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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Eveline's Relationship with the World

In a way, I can relate with the short story Eveline by James Joyce. Except the big problem was my stepmother, and Eveline's issue was her father. To have someone ridicule you without the other parent present, is a struggle. It does make you feel more isolated in the world even if other siblings are there to help. And once you have become accustomed to the continual arguments and downgrading, you realize there is no escape and to just go with it. So when Eveline is faced with the option to leave the one home she has known all of her life for her first lover, she is undecided. What will she do without the constant fighting that has been a daily ritual in her life? The obvious answer is that of course, she should take her chances and leave. Yet, it is way more complicated than the easy way out. In my personal story, I am faced with the option of leaving my dad's house in Maryland and return living with my mother in Delaware. Obviously, I picked the choice to attend St. Mark's High School in order to obtain a better home life and face the problem of having to make new friends all over again. The doubts will always be present in Eveline's mind. There will be consequences to either action. It will change her entire course of life. What if she makes the wrong decision and something even more horrible happens to her or someone else? Eveline could always just keep facing the dangers of her father and be strong for her siblings. Or Eveline could possibly be happy, if she knew how to. The fear of reaching an agreement is what stops Eveline from marching on to that boat and running away with her secret lover. It's almost unjust how life comes with big changes. These feelings of uncertainty all lead up to how the new criticism is a critical approach to this story. (And sorry if I repeat things that have been previously said, I don't remember which approaches the presenting group did in class) This is because there is universal sense of being confused between choices. I had an extremely similar situation and I'm almost one-hundred percent positive that everybody else in the entire world has or have these experiences. Even though there is a historical approach to this story because it was written in 1914 yet this struggle is global even 98 years later, in a new era with new concepts of life. Eveline's character is also common among the people of the world and could be understood by many generations of people. Basically, this story could be read by numerous communities in order to learn that they are not alone in this big world. I certainly have realized that others may be going through the same dilemmas and need help sorting out the pros and cons of each situation. This book is very beneficial for the readers and is entertaining to comprehend.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

McCarthy's Suspense

In Cormac McCarthy's Pulitzer Prize Winner novel The Road, the entire plot kept reminding me of a song. Specifically, August Burn Red's cover of the traditional Carol of the Bells melody. McCarthy insists on never telling the reader the history of the story that leads up to such a drastic world. Thus, creating an intriguing suspense that is portrayed throughout the novel. Every time a turning point or climax would occur in the story, I would get really excited because I was hoping that a critical detail would finally be revealed. But nope, as always, the event was just a tease. This is exactly how the alternative band plays the traditional piece of music. At one point in the story, the two main characters have finally seen another human in civilization. The father even talked to one of the bad guys. This is where the wavering music introduces repetitive jingles, slowly leading up to the main part. During this interaction with the other human, the bad guy snatches up the son and threatens to hurt him. Cue the guitars strumming in, creating more madness. After a few intense moments, the father shoots the bad guy perfectly and watches him fall dead with no remorse and the child comes sobbing back to this papa. Here, the chords are finally in full rhythm, with obnoxious downbeats that pronounces the scary event. A few weeks or so pass on by, the father and son find a broken down house, covered in gray ash. Once inside,the father finds a locked door and asserts that he must go inside to have a look around. The main chorus starts abruptly in the song, pleading with the father. After some struggles with the lock, the father swings open the door, just to find a bunch of human prisoners, waiting to be eaten by the elite prisoners, who are actually marching back to their haven at this exact moment. Within the song, the rapid scales are climbing on the instruments. The father and son turn around to efficiently run away. Another few months has passed since their last encounter. No people have been seen on the broken down roads leading South, hoping for a group of good guys that still want to survive with humane conditions. The father and son are lucky enough to scavenge some food and supplies. After years of waiting and dreaming to reach the ocean, they finally do! It's not everything they hoped it to be but the duo know how to make shelters work in their favor. Having made a camp at the beach and walking away without second thoughts, they come back with all of their items gone. Yet, the father and son find some footprints and start tracking down the homeless man who stole their cart full of stuff. While running, the music has turned into a drum solo that consists of a lot of bass grinding together and a repeat of the intense harmony. The duo gains their belongings back. Not even two days has passed before the father lies down to rest a while and dies from malnutrition or some other kind of disease. The music correlates with the resolution as the guitar, drums, and violins slow down immensely and fade into the background. Just like the plot of the novel, the music never declares a secret or the underlying story. Only drama happens with a lot of serious turning points, climaxes, and questionable endings. What is The Road even about? What happened to the world? Why is there a chance of cannibalism among humans? Does anybody even know what ever happens?! These thoughts parallel the traditional Christmas song as it slowly gains some detail about the past life but never actually answers the questions. Song: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6o-p-OAWmsY

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Band Geek for the World

The Desperate Act in the Secret Agent

                  There are several aspects in The Secret Agent that make the plot so addictive to read. One of those is a turning point in the novel when the reader finds out that the person who had been blown up to tiny little pieces by the Observatory bomb was Stevie. He was the poor innocent lad who had to be scraped off the ground by a shovel. Of all the many anarchist characters that have been developed, Stevie would be the last person on the list anybody would have expected to be dealing with bombs. This setback caused Stevie's sister, the psycho Winnie, to stab her husband to death. Thus, creating a humorous scene toward the end of the novel, when a different character, Ossipon, decides to literally jump off of a moving train to get away from Winnie, who is trying to escape the country. The fact that Ossipon was desperate enough to risk his own life to get away from a single woman, is both comedic and depressing because Ossipon resorted to this dangerous choice. I found this piece of literature extremely hilarious due to the classic stereotype of the scene. Honestly, how many tragedies end up with a certain insane twist that is extremely unexpected? All of them.  This act of despair represents how the author, Conrad, has a sense of humor in his personality while creating such a realistic masterwork based off of a true event.