Monday, January 30, 2012
Leftover discussion question, 1/30, part 4
What do you think about Mike's description of Brett? "She loves looking after people." That seems to interrupt most of our ideas of Brett as a callous "man-eater." Does this change your opinions of Brett's ethics in intimacy?
Leftover discussion question, 1/30, part 3
Who is the character with the most depth? Who do we think is most likely to succeed after the story is over?
Leftover discussion question, 1/30, part 2
Hemingway closes this novel with a fantastic but possibly enigmatic line. What do you think he means by "Isn't it pretty to think so?" [Lots of you actually brought up versions of this question--and questions about Brett's remark--it is cruel of her to say what she does?]
Leftover discussion question, 1/30
Jake looks down on Robert because he is completely shaped and controlled by the women in his life, but isn't Jake just as obedient to Brett?
Discussion Questions 1/30
Discussion Questions 1/30
1. After the fiesta, Brett leaves with Romero instead of Mike. Although Brett is usually free willed and Mike is very permissive, it is never clear what happens between Brett and Mike. Are they no longer getting married?
2. It is not directly clear why Hemingway decided to name this work “The Sun Also Rises.” It could function as a parallel to his objective, sequential writing style. What do you think?
Discussion questions for 1/30
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Discussion Questions for Monday 1/30
2. What did you make of the ending of the novel? Has Brett and Jake's relationship really changed at all after all of their travels? If yes, how so?
Discussion Questions for Monday 1/30
2. The whole bankruptcy issue came in out of the blue. If they are all bankrupt, then how are they affording everything on these trips? DO you think it is all coming from loans or something else?
Friday, January 27, 2012
Defending Brett
Brett is not a hussy, as has been stated before. We have all known women like this, those that have some invisible magnetism affecting all the men they come in contact with. For the most part, these types of women don't even notice it, they simply pay the same attention they're given to all of these men. In my opinion, Brett is simply taking advantage of her situation and the men are as much to blame for being mistreated. Saying that it is Brett's fault that all of these men are being used is not giving men any credit to think for themselves. She is nothing if not honest, and each man knows what he is getting when becoming involved with her. If he chooses to continue, it's at his own risk.
My Sympathy Vote For the Week and Drunken Stupors
On another note, I like the point that was made in class about how the true emotions came out during drunken stupors. If you ever want to know how someone really feels talk to them when they're drunk. There is no filter what so ever. I liked those moments of drunken rants because the characters were really able to say how they felt. I also thought it was interesting though how Robert never drank. Why didn't he conform to the culture of drinking like everyone else?
Would you be Robert's friend?
I personally feel bad for Robert, but in all honesty I would not want to be his friend. He is one of those people that you want to like, but just can’t. You know they have good intentions, but you just cannot seem to get past that completely annoying exterior. He is, quite honestly, a pathetic person; he never achieves much of anything and when he does no one remembers, he completely lets those around him shape his life (especially the women), and he even waits around on a girl when he knows he has no chance. Yet, if I were around Robert, instead of having a pull to sympathize with him, I would probably try to distance myself. The more I read, the more I notice that they literally want Robert to leave them alone. It is almost like a survival method people have so that they are not dragged down with someone in their inevitable embarrassment. This is a little harsh, but c’mon, you know it’s true.
Hemingway's Style - and Brett
Also, is it so terrible that I am a fan of Brett's character? She does terrible things and seems to lead Jake on throughout the novel, but I feel like she has a reasoning behind them. Also, "cheating" or seeing other people while you are with another was not so frowned upon socially in the early 1900's. I'm not exactly sure why, but rules about monogamy were not how they are viewed socially now. Maybe Brett did have feelings for Jake, but knew it could never work (maybe because of his injury, but then again maybe not), so she wanted to keep him around as a friend...?
Week #3: The Sun Also Rises
Hemingway frustrations
The Animal Spirits
I think it's patently wrong to say that nobody in this novel wants anything. This novel is so ABOUT want. Not an object, but the very experience of WANTING. Passion. Lust. Power is the point. Nietzsche would say that this drive within a species is the only story:
"... only in limited situations is the drive for conservation precedent over the will to power. The natural condition of life, according to him, is one of profusion.[69] In its later forms Nietzsche's concept of the will to power applies to all living things, suggesting that adaptation and the struggle to survive is a secondary drive in the evolution of animals, less important than the desire to expand one's power... Defending his view, Nietzsche describes instances where people and animals willingly risk their lives to gain power—most notably in instances like competitive fighting and warfare."
-- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Nietzsche
Bullfighting and Boxing, anyone?
It's obvious that these characters are not supposed to be telling us about the selves we want to be, either by negative or positive example. Like Dr. H said in class-- nobody in this novel, even Brett, really seems happy. I think Brett, Jake, Robert, and Mike are all struggling with those dark, ruthless impulses and desires that none of us want to admit are a defining point of all of our characters as human-animals.
The Sun Also Rises 1957 Film Trailer
Dragging on with the Details
The Writers Craft
Thursday, January 26, 2012
First There's Misery, Then There's Jake.
Jake will not and never will act on his feelings for Brett, not because she's engaged to Mike or has had a meaningless fling with Cohn, or the countless other men that are mentioned, but because he limits himself from the ability to have sexual relations with her (and Brett doesn't help him forget about it). Jake is so helplessly in love with Brett that it's almost pathetic. He is willing to drop anything and everything he is doing to rescue her like a knight in shining armor whose services seem to not be appreciated. Over the course of this novel, including the background information we have been told, Brett has easily manipulated Jake so much so that she knows he will always be there for her whenever she feels it's necessary.
I also thought the comment Mike shouts in Chapter XVI was very ironic: "Bulls have no balls!" For this reader, I really wish Jake would finally grow a pair and tell Brett to get lost and quit being miserable. And, this may be cheesy but I feel like Jake should break into a song every time Brett appears on the page...I'm thinking "Toxic" by Britney Spears should do it!
Friend Zone Frustrations
Bullfighting: Despicable Sport Suits Despicable Characters
Vacuums and War
This advice is what came to mind as I pondered what, exactly, frustrates me about The Sun Also Rises. With the possible exception of Lady Brett, the characters don’t really want anything. Even Jake, the narrator of the entire story, has no aspirations. Jake’s life basically involves going out and drinking, going fishing, and going to the bull fights in Spain. There are no great rewards attached to any of these activities; neither are there dire consequences if Jake can’t do any of these things.
And I think it all goes back to World War I. Jake participated in a war that had the potential to give great meaning to his life. The war held promises of participating in patriotism and gaining honor for defending the United States. Instead, the war basically stripped Jake’s life of meaning. Instead of feeling proud of his country, he seems to strongly dislike associating with Americans. He never talks about what
he witnessed in war, but I can’t help suspecting that Jake’s rather
anesthetized reaction to the bull fighting indicates that he’s become
desensitized to violence. He has been raised Catholic, but religion offers him no hope or purpose. I’d guess that he became disillusioned with religion because of what he witnessed in World War I. And the war took away his ability to have (in his mind) meaningful relationships, either with Brett or with anyone who hasn’t been through the same experiences.
One of the problems that I have in connecting with the story and the characters, then, stems from the fact that Jake seems so resigned to his situation. Maybe if Jake were trying to find fulfillment, I would feel more compassion toward his character.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Drinkers, Gotta love 'em
And on a side note, Brett is a hussy. (I'll use a nicer word than I used in class c: ) She is engaged, but she is having an affair with Robert, tells Jake she loves him, and kisses all different men. There are no if's, and's, or but's about it, the woman is a hussy.
Undecided
I don't know if I could even say that I disliked this book, it just did not resonate with me, as a reader. I think my biggest issue had to do with the lack of feeling. While I respect the idea of not telling the reader what to think and feel, I also think that feelings are what makes literature great to me. I do applaud the intrigue that is created when the characters aren't viewed internally. It makes every one a mystery and every action a symbol. This being said, I'm not sure if that was Hemingway's intention. I feel like this creation of his was made to mirror the characters. I suppose he couldn't really create this evocative and grandiose tale around people who really don't know where they're going and really don't care. Does anyone else want to defend Hemingway? I really do want to like him, I'm just bleh.
Is Jake (Hemingway) Anti-Semitic?
1/25: Another leftover discussion question (more of a Franken-question)...
1/25: Leftover discussion question
"Does the character's apparent post-war lack of direction still resonate with readers today?"
In other words, can you--in any way--understand, relate to, or sympathize with what Jake is going through? Some of the discussion questions I read from the rest of you seem to indicate that folks are having a hard time with these characters.
Thoughts?
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Metaphors
Friday, January 20, 2012
Battle of the Sexes
I particularly love the way Glaspell wrote how differently the men and women behaved and reacted to each other. It was not simply to play on the typical dissimilarity of the sexes, but instead she used it to form and drive her story. This story displayed a real power for women, not only with their ability to recognize clues that the men missed, but also in their relationships and bonds as women.
The irony of the story is that the men never even considered that the women could make any valuable observation. The women noticed details that only they would recognize, such as the dirty pots under the sink or the crooked sewing on the quilt square. The men simply dismissed these out of place things as her failure as a housekeeper. The men dismissed these observations as women’s “trifles”, but the things they noticed actually solved the case. This also hints at the underlying theme of the community of women. These women didn’t just see the subtle hints, but they also saw what Mrs. Wright’s life was really like. They could empathize with her cold life of silence and knew exactly why she would want a bird; just to hear the singing.
One thing I really like was how the men and women reacted differently with one another. For instance, when they first come in the house the men rush to the stove and the women hang back, when the men are upstairs the women have no problem going directly to the stove and commenting about the cold temperature. Also, the women are markedly more quite when the men are in the room. The men give the women no respect, but rather speak to them like children.
The joys of womanhood, or not so much
Female Intuition: Fact or Myth?
Without a doubt, the women play the most important role in this play. Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale are ultimately the ones who find the evidence and draw their own conclusions about the murder. But at the beginning, when the five adults walk into the unkempt Wright residence and step into the kitchen, the County Attorney comments that Mrs. Wright, was “not much of a housekeeper”. During such times when women played a very specific domestic role in every household, the kitchen was often seen as a woman’s sanctuary—a foreign land for most of the male population. Glaspell demonstrates this idea well by maneuvering the entire play from the kitchen, the woman’s space; essentially all of the action happens in the kitchen.
Another aspect I found interesting was the interrogation scene between the County Attorney and Mrs. Hale. Glaspell definitely changed the tone between this interrogation scene and the previous one between the County Attorney and Mr. Hale. As the County Attorney is speaking to Mr. Hale, the Attorney politely asks Mr. Hale for a recollection when “you came here yesterday morning”. He proceeds to ask Mr. Hale other questions during the scene, but let’s Hale answer at his own pace without interruption. However, when the County Attorney turns to Mrs. Hale for answers, his tone is harsher, more fast-paced, and even interrupting of her responses. After the Attorney is through with the questioning, the men head upstairs into the bedroom to investigate the crime scene.
In the time period that Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters are downstairs, they proceed to find the most significant evidence: fruit jars, a dish cloth, the setting loaf of bread, the broken bird cage, the half cleaned table, the unfinished quilt, and most importantly, the dead canary bird wrapped in a delicate piece of silk in the sewing box. Glaspell gave her female characters the gift of common sense, and the women were able to seemingly put the pieces of the murder together. Both women concluded that Mrs. Wright had strangled her husband because he had—in turn—strangled her beautiful singing canary. Mrs. Hale makes sense of the bird’s murder: “Wright wouldn’t like the bird—a thing that sang. She used to sing. He killed that, too”. By the end of the play, Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters do protect their own sex by hiding the evidence; Glaspell preserves the sacredness of female intuition and creates heroines from trifles.
Poem to my Uterus
What, if anything, is particularly patient about a sock?
The rest of the poem reveals to me through the metaphorical rendering of this defunct uterus, a look at a much mythologized, sometimes domestic, sometimes magical, "women's world."
I can see a sock as a product of women's labor-- a loving, quiet process carried on in private spaces, if we want to get romantic. It is a very useful, surprisingly intimate, little thought of thing. Wrapping up the object, organ, and labor and calling it "patient," tags all of this, and makes Clifton's lamenting "where can I go/ barefoot/without you/ where can you go/ without me," more intelligible and heartbreaking.
"My bloody print/ my estrogen kitchen/ my black bag of desire." An expansion upon the theme begins with a phrase that equally echoes something aggressively primal and strangely domestic. A paw print? A floral print? A fingerprint? Likely all of the above. An identity. And "estrogen kitchen," other than being an awesome band name, alerts me to something alchemical. And when we get to "black bag of desire," my imagination takes an energetic leap to cackling women in black hats with bubbling cauldrons. Something mysterious and otherworldly and powerful. A container of magician's tricks.
"To My Last Period"
Week Two: Plath and Clifton
Thursday, January 19, 2012
random thoughts on Lucille Clifton
Trifles
Trifles...Another episode of "Snapped"
Well I'll be
SPOILER: Clifton's Emphasis on the Female Body
Another Mystery in "Trifles"
Each time I've read "Trifles," I've gotten the impression that Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters are friends, at least to the extent that they understand each other quite well and discuss serious topics together. Maybe I felt that they are friends because they work together so quickly at the end to help out Mrs. Wright. But the way that they use only their last names to refer to each other creates a sort of artificial distance between two characters that otherwise seem close.
Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters know that Mrs. Wright's first name is Minnie (1997); don't they know each other's first names? Why don't they use them when addressing each other? Maybe Susan Glaspell is using this device to make a statement about women and the overarching reach of their husbands. But if this were the case, wouldn't it make more sense for the husbands to call their wives "Mrs. Hale" and "Mrs. Peters" and then have the women use their first names with each other to serve as a contrast? I'd appreciate anyone's thoughts on this.
Overused?
No Hard Evidence in Trifles
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Women are like Birds
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Fern's "BlueStocking"
I believe that Fern's choice of title was meant to poke fun at the term "Bluestocking" and that no woman can possibly cultivate her intellect in a society that puts so little importance on feminine ambition and masculine domesticity.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Fern's Feminism
Fanny Fern’s “Mrs. Adolphus Smith Sporting the ‘Blue Stocking’” is brilliantly written. Only a female writer could create such a piece, most likely from personal experience. I’m sure both Fanny Fern and her character, Mrs. Adolphus Smith, received much criticism for leaving their children unattended in order to sit down and write their masterpieces. Fern wrote her character as a fellow authoress for newspapers and journals, which leads me to believe this was written due to some like scenario in Fern’s own home. I also find this to be a great women’s rights piece showing that men need to take some responsibility for things occurring in their own homes. Mr. Smith can’t even find his Sunday pants, much less save his own child from choking on a button. He also gets fed up enough to call his wife’s writing scribbling, which she more or less ignores because she knows she is in control.
Margaret (vs) Anne
I had previously read Anne Bradstreet's poem, "An Author to Her Book" before, but I had not yet read Margaret Cavendish's , "The Poetess's Hasty Resolution". I love reading Bradstreet and I'm learning to like Cavendish. When I read both of the poems, I felt as if they were saying somewhat of the same things. Both authors thought of their works as their own children and that there should have been time between the writings of them and the publishings. I did not know that Cavendish wrote her poem before Bradstreet though and it made me wonder if Bradstreet had the chance to read Cavendish's poem before Bradstreet wrote her own. Did Bradstreet get ideas for her poem from Cavendish, or was it purely coincidence that both woman wrote about relatively the same thing? I would love to know the answer to that question.
I hope I enjoy our other readings as much as I have enjoyed what we have read so far. I'm very excited to discuss Susan Glaspell's, "Trifles" this week in class. I have read it for two classes previously and love the conversation it sparks with the students in the classroom.
Saturday, January 14, 2012
King's "Balcony"
I'm so glad to be taking this class and looking at the transition that writer's subject matter and ideas of gender (especially feminist writers) have made as the feminist movement's goals changed over time. I believe that all writing reflects hopes and struggles of the people in the time it is written and that especially in the last 200 years, feminist writing has changed drastically in regards to the goals of the writers. I hope to continue to see a shift in these writer's objectives as we move into more modern writing, and I'm also anxious to see how male feminist writers explore these stereotypes and change their objectives in writing as the semester goes on.
Friday, January 13, 2012
"Mrs. Adolphus Smith": The Use of Stereotype
Grace King's The Balcony as an Escape
Fanny Fern
That's What They Want You to Think
An observation I made while reading Bradstreet’s “The Author to Her Book” and Cavendish’s “An Excuse for So Much Writ upon My Verses”, was that they talk about their writing as their children. In one way, their writing was precious to them and was created by them like a child. For example, Cavendish said “Condemn me not for making such a coil/About my book, alas it is my child.” It is literally an excuse for writing, as if she could not help but pursue her maternal instinct. This gives the impression that they were taking on a socially accepted maternal role, but toward their writing. These women were basically saying that it was acceptable for them to be writers because they took on such a feminine role towards their work. Also, they take on a very inferior position in their explanations. For instance, Bradstreet talks about herself as a weak writer who had no business being published. She makes it sound like her writing is so bad that even she does not like it, but she has to take ownership for it as her motherly duty, just like the mother of a flawed child. This paints a picture of weak women who cannot help but indulge their natural need to nurture. This is such a clever approach because they use the guise of socially accepted inferior women to accomplish their socially rebellious goals of being women writers.
Those Trifling Blue Stockings.
Nonetheless, in true realistic style, Fern's writing is interrupted repeatedly by everyone around her. I don't know about anyone else, but I know I've experienced a similiar situation in my academic career. It seems I can waste most of the day doing absolutely nothing important, but when I make the decision to sit down and start writing a paper, reading an assignment, or anything that has to do with school, suddenly the entire world wants to communicate with me. My mom comes in wanting me to do 10,000 things, or the phone starts ringing, or 50 text messages start ringing through my phone. All at once, the concentration I've been building up is shattered and frustration sets in. At the beginning of this piece, Fern seems to finally find time to sit down and work a story and then is simultaneously interrupted to the point where she gives in and returns to her personal life. It's very comedic.
My favorite part of the piece was when Mr. Smith interrupts and says, "Wife! will you leave off scribbling?" I know I'm jumping the gun a little, but that line instantly reminded me of Susan Glaspell's Trifles, when Hale makes the comment: "Well, women are used to worrying over trifles." It's as if the men are dismissing that anything the woman is suggesting or trying to accomplish is worth the time. To Mr. Smith his wife is doing little more than "scribbling" meaningless words, instead she should be conducting her duties of taking care of the children and performing her female duties. The same goes for Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters in Trifles. The men would rather dismiss any of their suggestions or intuitions than gather any sort of credibility from women who clearly should know their place.
Why do we care about gender again?
In which books are neither read nor written on The Balcony
This piece also tries to make a case for women's writing springing from a particular way of being-- a similar mothering sensibility that Cavendish alluded to in her poems "Each story is different, or appears so to her... And so she dramatizes and inflects it, trying to make the point visible to her apparent also to her hearers. " Men are explicitly excluded from this process.
I think primarily that this piece is trying to relate how powerful and desirable it is to be at the center of this closed, intimate, social universe. The children are "not even afraid of God" under this meeting of the woman hivemind. The influence of shared "experiences, reminiscences, episodes" among women on the balcony is gathered and impressed upon the world not through writing, but through enveloping and shaping the minds of the next generation.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Week One: Which includes Bradstreet, Cavendish, Fern, and King
Bradstreet, Cavendish and Fern
Mrs. Adolphus discussion
First and foremost, Mr. Adolphus Smith is portrayed as someone who looks toward his wife when he can't quickly figure out a problem, instead of spending time thinking up a solution. For example, he could not find his Sunday pants, did not know what to do when their child swallowed a button, and could not remember what his wife wanted to order from the butcher. The piece is extremely stereotypical, with the husband unable to problem solve, while at the same time expecting his wife to easily and quickly come up with a solution. At the end, Mr. Aldophus Smith clearly has no clue how to do what would be considered *stereotypically* female work, as he had been holding his child upside down for quite some time to get the button out of his throat.
If I didn't find this piece so funny, I might actually be offended by it. However, I think men do have a tendency to look toward their wife, girlfriend, mother, or other major female relation to solve problems for them. I do believe that both Mr. and Mrs. Aldophus Smith are conforming to their gender roles, and expect the other to do so as well (even Mrs. Aldophus Smith taking her husband's name is following gender role norms). I have no problem with clearly defined gender roles, as I think they would exist naturally anyway. That being said, I really like this piece. I think it is hilarious and I am looking forward to discussing it in class with everyone!
Anne Bradstreet: A Visionary for American Literature
Ramblings
Anyway, I did like the idea that Cavendish’s poems reflect, as the introduction to her poetry put it, “psychological reactions to the process of writing” (160). The description of the sheer joy of writing for oneself, the anxiety that follows when one realizes that others will read this precious writing, and the desire for somebody to say, “No, this is good!” were definitely relatable.
I think both Brittany and Angela commented that Bradstreet and Cavendish were “rarities” in their days: most authors were men. I was thinking about the fact that things are sort of opposite today, or at least there are equal numbers of men and women writers. Maybe I was thinking more of fanfiction.net, the website where I’ve posted stories and frequently read others’ “fics.” The majority of the authors on that website are female. Likewise, out of the seventeen people in my Intro to Creative Writing class last semester, only three were male. Now, I realize that
there are plenty of male English majors and authors. I just think it’s interesting that sometimes we – or at least I – think of writing as a more feminine pursuit. I’m not saying that this is true – my favorite author, Ted Dekker, is obviously male.
I’m also reminded of an article that we had to read last semester for English 377 – “Composing as a Woman” by Elizabeth Flynn. Among other topics, Flynn discussed the contrast in the typical subjects that men and women tend to write about: women write about relationships, while men write about accomplishments (427-32). Bradstreet’s and
Cavendish’s poems seem to be a combination of the two: the poets describe their mother-child relationships with their writing as well as the tentative accomplishments that their poems represent.
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Bradstreet and Cavendish
I believe that Bradstreet and Cavendish are another reflection of the era they lived in. Becoming a published, woman writer was not a respected profession for a gender condemned to find complete fulfillment as a wife and mother. A woman was to have no wants of her own or desires apart from her husbands. If Bradstreet or Cavendish had not displayed their writing through a humble, passive, and submissive lens they would have been shunned and most likely never published. Bradstreet describes her own poetry as inferior and flawed. She also implies a lack of control over the outcome of that symbolized inferiority. She portrays herself as a woman incapable of producing any better because she is a woman. Cavendish also takes a similar stance in "An Excuse for So Much Writ upon My Versus." She presents her work as juvenile, incomplete, and in need of guidance. She also appears to absolve herself of all responsibility for her poems outcome in the very first line, "Condemn me not for making such a coil." I don't believe for a second that either of these women actually considered themselves inferior writers; but, instead of screaming "Screw You!!" to the men who controlled their world they chose to play their hand in the most effective way and I applaud and respect them for knowing how to work the system!