Sunday, May 29, 2016

Shooting an Elephant Questions

1. George Orwell has a negative attitudes regarding imperialism, the native peoples, and his own position in Burma. He states, "...I had already made up my mind that imperialism was an evil thing and the sooner I chucked up my job and got out of it the better." He also states, "As for the job I I was doing, I hated it more bitterly than I can perhaps make clear." and uses derogatory terms such as "yellow faces" and "coolies" to describe Asians and Natives. 

2. Orwell views the nature of imperialism as such: The only power white men have is the facade of control they put impose on people when it is actually the other way around. 

3. Orwell mostly felt compelled to shoot the elephant out of peer pressure that arose from his status as a tyrant from a foreign land and the need to be liked. 

4. You want to hear my honest opinion about Orwell? He's a jerk and lower than the scum of the earth in this story. His pride makes me so irritated that he would only shoot a poor creature for the sake of his dignity. If the  younger men believed that the elephant shouldn't have been killed because the man it killed wasn't worth it, then let me just say that Orwell's dignity was definitely not wroth the death of an elephant because he himself is just as lowly as the "coolie." And also, the older men who praised for killing the elephant because it was out of control and needed to be taken care of obviously have no idea how different a freaking dog is from A FREAKING ELEPHANT!!!!......That is all.

5. One of the ideas about human motives that he describes is how in the end, people usually care about themselves and if they have to, they'll do what they can or need to in order to save themselves. He basically says that everyone follows the "Every man for himself" policy, which only true to some people because there are good-hearted people! This idiot who shot the elephant for the sake of protecting his own nonexistent dignity is a perfect example of a horrible human with no soul and motives to save themselves when it comes down to the last straw. However, in my life, I have seen and met genuinely nice people who are there to help you out and support through whatever is going on in my life. It's called selflessness, and I've seen it many times in rare yet memorable people including my friends and family. Orwell can go suck on an egg for all I care. THERE ARE GOOD PEOPLE IN THIS WORLD ORWELL! STOP BEING SO FREAKING NEGATIVE AND CONSERVATIVE!!!

The Destruction of Culture

Music is an artifact that justifies war but destroys culture. Some artists encourage violence through the lyrics they compose. One of the ways they continue carrying on this underlying theme of violence is to mask their songs with a catchy beat that listeners can enjoy, if not completely understand. As this combination of lyrics and music becomes successful and slowly makes its way into mainstream culture, it sets a standard for what upcoming tracks need to sound like in order to become popular and make money, which is ultimately what companies look for in their decision of which music to put out. As a result, we see a cycle of consumers blindly buying meaningless beats for the sake of their own superficial pleasures and producers constantly trying to meet them. 
Like war, music can also be a perversion of human desire. We pursue certain musicians for reasons beyond the sphere of logic and morality to breed more nonsensical music whose justifications have more to do with our individual, selfish desires than the benefit of humanity as a whole.  

Thursday, May 5, 2016

High School Confidential Analysis Questions

1. Denby uses opposition like "Everyone is afraid of her; that's why she's popular," and exaggerations such as "a waist as supple as a willow," to describe the female villain of teen movies.

2. Denby's description of the female villain focused on what she said and looked like while his description of the male villain focused briefly on his appearance and mainly on his actions. This difference suggests that looks matter a lot for females along with the things they say, but guys are only accounted on the things they do (on the most part).
3. To me, the change in tone occurs when Denby switches from talking about the movie characters to talking about the people who created those movies. His sentence structure changed along with his diction, which helped established his change in tone.
4. There's a break between paragraphs 3 and 4 because the subject changed from movie characters to the genres of films.
5. By saying directly after the question that the scenes provide emotions within the audience by over-exaggerating scenes that people can relate to.
6. Films. He used a handful of films as examples and made comments on it as support.
7. Denby's main argument is of the common use of stereotypes in high schools and the impact it has on high school students. He also talks about the overuse of these stereotypes in films using examples and finding patterns in all of them.

9. He uses the victim characters in the movies as examples since they're always going through a bunch of crap, especially from the bullies and villains of high school, but they're also talented and smart and stick out in so many ways. They're bound to be successful people and being able to make it through the issues they're having right now helps.

10. He uses the movie Carrie as an example with a girl who was tricked and humiliated and retaliated, something the boys should be able to relate to.

11. Kind of like "breaking stereotypes," these films bring more into the genre and make it more complex. It different from the usual over-usage of stereotypical archetypes which is something that Denby spoke about in this essay.

12. The audience for this essay would most likely be teen high school students. He considers the audience by speaking as if he was their teacher lecturing them, speaking directly to them and in words and phrases they would understand and relate to.