the character Eveline goes through a paralysis that leads to her epiphany on the decision to either stay at home or go away with her boyfriend Frank, to be his wife. Before the scene where she goes through her paralysis she contemplates the idea of leaving her home and going to Buenos Ayres with Frank. While she ponders what to do she reflects on her life at present and how it would change once she leaves.

The story starts out with an image of her sitting in front of her window staring out into the night. She ponders leaving home and leaving behind her duties of taking care of the house, cooking their meals, the children she is in charge of and also her job. She starts to consider the advantages and disadvantage of staying at home or leaving to get married to Frank. She reflects on the idea that when she is married people will treat her with more respect unlike how her mother was treated. While she thinks about what decision to make she has a flashback to when she promised her mother at her deathbed to “keep their home together.” The paralysis in the story occurs at the time she is about to get on the boat. Eveline grips “the iron railing in frenzy,” and “she sets her white face to him, passive, as a helpless animal.” Eveline at this moment in time was unable to get into the boat with Frank and her expression and posture revealed her reluctance. “Her eyes where gave no sign of love or farewell or recognition.” She was frozen in place. By not getting on the boat she had made her decision, she was not going to go through with the plan, she was not leaving. Her epiphany was her realization of the fact that she was about to go overseas with this man and leaving her home behind. Her epiphany was also revealed a little earlier in the story when she asked herself if she “could still draw back after all he had done for her.”

James Joyce has a background of ending his stories with an epiphany. In one of his other stories “Araby” a similar thing that happens to Eveline also happens to the boy in the story has an epiphany while his is at the bazaar. He suddenly realizes that he is being controlled by his desire and that buying the girl he likes a gift does not ensure that she will like him back. He had convinced himself that buying her the gift would be the significance of his love and after seeing the sales lady flirting he realizes that buying her something is what she wants not his love.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Lucy's story

A portion of the book in Lucy’s perspective:


After being disgraced by society for having an affair with one of his college students my father, David Lurie, will be moved in with me I was not sure he would be able to live on a farm because he had been living in the city before. He decided to stay with me only because he wants to escape the media and take a break. Life on the farm went on as usual except now I was living with my father who I could tell believes I can do so much better than living on a farm when I had a college education. He could not realize that this was the way I truly wished to live my life. Working on this farm, planting in my garden, and taking care of the dogs are things I actually enjoy doing. Today, David is going to see me at my best. He is going experience the part of my life where I go into the market and sell what I grow. When we reach my stall in the market I can almost imagine what David is thinking. What is my daughter doing working in this place? She can do so much better. After things are ready, the customers start passing bye, some stopping to bye something other just to say hello. Every time a customer stops by I would introduce David to them so he does not feel award, but I know that he looks at them and judge them, especially Bev Shaw. So I tell David we are going to Bev Shaw house after we finish here in the market because I know he wonders why I am be friends with a person like her. As we visit the Shaw’s I can see from David’s expression that he is criticizing their way of living and underestimating Bev Shaw. He did not like women who make no effort to look attractive and believes they are not worth his time. After a while living on the farm and volunteering at the clinic with Bev I could see that David’s attitude towards animals where changing and he did not look down on Bev anymore. On one early evening a horrible thing happened to me and my father three men forced their way into my home almost burn my father up, shoot my beloved dogs, robed my house and also raped and stole my dignity. Now I am left alone with the aftermath of what happened, with the memory of that night that I cannot even sleep in my own room anymore and also with a child that was conceived on that night. Everything changed from that day on, I could not even tell the police about what happened to me because on that night while those men violated me I felt their hatred for me. I knew that these men did not go after me only because they wanted to rob my house and on the way decided to rape me, it was an act of revenge on me because I am white and represent the suffering black Africans went through during the apartheid; when white were given certain privileges that were not allowed to black Africans.


Analysis:
I wrote about this part of the book because I felt that these issues were something if given a chance in a book from her perspective Lucy would elaborate on. The problem being that David did not approve of her living in that part of South Africa and working on the farm by herself and of her not reporting the three men to the police because she was a victim of rape. Lucy would tell this type of story in this way because she can give the reader insight to how what lead to how she felt after the rape and her reasoning as to why she did not report the three men.
The first issue that Lucy and David argue about it her the type of friends she has and her living in the farm (74). Lucy also says “what happened to me is purely a private matter. In another time, in another place it might be held to be a public matter. But now in this place, at this time, it is not. This place being South Africa.”(112) This is her justification of not telling the police what happen because in her mind in will not change anything. In the book we also see the drastic change that happens to Lucy after the incident she is does not behave how she did before. She stops doing the chores she usually does on the farm, even going to the market on Saturday. David is left to take her place and take care of the farm. She withdraws herself from everything and moves out of her bedroom. While David was gone she has decided that she will keep the baby and marry Petrus giving him her land but she gets the house.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

David Lurie's Change

In the novel Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee, the character David Lurie is portrayed as a womanizer and a chauvinistic man. However David evolves after going through some traumatic events and becomes a man that finally looks beyond the physical appearance of a woman

He is accused of sexually abusing one of his students and is sent to the campus trial committee for what he did. He is also tagged as a Casanova by the students. When he moves to the country with his daughter to escape the media he is faced with another tragic event. He and his daughter are abused by a trio of African Americans and his daughter is raped. In both incidents he is left feeling disgrace as is the name of the book. Both incidents lead up to the change that happens to David Lurie.

After failing at his first and second marriage he decided he did not need “a wife, a home, or a marriage” (5) all he needs is the ninety minutes a week he gets from his prostitute. David relationship with Soraya is based on a weekly session of pleasuring each other. His relationship with the women in his life reflects his view of women. David Lurie believes women are put on earth to share their beauty with other men. “A woman’s beauty does not belong to her alone. It is a part of the bounty she brings into the world. She has a duty to share it.” (16) He believes that a woman who is beautiful has no right to choose which man she gets instead that all men or mostly he is in the right to have her. This can also be related to the Apartheid that South Africa was getting over, when White men were privilege to certain rights that was not given to everyone else. When White men thought that they could have whatever they wished. David superficial view of women is also reveal when he sees his daughter in overalls walking on her bare feet and also in the scene when he meets Bev Shaw and completely dislikes her because of the way she id dressed, talks and the lifestyle she lives.

However, David’s attitude changes after living in the country and witnessing his daughter rape. He starts to get more involved with the farm by helping Lucy with the dogs. He even moves beyond his dislike for Bev and works in the animal clinic assisting with killing the dogs when needed. The incident of the rape of his daughter David realize that a woman should not be treated that way and realized what he did to Melanie is also almost the same thing. He tries to make Lucy see that she needs to tell her story to the cops because if not those men where going to go free not paying for what they did. David wants to get revenge on the men that rape his daughter and in a way repent for what he did to Melanie. After the incident with the robbers he finally realized that he was wrong in his affair with Melanie. Other change in David is also revealed “One Sunday evening, driving home in Lucy’s kombi, he actually has to stop at the roadside to recover himself. Tears flow down his face that he cannot stop; his hands shake.” (143) This shows how David has changed from the person he used to be where he did not care about anybody opinions and also how he use to believe that animals do not have a soul. David shedding tears for an animal he had to watch getting killed shows that he had cares about more things than only things that are put on earth to please him.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Political Context of Harlem

Dutch settlers founded Harlem, a 5 1/2 square mile area north of Central Park, in 1658. Central Harlem became a Black neighborhood between 1910 and 1920 when its real estate market collapsed, leaving scores of new apartment buildings empty. To find tenants, landlords opened up the area to African Americans, who were leaving the southern states in search of a better life. By 1914, Harlem's population reached 50,000, and between 1920 and 1930, the number quadrupled.

The Harlem Renaissance was an expression of African-American social thought and culture which took a place in newly-formed Black community in neighborhood of Harlem. Instead of using direct political means, African-American artists, writers, and musicians employed culture to work for goals of civil rights and equality. In the 1920's, Harlem became a mecca for Black artists, writers, and intellectuals, who launched the artistic and literary movement known as the Harlem Renaissance. Notable names included writer Langston Hughes, painter Aaron Douglas, and sculptor Augusta Savage.

In 1951–the year the poem “ Harlem” by Langston Hughes was written was a period of frustration for African Americans and in the poem Hughes characterized the mood of American blacks. The Civil War in the previous century had liberated them from slavery, and federal laws had granted them the right to vote, the right to own property, and so on. However, continuing prejudice against blacks, as well as laws passed since the Civil War, relegated them to second-class citizenship. By the mid-Twentieth Century, their frustration with inferior status became a powder keg, and the fuse was burning. Hughes well understood what the future held, as he indicates in the last line of his poem. Hughes believed that realistic portraits of actual people would counter negative caricatures of African Americans more effectively and so wrote about and for the common person.

Parody of This is Just to Say

You have eaten
The plums
I left in
The icebox

So I
have taken
Something
Of yours

Take that!
With your insincere
Apology.
I wont forgive you

Sunday, January 24, 2010

"Harlem" by Langston Hughes

The poem “Harlem” is a lyrical poem, written by poet Langston Hughes. Through out the poem the poet uses literary devise ranging from rhetorical question to similes, metaphors, alliteration and also imagery to explain to the reader what happens to a dream deferred. In the poem, the dream is not just any dream it is about goals an individual has for themselves. The poem goes on to describe possible consequences that might come about if one lets their dream become deferred. The way the poem is structured is effective in showing the readers how the results of one dreams being deferred can go from bad to worst. The poem portrays the idea of a dream being postponed in a negative light.
The tone of this poem is persuading and commands attention. Throughout the poem the speaker asks the reader questions that not meant to be answered but to persuade the reader to getting to the obvious answers. The first stanza in the poem is a question “what happens to a dream deferred?” which is altogether the theme of the poem. The rhetorical questions in the poem commands the reader’s attention in that it makes one wonder about how these things truly do connect. The poet use of rhetorical question in the poem is effective in emphasizing his point on what happens to a dream when deferred.
In each line of the poem the poet uses rhetorical questions, simile and imagery to show how, when a dream is deferred it slowly starts out first to dry up like a raisin in the sun, then it goes on to fester like a sore, then on to stink like rotten meat, then sugar over like a syrupy sweet, then to sag like a heavy load, and finally does it explode. The poet using these similes is saying that a dream when is left postponed for too long first it becomes too difficult to fulfill.
Each simile the poet uses in the poem stands for the process that an individual will go through when they have not realized their dream. The consequences that occur when a dream has gone deferred seem to go through a period in time that shows how the more a dream is prolonged the harder it is to achieve. In the first stanza the speaker’s talks about the raisin in the sun, which is when the raisin has been left out in the sun and it gets hard and also becomes difficult to eat. This can be related to when a dream has only been just a dream for so long with no actual attempt to accomplish it, the longer it is left delayed the more difficult it is to achieve. The speaker’s also discusses about other results of a dream deferred when he states “or does it fester like a sore/And then run? /Does it stink like rotten meat?... / Or does it explodes?.” In this the speaker indicates that a dream postponed becomes a burden that one keeps wondering about and thinking about what ifs. A time will then come when holding on to a dream you cannot have becomes so burdensome that they cannot take it anymore.
The structure of the poem is effective in showing that the results of a dream deferred is one that at first might seem like a little thing but in fact it is more than that. It is something that can make an individual “explode” from it because of one constantly thinking about that dream of theirs that has not yet been realized. It also makes the reader realize that maybe it takes the destruction of the speakers dream for one to make sure that does not happen to their dream.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Pictures worth one poem




These pictures are a symbolic representation of the poem “In a Station of The Metro” by Ezra Pound. The poem was written during the modernism period, and consists of only two lines. Through out the poem Pound used of imagery, diction, and metaphor to portray the speaker’s experience at the station.
This photo of blurred people walking pass and of a flower hanging on a tree branch, produces the illusion that Pound creates in his poem. In line 1 of the poem, Pounds expresses “The apparition of these faces in a crowd”, while in line 2 he says “petals on a wet, black bough.” Both pictures are a relative representation of what the speaker might be experiencing.

The poet’s choice of words in those two lines conveyed just how important very word in the line is to the meaning behind the poem. The word “apparition” means the appearance of something at the precise moment in which it is perceived. The word evokes the reader to the poem immediately and gives the line a deeper meaning. The picture is an image of what one would see when picturing an “apparition of faces.” The poet use of apparition in his poem was effective in relating that in this crowd of people that turns in a blur of ghostly figures as they walk pass he was able to see petals. People usually go on with life not noticing the beautiful things around them not just the beauty of nature but also other things we take fore granted.

The flower is a metaphoric representation of the second line of the poem “petals on a wet, black bough,” not only because it talks about flowers in the concrete sense, but also because in the abstract sense in that it represent the beauty of life. The beauty of nature is one of the things that surround us that most people take for granted. I picked this flower as my representation of the second line of this poem because the flower is on a tree branch and stands brightly on a gloomy rainy day. The single flower in the picture sits alone on a bough surrounded by the dull atmosphere caused by the rain. This can be related to the poem because the speaker looks past the ghostly figures around him and see the beauty that outside.

When first reading the poem the first thing that comes to mind is that this is a very short poem and also the two lines do not make sense together. They appear as a contrast to each other. Only after rereading the poem and fully understanding what the poem is talking about can one realize just how much the two lines put together make the poem a very strong poem. The poet using imagery, metaphors and diction was able to create a great poem

Thesis: Mirror by Sylvia Plath

I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions.
Whatever I see, I swallow immediately.
Just as it is, unmisted by love or dislike
I am not cruel, only truthful –
The eye of a little god, four-cornered.
Most of the time I meditate on the opposite wall.
It is pink, with speckles. I have looked at it so long
I think it is a part of my heart. But it flickers.
Faces and darkness separate us over and over.

Now I am a lake. A woman bends over me.
Searching my reaches for what she really is.
Then she turns to those liars, the candles or the moon.
I see her back, and reflect it faithfully
She rewards me with tears and an agitation of hands.
I am important to her. She comes and goes.
Each morning it is her face that replaces the darkness.
In me she has drowned a young girl, and in me an old woman
Rises toward her day after day, like a terrible fish.


In the poem “Mirror” by Sylvia Plath, the speaker conveys her fear about not being able to find herself anymore. The mirror and the lake reflect the old woman she has turned into, who acts the way people expect her to behave. Using a free verse style the poet was able to convey the speaker feelings about the person she has turned into and regrets being.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Comparsion of Shakespare and Thomas

In the poems by Shakespeare and Thomas Dylan, "Sonnet 73", and “ Dot Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night" , the main focus is death. Each poem has a different approach of how the subject death should be taken. Using metaphors Shakespeare relates death to Fall, Night, and fire. Whereas Thomas using form relates his feelings of death.

In the first quatrain of "Sonnet 73" death is presented along with the season of late Fall and early winter. He speaks of the how it is damp, cold and bare; how the leaves change color and late birds sang. In the second quatrain the speaker speaks about Twilight and how that shows the how ones life can go from being bright to dark in a moment. In the third he discuss how the fire in his life is being put out by its own ashes. He describes how the end of his has come and all that is left is the deathbed and awaits.

Shakespeare approach to death in the poem is that the addressee must accept his impending death and realize that he must live what’s left of his time. Using metaphors Shakespeare talks about death’s second self sleep, in this he relates to the addressee that death is inevitable and he is soon approaching the long sleep.

While on the other hand Thomas Dylan poem Do No Go Gentle Into That Good Night, is a completely different perspective of death to that of Shakespeare approach to death. Thomas writes his poem about his father approaching death in the form of a villanelle, which consist of a very specific rhyme scheme. In this poem he sticks to the specific rhyme scheme of aba, aba,… abaa, through out the poem repeating the fist and last line, which shows his frustrations of his father’s impending death.

In Thomas Dylan’s poem he feels that he father should fight against death. He discuss how wise, good, wild, and grave men have fought against “ that good night“, not because they didn’t know its was coming but because they were not readying to go and still had things to do here on earth. Which to him these people are what he has always believed his father to be until now. His is distraught at the thought that his own father is just laying there not fight to stay alive. He believes that if his father just fought against death maybe he could live a little longer. Through out the poem he is constantly pleading with his father to “ rage, rage against the dying of the light”.