Monday, March 30, 2015

Masterpiece association-Dove

Check out Dove's Youtube channel and their Self-Esteem Projects!
https://www.youtube.com/user/doveunitedstates

Masterpiece

I saw this tweet today and it resembled exactly what I want to achieve with my masterpiece- changing the conversation of negative body image comments to positive empowerment because WE have the ability to do so. Dove is a huge representation of health/body image activism and they are someone I am definitely going to get in touch with!

Literature Analysis #3 The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros

1. The House on Mango Street is about Esperanza Cordero who is a young Latina living in an unstable society and her journey of transformation into adulthood. The novel tells about her life as a young girl in this area of her town, where she is faced with hardships, one of them being sexually assaulted, and comes out of each difficult moment with more wisdom and knowledge about the world than in the beginning of the book. Esperanza wants to leave Mango Street, but realizes that she is mentally scarred by the place where she grew up. She wants to leave and then come back to help others who are unable to escape this place. The author's purpose is to teach her readers about unbelievable things that occur in the real world. The author shows us how well Esperanza copes with the situations she is put into.
2. The theme of the novel is a resolution of personal conflicts and hope of better life. Esperanza had to face many challenges, but overcame them. Yes bad things happened, but she didn't give up. She wanted to leave everything that she had dealt with behind, and not look back. She wished to start a new life, and though she knows this isn't thoroughly possible, she still had hope. She knew that she deserved better and would work to get it.
3. The author's tone is blunt, straightforward and sometimes negative. It seems that she doesn't really care about much, not even herself. This is shown when she says, "I am an ugly daughter," "My Papa's hair is like a broom, all up in the air. And me, my hair is lazy," "In English my name means hope. In Spanish it means too many letters. It means sadness, it means waiting."
4.  
Anaphora: "Not my house. Not my car. Not my room. Not my family." 
Onomatopoeia: "Bam! Buzz." 
Simile: "My life, it is life the number 9." 
Alliteration: "...crumples like a coat and cries." 
Idiom: "Get your head out of the clouds." 
Personification: "But I think diseases have no eyes. They pick with a dizzy finger anyone, just anyone."
Synesthesia: "a loud color"
Hyperbole: "Anthony Haselbauer is a giant!" 
Symbol: The American flag, symbolizing the American dream that Esperanza wants so desperately.
Metaphor: "Like it or not, you are Mango Street."
Characterization
1. Indirect characterization: "He worked two jobs. He came home late and left early. Everyday." "...first annual Tarzan jumping contest, Meme won. And broke both arms." 

Direct characterization: "She is very sassy." "She was a horse woman too."
Both approaches are used so that the characters and the way they are introduced are more realistic. These methods allow the reader to imagine and infer aspects of the characters but then they can also directly get to know what the author wants them to see about the characters.
2. The book is pretty simple so the syntax/diction doesn't really tend to change when focusing on specific characters. The story is viewed entirely through the eyes of Esperanza as she describes the settings and gives the reader insight on the characters, which tends to be biased toward the smaller characters. The way Esperanza talked to and about characters did vary since each played a different role in her life.
3. Esperanza is definitely a dynamic and round character. At the beginning of the book she is naive and who slowly learns about growing up as the story unfolds. At first, all she wanted to do was play and interact with the children living in the neighborhood, but then she began to interest herself in boys and sexual matters. She was maturing. Esperanza is left disappointed at the end because it isn't what she expected. She goes on to worry about more important things like leaving Mango Street.
4. After reading this book, I can say that I met a character. Esperanza went through stages of life that all of us go through. She was a curious young girl with dreams, she set goals and wanted to become something greater and learned a lot along the way. She was a character with real emotions, hardships, and aspirations. She resembled someone who is determined to achieve something in the real world.

TPCASTT: Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden

Title of poem means: "Those winter Sundays" remind the speaker of his childhood. It seems to be a flashback from a long time ago. Now that he thinks about it, these specific Sundays were meaningful.
Paraphrase parts of the poem: The dad of the speaker would get up really early to warm up the house for the family, after he had worked hard all week long. No one would thank the dad, or show any enthusiasm. The speaker was afraid of his dad so he would speak without affection. The speaker's dad did all of this stuff for him, but he never understood why. He never understood that his father truly loved him, and showed it by lighting the fire and polishing his shoes, until now.
Connotation of some of the words – changing literal meaning to implied or associated values: His father warmed up the house and polished his shoes...but why? These are the ways he showed his love.
Attitude: The speaker is regretful, yet grateful. It wasn't that he purposely took advantage of what his father did for him, he just never recognized that it was his way of showing his love for his family. No one ever thanked the father, but looking back the speaker is truly grateful for his father.
Shift: The poem shifts at the end where the speaker says, "What did I know, what did I know of love's austere and lonely offices?" At this point the reader realizes that now he understands his father's love and why he did the things he did. The reader sees that the speaker wasn't ungrateful, he just never understood that that was how his father showed his love until then.
Title revisited: "Those winter Sundays" are significant to the speaker's childhood. Every Sunday his father would warm up the house and polish his shoes, yet no one would ever thank him. These simple gestures were overlooked, until now where the speaker is flashing back.
Theme: Love and sacrifice. This poem shows the love between a father and his child. This bond is what makes a father get up early after a long week of work to warm up the house. This love is quiet yet powerful. This love is what drives the father to make sacrifices for his family.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

College?????

College is such a scary yet exciting word. Thinking about going off to college, 1,500 miles away from my hometown, all alone, having to make new friends, not knowing what to expect gives me anxiety...but sometimes it's good anxiety. I'm anxious to start a new chapter in my life. I'm ready to explore and experience new places and people. I believe that this is the perfect time in our lives to try something totally new. This is the time where you search for yourself and the person you want to become. Even though I am going to miss this small town (as much as I complain about it) and all of the people I have grown up with, I'm ready.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Tobermory Explained

"Watch what you say/do, even if you think no one is watching/listening" (or something like that?)

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Conforming/Questioning? (Brave New World Essay)

In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, Bernard Marx is caught between conforming to the standards of society while also questioning the way in which the World Controllers are running the world. He is surrounded by the World State rules so conforming is expected of him, but is tormented by his own thinking. Bernard’s outward conformity and internal thinking contribute to the author’s voice and develop his warning to the readers.
Bernard conforms by simply doing his job, working in the Hatchery and genetically engineering children. He doesn’t approve of what the World State is doing, yet he continually does what is expected of him. By Bernard taking soma and engaging in orgy-porgy, he’s conforming to the World State’s culture. He’s trying not to be a part of society but results to conforming to avoid internal questioning.
Bernard does however question actions of society, especially when he is alone. The World State doesn’t like when people, such as Bernard, are alone because it gives them the availability to actually think about their actions and thoughts. When alone, Bernard continuously questions the entirety of the World State and the culture that comes with. It’s uncommon for people in this society to question anything so Bernard is one of the few that are considered outcasts.
Bernard’s actions of conforming outwardly yet questioning inwardly are a representation of the author’s voice and attitude. The author portrays his voice through Bernard’s action. The author wants the reader to question this dystopian society and the restriction of freedom. Through the process of reading the story, Bernard’s personality urges the reader to ponder the importance of freedom and the dangers of scientific driven society.

Seeking Mentor

Finding a mentor to guide me through my masterpiece may be very beneficial. They provide experience and insight. Mentors give criticism but also encourage you. You need a mentor that is dedicated to supporting you but will also give you honest feedback. For my masterpiece, I believe I need to find a mentor that has personally experienced the negative effects of low self esteem and body image problems. I need to speak to someone that understands the impacts and what they had to overcome to get their life back on track. I would like to find a mentor that can give advice on how to look at one's body positively.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Essay Dillema

Do you ever get stuck writing an essay because you feel like it can't live up to a previous essay you wrote? If that made any sense at all...I was confident with my Great Expectations essay but now I seem to be struggling with the Brave New World essay. I know what I want to say but I'm not quite sure how to put it into words. I want it to be as well written as the last essay >:/

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Literature Analysis: Bless Me, Ultima

Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya
1. The respected old healer Ultima comes to stay with Antonio Marez's family in Guadalupe, New Mexico. Antonio's dad wants him to become a vaquero while his mother wants him to become a priest. Ultima teaches Antonio about herbs and plants. One night Antonio witnesses a man who just returned from war get shot and killed; it makes him question sin, death, and hell. After helping his uncles with harvest, Antonio starts school. Ultima tells his mother that he is going to be a man of learning. His brothers return from war and they're mentally messed up. Antonio has a lot of moral questions. Antonio's friend tells him about the golden carp that is a river god who looks out for mankind. His uncle is cursed by the Trementina sisters and the priest is unable to cure him, but Ultima is able to banish the curse. He realizes there isn't a way to explain Ultima's powers in the Catholic church. There's a rumor that if people cannot stop sinning, then the carp will flood the land and rid it of humanity's evil; it makes Antonio wish there was a god of forgiveness. He overhears a conversation between Narsico and the dad of the Trementina sisters saying that he blamed Ultima for the death of one of his daughters so he was going to kill her. Narsico tries to stop him but ends up getting killed. Antonio is sick with frightening dreams. He doesn't feel any different after communion. Ultima continues to teach Antonio moral lessons. Ultima drives away ghosts for the Trementina sisters' dad; another one of his daughters falls ill and he blames Ultima. Antonio's friend drowns so he goes to stay with his uncles. The Trementina sisters' dad goes after Antonio but he gets away. He shoots Ultima's owl, and when it dies, Ultima is doomed to die because the owl is her spiritual guardian. Antonio sits with her while she passes.
2. The main theme of Bless Me, Ultima is the importance of moral independence. Throughout the book, Antonio is struggling to find his moral independence. When he does, it marks the moment of maturity and him becoming his own person. He goes through highs and lows but is able to make his own decisions. Ultima is a guide to Antonio throughout this discovery.
3. The author's tone is serious and simple, yet philosophical. 
"Was Ultima at my birth?" "Why did God make you?" "You are growing, and growth is change. Accept the change, make it apart of your strength."
4. Point of view (narrator): The book is written from Antonio's point of view as an adult looking back on his childhood.
Symbolism: the golden carp, Ultima's owl
Foreshadowing: Antonio's frightful dreams
Simile: "...and now the people are scattered, driven like tumbleweeds by the winds of war."
Allusion: "The sky sparkled with a million stars and the Virgin's horned moon, the moon of my mother's people, the moon of the Lunas. My mother would be praying for the soul of Lupito."

Personification: "...that the powers of mother nature will turn upon him and destroy him."
Metaphor: "The sun was good. The men of the llano were men of the sun. The men of the farms along the river were men of the moon. But we were all children of the white sun."
Pathos: "Why must I be witness to so much violence? I cried in fear and protest. The germ of creation lies in violence, a voice answered."
Alliteration: "Mephistopheles! Machiavelli!"
Motif: "Take the llano and the river valley, and the moon and the sea, God and the golden carp-and make something new."
Characterization
1. Direct characterization- "Good is always stronger than evil. The smartest bit of good can stand against all powers of evil in the world."
"He will be a man of learning."
Indirect characterization- "I think most of the things we call evil are not evil at all; it is just that we don't understand those things, so we call them evil."
"Take them to their room," I said to my mother. it was the first time I had ever spoken to my mother as a man. She nodded and obeyed.
The author uses both approaches because some things the author wants the reader to specifically know while other things he wants the reader to figure out on their own and form their own opinion.
2. The authors syntax/diction changes depending on the character, especially when talking about Antonio's father, Gabriel. Sometimes the author will say things in Spanish rather than English like llano or vaquero.
3. Antonio is dynamic and round. The book started off with Antonio as a young boy with little knowledge about independence. After witnessing a murder and losing his innocence, he became a man.
4. After reading this book I felt like I had read about a character. I could see him being a real person in a different location or time, but I didn't get to know him enough to where I could relate or felt a connection.