Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Fifth Business

Fifth Business

Author: Robertson Davies is one of Canada’s best known authors. He was a schoolmaster for a residential college associated with the University of Toronto, a background which can be seen in Dunstan’s career as a schoolmaster. His father was a senator, and he converted to Anglicanism from Presbyterianism.
Setting: It is set in the early 1900s through the mid 1900s, through the course of the two World Wars and the Spanish Influenza outbreak. The first setting is Deptford, a small village in Canada, and the plot follows Dunstan’s journey from Canada to the battlefields of Europe, back to Canada, and on his journeys to research saints.
Plot:  The novel starts out with the account of Boy’s throwing of the snowball that leads to Mary Dempster’s simpleness, and Paul’s premature birth. Then it is revealed that the book is a letter from Dunstan to the headmaster.  Dunstan details his journey from Dempster to Europe to fight in World War 1, his affair with Diana and his relationship with Boy and leola, and his search for saints. He meets Paul, now known as Eisengrim, and Leisl. This results in his epiphany that his life’s role is as Fifth Business.
Characters:
Dunstable Ramsay– He is the narrator of the work, and his journey is detailed above. His reliability is questionable at times, and he omits details that he claims to have forgotten and highlights others.
Mary Dempster– Dunstan believes that she is a saint after seeing her bring Willy back to life, and seeing her in a vision in the battlefield. She has sex with a tramp, which changes his life and causes him to seek salvation in religion. She eventually goes crazy, and then dies.
Amasa Dempster–He is a preacher and the wife of Mary, he refers to her indirectly as a burden he has to carry, but seems to sincerely love her, or perhaps just devotes himself to her? He eventually dies from Spanish Influenza.
Paul Dempster– He is Mary’s son, and was born prematurely. It seems that he is supposed to be portrayed as a Christ figure, but his Christ-like characteristics and actions are slightly off, suggesting that Boy is the cause for his deformities as a Christ Figure. He runs away, joins the circus and undergoes a name change.
Boy Staunton– He seems to be portrayed by Dunstan as the hero in his life story, and undergoes a name change, just like Dunstan and Paul. He aspires to fit the role of a prince.
Leola Cruikshank – Leola is the wife of Boy, and was part of the love triangle between Boy and Dunstan. She attempts to commit suicide, and later dies.

Point of View : The speaker, Dunstan is recounting his life to the headmaster, trying to prove a point. Thus, he is a biased narrator who is unreliable since he can omit and highlight facts as he chooses.
Symbolism: Mary and Paul act as symbols for the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ, respectively, but share some differences that highlight the strange twists on conventional religion.
Narrative: The novel is structured in the form of a long letter from Dunstan to the headmaster. Thus, the details and diction in the novel are biased in favor of Dunstan.
Imagery: The imagery in this novel is especially thick in events that Dunstan chooses to highlight for their significance. One of the events is his near death experience on the battlefields of World War 1, where he gives a vivid and dramatic account of his journey to the church and his vision of Mary Dempster.
Theme: Everyone casts people in their lives, including themselves, in roles that they need them to play.

The narrator, Dunstan, is obsessed with the roles that he has played in the lives of others. He describes himself as “Fifth Business” and gives detailed accounts of the various forms in which he plays that role, calling himself a polymath, a Charlie Chaplin-esque figure, and a war hero, among other things. He explicitly states his own views about the theme when he discusses the mentality of a public figure, in which he uses a stage player metaphor.


Hamlet Analysis

Author: William Shakespeare
Setting: The setting is Elsinore in the kingdom of Denmark in the late Middle Ages. The kingdom seems to emphasize martial rule.
Characters:
Hamlet - He is the Danish prince, and his father has recently died. His uncle marries his mother and claims the throne. He learns that his father my have been killed by his uncle and contemplates action. He is portrayed as either mad or acting mad. He mourns for his father and feels betrayed by his mother.
Claudius - He is Hamlet's uncle and kills the old Hamlet and marries Gertrude.
Gertrude - She is Hamlet's mother and marries Claudius. She is torn between her love for Claudius and her love for Hamlet.
Ophelia - She is Hamlet's lover, but she is not royalty; she is the daughter of Polonius.She refuses to see Hamlet after Polonius instructs her to. She commits suicide after she goes mad.
The Ghost - The ghost is of Hamlet's dead father who tells Hamlet Claudius killed him. He tells Hamlet to avenge him.
Polonius
Laertes
Fortinbras
Horatio

Ceremony Analysis

Ceremony
Author: Leslie Silko is a writer of Native American descent.

Characters
 Tayo - He is the protagonist of the work, a Laguna pueblo who has returned from the Vietnam War. He lived in the shadow of his brother Rocky, the model of Native American assimilation into white culture, until he died in the war. He believes that he has cursed his land with drought when he prayed for an end to rain in Vietnam. He embarks on a journey to complete a ceremony to bring balance to his land.
Auntie - She is Tayo's aunt, who took Tayo in. She favors Rocky and is cold to Tayo. She is Christian and opposes many traditional beliefs.
Rocky - He is the model of Native American assimilation into the contemporary white culture, playign football and earning a scholarship to a college.
Ts'eh - She symbolizes a mountain, more generally the land of Tayo's culture. In human form, she sleeps with Tayo and she
Ku'oosh - He is a traditional medicine man who can't help Tayo because his old ceremonies are ineffective for current problems.
Betonie - He is a medicine man who adapts to change and creates new ceremonies. He helps Tayo with his journey.
Emo - He is also a Vietnam war veteran, and he symbolizes the witches.
Imagery: The prose has a poem-like quality to it. The use of vivid descriptive words and smooth flow create pictures of landscapes and settings in the reader's head.
Narrative: The structure is nonlinear, and switches to different narrators. This emphasizes the concept of time as a web, in which all stories are connected.
Allusions: Silko alludes to Laguan cultural texts, with shaped poems that allude to the content.
Symbolism: The nausea Tayo feels is his loss of identity in between his traditional culture and the white culture. The alcohol symbolizes the clashing of the white culture with the traditional culture. The geographical features  and creatures of the land symbolize the spirits of the culture.
Theme: Only through the unification of all conflicting themes can result in peace.

The plot of the book emphasizes unity in all aspects of Tayo's life. There is a motif of all things being one. For instance, the multiple linear storylines are presented as one weblike story. Tayo, with his mixed heritage

Death of a Salesman analysis


Death of a Salesman

Author: Arthur Miller is an American playwright and essayist. He testified before the HUAC and was blacklisted by Hollywood for his communist beliefs.
Setting: It is set in the 1900s in the US, in a middle class/working class home, and the society embodies the values of consumerist America.
Plot: Willy Is an aging salesman
Characters:
Willy Loman – He is the character referenced in the title, and is first introduced to the readers as an aging salesman who is losing his mind. As a travelling salesman, he does not earn much money and returns to a rundown home.  The reader slowly learns throughout the play the circumstances  that caused Willy’s downfall. He is represented as a victim of the American Dream.
Linda Loman – She is Willy’s wife and caretaker, and is somewhat of a mother figure to both Willy and the boys. She sees through Willy’s lies but cares about him too much to bring him to reality.
Biff Loman – He is Willy’s son, and believes wholeheartedly in the vision that Willy creates regarding the American Dream  until he sees Willy with The Woman.
Happy Loman – He wholeheartedly believes in the vision Willy creates.
Bernard – He is portrayed as less successful  than Biff and Happy in high school, but is more succesful later in life.
Charley – He is Willy’s neighbor, and tries to keep Willy’s spirits up despite Willy’s illusions.

Point of View : Miller is critical of the materialistic, glamorous version of the American Dream, and details Willy’s downfall. He gives Willy’s lines that cause the reader to sympathize with him and blame the society he lives in for his death.
Symbolism: Willy symbolizes the population of Americans that have bought into the hollow American Dream and have been met with failure. The house represents the state of Willy’s mind, being barren and decaying by the end of the play. The darker side of Ben and the jungle represents the pitfalls of the infatuating American dream. Geography is important, with Ben trying to go north but ending up south, and the idea of the West idealized. Sports and popularity symbolize the worse sides of the American Dream.
Narrative: Miller uses a nonlinear narrative and juxtaposes the past and present. This allows for greater characterization of the characters.
Imagery: The imagery of the house before and after Willy’s affair with the Woman show his demise

Theme: The materialistic, glamour-obsessed American Dream is an unattainable fallacy. Instead, one should aspire to one's own desires.

Miller obviously condemns the version of the American Dream that is sold by Willy, portraying him as the victim through the subtle comparisons of Willy to an innocent boy, even through naming him Willy. He contrasts the unsuccessful Loman family to Charley and Bernard, who work hard and are charitable and considerate. Though Charley is a high paid banker and Bernard a lawyer who is a rising star, Miller does not exclusively  advocate for those paths. At the end of the play, Biff embarks on a journey to make something of himself out "West". Miller conveys the message that the American Dream is specific to each individual, and should not be a standard imposed by society on the individual.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

The American Dream Analysis

The American Dream:
Author: Edward Albee is a part of the Theater of the Absurd movement, consisting of authors believing human existence has no meaning or purpose. He uses his play to ridicule the contemporary notion of the American Dream.
Characters:
Mommy - She is a dominating figure who is the head of the household. She has a sadistic streak and is the one to mutilate the bumble. She marries Daddy for his money.
Daddy - He is Mommy's subordinate,a dramatic reversal of the typical American family. He has "tubes" where he used to be "tracts", emphasizing the both physical and social aspect of the gender switching theme.
Grandma - Grandma appears senile in the beginning of the play. However it becomes clear that she is the most "normal" character of the play, and ironically comments on the plot.
The Young Man - He symbolizes the American Dream, and his early mutilation that left him as a shell is representative of Albee's argument about the state of the American Dream.
Mrs. Barker  - Mrs. Barker represents the authority of society, and brings an outside perspective to the crazy household.

Point of view: Albee holds a cynical point of view to the status of the American Dream. He uses absurdist themes to point out how absurd the contemporary idea of the American Dream is.
Tone :  Albee uses an absurdist, comic tone to reveal the ludicrous nature of the American Dream.
Imagery
Symbolism: The wheat colored hat, the mutilation of the American Dream, all the characters represent a part of American society.
Quotes: "I no longer have the capacity to feel anything. I have no emotions. I have been drained, torn asunder disemboweled." This is spoken by the young man, regarding his hollow existence. The audience knows of his physical mutilation that occurred as a baby, at the hands of Mommy. This shows the emotional significance of the harm caused by Mommy on the character that represents the American Dream.
Theme:
Discussion

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Book Notes

Poetry
  • Rhyme - near rhyme ,end rhyme, eye rhyme
  • Meter -rhyme
  • Elegy - dying
  • Lyric - 1st person feeling
  • Ode - address single object
  • Villanelle
  • Poetic Syntax - enjamment, caesura
  • Poetic sound - alliteration, assonance
  • cadence - rise and falll of voice


Literature for Analysis/Open Prompt

The American Dream: Absurdist play about American Dream. American Dream is criticized as overly materialistic and lacks substance. Grandma is the only reasonable character, Mommy and Daddy are the "normal" couple, but actually crazy.

Death of a Salesman: American tragedy about the American Dream. Aging salesman battles with position in world, success of his kids and his life in question. Disillusionment with the golden years of the American Dream, everyone searching for an answer. Never comes up with solution, leads to demise. Miller's indictment of the American Dream.

Ceremony: Contemporary Native American novel. Incorporates NA culture and current issues. Juxtaposes NA and White, War and Peace. Tayo, main character, is lost and can't find way. Nature and color motifs.

Pride and Prejudice: Old British Classic. Novel of Manners(?) about 1700s society and all the drama that comes with getting girls married. Originally pop fiction but regarded as high literature. Contrasting characters, emphasis on appearances and judgement. Probably won't use.

Hamlet: Greatest work in the English language. Revenge, broken love, madness.