Sunday, December 9, 2012

Literary Theory: Weekly Response 13

"Disability is not a static condition; it is a fluid and labile fact of embodiment, and as such it has complex relations to the condition of narrative, because it compels us to understand embodiment in relation to temporality." 
- Disability and Narrative, Michael Berube

In what ways does Mark Haddon prevent The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time from being solely about disability?

Though the main character of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time is Autistic and often voices the ways in which his mind works differently than the average person's, Haddon's story revolves more around the plot of the story. It's risky to have a narrator with a disability, because he could be perceived as an unreliable narrator, but Haddon drops numerous hints that prove the narrator's credibility, enhancing the impact of the plot. He subtly brings the narrator's disability into the story by inserting tidbits of his thought process and introducing his quirks, but he does it in a way that makes the character relatable, not someone you'd pity or render disabled -- just a character with his own set of traits.

Literary Theory: Weekly Response 12

"Its only apparent visual simplicity coupled with emotional and political complexity--and insisting on the connectivity of aesthetics and politics--Persepolis has earned the most international attention of any graphic narrative in the past ten years." 
- Graphic Narrative as Witness, Chute

Would Persepolis be less effective if it was not a graphic novel?

Persepolis has such a deep impact because of the way it is written, but also because of its layout. Because it is a graphic novel, everything flows nicely, is easy to follow, and is also entertaining, which is the best way to capture attention. Persepolis is a very unique novel and that is why it has been such a success. There is something portrayed by the comic book feel of the novel that could not otherwise be shown. For people that haven't experienced the Iranian Revolution first hand, the fact that Persepolis is a graphic novel is helpful to their understanding, because it offers the making for an easy to understand novel, making it effective.

Literary Theory: Weekly Response 11

"Persepolis is a disruptive text on many levels. It delivers, for example, comfortable liberal notions of our common humanity in its representation of the universal desire for personal freedom. At the same time, it demonstrates liberalism's need for an abject or menacing other that is excluded from the common humanity by allowing the reader to reconfirm stereotypes of, for example, subjugated, veiled Muslim women and of post-revolutionary Iran as a threatening and alien place."
- Estranging the Familiar, Naghibi


“The regime had understood that one person leaving her house while asking herself: 
Are my trousers long enough?'
Is my veil in place?' 
Can my make-up be seen?' 
Are they going to whip me?' 

No longer asks herself: 

Where is my freedom of thought?' 
Where is my freedom of speech?' 
My life, is it livable?'
What's going on in the political prisons?” 
- The Complete Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi

What makes Persepolis such a profound and disruptive text?

Persepolis is disruptive for me because it uncovers a world I was previously ignorant about. Because I didn't know anything about the Iranian revolution and little about the treatment of Muslim women, reading about it in Persepolis was shocking. In the novel, I got to see first hand the kinds of thoughts that run through the minds of Muslim women on a daily basis. It's shocking enough to hear about the way Muslim women are treating, but through Persepolis, I got to see the perspective of someone that can actually go into vast detail about not only what happens, but the emotional and psychological impact it causes, which, for me, leaves me with a personal connection to the character, and in turn, the point of the story.

Literary Theory: Weekly Response 10

"In an evolutionary context, hyper attention no doubt developed first; deep attention is a relative luxury requiring group cooperation to create a secure environment in which one does not have to be constantly alert to danger."
- Hyper and Deep Attention, Page 188, N. Katherine Hayles

“It's fear that makes us lose our conscience. It's also what transforms us into cowards.” 
- The Complete Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi


Is evoking fear in readers beneficial when trying to get a point across effectively?

When suspense is present in a novel, more often than not, I, as a reader, find myself on the edge of my seat waiting impatiently to see what is going to happen next. Fear really does enable a loss of consciousness, but at the same time, it captivates attention. When fear is present, sometimes sensibility gets lost in the shuffle, which could be seen as a hindrance to a reader's understanding, but if fear evokes deep attention because the reader cannot regain a calm demeanor until the suspense is settled, the point of the novel can come across very clearly, because the reader will be so alert from fear and deep attention that they will not miss a single point the author is trying to make.

Literary Theory: Weekly Response 9

"What I thought I was doing was acquiring the language and repertoire of analytic techniques called for implicitly by the inherent features of self-evidently great works of literary art. But I was troubled by my clumsiness. This was not a language I felt very comfortable with or wielded naturally with any sort of grace or independence."
- A Feeling for Books, Page 2, Radway

"Elizabeth feeling all the more than common awkwardness and anxiety of his situation, now forced herself to speak; and immediately, though not very fluently, gave him to understand, that her sentiments had undergone so material a change, since the period to which he alluded, as to make her receive with gratitude and pleasure, his present assurances."
- Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen

When the language she uses is sometimes complex and confusing to readers, how is Jane Austen still able to get her point across effectively?

Jane Austen tends to use a lot of excess words when she writes, adding in more complex words in both the dialogue and in her narrations. Though parts of Pride and Prejudice can seem to be too wordy to understand clearly, she does a good job of pulling in explanations every so often, summarizing what is going on at that point in the novel. When Darcy proposes to Elizabeth and she accepts, there is a lot of length to the dialogue as well as the explanation, but the reader is still able to get a sense of how the characters are thinking and feeling and what is happening at that point in the story.

Literary Theory: Weekly Response 8

"Class difference was of course a fact of life for Austen, and an acute observation of the fine distinctions between one social level and another was a necessary part of her business as a writer of realistic fiction."
- "Class" from The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen, page 115, Julie McMaster

"Certainly, my dear, nobody said there were; but as to not meeting with many people in this neighbourhood, I believe there are few neighbourhoods larger.  I know we dine with four-and-twenty families." 
- Pride and Prejudice, Chapter 9, Jane Austen
In what way does Mrs. Bennet exemplify class distinction?

In Pride and Prejudice, each character's social level is apparent. Jane Austen uses this as an opportunity to display class distinctions through each character's personality. Mrs. Bennet is a a prime example of this. Being of a higher class, she is more haughty than those of a lower class in the novel. She, in turn, is portrayed as being obnoxious, setting the scene for readers that people of a higher class are often times stuck up and un-likable as people. 


Literary Theory: Weekly Response 7

"It almost seems that Pride and Prejudice is too good a novel, partly because our awareness of its ingenious construction dilutes our engagement with the fictional universe that is depicted, producing a strange mixture of suspense and certainty."
- The One vs. The Many, page 45, Alex Woloch

“My affections and wishes are unchanged, but one word from you will silence me on this subject forever.”eli
- Pride and Prejudice, Chapter 57, Jane Austen

What does Jane Austen do to give Pride and Prejudice a fairy tale ending?

Throughout Pride and Prejudice, Elizabeth and Darcy had a very tumultuous relationship. They were at first very put off by one another. Then, there was a reluctance present when it came to admitting their feelings for each other. Elizabeth is portrayed as a very strong willed, headstrong woman that does not really believe in the sanction of marriage, so when she accepts Darcy's proposal and professes her love for him, while fumbling over her words, showing her excitement about marrying the love of her life and giving readers what they had been waiting for the entire novel: the confirmation of the love story that is Darcy and Elizabeth -- a happy ending for them.