Thursday, June 4, 2009

Hamlet post 2

Upon reading different Shakespeare play's, it sees as if all the love stories end horribly. It makes you think what happened to Shakespeare in his life that these stories end the way they do. Stories such as Romeo and Juliet, Othello and Hamlet all seem pretty consistent. There is always a barrier keeping the higlighted couples from seeing each other. However, they do get to interact throughout the play. The fact that Shakespeare always puts his couple at a disadvantage could signify the importance of communication in a relationship. I do think it is weird that all of these love couples have to deal with death. It seems to give Shakespeare a darker tone. We tend to think of love of happy and bright but this isn't the case in these stories. We see in other plays that people have to deal with the death of a lover. We will see if this too is the case with Hamlet and Ophelia.

Cuckoo's part 4

When we last left off, McMurphy had taken a group of the patients on a fishing trip. During this trip the guys bonded more and formed a tight bond. Being around McMurphy gave a bunch of the patients courage to be strong although they did not know how to use it yet. The trip gave all the members a sense of the outside world. During the trip it seemed as if McMurphy as the father. He often sat back and watched the others interact. It seems as if everyone feels safer with him around. Due to the fact that the patiennts are so attacched to McMurphy, the Nurse basically loses all of her power. This has to be a big blow to the Nurse because she's used to having everything in the palm of her hand. However like anyone who has ever been threatened, she trys to eleminate the source of her down fall. This happenes when she has a lobotamy for him. This is her way of regaining her power and showing everyone else that she is still and will always be the one in charge. This move not only stpped McMurphy but it put fear back in the others which would make the Nurse haooy again.

Cuckoo's Nest part 3

With the influence he has over the other patients, McMurphy begins to encourage them to really rebel on their own. However, McMurphy doesn't give in to the Nurse so soon. HE stills takes her lightly and jokes about serious matters. McMurphy planned a trip with a hooker with to get out of the ward. This shows that he didn't respect the Nurse's authority and that he could get away with whatever he wanted. The nurse did not approve of the trip but Spivey did. This angered the Nurse because McMurphy went behind her back and she couldn't do anything about it. In this section we start to learn more about Chief Bromden and his past. He begins to inwardly react more to what's going on around him. He has a flashback to when he was young and how he was always ignored. We learn that when he was young, people came to his settlement attempting to buy the land for government renovation. From what we learn he wasn't really given any ones full attention. This corresponds to the modern day chief because he contemplated blowing his cover to sign up for the fishing trip. This puts him in a peculiar position because he never had anything tempt him so much. This is interesting to see how this plays out because with Bromden in the picture a lot of people could change their attitudes because of things they did or said around him.

Coleridge and Shelley

In Kubla Kahn's poetry, it seems as if he is trying to caution us against diving too deep in our imagination. In the beginning of the poem, there is a beautiful image portrayed through Kahn's poetry. The land consists of ten miles of fertile land, measureless caverns, a sacred river and more. Upon reading this description, one can not help but to instantly think of a paradise. With the given description there is no immediate flaw present with the land. However, Kahn goes on to say that the land is enchanted and savage. This changes the whole perception of the land. When adding in that the land has negative flaws to it, it seems to diminish the value of what was described as originally. The message that I think is trying to be portrayed is that you can't take the good without the bad. Often times people like to imagine a Utopia or a perfect life. It seems as if Kahn is bringing us back to earth with this poem and tell us that everything isn't going to be as we want it.

In Shelley's poem it seems to be three different speakers. The first speaker acts as sort of a narrator who relates a story from history that has social or political relevance from history. The traveller brings in an important observation. He notices what can possibly be a statue from a pile of remains. The traveller was also responsible for bringing forth information. It turned out that the pile of remains was really a monument named Ozymandias. The monument said "My name is Ozymandias, King of kings, look on my words, ye Mighty and despair!" This seems like Ozymandias had some type of power, or at least he thought he did. To pronounce yourself King of Kings you clearly have to have an enormous sense of entitlement. However the statue is in ruins. This most likely means it was destroyed by some type of force. This could be signifying the brutal end to those how think of themselves higher then they are or those who have social and political power