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Thursday, December 24, 2009

Great Expectations Essay

In essay blog.

Any time you visit the art museum, you are likely to stumble upon the picture of the Campbell’s soup can created by Andy Warhol. It is bright, obnoxious, and probably one of the odder pieces in the museum. The series of pictures is prominently placed in the one of the main rooms in the museum. This piece really caught my eye because of the bright pinks and greens that are used in the piece and the fact that it’s a painting of a soup can. Andy Warhol created a series of these soup cans in their traditional colors and made one for every different type of soup that Campbell’s made. He eventually made many different pictures of the soup cans substituting the traditional colors for brighter colors. One observation that Warhol made about America was that "America started the tradition where the richest consumers buy essentially the same things as the poorest. You can be watching TV and see Coca-Cola, and you know the President drinks Coke, Liz Taylor drinks Coke, and just think, you can drink Coke too."

Monday, December 7, 2009

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Quote Response

“He regarded me with a look of affection that made him almost abhorrent to me again, though I had felt great pity for him.”(pg. 351) Pip thinks about his convict this after he learns that his benefactor is not Miss Havisham, but the convict from so long ago that he had forgotten, but who had not forgotten him. Pip’s initial reaction to this is not one of love, but one of disgust. He had prided himself on being the recipient of Miss Havisham’s money, only to learn that he was in fact receiving money from a convict, a member of the lowest level of society. Pip treats the convict with the arrogance of a gentleman, forgetting that it was the convict who had made him the gentleman. The convict loves Pip like a son and showers him with money, and Pip just looks at him in disdain and just takes the money as his.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Chapter 25 Wemmick

Wemmick is certainly one of the more unique characters so far in the novel. Wemmick's entire personality changes based on if he's at work or at home. When Wemmick leaves work he appears cold and heartless, and when he arrives home he is cheerful and calm. As an assistant to Jaggers, Wemmick must put on a facade that he is cruel so that he protects Jaggers's image as a feared lawyer, and because of his line of work. When you're a lawyer in court, you have to fight a battle in which somebody's life could balance on the outcome. Somebody has to lose, and if you lose you have to move on or risk being stuck in a moment of greif like Miss Havisham. Wemmick has been Jaggers assisstant for many years, and has learned not to show much emotion at work.

At home, Wemmick is like a whole new person. When he is home, he is at rest and happy. Wemmick has even transformed his house to represent his change of attitude, turning it into a castle complete with a flag and drawbridge. Also at Wemmick's house is the Aged Parent, Wemmick's father. The Aged has a strange quirk, in that he loves to be nodded at. Wemmick appears to take great joy in nodding at him, which is not only strange but completely unlike his work personality. At the end of Pip's stay at Wemmick's house, Pip walks him back to work. While walking, Pip notices Wemmick's face start to harden until he becomes the cruel man that so many expect him to be.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Monday, October 26, 2009

Veteran's Essay

My Veteran's Essay is in my essay blog. The link is on the right.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The Good Earth Essay

Here's a link to my new blog, and my essay is in the blog. It's a pretty long essay and it might take awhile to read.
http://ggeanon2.blogspot.com/

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Hart Crane Pt. 1

Hart Crane was born in Ohio in 1899. His father was a businessman who owned a candy company and his mom was slightly crazy. He had a tough childhood, because his mother would force him to spend time with her, because she kept on imagining that she would soon catch a fatal disease and die. His mother would continue to control him even when he became an adult. In 1908, he moved to his grandmother's house while his mom recovered from a nervous breakdown. It was at his grandmother's house that he was first exposed to any sort of writing. He began reading pieces by famous poets like Walt Whitman and Ralph Waldo Emerson who eventually became major influences on him. In 1916, he left Ohio to attend college in New York City. In New York, he decided to quit out of college and chose to follow a career in writing. While there he continued to read up on different poet including William Butler Yeats and James Joyce. Soon, he began to abuse alchol, and have relationships with sailors because it turned out that he was gay.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

The Good Earth Quiz

1. So far in this novel, Wang Lung's uncle is my least favorite character. He is a dishonest man who steals and gambles. The first time he comes to Wang Lung for the money, he keeps begging until he blackmails Wang Lung when he says he'll tell everyone in the village that cold rude man. His uncle keeps on coming and asking for more until eventually they have nothing but the land and their house.

2. Partly because of his uncle, and partly because of possible starvation, Wang Lung decides to take his family to one of the southern cities. They ride on a train, which they call a firewagon, and make it to the south city. Once there, Wang Lung is like a fish out of water. He doesn't know how to make a house out of mat, he doesn't know how their money works, and he doesn't know how to make a living. His wife knows how to beg, and Wang Lung learns to pull rickshaws. One thing I noticed was after their first day in the city, Wang Lung's son wouldn't let of the money he earned be begging. I think this might be a foreshadowing that if Wang Lung becomes rich, his son will be like one of the sons in the House of Hwang and run around doing whatever he wishes.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

The Good Earth

The power that people have in this novel revolve around two things, wealth and what sex you are. Wang Lung is a poor farmer from a small village, and has just as much power as anybody else in his village who are also mostly farmers. However, when he goes to the city for his bride, he loses what little power he has and becomes just another farmer because he is so poor. When he goes to the tea shop before he visits the House of Hwang, he is treated with greater respect because he was the richest one there, and thus had more power. The author demonstrates this when the beggar comes up to him for money. Wang Lung had never been the rich person before and was startled that he was being asked for money. He decided to give him money, but probably so he could feel what being rich was like. When he meets the old lady in the House of Hwang, even though she is a woman she still has more money than him and has more power. The only person that Wang Lung has control over would be his wife, because she is poorer than him and is a woman which makes her nothing more than property to Wang Lung.

Monday, September 14, 2009

A Jury of Her Peers Response

I believe that there are many reasons as to why Mrs. Wright killed Mr. Wright by strangling instead of using a gun against him, the biggest being that she wanted to punish him. If this story is taking place in the early 1900's, then most people being executed were probably done so by hanging. Mrs. Wright probably decided to strangle him as a way of punishing him after 20 years of being forced to live under him. He also took away the two things she loved the most, singing and her canary. When Mrs. Wright was younger she was one of the church choir members and loved to sing. Once she married Mr. Wright he prevented her from singing and she had to find another thing to replace it, which she found in the canary. She loved her canary and then Mr. Wright strangled it. This was probably the final straw for Mrs. Wright who would have wanted to kill her husband, but in a way that would make Mr. Wright regret killing her bird. Since the canary was what pushed her over the edge, killing Mr. Wright the same way he had killed her bird would have been satisfying to Mr. Wright instead of just using a gun and pulling a trigger.