Monday, October 21, 2013
Weekly Reflection 10/21/13
We presented our myth projects today, but our group was unable to present ours due to running out of time. We will present next week instead. It was really interesting hearing everyone else's presentations! Some of them were really expansive, especially in comparison to our topic of "tricksters" which are more character-oriented and character driven. I immediately decided to go with tricksters as my topic, because Loki was my favorite Norse God. I really enjoy reading about characters that are not good or bad, but somewhere in the mysterious middle. I like the fact that the motives of trickster characters are rarely known. They may as well betray you even if they were once your friend! Those types of characters are so fascinating and interesting to me.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Weekly Reflection 10/14/13
I'm excited about my Myth Collaborative Project. I've always been fascinated with both Greek and Norse Mythology from a young age, and always bemoaned the fact that we rarely get to explore mythology in school! I had a brief taste of it way back in middle school and I was hooked ever since. I remember reading about the journey and deeds of Hercules in class. I immediately went to the library and borrowed on book on mythology. I remember being fascinated by Zeus, Hera, Aphrodite,and Ares. I soon read about the lesser known characters like Jason, Medea, Cupid and Psyche!Some of those stories are so timeless, I really wish it was part of the curriculum in middle school and high school! I would love to teach my students some Greek mythology and analyze the stories.
Monday, October 7, 2013
Weekly Reflection 10/7/13
This week's class was short but effective. I think having to peer review each other's works is a great opportunity that is always helpful in creating a better final draft of your essay. Often, my peers will offer great advice or catch errors that I missed. They also help to clarify any ideas I failed to express clearly in my essay. I ended up writing about Robert Frost (My Favorite Poet!) and "Mending Wall," because I really enjoy the whimsical undertones in the poem. I took a different look to it, however, taking a more "property" and "ownership" approach to the poem, which gave me a new perspective on it. When I first read the poem, I always assumed the neighbor was a fuddy-duddy, but years later, upon reflection, I think thew neighbor was perfectly in his right! LOL. We all love our privacy.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Poetry at the Breakfast Table: Sonnet and Free Verse
Sunday Breakfast - Sonnet
One lazy Sunday morning, I awoke an hour
Later than my usual six. Tired, with sleep
In my eyes, I looked across the table with a glower
At my husband who sat in front of a heap
Of toast and enjoying a cup of coffee.
Looking at the empty spot in front of my chair,
Which only looked worse by proxy
To the glorious spread; so unfair!
Out loud, calmly, I only said,
"Good morning. Are the kids still asleep?"
He, with his usual monosyllabic talking head,
Looked up briefly to acknowledge my tell,
And gently pushed the plate of toast in front of me.
Crisis averted, we ate breakfast in silent harmony.
Recurring Nightmare - Free Verse
In the distance, the lone blue building stood
Like an oasis in the middle of a desert.
The line that lead out its door stretched
As far as the eye could see,
Forms and figures becoming mere specks
Of dust in the far distance;
Like illusions of weary desert travelers.
The sun beat mercilessly down
On my uncovered head, caught unaware
Of the heat that mornings could bring.
Stranded, stuck, tired, and hungry,
I tapped the shoulder of the stranger in front of me.
"What's with the long line?"
She turned to me with a face that reflected
All the tortured thoughts I also shared.
She sighed, resigned, and said,
"Apparently, kids eat for free at IHOP."
One lazy Sunday morning, I awoke an hour
Later than my usual six. Tired, with sleep
In my eyes, I looked across the table with a glower
At my husband who sat in front of a heap
Of toast and enjoying a cup of coffee.
Looking at the empty spot in front of my chair,
Which only looked worse by proxy
To the glorious spread; so unfair!
Out loud, calmly, I only said,
"Good morning. Are the kids still asleep?"
He, with his usual monosyllabic talking head,
Looked up briefly to acknowledge my tell,
And gently pushed the plate of toast in front of me.
Crisis averted, we ate breakfast in silent harmony.
Recurring Nightmare - Free Verse
In the distance, the lone blue building stood
Like an oasis in the middle of a desert.
The line that lead out its door stretched
As far as the eye could see,
Forms and figures becoming mere specks
Of dust in the far distance;
Like illusions of weary desert travelers.
The sun beat mercilessly down
On my uncovered head, caught unaware
Of the heat that mornings could bring.
Stranded, stuck, tired, and hungry,
I tapped the shoulder of the stranger in front of me.
"What's with the long line?"
She turned to me with a face that reflected
All the tortured thoughts I also shared.
She sighed, resigned, and said,
"Apparently, kids eat for free at IHOP."
Weekly Reflection 9/30/13
Let me just say that I'm not a creative writing major, nor have I ever considered becoming one. The idea of creating and writing poetry is almost terrifying to me. Last semester as an English major and I'm so used to writing analytic essays that I've completely lost how to start writing creatively.....and poetry to boot! Wait a minute, did I ever have a hold of the creative writing process to begin with? Where do I even begin? Should I write a bunch of sentences, throw them at notebook paper, and hope one of them is usable? Would it not be -poetry- if I write about mundane things like waiting for the bus or eating breakfast? Help!
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Poetry Analysis Essay - "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost
Eun Hae Lee
Dr. Wexler
English 495 ESM
23 September 2013
Community
in Property Ownership
In “Good Fences
Make Good Neighbors,” Zev Trachtenberg argues that “the social
contract tradition prompts us to think of society in terms of the
cooperative human enterprise of protecting individuals' interests”
(Trachtenberg 114). In other words, a society is only formed when
there are formal voluntary agreements and associations between people
– namely laws and rights – that protect people and their
property. Property can be accused of dividing human relationships in
the same way that it divides the actual land on which human beings
reside. However, one can also argue that the best kind of
individuality can only be achieved in the comforts of one's own
property where one has the freedom to live in whatever way he/she
chooses. The mutual protection of this division of property can thus
be seen as the best kind of community and human interaction. In his
poem “Mending Wall,” Robert Frost tackles the issue of
maintaining individual freedom through mutual understanding and
property ownership, suggesting that the division, not the bringing
together, of property is what brings people closer in a community.
The poem contains
two characters: the narrator and the neighbor, who own adjacent farms
and meet every Spring to repair the stone wall that divide their
properties. An initial reading and popular interpretation of the poem
has the narrator take a skeptical stand towards the existence of the
wall while the neighbor remains firm on the benefit of the division.
The neighbor's slogan that “good fences make good neighbors” is
not given to much disparaging interpretation; the neighbor is
pro-property and he will not budge on this opinion (46). However, the
narrator's attitude is a bit more ambiguous, and is not as simple as
an initial reading would suggest. The narrator's attitude is best
expressed through the playful way he claims that “something there
is that doesn't love a wall,” suggesting that the yearly upending
of the stone wall is caused by natural forces (1). The narrator
repeats this phrase throughout the poem, adopting it as a
counter-slogan to the neighbor that seemingly personifies his stand on the
issue of property ownership: the narrator is anti-property because
nature does not support it. The fact that “something” sends “the
frozen ground-swell under it, / And spills the upper boulders in the
sun” proves that natural forces dictate that people should not have
divisions on their lands (1-2). As a result, these same natural
forces forcibly remove the obstacle dividing their farms.
However, upon
closer reading, a question arises. If the narrator is so against the
mending of the wall that natural forces dictate as wrong, then why
does he bother to inform his neighbor every year of its broken state?
If the narrator supports the destruction of the stone wall, then is
it not more logical that he simply ignore the broken wall until his
more serious pro-wall neighbor calls attention to it? But no, the
narrator is the one who takes initial action:
But at spring
mending-time we find them there.
I let my neighbour know beyond the hill;
And on a day we meet to walk the line
And set the wall between us once again (11-14).
I let my neighbour know beyond the hill;
And on a day we meet to walk the line
And set the wall between us once again (11-14).
The narrator is the
one who lets the neighbor know about the wall and proactively sets a
date to meet in order to work on the wall together.
Additionally, the
“game” that the narrator keeps referring to when referring to the
wall can be read as playful banter. The mischievous tone and casual
attitude of the narrator also supports his pro-property stance as it
suggests that the narrator is not completely serious when suggesting
they remove the stone wall that divides their land (21). Spring, as
he claims, “brings the mischief in [him]” and can explain the
reason for his questioning of the existence of the wall (28). He mentions elves as a possible culprit for the broken stone wall, only
serving to lessen the seriousness of the situation. He banters with
his neighbor because it is the social norm to converse with your
neighbor. The banter and the annual fixing of the stone wall is the
“out-door game” that the narrator refers to; it is a yearly
tradition that keeps him and his neighbor on good terms with one
another (21). Thus, the fixing of the wall is simply a tradition, a
holiday like Christmas or Thanksgiving; it is a day that serves to
reaffirm their agreement to maintain their division. Both the
narrator and neighbor agree on this day, every year, that the
division of property is what keeps them good neighbors and good
members of the society they belong to. Protecting the other's
property and, as a result, their individual freedom and rights, is
what helps them stay good neighbors. As the narrator explains, “He
is all pine and I am apple orchard;” the stone wall allows for the
pine and apple to remain as themselves (24).
In “Architecture
in Frost and Stevens,” David Spurr argues that “The wall also has
a sepulchral function, as a kind of memorial to the generations from
which it is inherited, just as the “saying” of the neighbor is
inherited from his father, and the ritual repetition of this saying
accompanies the annual rite of wall-mending” (Spurr 75). The
neighbor is obviously guilty of this “repetition,” as it is the
only response he gives all throughout the poem: He will "not go behind
his father's saying, / And he likes having thought of it so well / He
says again, "Good fences make good neighbors" (44-46).
However, the neighbor is not the only one guilty of repeating a
“saying.” The narrator is just as guilty. His annual greeting can
be represented by the repetition of the line “something there is
that doesn't love a wall." This back-and-forth and repetition
of the two slogans serves to emphasize the absurdity of the idea that
the wall can be torn down. Every year, the narrator tosses his line
to his neighbor with the knowledge that the reply would be that the
wall is an absolute necessity. It is a ritual, a dance, a tradition
between the two neighbors; one that probably goes back to their
fathers and their fathers' fathers. In the end, the wall is always
mended. And the two farmers can always trust that they will be back
again next year to fix the same wall again.
Works
Cited
Spurr, David. "Architecture in
Frost and Stevens." Journal of Modern Literature 28.3
(2005): 72- 86. Project MUSE. Web. 20 Sep. 2013.
<http://muse.jhu.edu/>.
Trachtenberg, Zev. "Good Neighbors
Make Good Fences: Frost's 'Mending Wall'." Philosophy and Literature 21.1 (1997): 114-122. Project MUSE. Web. 20
Sep. 2013. <http://muse.jhu.edu/>.
Monday, September 23, 2013
Weekly Reflection 9/23/13
This week's class began our journey into the world of poetry, a place I don't think we go to often enough in K-12 classrooms. I wasn't exposed to much poetry until my third year of college when I took a poetry course as part of my major. Though I did have a middle school teacher who was passionate about Robert Frost, I don't think children these days get enough poetry in their school experience. I personally love reading poetry out loud and find it fascinating how so much could be conveyed in so few words. To this day, I love Robert Frost, especially "Mending Wall," which I think I am going to focus on for my essay. I also enjoy Frost's shorter poems "Fire and Ice" and "Nothing Gold Can Stay." I credit my sixth grade English teacher for my everlasting love of Robert Frost. A little crazy and a little drunk he may have been, his taste in poetry was exquisite. Thanks Mr. Leon!
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