So the question here is this:
Blood Meridian ... yes or no? Should it be in the curriculum of the class or not? Is the difficult reading experience worth the payoff?
In your blog entry you should make your case. I have mixed feelings and am curious to know what you think.
LATAW!
Monday, February 25, 2013
Friday, February 1, 2013
Headin' down the road...
Howdy LATAWers. Homework for this weekend is to read the little
excerpt from "Into the Wild" and respond to this blog entry. What I
would like you to reflect upon is our class on Thursday. I told Mr.
Lichtman that I would pass some students reflections along to him. As a
reminder, here are some topics that came up in the
discussion/presentation that day:
1. The feelings that come along with being on the road (from Grateful Dead song at beginning).
2. The manner in which being on the road can free up your mind.
3. The possibility that you think in a different manner when you are moving -- walking, riding, driving.
4. The question I asked, "Does the need to write about your experiences cheapen or enrich them?"
5. Educational innovation -- came up more in first period than seventh. What skills should we REALLY be teaching in high school to prepare students for the future.
Any other topics that came up that interested you.
I may weigh in a little later in the weekend.
Have fun watching those superb owls on Sunday.
mrh
1. The feelings that come along with being on the road (from Grateful Dead song at beginning).
2. The manner in which being on the road can free up your mind.
3. The possibility that you think in a different manner when you are moving -- walking, riding, driving.
4. The question I asked, "Does the need to write about your experiences cheapen or enrich them?"
5. Educational innovation -- came up more in first period than seventh. What skills should we REALLY be teaching in high school to prepare students for the future.
Any other topics that came up that interested you.
I may weigh in a little later in the weekend.
Have fun watching those superb owls on Sunday.
mrh
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Cape Solitude
For your post I'd like you to write about whatever interested you in
your reading of "Cape Solitude." I hope something interested you, but
if nothing comes to mind, please respond to one of the questions below.
Kindly refer to some specifics to demonstrate that you took the time to
read the essay.
Q: Is Abbey doing something different than Steinbeck or William LHM? Are the motivations similar?
Q: Can you compare Ed Abbey with Doc?
Q: Why do you think he chooses this place for his catharsis / redemption / resurrection? Does the fact that it overlooks an "abyss" have anything to do with it?
Q: Why does he seem to have problems with the direction of the US? (he wrote this in 1980).
Q: How would you characterize Abbey's unique and highly personalized tone?
Feel free to write what you like -- but I'd like to see at least one reference to another person's post and some references to "Cape Solitude." mrh
Q: Is Abbey doing something different than Steinbeck or William LHM? Are the motivations similar?
Q: Can you compare Ed Abbey with Doc?
Q: Why do you think he chooses this place for his catharsis / redemption / resurrection? Does the fact that it overlooks an "abyss" have anything to do with it?
Q: Why does he seem to have problems with the direction of the US? (he wrote this in 1980).
Q: How would you characterize Abbey's unique and highly personalized tone?
Feel free to write what you like -- but I'd like to see at least one reference to another person's post and some references to "Cape Solitude." mrh
Monday, September 17, 2012
Deerslayer and his Enormous Gun
Keeping in mind the American mindset in the early 19th
century, speculate about why people living in the new republic would have found
the Leatherstocking character so appealing.
In answering this, you might recall Thoreau’s points about
looking/walking West. To the east, he
said, is tradition, art, religion, Europe; to the West is nature, the future,
the unknown, the new America. Recall, too, that America was said to have something of an inferiority complex, especially when it came to art and literature. Given the cultural
psychology of America in the 19th century, why was Deerslayer such
an enormously popular figure?
Speculate!
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Marauder Party
Here’s the topic of your first LATAW blog entry:
Note a specific moment, line, or scene – large or small –
that was particularly memorable (for you).
In your entry explain why the moment carried so much weight for you.
I’ll start.
My first inclination would be to center my entry on
something from late in the book – the prison fight, the last moments with
Alejandra, returning for the horses, talking to the judge. I love when battle scarred John Grady Cole
walks into the jail and says to the corrupt captain, “I come for my horses”
(without the quotation marks, of course).
All these moments had resonance and power for me. But so as not to steal anyone’s thunder, I’m
going to go back to the first third of the book and talk about the moment that
they crossed the Rio Grande into Mexico, when they were “lined out behind one
another and making for the alien shore like a party of marauders.” While I was reading this section, I was
following their route on my iPad with Google Earth, and based on the various
place names given, it wasn’t too difficult to pinpoint the general area of
their crossing – which was pretty cool.
The reason it was so memorable for me, though, was because it was easy
to imagine the symbolic importance of the crossing. Here are two guys – three if we count
Blevins – who are riding backwards in time, searching for a life that is more
authentic, more exciting, more passionate.
Crossing the Rio Grande would have been the portal into that lost and
perhaps romanticized world for which they were searching. I love how, once they reach the Mexico side,
they gallop along the beach “fanning with their hats and laughing and pulling
up and patting the horses on the shoulder.”
They’re like unrepentant
prisoners emerging from a dungeon into a world about which they know nothing
but have dreamed about in their dark souls. (That last line was my attempt at a
Cormac McCarthy imitation J)
. It keys into some of the discussions
we’ve had about the perfectly chalked frontier line in 19th century
America. On one side is the social
world, filled with complicated relationships (mother, father, girlfriend) and the
obligatory sense of responsibility that goes along with living in society – and
on the other is simplicity, freedom, and rugged individualism. It didn’t turn out that way exactly, but I
imagine that’s how they would have felt as they waded naked across the river.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Become a LATAW blogger
Welcome to the Literature and the American West class blog for period 1. The first assignment is a simple one: sign up for the blog. Respond to this post in the comments section below.
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