Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Zombies

    After reading the assigned artical, it truly allows for a new perspective on the overwhelming amounts of zombie movies within the last ten years and even earlier.  The author of this article connects the subject of zombies with what is the current "war" situation.  It is quite interesting because he actually proves that after 9/11 the United States went into a fear mode.  With the population feeling scared and unsafe, the production and popularity of zombie movies sky rocket.

    He says how zombies are seen as more scarey objects than vampires or whitchs beacuse the represent the dead where as the others are alive in some way and often are made to be beautiful. Where zombies are the walking dead that feed on people who are alive to remain the walking dead.

    Another interesting fact that he links to the zombie craze is that often in zombie movies after they take over the living, often they show a deserted aftermath of the distruction the zombies leave behind.  He says that represents the aftermath of perhaps a nuclear bomb or a devistating war.  It is very interesting that when the United States is in a state of awarness of lurking dangers the peoples desires for these grotesque movies of death seem to sky rocket in popularity.  However, he also states that during the 90's the United States seemend to be blinded by minor issues going on and popularity for zombie movies were almost a zero.  He does a good job to connect war issues and popularity of zombie movies.
                   
I got this link from: rashmanly.wordpress.com

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Final Project Draft

Lindsey Blakley         
English 102
Laura Cline
4 November 2011
Flannery O’Connor
Twentieth century literature was a time that consisted of many different types of authors.  Flannery O’Connor was a very unique author, popular for her technique and her many successful short stories.  O’Connor was known for her distinct violent type stories that ended in death or some crazy way.   Her last written book of short stories, “Everything that Rises Must Converge,” was considered one of her best pieces of work and was published after her death.  Although there were many constant themes present in her short stories, in this specific collection, racism toward people of different ethnicities was very prevalent and always seemed to be tangled into her creative stories.
Flannery O’Connor was born in the year 1929 and raised in Savannah Georgia.  She, being raised in the south and living through a time of intergrading blacks and whites together, gives O’Connor a unique but popular style of writing for this time.  In her stories she incorporates people of different statues that have different views about one another that add animosity and a good plot to the story.  O’Connor wrote in an era of New Criticism which John Skyes describe, “New Criticism might be said to represent at the theoretical level the same struggle with modernism in literature of the Southern Renaissance” (Skyes 28)  He also says, “New critics also maintained that literature had to be understood in its own terms suited to its unique discourse” (Skyes 29)  O’Connor’s stories were definitely different and her contents were appreciated because how they did well to relate to the time and events taking place around her.
                In the first story in O’Connor’s collections in, “Everything that Rises Must Converge,” which is also the name of the story, is about a young man named Julian who just graduated from college and is living with his mother whom he seems to have a constant battle with, mainly due to her racist feeling she has towards black people. Early on in the story Julian states, “…in spite of all her foolish views, he was free of prejudice and unafraid to face facts.” (O’Connor 12)  He saying this lets the reader understand that there is turmoil between him and his mother due to their different beliefs.  It is not until the end of this story that Julian’s Mother is faced with the realistic truth that black people were equal and it was no longer acceptable to treat them in a non equal way.  Julian lectures his mother on just how inappropriate her actions were, "What all this means, is that the old world is gone.  The old manners are obsolete and your graciousness is not worth a damn." (O'Connor 21)  What is ironic about this story is that Julian’s mother ends up dying at the end of the story.  As if this shock of information about how inappropriate she truly was killed her and Julian is left in despair and guilt.  
            Taking a second look at the first short story “Everything that Rises Must Converge” one can begin to understand just how much tension existed between black people and whites during this time.  An American critic by the name of Stanley Edgar Hyman took a much closer look into Flannery O’Connor and her stories.  Hyman explains about Julian and his mother, “It is beautifully foreshadowed from the story’s first sentence, but the characters, a travesty segregationist mother and a travesty integrationist son, are not adequate to the finely structured action”. (Hyman 27)  The main point of this story was Julian trying to upset his mother, by using a black person, since she is racist, because he knows that it would be the key to get under her skin quick and efficiently. Time and time again in the story one could gather how much Julian wanted his mother to feel the rath of her superior feelings toward black people.  O’Connor twist at the end in such a dramatic way that both sides seemed to be punished for their actions of being judgmental and arrogant of one anthers beliefs.
            For O’Connor being an author in such a time of change inspired her to have racism as a main theme in her short stories. A woman named Patricia Yaeger, who wrote “Dirt and Desire: Reconstructing Southern Women’s Writing”, also recognize the battle between blacks and whites in her stories.  Yaeger states one of the many underlying statements involving racism, “Third, these stories suggest the difficulty white southern culture in freeing itself from specters of ownership-from its obsession with African Americans as objects, as things to be owned-and the question of whether whites can allow a person who has been so commodified to ascend to the status of possessive individualism”. (Yaeger 40) As a reader, one can easily identify this battle.  O’Connor has strong feelings of resentment towards blacks by her white characters in some of her stories for wanting to be equal but, in the end it seems as though her white characters are the ones who die in some freakish way.
            Although some twentieth century literature could be thought of as racist and appalling, O’Connor did not only write about racism towards black people but also about white people.   In her short story “Revelation” Mrs. Turpin, the main character, is a very judgmental women towards just about everyone.  Unlike some of O’Connor’s other stories, racism towards black people isn’t the main theme here.  It is against “white trash” type of people.  Taking place mainly in a doctors waiting room, Mrs. Turpin, looks around judging the others waiting to see the doctor and thinks, “She could tell by the way they sat-kind of vacant and white-trashy, as if they would sit there until Doomsday if nobody called and told them to get up”. (O’Connor 194)  What is interesting in this particular short story is just how judgmental and nacicisitc one person can be.  Especially a lady who thinks of herself as saint like, thinking in her head how horrible the people around her are and taking a God like statue to decide which people are decent and which aren’t.
            Comparing the few stories in the collection, “Everything that Rises must Converge” presents the constant presents of racism while not discriminating races.  Robert Avis Donahoo Hewitt is a man who wrote a book called, “Flannery O’Connor In the Age of Terrorism: Essays on Violence and Grace.”  He says that, “The combination of power and humiliation that O’Connor builds into her characterization of blacks in this story is also what allows the statue to serve as a representation of Christ”. (Hewitt 136)  Although the representation of Christ is not clear, the power and humiliation are.  Most characters in her stories often lead to the down fall of the character that perceives them as being better or higher ranking in society than the one being dissected.
            In another one of O’Connor’s short stories, “Judgment Day” this story is a bit different from some of the others.  An older man, named Tanner moved from Alabama to New York so his daughter could take care of him.  When Tanner discovered a black man had moved into a neighboring apartment he was thrilled because this black man brought feelings of familiarity to this Southern raised man.  After getting a chance to introduce himself to the black man Tanner attempts to make small talk with the man and be friendly and says, “I thought you might know somewhere around here we could find s a pond, Preacher”. (O’Connor 262)  Tanner, assuming that this man was from the South, completely offends the black man who states he is neither a Preacher nor has any intent on finding a pond.  Tanner being a man from the South, he that life in the North is much different from that in the South and his way of approaching black people being friendly in his eyes is unacceptable.  An ironic twist to this story comes from the black man, “I don’t take no crap off no wool-hat red-neck son-of-a-bitch peckerwood old basterd like you.” (O’Connor 263)  O’Connor not only writes about racism happening towards black people but white people as well.  This era was full of mixed feelings between the two races and O’Connor does well to incorporate both sides.
            O’Connor used much of the same character base for her stories.  There always seems to be a good mix of white people and black people.  The way O’Connor decides to incorporate which ever group she decides one can always count on racism of a group present.  Hyman says it best, “As this suggest, not only do images and symbols recur, but fixed grouping of people recur, and certain figures in these fixed groups are consistently travestied” (Hyman 30)  Not only are black people constantly judged in O’Connor’s stories, but she also targets whites by using such words as, white trash and peckerwood which could be interpreted as racist toward white people.  The continual battle between the groups of characters in her stories, allow almost a comical feeling present of the ignorance of just how narrow minded people where in that era.
            Flannery O’Connor was considered a great author of her time.  Her stories were unique and funny but at the same token disturbing.  She lived through one of our nation’s most intense times of Jim Crow Laws and intergrading blacks and whites together as equals.  She showed no favoritism to either race but had consistent criticizing of different characters throughout her stories.  From blacks to white trash to a young girl who was a slut, there was a bit of everything in each story.  Of the many themes present her battle of judgmental characters and racism intertwined in her unique stories was a great theme that makes Flannery O’Connor such a different and great writer.
Works Cited
Hewitt, Avis Donahoo, Robert. “Flannery O'Connor in the Age of Terrorism : Essays on Violence and Grace”: University of Tennessee Press.  April  2010.
Hyman, Stanley Edgar. “Flannery O’Connor - American Writers 54” : University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers No. 54. University of Minnesota Press.  1996.
O’Connor, Flannery. “Everything that Rises Must Converge” : Ninth Printing and Ambassador Books Ltd., Toronto. 1970.
Sykes, John D. “Flannery O'Connor, Walker Percy, and the Aesthetic of Revelation” : University of Missouri Press.  Columbia, MO, USA. 2007
Yaeger, Patricia. “Dirt and Desire : Reconstructing Southern Women's Writing, 1930-1990” University of Chicago Press. July 2000.


Sunday, November 6, 2011

Bibliography: Post 11

 Flannery O'Connor - American Writers 54 : University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers No. 54 Hyman, Stanley Edgar


    Although this author doesn't really write about the main theme of my paper, this will still be useful because it gives great detail about O'Connors life and what events happened that contributed to her as an author.  It gives a good timeline of her many successful stories and gives a little description about a few of the main ones.  He does well to to give a little help to my thesis in pointing out a few ironic points in her book of course, concerning black people and there actions or characteristics about their parts in her story.   




Flannery O'Connor in the Age of Terrorism : Essays on Violence and Grace
Hewitt, Avis Donahoo, Robert 


      This particular author compares many of O'Connors major subjects in her short stories.  He writes about how her characters in her stories can be compared to zombies and negative figures.  He also speaks of her often use of religion and its many incorporation in her stories.  A main topic spoke of in his book is racism.  This having a major part in my thesis for my paper makes him a key author for me to use and allows for many quotes to tie my paper together.  To conclude, this book talks a lot on how Flannery O'Connor writes and about the many short stories she has written and will be very valuable to my paper.  



 Recent American Novelists - American Writers 22 : University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers No. 22 Ludwig, Jack 


After reading Ludwig's book he writes about O'Connor and some other similar authors with the same styles as she has.  He speaks of how in 20th century southern literature revolves around heir ways and its many issues when African Americans were looked at as less equal than white people.  He talks about other popular authors that had similar styles to O'Connor and how they all seemed to be based around blacks, Bible, and violence.  He makes great strides to show how even though she does write dark literature, it is suppose to have some comic relief for the story.  This will be a strong point in my paper and ultimately help to make me paper thesis strong and add a different perspective of comparison to other authors of the time.   




Dirt and Desire : Reconstructing Southern Women's Writing, 1930-1990
Yaeger, Patricia 


      This book is going to be a great secondary source for my paper.  It is based on southern women writers which Flannery O'Connor is.  Living in Georgia her entire life being raised in a time where blacks were treated less than equal this author, Patricia Yaeger, talks about monstrosity and violence present in O'Connors stories.  Her use in describing certain things in her stories that is in some way or another tied to her feelings of racism and how things were in Georgia in the mid 20th century with black people and the Jim Crow Laws. Yaeger also speaks of O'Connors inner battle with the way things were before with black people and the changes that are slowly making everything change for southerners.