Saturday, July 31, 2010

The Crucible

It was good to have a new type in our summer reading books. A play was a good break from all the novels. It was a lot easier to read than I thought a play would be. It was very descriptive with a page every now and then in novel style. It probably would have been boring if there were only continuous dialogue. The Crucible was engaging and easy to read. I could clearly picture the situations and the emotions the characters felt.

The second scene of act 2 changed a lot if included. It always appeared as though Abigail was selfish and vindictive. Her being mad changes her motives. She is still despicable for hanging others, but you can pity her for not being in her right mind. She goes from evil to nuts which is probably a step up. Everywhere else she is accused of lying and hurting others for power and self-gain; her being mad enough to believe she is doing God's work shows she believes she is telling the truth and really thinks she is helping. She becomes less of a cruel villain and more like a child who knows not what she does. It actually makes the people who follow her word even more foolish for not being able to tell insanity from reason. A well-rehearsed lie should be more convincing then crazy babble.

The Crucible shows how fear can get out of control. Fear causes people to not see the truth right in front of them. The puritans had great fear for Satan and thengs unknown, it caused a witch hunt that only a few objected to. Fear caused mayhem and opportunities people exploited and so tried to keep the fear alive and growing until no one could control it. The people were so frightened of what witches might do or that they may be accused of witchcraft that they went along with it. When truth was presented in front of them or the insanity questioned, they were still so afraid of evil and their hands already dirty, they could not accept reason.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

The Scarlet Letter

The Scarlet Letter is a confusing book. It is long-winded.

What was interested was the fanciness of the scarlet letter. At first I thought that she made the letter like that to defy the people's will trying to press shame on her. However, she obviously has guilt and shame for the sin. Although I get that she wanted everyone to notice the A, I do not understand why she would make something beautiful to represent something so ugly.

The setting had a big impact on the story. The puritan era is none for its harsh, religious-base crimes and punishments. It also gave Puritans a more rounded view. It told a story that was based on the well-known society without the commonly used angle of witchcraft. The first thing you think of with puritan towns is witches. That period is known for its false witch trials. Because of this hunt that killed many innocent women, it pushes aside the extreme punishments given for crimes which a lot of times were religious sins. You could be put to death for the slightest misbehavior. In the book, some of the women resented that Hester was not executed.

Although she is considered a sinful person, Hester is the best person in the book. She made one mistake and paid for it the rest of her life. She accepted ridicule and banishing yet still had good in her heart. No matter how she was treated she always helped others and did not complain. Others hid their sins, like Dimsdale, or commited and ordered sins in the name of law, like flogging and executions. Most were spiteful or cruel, like the women who thought Hester deserved death. Hester kept values and other's secrets even when they did not deserve her trust or it hurt her. Dimsdale and Chillingworth only hurt her and led sinful lives, she did not betray them. Although in time, people saw her goodness and treated her more kindly, they never forgave her sin, even though they sinned too.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

The Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby is revealing book about the roaring 20s. It portrays the secrets behind the parties and wealth. It also depicts the boredom of the children of millionaires, who are restless because they never had to work hard to get anything. The members of this group remain like children, too oblivious to what they do, so they can live with the excitement they create to amuse themselves without really realizing the damage they leave in their wake.

Nick is both awed and disgusted by the life of the rich. Everyone wants to be rich and live the privileged life, but scorns their shallowness and scandals. This is still present today with get rich quick reality tv shows and gossip magazines. Rich people are expected to live a wild, extravagent life, but are showed contempt when they do so. It is a way of dealing with lower social classes when you fail to reach the top.

Nick Carraway is an interesting narrator. In the beginning he was unbiased, only intrigued by the extravagent life of the rich. He states facts and does not have a voice. Later on he gets a voice, and everything he writes about is tainted by his distaste for the people. It is unusual for a narrator to change unless he is the main character. Most narrators are unbiased or has one voice which does not evolve. Nick was impassive but developed a strong opinion on that type of life.

A major thing in the novel is social class. More accurately, the difference in class. People some times try to reach much higher than their place. In this book it has them all come crashing down. Both Myrtle and Gatsby overreached their place society had given them. Myrtle tried to act like she was sophistacated and gain class by a man. Gatsby tried to rise above his low beginnings through money. Both of them were crushed because of it and it led to their deaths. However, the people born to high society are kept high and mighty, above the problems of regular mortals. They coasted through life using people to forget their problems and not caring about the chaos they left behind. Both Daisy and Tom were like this; they used Gatsby and Mytle and then dumped them, merely moving on without looking back. People are often striving to go higher up, but if they try to go to far, they and society cannot handle it, and they fall brutally. High Society, like Tom and Daisy, have nothing to strive for as they are on top. I believe this is why they are bored and restless, because they have nothing to obsess them. Tom and Daisy had everything, and so tried to fill their time and get satisfaction from parties, gossip, and travel. It is only temporary relief.

The Great Gatsby brings forth thoughts and opinions on people that one usually does not think of.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

The Grapes of Wrath

The Grapes of Wrath is to be admired because it was a widely read book that exposed what was happening in California at the time. It revealed the atrocities shown by Californians to the immigrants. Although it was a great topic to write about and written for the right purposes, I did not like the book. The author is trying to show that the "Okies" are as smart and human as everyone else, yets he creates the stupidest characters. They repeat the same thing over and over and will not listen to reason. Although they show humanity they do not show common sense.


I dislike the Ma because she is so aggravating. She acts like without her, the family would sit around doing nothing, because she makes them have family meetings about things they all know and saying it out loud changes nothing. She constantly repeats herself like saying I knew Pretty boy Floyd over and over, even though Tom shows no anger management issues. Also, she constantly says they have to keep in the future and adjust, and claims she changes easily, but all she does is look at the past and whine that others are, too. Ma tries not to let the family change at all, not even letting them marry and start their own family in their own house like they did in Oklahoma. It seems she doesn't want anyone to grow up or evolve in the slightest. It is annoying how Ma refuses to tell Rose of Sharen that Connie is a jerk who left her and no-good, but whenever Rose of Sharen complains about Connie being gone Ma yells, but doesn't say anything to stop the whining and threatens to hit her, and then she is exasperated when Rose of Sharen continues whining even though she was given no reason to stop. Ma scolds everybody if they are regrettful of somethings they have done, but Ma constantly complains of becoming mean when the children speak and act worse than her.

I like how Steinbeck has a chapter about the family, and then a shorter chapter about all the migrants in a related scenario to the Joad chapter. It helps show other possible outcomes, including the worst scenario, without making the actual story gloomy and depressing. General information given in the short chapter helps to understand some of the things people say. Unfortunately, because the book was written in 1939, I don't always get the particulars people back then would have found obvious. Money is an example. Because prices are so different now, I can't tell just how poor 30 cents in hour is, or how big a change 30 cents to 20 is back then. Although I get it is enough of a difference for one to be able to scrape by and the other not, I cannot figure how much food the money can buy. Also when businessmen are selling stuff, I do not know how badly they are ripping the person off.

Grapes of Wrath have two contradicting ideas. One is that we have to change to live and be human, and so change is a good thing. This is shown in numerous conversations that state the family needs to move on from the past to the present in order to survive. The other is that the Industrial Revolution should never of happened. The author shows this with his narrative saying that the growing machine industry causes the problems and makes people cruel and cold. Also it describe machines as dead and destroying the farmer's understanding of the land, making the land unappreciated. This suggests that the changing, evolving world is a bad thing. The novel also states many a time that the changes are like a step forward and you never lose ground and go backwards. He makes this out as a good thing. This makes the ideas contradicting because the book says all change is a step forward which is a good thing, but also advancements in machines is not good.