Friday, June 5, 2009
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest IV
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest III
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Part II
The tables begin to turn in part two of this novel, as the patients in the ward begin to watch and observe Nurse Ratched. They all sit and stare at her through the glass window as she has her outbursts. All of this mayhem is taking place in the ward because of a rather new and very smart patient, McMurphy. In the beginning of part two Nurse Ratched, the aids, the doctors and the other staff at the ward hold a meeting to discuss what to do about this McMurphy character. Chief Bromdom always sits in on the meetings and cleans the walls and baseboards with a bucket and sponge. They allow him to do this being that they think he is “deaf and dumb”. But Bromdom isn’t really deaf and he isn’t so “dumb” either. In this meeting he listens and pays very close attention to their discussion about McMurphy. They all feel that he is violent and a threat to the staff and other patients, and that he should be moved from the acute’s to the disturbed. The big nurse does not respond to this and the rest of the staff takes he silence as a sign of approval, but they are oddly mistaken.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Part I
In part one of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest we are introduced to the characters in the hospital. We also become aware of who our narrator is and how he came to be there, his name is Chief Bromden, a long-term patient in Nurse Ratched's psychiatric ward. Nurse Ratched is steadily referred to as “The Big Nurse”, by Bromden. Bromden describes Ratched as having “skin like flesh-colored enamel” and lips and fingertips the strange orange color of polished steel. Her one feminine feature is her oversized chest, which she attempts to hide under her white nurses uniform. Bromden also describes he as “big as a tractor” when she gets angry with the aides, other wise known as the black boy. Everyone in the ward seems to think Bromden is “deaf and dumb”, meaning he cant hear or speak. With that said everyone in the ward, patients and staff included, walk all over him. The patients like to mess around with him time and again, and the aids; or black boys like to make him do their dirty work like mop the floors and clean the ward. Another thing we learn early on about Chief Bromden is how he begins to scream and hallucinate that he is being surrounded by machine-made fog until he is forcedly medicated. This happens when they aids try to shave him.
Friday, May 8, 2009
Response to Lantern Theater performance of Hamlet
Hamlet act 2
Hamlet act 1
Friday, March 20, 2009
Coleridge and Shelley - Imagination and Narrative Voice
2) In Shelley’s poem “Ozymandias” I hear three speakers, the narrator; the traveler; and Ozymandias. I as a listener consider Ozymandias writing on the pedestal as him speaking because it is his words. After rereading the poem the voice of the traveler tells me that all that remains of the statue of Ozymandias is his legs. The voice of the narrator tells me that the ruins of the statue are a very depressing scene. Also the words on the pedestal tell me that Ozymandias was a very powerful man and a great leader.
William Blake's "The Chimney Sweeper" - Poetry and Social Change
1) I would agree with the editors of the textbook that Blake’s poetry had the power t enact social change by appealing to the imagination of the reader. In Blake’s poem “The Chimney Sweeper” from the songs of innocence he touches the reader with the boy’s sad story but leaves a happier ending in that you know the boy will be okay. In Blake’s poem “The Chimney Sweeper” from the sons of experience the boy is very blunt. For him he has accepted life as it is, although it is not the life he would choose he has learned to live with it. I think that in both poems Blake’s approach is to bring a connection with the reader sympathizing with these boys. Although the boy in the songs of experience isn’t presented to be as sad as the boy in the songs of innocence they are both very similar, and for both I felt sympathy as a reader. I felt the poems could enact social change because, for me, after reading these poems I wanted to help these boys and all children in their position.
2) I feel that the editors might have included the Parliament transcript as a primary source document so that the reader could have some historical background on the child labor laws back when these poems were written. By showing the harsh reality of these times and laws, this document is a good way to help the readers be more intuned with the characters feelings in the moment of the poem.
Jonathan Swift Teacher Prep Work
a) For our small teacher group my group and I had one main question focusing our whole lesson. Our main question was, from the human interactions between Gulliver and he Lilliputians what is the author trying to teach us? We focused our lesson from there on about human instinct. Of course will never know the exact answers to our question or know exactly why this story was write but as a group we feel it teaches the lesson “think before you act”. When Gulliver first meet the Lilliputians and they attacked him and tied him down, Gulliver could have easily broke free, being that he was much larger then the people of Lilliput. Instead he thought about the reproductions of his actions and he decided to show them respect. By showing them respect he not only gained his freedom but he was given the royal treatment by the Lilliputians, it was as if he were their king.
I was unable to respond to part b and c of this post because I was out for the rest of that week.