Please read at least half of Dead Man Walking before the next class, and finish it before the Oct 10 class. Remember that the first major writing assignment is due and start planning.
Also remember that the weekly posts are a required component and are not accepted late.
That said, we will skip the weekly post this week and return to the routine on the following week.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Monday, September 19, 2011
Wizard of Oz
Choose one of the following and respond with about 200 words. Read messages posted before yours and do not duplicate!
We will also discuss the following in class (but these are not writing options)...
- Is the film’s Dorothy stronger or more passive than the book’s version? Defend both points of view.
- In what way does the movie convey a different attitude toward the world (which you can take in any sense: gender roles, politics, human nature, economics, home, family, friendship, etc.), than the book did?
- This film has always had people trying to come up with a ‘master interpretation’ that argues what the film is really (or secretly) about. It’s said that the makers of the film put all sorts of things into it that weren’t in the book to advance this “secret agenda.” If it’s true that the film is trying to teach or advocate something through symbolism and allegory, what do you think it is? What elements of the plot or of the characterizations that differ from the book can you use to help defend that idea?
- Who are the good and bad mother figures in this film, and what scenes convince you to regard them this way? Keep the emphasis on qualities that define them as mothers, not just good or bad women. What kind of theory can we form about Dorothy’s attitudes toward mothers when we look at their role in her life and in her dream?
- How is Dorothy’s quest a “feminine quest,” markedly different from the standard masculine quest? Begin by deciding what you think constitutes a masculine quest, thinking in terms of ultimate goal, steps along the way, techniques used to achieve, side characters encountered. Look to blockbuster movies or famous stories as examples.
- If the Wicked Witch is The Outsider in this movie, what minority groups is she being associated with to help the audience identify against her? That is, what popular prejudices does the film take advantage of to mark her as different/wrong? How do they accomplish this, specifically?
Monday, September 12, 2011
Muriel's Wedding
Reminder: you should begin reading The Wizard of Oz.
Now for the online questions...post a comment to this entry of about 150-250 words. You don't need the elaborate introduction of an essay; just jump right into your concise answer.
Answer any ONE of the following (and please make it clear in your first sentence which question you're answering). Feel free to reply with disagreements or additions to other student comments.
1) What specific moments show marriage being parodied. Think in literary terms (actions, dialogue, characterizations, plot outcomes) but also film terms (camerawork, lighting, music, and sequencing).
2) Discuss Muriel’s more peculiar lies to see if you can find any plausible, psychological reason for them (either a deliberate reason on her part, or more likely an explanation of why her subconscious prompts her to come up with them): 1) her lie that her mom has cancer (instead of Rhonda); 2) her lie that her husband’s name is Bill (her dad)
3) Why does Muriel decide to find a husband through the classifieds in precisely the moment that Rhonda is diagnosed with cancer?
4) Is Muriel’s father portrayed as the source of all trouble in the family or a victim of them? Are there things going on in the family that the father clearly can’t be blamed for?
5) Discuss the specific moments in which the “traditional” role of women is parodied. This role includes behavior, personality, appearance, expectations, and sexuality among other things. Think in terms of actions, dialogue, characterizations, plot outcomes, the implied messages conveyed by camerawork, lighting, music, and sequencing. Also remember to pay attention to things that are not said, shown, or done (that are conspicuous in their absence).
6) Muriel’s Wedding can be viewed as a (very) twisted variation of the Cinderella myth. Explain what plot elements, character traits, and patterns correspond to elements of Cinderella. Also, these variations were presumably made for a reason, to critique the moral message of Cinderella. Give your best theory as to what purpose the makers of Muriel’s Wedding had in rewriting the Cinderella story in this way. That is, what’s their response to the moral message of Cinderella?
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