The Blog of Schramm
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Workshopping
I liked the group workshops that we did in class on Tuesday. The small group exercise really allowed us to get to hear someone else's story as they would read it, which put an entirely different light on things. Also the large group excercise, where we went around and discussed what we thought we could do to better our papers showed me that most of the class was having the same or similar problems and it was just nice to know that I wasn't alone in that.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Literary Analysis Thesis
Thesis: "The use of the color white in Sarah Orne Jewett's "The White Heron" and of the color yellow in Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" show how symbolism can be used to describe the feelings of the characters in the stories.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Critical Analysis
The critical reading session in class today was very interesting. It was crazy to see how the story that I had read and got meaning out of had a completely different side to it. It was almost like reading another story altogether. I plan on using more time and effort in really looking into a story and finding all of its hidden meanings.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Symbolism
Symbolism is used in both The Yellow Wallpaper and The White Heron through different colors. In Heron, the color white is used. Sylvia is about to show the hunter where the heron has its nest, but when she sees it is all of its purity she realizes the purity of the world around her and can't bring her self to reveal the bird's location. On the other side of the spectrum, the woman from The Yellow Wallpaper, is surrounded by the color yellow and begins to see it as something that is dirty and foul, the opposite of pure.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Response to The Yellow Wallpaper
Women's conditions at this time were atrocious. They were treated as subservient and kept down by their male counterparts and it was believed that their place in the world was as caregivers and homemakers. Those women that did work, worked terrible, usually dangerous, jobs that paid far less than what a male would be paid for the exact same position. Women were also not deemed as smart as men, for it was believed that women didn't have the brainpower or ability to reason. This was one of the reasons that women we're not allowed to vote until the ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920. After a while this can take a very hard physical, emotional, and mental toll on a person as we saw in The Yellow Wallpaper.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
This was a very surprising piece. I really began to feel for Farquhar. He was committed to a cause and was about to be hung as a result. In his final moments, all he really wanted to do was to see his wife and children, but he knew there was no real way out. When he was thrown over the edge to his death though, something miraculous happened. The noose around his neck snapped and he was able to get away. He escapes and makes it all the way back to his wife, but when he goes to embrace her he is engulfed by a blinding light and that is it.....He is dead and his escape and reunion was all a dream.
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Response to Omelas
This was a powerful readings. The people who live in Omela believe that they live perfectly when most of them know about the poor deformed child that lives locked away in their city. They would rather ignore the needs of this one soul in order to keep living in the bliss they are used to.
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