I have really enjoyed posting my work on blog spot. I like it so much because it keeps all of my thoughts organized. If I need to pull up a past piece of writing I know exactly where it is, it wont be lost in the depths of my locker or other strange places. It is easy to access and if I need to reference a website for other sources I can just open a new tab. I am confident that all my work is in on time.
It is nice to be able to read other students posts as well. Being able to read other blogs gives you a glimpse into what your other classmates are thinking. Sometimes kids you don't have much in common with or kids you don't "hang out" have similar feelings as you do on various topics. It is nice to be able to leave comments on others work. It is encouraging to know people are reading and are interested in your work. Comments can be beneficial to your writing or you can offer your thoughts and feelings to others.
Though the google threads were similar they were not quiet as good for me. First of all you couldn't go back and edit your work. It has helped me as a writer to know that I can start writing out a thought, then go back and edit it. It is discomforting when what you have submitted is your final word. Even though this is how it usually works on tests and other essays, it is nice to be able to go back if you are granted the chance. The google groups were not as personal either. The blog allows you to post photos and have a custom profile. Things like this are generally unimportant to me but when reading others writing while looking at the way they have made their profile look kind of gets you inside their world a little better.
I value the class time we get on fridays to work on our blog. Thanks Fiorini! It is great to have some independent time to start on a weekend assignment. On fridays our 11-2 English period is right before lunch which means we get two whole periods without teachers nagging!
As for any suggestions I may have for Mr. Fiorini about using the blog in our class, I have none. I like the way we have been working and the grading system. I like that we get a grade for commenting others work, if you do it, it can help your grade a lot. I would like to continue working like this.
Friday, March 27, 2009
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Gatsby: A selection of Quotes
“All good writing is swimming under water and holding your breath.” All good writing keeps you hanging on, wanting more, making you want to further interpret character traits and personalities, and find the symbolism. Good writing makes you want to read past what is on the surface. It is "swimming" and you have to dive into it.
Fitzgerald uses a ton of symbolic descriptions in this story. Symbols for social characteristics and trends of the 1920's. East and West Egg are a representation of new or self made wealth (west) and family or old fortune (east). Both Gatsby and Nick have a similar contemptuous attitude. Is it because they were both WWI soldiers? I feel that Gatsby's character is more of a representation of the uprising of organised crime in America during the 20's.
I wrote a lot about moral decay and greed of the 20's in my last blog about The Great Gatsby. For this entry I want to focus on the "American Dream" and that people do crazy things when their in love. I think this story is about the complete destruction of the American Dream at this time. First of all what is the "American Dream"? Come to America, make an honest hard working living, and you can achieve all your goals! You can do anything you set your mind to! Gatsby worked his way to the top of the social ladder. During his childhood he had very little. The only thing keeping him apart from his love Daisy was money. Gatsby is a highly motivated person and would do anything to gain wealth and a high social position because in gaining those things he could gain Daisy. He began making his fortune, but in the wrong way entirely. Gatsby is involved with organized crime such as the illegal distribution of alcohol. American dream crushed. He is working dishonestly and has still not acquired the thing he desires most, Daisy. He has made her to be this perfect specimen of beauty. As his emotions are more "sitting" rather than "active" ones. Because of this Daisy is almost UN-reachable to Gatsby. When his dream of her is no longer all that is left is immoral wealth. I like Gatsby, I think his intentions meant well. I loved The way Fitzgerald presented him in the story. He had an Ora of mysticism about him. He illuminated green on the dock at the beginning of the book. Did the green symbolize greed or money? Or perhaps jealousy? Jealousy of Tom who had in fact won Gatsby's girl? I don't like Tom much. He's just "that guy" for me. Theres always "that guy". His character sits weird in my tummy. Kind of like listening to a whole Primus album.
Fitzgerald uses a ton of symbolic descriptions in this story. Symbols for social characteristics and trends of the 1920's. East and West Egg are a representation of new or self made wealth (west) and family or old fortune (east). Both Gatsby and Nick have a similar contemptuous attitude. Is it because they were both WWI soldiers? I feel that Gatsby's character is more of a representation of the uprising of organised crime in America during the 20's.
I wrote a lot about moral decay and greed of the 20's in my last blog about The Great Gatsby. For this entry I want to focus on the "American Dream" and that people do crazy things when their in love. I think this story is about the complete destruction of the American Dream at this time. First of all what is the "American Dream"? Come to America, make an honest hard working living, and you can achieve all your goals! You can do anything you set your mind to! Gatsby worked his way to the top of the social ladder. During his childhood he had very little. The only thing keeping him apart from his love Daisy was money. Gatsby is a highly motivated person and would do anything to gain wealth and a high social position because in gaining those things he could gain Daisy. He began making his fortune, but in the wrong way entirely. Gatsby is involved with organized crime such as the illegal distribution of alcohol. American dream crushed. He is working dishonestly and has still not acquired the thing he desires most, Daisy. He has made her to be this perfect specimen of beauty. As his emotions are more "sitting" rather than "active" ones. Because of this Daisy is almost UN-reachable to Gatsby. When his dream of her is no longer all that is left is immoral wealth. I like Gatsby, I think his intentions meant well. I loved The way Fitzgerald presented him in the story. He had an Ora of mysticism about him. He illuminated green on the dock at the beginning of the book. Did the green symbolize greed or money? Or perhaps jealousy? Jealousy of Tom who had in fact won Gatsby's girl? I don't like Tom much. He's just "that guy" for me. Theres always "that guy". His character sits weird in my tummy. Kind of like listening to a whole Primus album.
Friday, March 13, 2009
Gatsby Journal

The Valley of Ashes is half way between the wealth, riches, and fashionable glamor of East and West Egg. It is a desolate place of filthy dumping grounds and waste lands. There are a few shops, such as Wilson's garage. The people who live there, Wilson and his wife Myrtle for instance, seem very shady. The Valley of Ashes is a place of little or no morals. Tom comes here to meet his lover Myrtle, but both Tom and Myrtle are married! The way Fitzgerald describes Wilson makes him seem like a very handsome man, his life however is nothing worth holding on to. When we are introduced to him he is covered in ash and dust from the air. The dust and muck is possibly a symbol for the filth and lack of morals in his life. His wife is sneaking around his back committing adultery, and he is being almost taunted by Tom, the man who is with his wife. I feel bad for Wilson. Poor guy.
I think that the Valley of Ashes reflects the cultural and moral changes in America during the 1920's. Everything was changing in America during the "roaring" 20's. Women's fashion became more provocative and rebellious with the "flapper" style. The passing of prohibition gave gangsters a way to make money by opening illegal bars. Organized crime at this time was at it's best. Along with Prohibition came a social clash of those who opposed it and those in favor of it.
Morals were being tested at the Scopes trial. At this time more people lived in urban areas than in rural ones. Radio and television were booming. With all that excitement it is easy to see why folks were going a little mad.
Next we have, the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg. They see all. I get it....it's a billboard....great! "Their retinas are one yard high, they look out of no face, but instead from a pair of enormous yellow spectacles which pass over a non-existent nose." What a glorious description! It was that quote that gave me the idea that the Doctor may be a symbol of some higher power, (an idea i soon found out was not as original as I had hoped). A god of some kind, looking out onto a disappointing race, brooding over the filth of a nation.
Fitzgerald has a wonderful way of writing. His descriptions are so vivid and yet he manages to keep some parts and characters very mysteriously behind the scenes. For example, the party scene in Chapter 2. People are gossiping about Gatsby, he's quite popular but no one actually knows him.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Charles Simic: Very Cool.
The poem I chose for this assignment was "Fork" by Charles Simic. Born in Yugoslavia in 1938, Simic grew up in Europe and has many childhood memories of WWII. "Hitler and Stalin taught us the basics," said Simic.When he was sixteen his family immigrated to Chicago. Simic later received his BA from New York University. Nothing about his writing is distinctively American, in fact Simic is known for writing many translations of French, Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian, and Slovenian poetry. It was not until he was fifteen, did he even learn to speak English.
I enjoy Simics writing very much, it is bizarre and he gives a thrilling sense of imagery. In "Fork" http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/poem.html?id=171686 a simple everyday object is transformmed into a haunting "thing" that has "crept right out of hell". He brings us into his world of ultra surrealism.
Another poem i read by Simic was "Eyes Fastened With Pins":http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/eyes-fastened-with-pins/. In this poem he discusses what a long day "Death" (a grim reaper type character I suppose) puts in. It has such a dark ironic humor. Deaths friends and family are at home, drinking beer and chillin and poor Death is out in a "strange part of town looking for someone with a bad cough". I found that line quite ammusing. For this poem, Simic put similar ideas behind his writing as he did in "Fork" but used a different approach, (allow me to explain). In "Fork" a simple object is made into a twisted creature found only in places like nightmares or the Fifth Circle of Hell. In "Eyes Fastened With Pins", the concept of Death (faceing and accepting it) and the portrayl of Death as a person is drawn out as if Death is a regular working class kinda guy. Either way things are not as they seem, which is possibly the theme Simic is trying to get across in his writing.
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