Diving into the Wreck- By Adrienne Rich
I interpreted Rich's poem and her dive into the wreck as her describing a very personal experience of some kind. She writes "I am having to do this not like Cousteau with his assiduous team aboard the sun-flooded schooner but here alone", and she goes into the ocean on her own, which makes it more personal and meaningful. I think that the ladder represents her memory, and it is ever present "the ladder is always there hanging innocently"She is going to revisit a past event in her memory, which is the ship wreck. Once there, she observes and remembers it all. The lines"I came to see the damage that was done, and the treasures that prevail"can represent the treasure as a lesson learned or positive outcome in the face of pain and destruction. Rich ends the poem with " We are, I am, you are by cowardice or courage the one who find our way back to this scene carrying a knife, a camera, a book of myths in which our names do not appear." Her memory of the past has been revisited, whether due to her fear or courage we do not know, but now she has no reason to hold on to that memory. I think the poem deals with acceptance of the past along with embracing change and letting things go in order to move forward. The wreckage is a place of death and destruction, one must move on elsewhere to thrive and flourish.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Monday, April 22, 2013
Fences
Fences by August Wilson
Wilson's play is one that toys with change, family, and dreams. The play is about Troy, his wife Rose, and the lives of their children: Lyons, Cory, and Raynell. Troy's mentally handicapped younger brother is also a main character in the story, along with Bono, Troys best friend. Troy and Bono have been friends for years, and they met while they were in prison. They now work together and every Friday (payday) they have drinks together. The men talk of their childhoods and Troy ends up getting drunk and telling stories while "eyeing" other women. Though Troy thinks of himself as an accurate moral compass, Bono seems to keep Troy in line and offers advice that is aimed to steer Troy in the right direction.
Troy's son Lyons is aspiring to be a musician, and he stops by on Fridays to borrow money from his father. Troy always makes a big deal about it but ends up lending the money to Lyons anyway. Cory is busy with football, which angers Troy because he never finishes his chores and he has stopped working at the A & P. Cory has been recruited by a college in North Carolina, but Tory refuses to sign papers that will allow Cory to attend and play football. He insists that Cory must get his job back at the A &P, and this is where the conflict builds between Cory and his father.
Rose has always been a loyal wife to Troy, and though he knows she is the best thing to ever happen to him, he still manages to get another woman pregnant. He tells Rose and explains that "after eighteen years I wanted to steal second". Troy felt stuck on first base for eighteen years, and this woman became his escape, and she inspired Troy's desire to go for second base. Rose is hurt and explains that all those years she had dreams too, but she remained loyal to Troy and hoped that one day things would change. Rose agrees to raise Troy's daughter after her mother dies in childbirth, but she is no longer Troy's woman. Cory and his father get into a fight and Troy kicks Cory out of the house after he proves he's the strongest.
Everyone returns back to the house for Troy's funeral, and Cory is now a marine corporal, while Lyons is serving time for stealing money. He quotes his father saying " You got to take the crookeds with the straights" to describe that with every positive thing comes something negative, and vice versa. Though the boys are different, they both are very much like their father. Rose tells Cory "Your daddy wanted you to be everything he wasn't... and at the same time he tried to make you into everything he was. I don't know if he was right or wrong... but I do know he meant to do more good than he meant to do harm. He wasn't always right. Sometimes when he touched he bruised. And sometimes when he took me in his arms he cut." In my opinion, this quote wraps up the whole story.
In many ways, this story is one about regret and lost dreams, seen in Rose and her regrets in giving all of herself to Troy, and letting him swallow up her identity. It is also seen in Troy, who missed out on a baseball career because he was in prison for all of his "crooked deeds". Cory surely resents his father for not letting him attend college in North Carolina, and he never really lets go of the anger that resulted from his father holding him back from his dream. Wilson also toys with history and change in time and culture, with the African American population becoming more integrated in sports in Cory's generation than in Troy's. This is what causes much of the conflict between them; they cannot understand one another. The family that Troy grew up with, an evil father and an absent mother, also affects his parenting and views on life. Bono talked of his father being absent from his life, and he decides not to father any children so that they are never abandoned the way he was. He remains loyal to his wife and all throughout the story he is the character that is most morally sound.
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
"Lady Lazarus"
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Sylvia Plath’s poem “Lady Lazarus” is one about about her
close encounters with death through her numerous suicide attempts. She starts
off with, “I have done it again./ One year in every ten/ I manage it-“ to
convey that she has a breakdown and attempts suicide once in every decade. She
explains that this current attempt is “Number Three” out of her “nine times to
die”. Plath’s first encounter was at the age of ten, and it was an
accident. She writes “ They had to
call and call/ And pick the worms off me like sticky pearls” to describe how
her second attempt was nearly successful.
Plath
asks the reader, “Peel off the napkin/O my enemy./Do I terrify?-“ , and she
knows that she does spark fear in the reader. Her mere escapes from death are seen as miracles and are
put on as a show for an audience to gawk at. She mocks the show and the
audience for their interest in her miracle. “For the eyeing of my scars, there
is a charge/for the hearing of my heart-/ it really goes.”
At
the end of the poem Plath describes herself as something of value, somebody’s
“pure gold baby” that melts and shrieks and turns. This could be referring to
her father, who she referenced in many of her other poems. She ends the poem by
telling all beware, that out of the ashes of her successful death she will rise
and defeat her men, “eating them like air”. Plath uses many metaphors and
similes to create a mood and express her emotions, which are dark, raw, and
sarcastic all wrapped in one.
Monday, April 15, 2013
Sonny's Blues
Sonny's Blues - James Baldwin
Sonny's Blues is a story about two brothers and how their relationship has changed over time. The narrator's younger brother Sonny has been arrested for heroin use and is sent to prison. The narrator teaches algebra in Harlem, and he reminisces on how his brother used to be as a child, not so different from his students that he has now. The narrator feels icy towards his brother, not understanding why he has turned to drugs and crime. The narrator and his brother were not speaking terms, and the narrator does not contact his brother until after his daughter Gracie has died. Sonny replies back with a heartfelt letter to his brother trying to explain his struggle and how his life has become the way it is now.
As the brothers continue to communicate and as Sonny visits the narrator and his wife Isabel, old memories of the past are brought to light. The narrator has flashbacks of his late father and mother, and how he learns that his father once had a brother that was killed. The narrator's mother makes him promise to always hold on to his brother and look out for him, even when they disagree. She says "You may not be able to to stop nothing from happening. But you got to let him know you's there." His mother's advice suggests that he should be responsible for being a good brother, as well as a friend or someone who will provide Sonny with love and support.
The narrator and his brother don't interact again until after the death of their mother, and he is surprised to see that Sonny is a grown up. Sonny confesses his dream of being a musician, and the narrator disregards his future plans because he doesn't think they are good enough. Sonny skips school and runs away to go into the navy. The brothers meet in New York after Sonny returns and get into an argument that leaves them dead to each other. The narrator leaves saying that Sonny will need him someday.
When Sonny is released from prison after his arrest, he lives with his brother for a few weeks and the narrator starts to connect more with his brother. The brothers talk about struggle and suffering together, both adding their insight. "But nobody just takes it, Sonny cried, That's what I'm telling you. Everybody tries not to. You're just hung up on the way some people try- its not your way!" Sonny takes the narrator to a club to hear him play, and the narrator sees a whole different side to his brother. The narrator sees Sonny's struggle and pain while he plays his song, and starts to understand the way that music tells the musicians personal story and gives others a chance to really "hear" it.
I personally loved this story, and I think that it brings to light the suffering and struggle that comes with drug addiction and how it impacts family members. It also uses time as a motif, going back and forth between the past and the present and contrasting how things are different at different points in life. The importance of supporting your family and being there can really make the difference, and realizing and respecting differences can teach you things that you didn't know before. I also loved that Baldwin connected listening and hearing on an emotional level through music to stir up feeling and emotions in the reader. Overall great read!
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