The book The House Of The Spirits is unlike any that I have ever read. I think this is because of its genre of magical realism and the was that it is narrated with more than one person. I am not sure what to think of the magical realism. On one hand it adds magical things to a very down to earth plot which makes seems to create a feeling of "so could this really happen or not..." On the other hand it does help to give the book a sense of mystery. In most books it is easy to place the book in a set of similar story lines, such as the maiden in distress or the journey overcoming obstacles just to name two. Isabel Allende's book is able to be unlike the generic story because of the way that it includes magical and very ordinary happenings side by side throughout the entire story.
One of my favorite characters form the book is Clara. I liked her from the beginning when she spoke up in church and it was obvious that she was unlike anyone else. I think she is able to draw readers in with her supernatural powers. It is always neat when we are told by Clara what is going to happen and then we are able to read how it does happen just that way on the next page. I also admire her ability to do exactly what she wants to do, no matter what others have to say. She showed this when she went silent for years. I was very impressed with the way that she was able to keep silent even when the doctors and her mother tried so hard to get her to talk, and then one day years later she just decides to talk again.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Making a Statement
The picture in our book of Interrogation II by Leon Golub really got me thinking about how horrible torture and war are.
The picture made me think of a prisoner of war being tortured in order to make him tell information. Golub did an excellent job of portraying the emotions of each of the men. The man standing on the gives the impression that he has seen this happen many times and this is nothing new to him. The other three interrogators appear to be having a good time with the torture. They are making playful motions with their hands and they have evil grins on their faces. The image of the prisoner is what really strikes me. He is tied to a chair after being stripped of all his clothing. Golub did a good job by putting a black bag over the prisoner's head. It helps to show how the man is completely helpless, and will only have a slight clue of what is coming next by the sounds that the interrogators make.
Interrogation II and Golub's other paintings are perfect examples of propaganda in art. They show Golub's feelings on war and in particular America's presence in Vietnam. Many of his paintings showed the contrast between submissive figures such as a man being tortured and sadistic figures such as the men seeming to enjoy the torturing. His highly political works often seem to portray a bleak, evil world that has no hope for redemption. I think that his works did a very good job of showing the evils which often take place during wars.
The picture made me think of a prisoner of war being tortured in order to make him tell information. Golub did an excellent job of portraying the emotions of each of the men. The man standing on the gives the impression that he has seen this happen many times and this is nothing new to him. The other three interrogators appear to be having a good time with the torture. They are making playful motions with their hands and they have evil grins on their faces. The image of the prisoner is what really strikes me. He is tied to a chair after being stripped of all his clothing. Golub did a good job by putting a black bag over the prisoner's head. It helps to show how the man is completely helpless, and will only have a slight clue of what is coming next by the sounds that the interrogators make.
Interrogation II and Golub's other paintings are perfect examples of propaganda in art. They show Golub's feelings on war and in particular America's presence in Vietnam. Many of his paintings showed the contrast between submissive figures such as a man being tortured and sadistic figures such as the men seeming to enjoy the torturing. His highly political works often seem to portray a bleak, evil world that has no hope for redemption. I think that his works did a very good job of showing the evils which often take place during wars.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Andy Warhol's Popular Art
Page 135 of our humanities book states "Pop Art, the quintessential style of the Information Age, embraced the imagery of consumerism and celebrity culture mediated by television, film, and magazines." I think this is the perfect description of what Pop Art is whether it is in something like music or such as the paintings of Andy Warhol. In his Pop Art, Andy Warhol used things common to the general public such as cans of soup. Pop Music of today is much the same way. The 2011 song "On the Floor" by Jennifer Lopez incorporates lines that are easy for the general public to relate to such as the line "I'm like Inception, I play with your brain" referring to the recent, popular movie Inception.
Andy Warhol, who was a pioneer of American Pop Art, used very common things, which could often be found in a supermarket, as the images for his art. A couple of his most famous paintings were of the Campbell's soup cans and the Coca-Cola bottles. I think his paintings were a work of genius. Of course they are nothing that the average person today could not easily create with the aid of a camera and a copy machine, but that is not the point. I respect Andy Warhol, and I believe he is included in our Humanities book because he is an innovator. While I am not a fan of Picasso, I believe that likewise, he should be included in our book because he created a new form of art, abstract art. Therefore, I think Warhol should be in our book because he was a pioneer of Pop Art, and I like his works because they are of things that are easy for me to relate to.
Andy Warhol, who was a pioneer of American Pop Art, used very common things, which could often be found in a supermarket, as the images for his art. A couple of his most famous paintings were of the Campbell's soup cans and the Coca-Cola bottles. I think his paintings were a work of genius. Of course they are nothing that the average person today could not easily create with the aid of a camera and a copy machine, but that is not the point. I respect Andy Warhol, and I believe he is included in our Humanities book because he is an innovator. While I am not a fan of Picasso, I believe that likewise, he should be included in our book because he created a new form of art, abstract art. Therefore, I think Warhol should be in our book because he was a pioneer of Pop Art, and I like his works because they are of things that are easy for me to relate to.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Despair
As I read The Day of the Locust I continually got the feeling of despair. The book elaborates on the many different structures which are fake and poorly built just to be used as props for movies. Tod often looks at these structures with contempt because of their lack of sturdiness, but accepts it because he knows they are all created not with conventional materials such as steel and concrete, but with "plaster, lath and paper" because "plaster and paper know no law, not even that of gravity (61)."
Each of the characters shows despair also. Tod wants Faye so baldy that he has contemplated raping her more than once. Faye, who seems to have nothing going for her except her beauty, is convinced that if given a chance, she WILL become a movie star. Poor Homer, who came to Hollywood to get rest, is also madly but uselessly in love with Faye. I think Tod does a very good job of describing all the people who come to Hollywood seeking "instant fame and success" with his saying about the "people who came to California to die."
The last chapter of the book does an excellent job of summing up the feeling of despair that I feel when I hear about the lives of the main characters living in Hollywood. Tod talks about all the people in the world who work and save their entire lives for something and decide to come to California in order to find what they have been looking for. Page 178 reads "They have been cheated and betrayed. They have slaved and saved for nothing."
Each of the characters shows despair also. Tod wants Faye so baldy that he has contemplated raping her more than once. Faye, who seems to have nothing going for her except her beauty, is convinced that if given a chance, she WILL become a movie star. Poor Homer, who came to Hollywood to get rest, is also madly but uselessly in love with Faye. I think Tod does a very good job of describing all the people who come to Hollywood seeking "instant fame and success" with his saying about the "people who came to California to die."
The last chapter of the book does an excellent job of summing up the feeling of despair that I feel when I hear about the lives of the main characters living in Hollywood. Tod talks about all the people in the world who work and save their entire lives for something and decide to come to California in order to find what they have been looking for. Page 178 reads "They have been cheated and betrayed. They have slaved and saved for nothing."
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