Monday, May 22, 2017

Fahrenheit 451? More Like Fahrenheit Four-Fifty-Fun!

Fahrenheit 451, written by Ray Bradbury in 1953, tells the incredible story of a dystopian future where everything is censored. There is only one source of media available to the public and all books are illegal. The main character, Guy Montag, is a fireman who has always followed the status quo. A fireman’s job is to burn down houses that have books in them rather than put fires out. Montag’s life changes when he meets a young girl named Clarisse while walking home one night. Clarisse does not act like the other kids her age. She questions society and why things are the way they are. The things she says and the questions she asks are insightful and make Montag begin to question his way of life. When Clarisse asks a question that causes Montag to evaluate his relationship with his wife, his way of thinking starts to change. One day, while his fire squad is burning a house, he steals a book. Not knowing how to understand the book he has, he contacts a secret expert to help him. Montag’s newfound passion for reading and change leads him to blow his cover and results in him running away forever.
Bradbury creates fascinating and unique characters. Although he does not spend much time developing the characters, he does create conflicts within their personalities. For instance, the main antagonist is the chief fireman who hates books and believes that they are no good, yet he constantly quotes them. Montag’s wife is always very happy and loves to have fun, but she has bouts of sadness, and it is unclear whether or not she tried to kill herself. The writing style Bradbury uses in this book is very interesting. He throws you into the middle of an event and then explains what had happened. An example of what this looks like is, “The blow was quick. She started running. As she turned the corner she looked back at the man she punched in the nose”. Although it made it difficult to understand, sometimes it was an interesting change of pace from what you normally see.
This book has lasted incredibly well throughout the years. Bradbury often mentions the people in the book not being connected with anything and living loveless lives. He also describes the ongoing wars in the world and electronics that would have been unheard of in the 1950s but are everywhere today. This creates a world that is very close to the one we have today. In the book, it is revealed that the reason books were banned and the people were sheltered from the world was because people started to lose interest in literature. They just wanted to watch TV and receive fast entertainment. Eventually, the government took away what nobody wanted in the name of keeping the people happy. It was said that the contents of the books would make people think and be sad. This is the path that America is on today, with more and more people losing interest in books and turning all of their attention to visual entertainment. My explanation really does not do this book justice. There are so many layers to this book and I can not explain them all in a single blog post. I believe that everybody should read this book to warn them of the danger our future holds if we do not change the course we are on.

Saturday, May 13, 2017

Favorite Reading

My favorite book that we read this school year was The Odyssey by Homer. I have not liked Greek mythology books or movies in the past so I was shocked by how much I enjoyed reading this book. I really liked the way the plot was paced and how the story progressed. My favorite part of the book was when we got to learn what happened to Odysseus before he was trapped on the island with Calypso. I can see why this story has lasted through many generations. My least favorite reading was the poetry section. Although I did like most of the poems we read, I preferred focusing on a certain book for a few weeks rather than looking at multiple poems per class. Overall I really enjoyed the things we did in class this year. There was not one book that we read that I could not stand to read.

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Golden Noses Rotting In Money

Throughout the book The Great Gatsby, the distortion of noses has been used to represent the corruption of people by wealth. In the novel, whether it be direct or indirect, both the rich and the poor are affected by wealth. Although none of the main characters of the book have their noses distorted, a few secondary characters are described as having their noses deformed. Such as the movie producer, “‘I liked that man what was his name? With the sort of blue nose.’ Gatsby identified him, adding that he was a small producer,” the gambler Mr. Wolfshiem, “A small, flat−nosed Jew raised his large head and regarded me with two fine growths of hair which luxuriated in either nostril,” and Tom’s mistress, Myrtle, “With her face bruised and her nose swollen,” (Fitzgerald, 133, 75, 167). All of these people were well off and had plenty of money to spend, whether it be their own or their lover’s. They all became corrupted in some form or another by money. In Wolfshiem’s case, he loved money so much that he broke the law just to obtain more of it. The most well-known use of a nose as a symbol in the book is the story of the butler’s nose, “‘Well, he wasn't always a butler; he used to be the silver polisher for some people in New York that had a silver service for two hundred people. He had to polish it from morning till night, until finally it began to affect his nose,” (Fitzgerald, 17). In this quote, the butler’s nose is still distorted by riches, the silver, even though it was not his. The other mention of a nose that I found to be very important was the “nonexistent nose” of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg (Fitzgerald, 26). Eckleburg is used as a symbol of the all seeing eye in the valley of ashes. He does not have a nose because he is supposed to be the pure incorruptible god that has not and will not be corrupted by money. I believe that Fitzgerald used noses to symbolize corruption from money because they are typically used to describe rich people being stuck up when they turn up their noses to other people or things.

Monday, May 1, 2017

Hotel Madness

Is the climax the hotel scene when Tom and Gatsby argue, or is it when Gatsby meets Daisy at Nick's house? What central conflict or conflicts are being addressed in the climax, and how is this the turning point of the narrative (story)? Use textual evidence to back up your claims.

I believe that the climax of the book occurs when Gatsby and Tom have a confrontation in the hotel. The entire book seems to be leading up to that moment and then everything after that just feels like tying up loose strings. Although it can be argued that the climax is when Daisy and Gatsby first meet at Nick’s house that is not the moment when the dynamic of the book shifts. After Gatsby and Daisy meet, Gatsby has not yet reached his ultimate goal of obtaining Daisy, and the overall plan Gatsby has and pacing of the book stays the same. When he is at the hotel he has her in his grasp when she says she never loved Tom but then loses her when she retracts her statement. After that Gatsby’s world starts to crash as he tries to readjust and convince Daisy to leave Tom for him. This is when Gatsby’s plan to get Daisy and the pacing of the book changes which brings about the end.