Thursday, April 26, 2012
Film Choices (Post Graduate Film)
Monday, April 23, 2012
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Blue Velvet
Friday, March 9, 2012
Movie Recommendations
Ms. Schieffelin:
Old: The Godfather or The Big Lebowski
New: Drive
Strange: King of Kong
Jake:
Old: Seven
New: In Time
Strange: Donnie Darko
Ben:
Old: Die Hard
New: Twilight: Breaking Dawn Pt. 1
Strange: Harold and Kumar
Siobhan:
Old: A Knight's Tale
New: Tristan and Isolde
Strange: South Park
Kaleigh:
Old: Boondock Saints or Pan's Labyrinth
New: Martha, Marcy May, Marlene
Strange: May
Zack:
Old: Rebel without a Cause
New: Pineapple Express
Strange: Man on Fire (screwed up)
Jason:
Old: Rain Man
New: Moneyball
Strange: All the President's Men
Gabe:
Old: Raging Bull
New: Social Network
Strange: Inside Man
Xochil:
Old: Can't Hardly Wait
New: Project X
Strange: Saw
Mary:
Old: Breakfast Club
New: Stepbrothers
Strange: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Others:
A Few Good Men
Silence of the Lambs
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Rubric for Note Check #2: Secondary Sources
Are the notes clear and legible?
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/5
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Are the notes organized?
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/5
|
Are the notes well-cited with source information?
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/5
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Are the notes detailed?
|
/15
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Are the notes mainly paraphrased with some quotations?
|
/10
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Do the notes meet the 20 page requirement?
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/10
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TOTAL
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/50
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Monday, January 30, 2012
(and) Thesis
Sunday, January 29, 2012
thesis
The violence that moves the novel FIght Club by Chuck Palahniuk and the film Pulp Fiction shows the need for redemption from the lives that are led by each character in both pieces of work. The violence is used in some cases to prove how much of a man one is, and for others its just what surrounds their lives from work to their private life. VIolence is used to redeem the characters and make them more human.
Thesis
Thesis
Topic, Focus, & Thesis
Topic(s): 1. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey
2. The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
Focus: In each of the two novels stated above people are forced into some sort of escape where they must abandon their old lives and face a new reality. Sometimes this escape is for the better, but other times it can be for the worse, but even more so, an escape doesn’t necessary mean traveling to another location, but moving closer to a new person in search for help. Having an “escape” experience in one’s life can help people truly identify who they are and discover their own dreams and goals.
Thesis: In One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, the asylum is a place where individuals who can’t blend in with the outside world are forced to go, until they can properly ease back into the rules and expectations of society. Chief, a patient at the asylum with a Native American heritage and extremely large physical features that make him look like he’s towering over the rest of the patients, remains quiet during the majority of his time at the asylum, until he meets the news patient, McMurphy. McMurphy is unlike any of the other patients at the haven and fights back against Nurse Ratched and the Combine. He doesn’t conform to the society in anyway and remains true to his beliefs. The inspirational actions of McMurphy immediately attract Chief towards him and his beliefs, forcing Chief to escape the Combine and remain true and original. He follows in McMurphy’s lead and using his strength breaks free of the asylum.
Just as Chief finds an escape to freedom through action, Dimmesdale, from The Scarlet Letter, finds himself running away from his sins, unable to take action and confess what he has done to the town. His escape attempt is simply used to retreat from his previous life and leave forever, avoiding the troubles of his past forever. Dimmesdale strategy fails, as he is incapable to remain true to his life and confess his sins. The recognition of one’s self that Chief experiences at the asylum gives him the strength he needs to break free of the Combine, and be true to himself, as opposed to the weak, running away that Dimmesdale attempts to do.
Assertion
Topic: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Focus: The object (the ring and the key) that the characters are given and the journey it takes them through.
Thesis: In both Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and the Lord of the Rings trilogy, the main characters, Frodo and Oskar are given an object that takes them on a journey. Throughout this journey they are both understanding more about the world and learning how to understand themselves. These objects that they are given become each of the character’s life but they eventually lose the object, which was their life for so long. At the end of their journey Oskar is so easily able to move on, and it actually helps him because he realizes that his life doesn’t have just one meaning and he doesn’t need an object to define him. On the other hand, Frodo is unable to return to his life or move on and has to leave to find something new to depend on.
Friday, January 27, 2012
Topic and Focus
Thesis Topic: The Great Gatsby and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Focus: Obsession in the two books
Inside all men there is an obsession, and a desire to reach or obtain that obsession is what drives them to change who they are. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby and Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde both have obsessive men. Jay Gatsby, formerly known as Jay Gatz, changes himself to gain material possesions, and his highest prize is his lost love and obsession Daisy Buchanon. Dr. Henry Jekyll, a man of science, changes to Mr. Hyde along his quest to make strides in the field of science; which is his obsession.
Working Thesis
Working Thesis Statement:
Holden Caulfield—of The Catcher in the Rye—is a unique and iconic adolescent who has paved the way for various narrators to follow, including Oskar Schell in Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close. Despite their signature voices and radically different outlooks on life, Holden and Oskar are both deeply troubled individuals who have their trademark catchphrases, wander the streets of New York City, and attempt to regroup following the death of a close family member. They are initially rather dissatisfied with society (Holden is displeased by phoniness and corruption, while Oskar struggles to fathom the motive behind terrorism), but these two characters ultimately show a willingness to change after obtaining support from other family members. Although the two novels were written in different eras, the underlying connections between Holden (in the 1940s) and Oskar (in the post-9/11 era) highlight the universal struggles of adolescents.
Topic and Focus
A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid
Focus: -Contrast and comparison of how people look at societies
- Books provide two lenses in which one can look at society and tourism
Focus-Topic-Thesis #1
Topic, Focus and Working Thesis
Topic: Comparing the common obstacles and tragedies that Oskar of Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, Marcus of About a Boy and Max of “Rushmore” experience and how in these tragedies they use their strange personalities and essentially weirdness to cope
Focus: Compare their tragedies (Oskar’s father, Max’s mother/being kicked out of Rushmore, Marcus’ mother and father), talk about how they grow and thrive as out of the box kids (show all their idiosyncrasies), and finally realize how their strangeness actually leads to good things (all are able to bring people together)
Thesis: Oskar, Marcus and Max overcome the obstacles of adolescence and cope with family tragedies by challenging society’s expectations and thriving as strange and eccentric teenagers. In the end their peculiar personalities and odd habits help both themselves and the broken people around them.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Thesis
Thesis: The 2010 four-time Oscar-winning Inception is a mind-expanding movie dramatizing dreams and man’s futuristic power to manipulate the unconscious. Inception explores the realm of dreams and the potential for man to control what we once thought uncontrollable. Shakespeare’s vision of the unconscious as demonstrated in Macbeth, and Freud’s work on dreams and general theory of psychology, illuminate and enhance our understanding and appreciation of the film. There are many overlaps, as well as divergences in these three works—concerning the power of the unconscious mind to effect our thinking and actions, as well as the ability of dreams to portray our guilt and dark truths—that ultimately lend insight to the phenomenal power of the unconscious as well as its potential.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Possible Topics and Foci
Topic 1: Analysis of J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye and Jonathan Safran Foer’s Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
Focus 1: Comparing and contrasting Holden Caulfield and Oskar Schell. Holden is a particularly unique narrator that has laid the groundwork for a new class of narrators to follow: I would be asserting that Oskar is essentially inspired by (and a product of) Holden’s first-hand account in Catcher in the Rye. Although both characters face vastly different circumstances and have different viewpoints on life, the "relatibility" of both narrators and their powerful voices are quite noteworthy. I would also be addressing the fact that both characters are troubled in their adolescent years and that each character is greatly impacted by a family death (Holden’s brother Allie and Oskar’s father Thomas Jr.). Additionally, both narrators display somewhat of a positive change by the novel’s end: Oskar visits his father’s grave (showing strength and a willingness to somewhat move on) and Holden saying that he might consider returning to school).
Topic 2: Moneyball and either The Great Gatsby or a book about the Black Sox Scandal of 1919
Focus 2: I would be comparing and contrasting different methods of success (with a particular focus on the economic principles behind these strategies. While the Oakland Athletics utilize a completely new system of evaluating baseball talent and work their way to the top in a gradual, yet fully honest manner, Jay Gatsby in Great Gatsby and the players on the 1919 Chicago White Sox team placed instant gratification ahead of long-term benefit and and dishonestly take a shortcut to success. In the end however, the shortcut ends up hurting the individuals who greedily attempt to work their way to the top, while a well thought out plan and hard work ultimately pays off, as depicted in Moneyball.
Topic 3: One Flew The Cuckoo’s Nest and Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
Focus 3: Examining the idea of silence speaking louder than words. Both The Chief and Thomas Sr. are unable to speak, yet have considerable impacts in their respective novels, especially at the end of both stories. It would be interesting to look further into this topic and see where it takes me.