Thursday, November 20, 2014

Small Island Day One

Chizoba Ukairo, Laura Miron, and Kathryn Lazarchick

Small Island Discussion part 1
19 November 2014

Prologue:
After Queenie and her parents attended the British Empire Exhibition, she claimed to her class that “I thought I had been to Africa”(1).
  • Queenie then goes on to explain her experience at the exhibition as she discovered the “Ripe, green, crisp”(3) smell of the Apples present in Australia and the “women brightly dressed in strange long, colorful fabrics”(4) in India.
  • The young narrator continues to illustrate her thoughts as she discovers the wonders of each nation at the exhibition.

-How does the narrator’s depiction of Africa and the “monkey man sweating a smell of mothballs [who was] blacker than when you smudge your face with a sooty cork,”(5)  vary Queenie’s observations of the other nations at the exhibition?

-What significance does the prologue play in introducing racial issues of the novel?

-What stereotypes about Africa are introduced in this section of the novel?


Romanticized vision vs reality: Hortense’s arrival to England
  • Romanticized vision
    • dreams of moving to England to teach
      • talks to her friend Celia Langley who dreams of “leaving Jamacia...and going to live in England” (9)
        • her nose in the air
    • yet arrives and does not reach her expectations
    • Dreamed of her husband Joseph Gilbert waiting for her at the docks
      • his “double breasted suit”
    • Ringing her new doorbell in her new England house
  • Reality  
    • no one is at the docks
    • her husband fell asleep- lied about cleaning but,etc.
      • suit that she loved is hanging on the hanger alone
    • has a run down run in a house with other tenants
      • the doorbell she dreamed of does not even work
    • filthy, sad, small room run down by WWII
  • Basically a nightmare, that really saddens Hortense and makes her first impression of England miserable
    • yet her husband, Gilbert, after her less than positive reaction to the conditions sets her in her place
“Yes and you know what else, little Miss Stick-up-your-nose-in-the-air, you will have to wash your plate, your vegetable and your backside in that basin too. This room is where you will sleep, eat, cook, dress, and write your mummy to tell her how the Mother Country is so fine. And, little Miss High-class, one thing about England you don’t know yet because you just come off a boat. You are lucky” (27).

-Gilbert claims that “There been a war here, Everyone live like this”(17) as he shows Hortense his living area. How has war altered society?

Michael and The Ryders:
Upon watching the embrace of Michael and Mrs. Ryder, Hortense “wanted to burst from the room, blow through the windows, to blast through the walls, and escape into the embrace of the dependable hurricane”(46).

-Why is this scene significant?
-What was the town’s reaction to this scandal? Hortense’s reaction?
-In regards to The Ryders, how does the couple’s lifestyle differ from the rest of the town?

Hortense describes her upbringing:
Hortense reflects on her time with Mr. Philip and Miss Ma as they “had taken no more notice of my leaving the homestead than if I were a piece of their livestock whose time had come to be sent for slaughter”(51).
  • “Those diligent years of my upbringing--feeding me with the food from their plates, dressing me in frocks made of cotton and lace, teaching me English manners and Christian discipline-were they to mean no more than the fattening of a chicken on best coconut, which, after they had feasted on its carcass, stripping it of all goodness, they threw out as waste?”(51).

- Does Hortense’s description of her upbringing allow the reader to gain another dimension to her character as she is released into the world?

-What significance does the capture/shower scene (pg 54-55) play within the novel? (if any significance…)

Race
Race as a social construct is clearly shown throughout the novel so far.  Gilbert does not know about racism in America, and he is constantly discriminated against as an airmen while with the US men.

“Coloured, black, nigger.  All these words has been used to characterise me in the last few minutes.  Insults every one,” (126).
“master-race theory: Jim Crow!” (110)

Gilbert also feels a level of distress when he can clearly describe Jamaica’s connection with Britain, but no one understands him or knows it for themselves.  How do you interpret the passage below?

“Give me a map,  let me see if Tommy Atkins or Lady Havealot can point to Jamaica.  Let us watch them turning the page round, screwing up their eyes to look, turning it over to see if perhaps the region was lost on the back, before shrugging defeat.  but give me that map, blindfold me, spin me round three times and I, dizzy and dazed, would still place my finger squarely on the Mother Country,” (119).


“But for me I had just one question - let me ask the Mother Country just this one simple question: how come England did not know me?” (117)

-How did reading the explicit racism make people feel? Was it as uncomfortable for you all as it was for me?
-Is it possible to interpret the white soldier’s behaviors objectively in this connotation? Why or why not?

Queenie’s neighbor is apprehensive about her being a landlady for colored people.

Hortense and Gilbert

Do you consider the couple’s marriage legitimate? Explain

How do you interpret the scene when the couple was alone in the room after their wedding?  (85-87) What does it say about Hortense’ view/feelings about the marriage?

Monday, November 17, 2014

The Floating Opera Day 3

The Floating Opera, by John Barth
Blog Post due Tuesday, Nov. 18th
Margo Tanner, Christine Flynn & Thomas Brown


Calliope Music

He opens the chapter with two columns of different “voices”, is this a method to show how he is conflicted about suicide?  We talked about how he is torn between cynicism and fate in a way, is it his representation of the voices in his head? (pg. 170)

Todd describes the Morton v. Butler case and how it re-emerged after years of dormancy, is this an example he pulls to support his fear of commitment to anything?  Could it be one of his reasons for believing things don’t really “finish”?

Coals to Newcastle

Is there symbolism in the father’s appearance being pristine post-suicide?  Do you think it could be a bigger statement on people who are depressed looking alright?  Maybe this is how Todd feels too?
  • can we maybe account the suicide to the massive financial burden?

We found it odd Todd thought of his father killing chickens when he released the belt from his neck, why did he do this?  What was your reaction?

When he gives away the $5000, this seems to be the moment he chooses to live day to day.  Why does he do this?  Is it to fully release any sort of responsibility, like paying off his father’s debt?  Why does he refuse anything in return, even work?

A tour of the Opera

Relationship with Jeannine very father/daughter, do you think she is his?  Is the mystery behind it again related to his unknown future?

With Jane and Harrison moving to Italy, what will happen to Todd whose life has been built around them?  Why are they trying to call off the arrangement?  
  • admitting their lax attitudes weren’t all too true

Role of Death in the Novel

-How should the reader view Mr. Haecker’s attempt at suicide? What drama does this cast in the end of a novel, in which a mass murder has just been averted?
-Does Todd’s decision to kill everyone in town seem feasible and believable?  Or is it rather too contrived and merely act as an author’s way to make a point?

Todd’s Character

“Although my law practice pays my hotel bill, I consider it no more my career than a hundred other things: sailing, drinking, walking the streets, writing my 'Inquirey', starting at walls hunting ducks and 'coons,reading, playing politics, and whatnot. I'm interested in any number of things, and enthusiastic about nothing.”
-How does this quote shed light onto Todd’s character?  In what ways does this one extraction from the novel encompass up his complex personality?

-How does Todd’s storytelling affect the way in which we understand his story?  Does his storytelling indicate that we should believe him to be a reliable narrator?

“I would in all probability, though not at all necessarily, go on behaving much as I had thitherto, as a rabbit shot on the run keeps running in the same direction untildeath overtakes him.” (252)
-Does Todd feel regretful in they ways that he has lived his life? Or does he rather have a sense of pride in how he has escaped death?

Thursday, November 13, 2014

The Floating Opera Day 2

Group 2
Cavitt, Anna, Zach
11/13/14
The Floating Opera: Pages 84-169

Law and Justice
-Todd starts off the chapter trying to explain his interpretation of law and justice.
“A child encounters a toy tractor, winds it up , and sets it climbing over a book..The tractor climbs well. The child puts another book here, so , and angles the first.The tractor surmounts them with difficulty… the tractor strains, spins, whirrs, and falls like a turtle on its back, trads racing uselessly”(84).
  • What do you make of this quotation? Is this a metaphor for something else? What?  
-  He does not want to learn what exactly law is, but is interested in the things the law can do.
-What exactly is Todd looking for when he is talking about law, and what does he mean he is curious of what law can do?
  • Is law effective in Todd’s eyes?
- He also discusses law in the story of the will. Everyone fights over the old man’s money. Is this a mockery of life?

-”Doesn’t your attitude--which is, after all, irresponsible-- allow for the defeat, even the punishment, of the innocent, and at times the victory of the guilty? And does this not concern you?” What does this quote try to explain?


Death, Suicide, and Sex
-Todd repeatedly mentions death and sex in close succession, such as mocking his friend and asking if he’ll commit suicide and then joking that he’ll marry his friend’s wife afterwards, or the story about the dogs getting in the way of the funeral procession. He says Harisson “lacks guts”(99).
-He mentions the willingness to endure pain and death as a symbol of devotion to love.

-He equates both topics with maturity, and the unwillingness to deal with them with weakness.
“I felt mature and wise and confident, discussing them, and I found myself able to think more liberally, compassionately, and judiciously than before.”
Mister Hacker argues “Life, the simple fact of life, is good young man. Life has intrinsic value”(169). Tod Replies “Nothing has intrinsic value”
How does this change his outlook/character?
Betty June
  • They discuss her love for his neighbor but also “we discussed, in detail, various unpleasant deaths”(119).
  • “I felt mature and wise and confident, discussing them, and I found myself able to think more liberally, compassionately, and judiciously than I’d ever thought before.
  • loss of innocence “took from me my spiritual virginity”(119).
  • sexual encounter with Betty June
    • what are we supposed to make of this?
    • He laughs, she cries and leaves
-They meet again in the future in the next chapter. How have both characters changed?
Jane Mack
  • Conversation of love.

Do you agree that contemplating the subjects of death and sex are hallmarks of maturity? How might Todd’s experiences in war and his modern career affect his views on them?

Nature
- “Nature, coincidence, can be a heavy-handed symbolizer”(109). Also discussed the “life in the face of death scenario” beauty of life vs. clutching feeling of death.
“smile for sure… but walk on and say nothing as if you haven’t noticed”(111).
-Goes to the doctor, realizes the imperfectness of nature. Death a midst life


Tuesday, November 11, 2014

The Floating Opera Part I

The Floating Opera by John Barth   Pages 1-83
Lauren, Angelique, Mike, & Alicia

The Floating Opera- Relevance of the Title
  • References to the title, also the storytelling method he uses
  • Todd introduces to us how he will structure his story: in retrospect of the most important day of his life, but he also gives us background information to significant moments of that day.
    • How does this information of his structure/style change your perspective of the book and plotline as a whole? What if he excluded this part, how different would your perspective be?
  • On page 3 Todd refers to the German meaning of his name: “‘Tod is German for death: perhaps the name is symbolic. “I myself use two d’s, partly in order to avoid that symbolism.” Does this in any way foreshadow what his story is about? Or does this emphasize what he later calls his “cynic” personality? (pg. 51)
  • What is the importance of the handbill advertising the showboat he is planning on taking Jane’s daughter to later? Is there a reason Barth replicated the entire advertisement in the book? (i.e. the date on the handbill)

Relationship with Harrison and Jane
  • Todd’s relationship with Harrison and Jane is in great detail, something many people don’t do - admit and describe an affair that should not have happened. However, Todd incorporates this into his story almost as if it’s a confession.
    • Why does he describe in such detail or emphasize a relationship (that should not have been continuing) so heavily on this seemingly important day of his life?
    • i.e. is this a confession a suicidal person would put in their goodbye note? He doesn’t appear to be guilty about it - so what exactly is it’s importance to him?
     - Does the outline Todd creates about Harrison’s on psychic process on pages 37-38 seem accurate?

Living Everyday Like its His Last and in the Past
  • “So I begin each day with a gesture of cynicism, and close it with a gesture of faith…” (pg 51)
  • Todd as a very strict routine that is odd in some aspects, like he pays his rent of $1.50 to the hotel at about the same time everyday.
  • Why does Todd live everyday as if it will be his last? What is the significance of the minute changes in his daily routine on the day he decided would be his last?
  • He mentions how working in his “good clothes” reminds him of his father.(Pg. 70-72) Does this contribute to his pessimistic outlook on life? What imprint did his father’s suicide leave on him?
Narrative Style

  • The narrative style of  The Floating Opera is different from any of the other novels we have encountered. How does it compare or contrast from the stream of consciousness from Mrs. Dalloway and free indirect discourse from Pride and Prejudice?
  • What are it’s pros and cons?
  • Why was this style chosen and is it appropriate in relation to the “confessionary” story that the author is trying to convey?

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Mrs. Dalloway pg. 136-End

Ally
Santo
Alicia 

Septimus’ Suicide (146)
  1.      He did not want to die. Life was good. The sun hot. Only human beings= what did they want? Coming down the staircase opposite an old man stopped and stared at him. Holmes was at the door. “I”ll give it to you!” he cried, and flung himself vigorously violently down to Mrs. Filmer’s area railings”

        “The coward” cried Dr. Holmes

  1. Why was suicide the only option for Septimus?
  2. What is the symbolic purpose of Septimus’ suicide?
  3.  Who is he talking to and or about/What is he saying when he says, “I’ll give it to you!”
  4.  Why does Dr. Holmes call him a coward?

Peter Walsh
  1. Compare and contrast Peter and Septimus’ view of English society? (147-148)
    1.  Septimus is always talking about Shakespeare and commits suicide to escape humanity, however Peter promotes this idea of humanity
  2.  Conflicting emotions about Clarissa
    1. “Looking back over that long friendship of almost thirty years her theory worked to his extent. Brief, broken, often painful as their actual meetings had been what with his absences and interruptions (this morning, for instance, in came Elizabeth, like a long legged colt, handsome, dumb, just as he was beginning to talk to Clarissa) the effect of them on his life was immeasurable”  (149)
      1. How does Wolfe’s present to us the effects of Clarissa on Peter? What symbolic meaning does her being represented as a colt hold to us?
Clarissa’s Party
  1. Clarissa is conflicted about how her party is going and herself position in society
    1. What helps reassure her that her party is a success?
  2. How does she react to Septimus’ suicide?

Ending of Book
  1. “I will come,” said Peter, but he sat on for a moment. What is this terror? What is this ecstasy? He thought to himself. What is it that fills me with extraordinary excitement?

It is Clarissa, he said.
For there she was.