Posts

Rebirth

1. Why is the car crash so traumatic to David, and what does it symbolize? David’s fear of becoming his father, or rather,  like his father, is constantly reiterated throughout  Giovanni’s Room . After causing damage to another person because of his drunk driving, David realizes he is committing an action that is similar to what his father does, making the accident a moment that is traumatic to him. His father, an alcoholic, has verbally and [physically] abused David for much of his life, despite David not completely caring or realizing it. In landing himself and the other drivers in the hospital, David feels he is becoming like his father—hurting those around him because of his drinking and lack of prudence. The car accident is also traumatic as it is one of the first times David “meets” and calls for his mom. A figure who has never had a true presence in his life, only a photo in their house, and never talked about by David’s dad, David’s mother is an idealistic image o...

The Reality of Comics

The Escapist's anti-Nazi statements and actions concerned Sam and Joe's employers and publishers. What are the challenges of balancing social advocacy and private enterprise? Can you think of any issues today which would provide a similar challenge? What issues should comic books or graphic novels be exploring?        With social advocacy becoming a prime interest for the cousins, Joe especially, there is a constant push and pull between which aspect of comics should take priority--social  advocacy, or private enterprise and interest. The passion Joe (as well as Sam, but he does not have as strong a connection to the anti-Nazi cause) puts into The Escapist causes him to feel a connection to the character himself, thus the actions of Tom Mayflower are those that Joe wishes he could commit. By incorporating anti-Nazi sentiments in his writing, Joe pushes his employers/publishers to favor social advocacy when considering their business endeavors. From a rathe...

Chabon Character ID

The rancid smoke still clung to her pressed silken overcoat, freckles of a soon-to-be downpour already sunken into shoulders that seemed impossibly pulled back and tight like the graying knot cemented to her knobby neck, the shadow that fell on her face covered the splay of wrinkles that threatened to force their way to consciousness from between Margaret Haste’s flagrant eyes. The harsh woman looked, scornfully, at the recently acquired intern who had yet to engage in the inevitable squabble Margaret evoked with every being who dared face the printer that stood menacingly at the corner adjacent to her desk. The structured piles of marked documents rested on the corner of Margaret's desk, a pen, stone paperweight, office-issued dial phone, and dusted desktop computer the only other items that gambled to intrude on Margret Haste's sacred site of work. Not even the aged photo of her too-old children had earned its place. Type, write, print, edit, print, type, highlight. The woma...

Intertextuality in Kavalier and Clay

Answer the following for your blog post: Compare this novel to those you've read previously. What appears here that appears in others? For example, Chabon was asked if he purposefully referenced the opening of  Moby Dick  when two unlikely bedmates are forced together to share a bed unwillingly with the opening of  Kavalier and Clay . Make connections in the first 12 chapters to other works of literature in a similar way.    Opening "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay" with a reference to Moby Dick, and similarly referring to The Iliad, Chabon incorporates ideas from outside works to demonstrate his understanding of literature as a whole and to exemplify the motif of storytelling. With a reference to The Iliad in chapter one, Chabon relates the heroic nature of Odysseus to Sam himself. Though not a connection to another work of literature in terms of content, this reference helps characterize Sam and give further insight to his view on life and himsel...

Alternative Structure in The Penelopiad

What do the various poetic and musical forms Margaret Atwood uses to tell the maids’ story bring to the telling? Why do you think she chose to write  The Penelopiad   in this way?      Though the maids' songs are used as a humorous aspect of The Penelopiad 's telling, they show the lack of seriousness their deaths had in the original story. The maids finally have a chance to explain their own perspective towards their death and involvement with the suitors. In an ironic form, however, Atwood expresses this telling through song and poetic structure. Atwood stays true to the attention the maids were given in The Odyssey, but incorporates her own mission of telling the story through a feminist lens by actually allowing the maids to give their own take on the situation at hand. In doing so, a feminist lens is used through a character besides Penelope, who has her own biases towards Odysseus and his actions. Atwood includes the poetic and musical form to ironicall...

Justice in the Penelopiad

How does your novel represent justice? With The Odyssey being told primarily as an epic tale and used as a source of entertainment rather than character development or plot, the injustices toward Penelope and the twelve maids are ignored in favor of supporting Odysseus' journey of greatness. In my own opinion, the untold story of Penelope and the maids is a supporting detail that demonstrates Odysseus' tirade of power and adventure and does not purely exist to merely discredit the women of the story. Though the outdated ideas of the time period in which The Odyssey was written in are shown in the story through Odysseus' actions, The Penelopiad is a story of justice that takes a different stance on the importance of plot, social awareness, and culture when compared to its origin story. The alternative perspective that the work has given us thus far shows a different side to the adventure that is told in The Odyssey, giving the underrepresented characters, who were p...

The City Sounds Like a War

Consider the following statement from page 9: "We stayed because the city sounds like a war, and you can’t leave a war once you’ve been, you can only keep it at bay." In what ways does the historical precedent for violent removal of Native populations filter into the modern era? How does violence—both internal and external—appear throughout the narrative? The violent removal of Native Americans and the reasoning behind it filters into the modern era of real life and the setting of There There. With the oppression of Native Americans not being an uncommon occurrence in the novel, the continuous effects the Trail of Tears and horrific treatment toward Native Americans in the past are seen in the more modern setting of Oakland. One such instance in which the verbal violence that stems from the removal of Native populations occurs is when Dene is waiting to pitch his film idea to the panel of judges, and a fellow attendee asks if the winner of the grant has to be a person of co...