Upon further research I find that what I thought was true. Sidney did base this poem off of a myth or a folk tale, to be more exact he based this poem off of a Greek myth about Philomela, princess of Athens. Her brother-in-law Tereus son of Aries agrees to go to Athens and escort her from Athens to his hometown, Thrace for a visit. He lusts for her on the way and when they get to Thrace he ends up taking her to a cabin in the woods and rapes her. So she won't tell he cuts out her tongue but this proves useless because she weaves a tapestry telling her older sister, Tereus' wife Procne what happened. To get revenge on him Procne ends up killing their son and feeding him to an unknowing Tereus. He finds out and tries to kill both Procne and Philomela but the gods end up turning them three into bird; Procne into a nightengale (hence the "the nightengale as soon as April bringeth" in the poem), Philomela into a swallow, a bird with no song, and Tereus into a bird similar to a hawk.
This adds alot of background to this poem and helps me understand it a little more because at first I didn't know what Sidney was talking about. I now know that the speaking in the poem is Procne talking to Philomena. In the first stanza it is as if she is in mourning for what happened, "what grief her breast oppreseth". In the reoccurring stanza, stanza 2, it looks like she is saying that Philomena should atleast be glad that Tereus wants her because Procne is older and describes herself almost as baren "Thine earth springs, mine fadeth". This seems a little vain and selfish but this could have been the opinion Sidney formed himself, because the myth was told in many variations over time.
Monday, August 29, 2011
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Quote 4: Immortal Sin
"Sin never dies" 153
Carrie's mother says this, but I can't help but feel that King tries to say something with this line. I don't think King is one for redemption and neither am I. Really its the belief that you can never take back what you gave done in the past, ie sin, but you can better yourself in the future by learning what you have done which I think is the moral overall in the story. Sue tries to redeem herself with Carrie by making Tommy take her, but that ends up in disaster as is Carrie tries to redeem herself in front of her piers and Momma tries to religiously redeem herself from her having pre-marital sex. In other words every story has a moral and this one is that you can only move forward and learn.
Quote 3: Not divine but pagan.
"And if there was enchantment, it was not divine but pagan and she wanted it that way".
This quote symbolizes a point in most people's lives were they go away from their religion, loose their religion totally, or doubt it. Carrie had become tired of her mother's fundamentalist Christian ways which did not impose well on Carrie, i.e it gave her mother more "reason" to hurt her. On prom night she did not want anything from her mother's world in it, she wanted her own world, or what she viewed her classmate's world to be. When you are an outcast you sometimes view the world of the other people who fit in as wrather foreign, and in Carrie's point of view that would be categorized as pagan.
This quote symbolizes a point in most people's lives were they go away from their religion, loose their religion totally, or doubt it. Carrie had become tired of her mother's fundamentalist Christian ways which did not impose well on Carrie, i.e it gave her mother more "reason" to hurt her. On prom night she did not want anything from her mother's world in it, she wanted her own world, or what she viewed her classmate's world to be. When you are an outcast you sometimes view the world of the other people who fit in as wrather foreign, and in Carrie's point of view that would be categorized as pagan.
"I don't wanna fight with you mamma",Carrie said, and her voice almost broke from her and dissolved. She struggled to control it. "I only want to be let to live my own life .I...I don't like yours.". She stopped, horrified in spite of herself. The ultimate blasphemy had been spoken, and it was a thousand times worse than the eff word." P.92
This quote symbolizes not only Carrie breaking free from her mother but the overall feeling rings true for any person with the true intentions of breaking free from oppressive parents. She hates to do it because she loves her mother as do most kids who want to move off of her parents but she says that she doesn't like her mother's lifestyle and wants her own, as do the others. It also represents the fear that one may have, the feel that they're doing something wrong like Carrie felt that it was the "ultimate blashpemy".
Quote 2: They don't get better
"But hardly anybody ever finds out that their actions really, actually, hurt other people! People don't get better, they just get smarter. When you get smarter you don't stop pulling the wings off of flies, you just think of better reasons for doing it." 60-61
This quote to me shows King's views on the human race as a whole, and probably many other people's views. What he's trying to say is that humans don't just stop doing bad things when they grow up, they just think of more logical, mature reasons for doing them. For example a child that used to fight alot as a kid for no good reason could grow up and be president and say that he's going to make the country go to war because of some other reason that would make the people think that he is very justified in going to war. It is, admittedly, a somewhat pessimistic view on the human race because others think that people do change for the better when they grow up (some people atleast) but still King is justified in his thinking because of what the human race has shown us so far.
"Dead Fly ." Online Image. Wattle Creek Books. Jan.26,2011. Aug.28,2011 <http://www.wattlecreekbooks.com/wattle-creek-blog/?currentPage=4>.
Saturday, August 27, 2011
RR 6: Mama was a sado-masochist.
P.90
In these next 15 pages we find that Chris hates Sue now also. Maybe she's just hateful by nature or she just believes that Sue is a hypocrite. Chris is the type of teen that dresses provovativly, wearing things like a white blouse witrh no bra under with tight velvet pants, which I find just a little repulsive. We also find that Sue is loosing her popularity because of her tryng to make up for what she did to Carrie. What is King trying to say about redemption here? That it sometimes comes at a cost? Possibly even that its best to leave the past in the past. I also find that Chris seems very one sided but maybe that's because we don't go through much character building with her. We also find out that Carrie and Tommy (origionally Tommy and Sue) are going to be running for prom king and queen which Chris finds extremely hilarious. In "The Shadow Exploded" it simpily says that Carrie gets ruined on prom not, which pretty much ruins the surprise ending that was supposed to happen. Billy Nolan and his gang of friends go to a local farm. Billy says that he would kill for Chris, is this out of lust or love? Since he's even discribed by King as a gangster it's probably just lust. Him and his friends end up killing a few pigs, "pig blood for a pig" so he says. We go to Carrie trying on her dress for the first time, her mother comes in and sees her in it and urges her to burn it, but Carrie doesn't want to by any means so she refuses. Her mother's eyes are said to gleam when "tests of faith" are at hand, does this mean she is a masochist/sadist? Probably so considering all she has done to Carrie and now since she is hurting herself like she did before when Carrie was a child. Carrie goes about what's going on wrather calmly, probably because she is used to it, and ends up dragging Margaret out of her room with her mind. Then we end with Carrie waiting for Tommy to come pick her up and take her to the prom.
Yuumei. "The Masochist ." 2009. JPG file.
In these next 15 pages we find that Chris hates Sue now also. Maybe she's just hateful by nature or she just believes that Sue is a hypocrite. Chris is the type of teen that dresses provovativly, wearing things like a white blouse witrh no bra under with tight velvet pants, which I find just a little repulsive. We also find that Sue is loosing her popularity because of her tryng to make up for what she did to Carrie. What is King trying to say about redemption here? That it sometimes comes at a cost? Possibly even that its best to leave the past in the past. I also find that Chris seems very one sided but maybe that's because we don't go through much character building with her. We also find out that Carrie and Tommy (origionally Tommy and Sue) are going to be running for prom king and queen which Chris finds extremely hilarious. In "The Shadow Exploded" it simpily says that Carrie gets ruined on prom not, which pretty much ruins the surprise ending that was supposed to happen. Billy Nolan and his gang of friends go to a local farm. Billy says that he would kill for Chris, is this out of lust or love? Since he's even discribed by King as a gangster it's probably just lust. Him and his friends end up killing a few pigs, "pig blood for a pig" so he says. We go to Carrie trying on her dress for the first time, her mother comes in and sees her in it and urges her to burn it, but Carrie doesn't want to by any means so she refuses. Her mother's eyes are said to gleam when "tests of faith" are at hand, does this mean she is a masochist/sadist? Probably so considering all she has done to Carrie and now since she is hurting herself like she did before when Carrie was a child. Carrie goes about what's going on wrather calmly, probably because she is used to it, and ends up dragging Margaret out of her room with her mind. Then we end with Carrie waiting for Tommy to come pick her up and take her to the prom.
Yuumei. "The Masochist ." 2009. JPG file.
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Reader Response 5: Cruelty of Women
Pg.75
We pick up with a very interesting question; are women less cruel by nature than men? It says that the girls would always harass Carrie way more than the guys. Does that women can be extremely cruel also? In history we have seen single women with immaculant bloodthirsts but what of the female race as a whole? I hope someday I know this answer but until then; Tommy ends up agreeing to take Carrie to the prom and tells Sue that he loves her for the first time but I still highly doubt he even knows what he's talking about. Tommy is surprisingly nervous about asking Carrie to prom, which is strange but she still ends up saying yes after he reassures her that it is not a joke or something to further humiliate her. Carrie is still a little doubtful and acts pessimistic towards it even though she still hopes everything will go good for her. What really confuses me is that Tommy touches her hand after he asks her and she says yes. Did he think it would have given Carrie the slightest idea that he liked her when he didn't? Would it upset Sue if she knew? We go back to Carrie's house were she tells her mother about Tommy, and in reaction she throws her warm tea in Carrie's face. This time, though, Carrie ends up throwing a pan at her with her mind. Her mother thinks she's some kind of demon, which probably hurt Carrie's feelings. In another exert from "The Shadow Exploded" we find out that Tommy also dies in the prom night incident. There was only twelve survivors and those were ironically the unpopular people. It also revealed that Tommy was a great student but I doubt he really was intelligent given what I've read. Carrie ends up making a dress (ironically in the color red which is the devil's color according to puritans and her mom) and builds up her TK powers by lifting things in her bedroom with her mind. She has flashbacks of her mother beating her and calling her a "little slut" and the day when she made it rain stones. We even see some unintended irony when Sue talks about how they made a movie about Carrie when in real life they ended up making 2 and a musical. It could have even been King's clever suggestion that the movie industry make a movie out of his book haha. In another exerpt from "The Shadow" we find out that Carrie could have got her powers from her father and her Grandmother, who could have been a TK. We end these pages with Sue and the prom committee decorating, the theme is Springtime in Venice.
We pick up with a very interesting question; are women less cruel by nature than men? It says that the girls would always harass Carrie way more than the guys. Does that women can be extremely cruel also? In history we have seen single women with immaculant bloodthirsts but what of the female race as a whole? I hope someday I know this answer but until then; Tommy ends up agreeing to take Carrie to the prom and tells Sue that he loves her for the first time but I still highly doubt he even knows what he's talking about. Tommy is surprisingly nervous about asking Carrie to prom, which is strange but she still ends up saying yes after he reassures her that it is not a joke or something to further humiliate her. Carrie is still a little doubtful and acts pessimistic towards it even though she still hopes everything will go good for her. What really confuses me is that Tommy touches her hand after he asks her and she says yes. Did he think it would have given Carrie the slightest idea that he liked her when he didn't? Would it upset Sue if she knew? We go back to Carrie's house were she tells her mother about Tommy, and in reaction she throws her warm tea in Carrie's face. This time, though, Carrie ends up throwing a pan at her with her mind. Her mother thinks she's some kind of demon, which probably hurt Carrie's feelings. In another exert from "The Shadow Exploded" we find out that Tommy also dies in the prom night incident. There was only twelve survivors and those were ironically the unpopular people. It also revealed that Tommy was a great student but I doubt he really was intelligent given what I've read. Carrie ends up making a dress (ironically in the color red which is the devil's color according to puritans and her mom) and builds up her TK powers by lifting things in her bedroom with her mind. She has flashbacks of her mother beating her and calling her a "little slut" and the day when she made it rain stones. We even see some unintended irony when Sue talks about how they made a movie about Carrie when in real life they ended up making 2 and a musical. It could have even been King's clever suggestion that the movie industry make a movie out of his book haha. In another exerpt from "The Shadow" we find out that Carrie could have got her powers from her father and her Grandmother, who could have been a TK. We end these pages with Sue and the prom committee decorating, the theme is Springtime in Venice.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
RR 4: Hypocrites are always the popular ones...
Pg.60
So we pick up from where we left off last with an angry Desjarin getting ready to punish the girls in her class for what they did to Carrie. They all knew what was coming because they were acting, but Desjarin goes to Chris Hargensen first because she was the head of it. The teacher proves to be fairly brave when she slams Chris against a locker which is an offense that even in that time could easily get her fired. Chris, of course, begins to cuss at her and she cusses back. The good thing is the girls prove to feel wrather guilty for what theyve done. The brave and commanding spirit and the way that she takes up for Carrie really makes me like her. She ends up giving the girls one week of hard detention and if they don't show up they get refused their prom tickets. So, naturally, Chris skips and we get another foreshadow with Chris saying "This isn't over by a long shot, and she was right". In another exerpt from "The Shadow Exploded" we find that Carrie herself dies which is a huge spoiler for me. It suddenly becomes clear to me that Mr.King is using these articles (fake articles) as either character building or foreshadowing. After this we meet the principal and Chris' lawyer father. Her father threatens to sue but is driven away by the threat from the principal, Mr.Grayer, to countersue him on Carrie's behalf. In another exerpt from "The Shadow Exploded" shows us a poem that Carrie wrote in the 7th grade that really showed her feelings of lonliness and evidence that she has dealt with depression most of her life. Now we go to the fruit stand, which is the teen hang out for those in Chamberlaine. Sue goes there and unintentionally meets Chris, with her new boyfriend Billy Nolan the greaser/gangster. i find I like Chris more than I do Chris because she is up front about everything where as Sue isn't. In another exert from "The Shadow Exploded" we find the first traces of Chris' plans of taking revenge out on Carrie. Sue ends up writing a book and in it she talks about prom night and how she was blamed for whatever happened. She says there was 200 deaths and the destruction of the whole town which also seems like a huge spoiler alert. We end these 15 pages with Sue asking Tommy if he would ask Carrie out to prom as a way of making up with her.
So we pick up from where we left off last with an angry Desjarin getting ready to punish the girls in her class for what they did to Carrie. They all knew what was coming because they were acting, but Desjarin goes to Chris Hargensen first because she was the head of it. The teacher proves to be fairly brave when she slams Chris against a locker which is an offense that even in that time could easily get her fired. Chris, of course, begins to cuss at her and she cusses back. The good thing is the girls prove to feel wrather guilty for what theyve done. The brave and commanding spirit and the way that she takes up for Carrie really makes me like her. She ends up giving the girls one week of hard detention and if they don't show up they get refused their prom tickets. So, naturally, Chris skips and we get another foreshadow with Chris saying "This isn't over by a long shot, and she was right". In another exerpt from "The Shadow Exploded" we find that Carrie herself dies which is a huge spoiler for me. It suddenly becomes clear to me that Mr.King is using these articles (fake articles) as either character building or foreshadowing. After this we meet the principal and Chris' lawyer father. Her father threatens to sue but is driven away by the threat from the principal, Mr.Grayer, to countersue him on Carrie's behalf. In another exerpt from "The Shadow Exploded" shows us a poem that Carrie wrote in the 7th grade that really showed her feelings of lonliness and evidence that she has dealt with depression most of her life. Now we go to the fruit stand, which is the teen hang out for those in Chamberlaine. Sue goes there and unintentionally meets Chris, with her new boyfriend Billy Nolan the greaser/gangster. i find I like Chris more than I do Chris because she is up front about everything where as Sue isn't. In another exert from "The Shadow Exploded" we find the first traces of Chris' plans of taking revenge out on Carrie. Sue ends up writing a book and in it she talks about prom night and how she was blamed for whatever happened. She says there was 200 deaths and the destruction of the whole town which also seems like a huge spoiler alert. We end these 15 pages with Sue asking Tommy if he would ask Carrie out to prom as a way of making up with her.
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Reader Response 3: Ashamed
Pg.45
We begin the next 15 pages with Carrie thinking about how she could be free. We also find out that her mother had taught her that any sexual feeling is bad and sinful and so she hates the feeling itself. I've yet to know if that is a blessing or a curse. Even though Carrie knows why she started her period and the inevitability of it she still feels bad. It's almost like she is at war with herself, like she's struggling against logic and what her mother practically brainwashed her with. Her mother brainwashed her into thinking that her mother, and only her mother, was good. (except for God and all of that but that's already given.). She even thinks that people are evil, and she is even a little justified in thinking they are from how the human kind has treated her so far. She even dreamed her mother fought and cast out Satan all by herself and ripped all of the bad out of her leaving her completely pure but Carrie in a way hates her also. Carrie seems to be filled with alot of hate, even self-hate. It surprised me that she even described her face as "bovine like" but I suppose you can only endure so much before you begin to crack. We go to a brief article about what Telekinesis is and then to my favorite part of this story to my two favorite characters.... hahahaha just kidding. We go to Tommy and Sue Snell, Mr. and Mrs. perfect of Carrie's high school. The two seem to be in a purely sex based relationship. Although Sue isn't the main antagonist (Chris Hargensen is) she proves to be severely hypocritical and mixed with her seemingly not so smart boy toy this is a recipe for disaster. She is always scared about keeping her place in her school as being popular but she cries over what she did to Carrie. She's also confused about her relationship with Tommy which also turns out to be for the status also. She ends up blaming it on Carrie like a coward as a way to accept what she did. After Tommy saying she needs to apologize and other ramblings between the two of them they revert back to what stupid people usually revert back to, sex. A few articles later we find out that some of the scientists that were on the "White case" wanted to deny that Carrie's powers ever existed because they went against physics itself. I wonder what this says about human nature. Maybe that sometimes we deny something just because it doesn't make sence even if we have the evidence that it existed. We're back at the White house were we get some imagery about what Margaret looks like. She is ironically sitting in front of the 4 foot bloody depiction of Christ which feels a little like foreshadowing. She wears bi-focals and has blue eyes like Carrie. She always wears a hat and carries around her deceased husband's Bible, he is known as "Daddy Ralph" to Carrie. Carrie becomes angry at her mother because of her not telling her about what was happening to her, and Margaret slaps her hard in response and starts to compulsively quote the bible. What really shocks me the most is that Margaret even views women as weak. She eventually kicks Carrie all the way to the church like room in her house that even has an alter. Again Margaret starts referring to the puritan sermon "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God". Carrie still tries to fight her although her mother is violently making her pray by means of physical abuse. We find out that whenever Carrie does wrong in Margaret's eyes she is thrown in her closet for extreme periods of time to pray. Bravely she lashes back at her mother and is surprised to find that she is scared of Carrie a little. Probably because she knows better than anyone else what she is capable of. Eventually after much cussing from Carrie (which is kind of comidical). After being locked in her closet for 6 hours she finally broke and begged her mother to let her out and an hour later Margaret came to let her out. The longest time she ever stayed in there was for more than a day. I wonder why she didn't just break down the door with her mind? Maybe her telepathy wasn't strong enough then. In the next article we get a little bit of mom's background. She came from semi-rich parents who owned a roadhouse (one of the things that she defiantly can not stand.). Her father was shot in a barroom accident and her mother went on to re-marry, which Margaret didn't approve of at all because she then began attending fundamentalist christian meetings which is how she met Ralph. She goes on to move away with Ralph whilst boasting to her mother and her husband the life that her and Ralph had which was, as she says, like Mary and Joseph but ironically she ends up (according to her mother) getting pregnant out of wedlock and miscarries the baby which really sends her over the edge. A year later Carrie was conceived. And so we cut back to Desjarin coming into her gym class to punish them for what they did to Carrie and that ends these 15 pages. :]
"Angry God ." Online Image. ONETHING Challenge. July 11, 2011. Aug.9,2011 <http://onethingchallenge.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2011-08-02T09%3A50%3A00-05%3A00>.
We begin the next 15 pages with Carrie thinking about how she could be free. We also find out that her mother had taught her that any sexual feeling is bad and sinful and so she hates the feeling itself. I've yet to know if that is a blessing or a curse. Even though Carrie knows why she started her period and the inevitability of it she still feels bad. It's almost like she is at war with herself, like she's struggling against logic and what her mother practically brainwashed her with. Her mother brainwashed her into thinking that her mother, and only her mother, was good. (except for God and all of that but that's already given.). She even thinks that people are evil, and she is even a little justified in thinking they are from how the human kind has treated her so far. She even dreamed her mother fought and cast out Satan all by herself and ripped all of the bad out of her leaving her completely pure but Carrie in a way hates her also. Carrie seems to be filled with alot of hate, even self-hate. It surprised me that she even described her face as "bovine like" but I suppose you can only endure so much before you begin to crack. We go to a brief article about what Telekinesis is and then to my favorite part of this story to my two favorite characters.... hahahaha just kidding. We go to Tommy and Sue Snell, Mr. and Mrs. perfect of Carrie's high school. The two seem to be in a purely sex based relationship. Although Sue isn't the main antagonist (Chris Hargensen is) she proves to be severely hypocritical and mixed with her seemingly not so smart boy toy this is a recipe for disaster. She is always scared about keeping her place in her school as being popular but she cries over what she did to Carrie. She's also confused about her relationship with Tommy which also turns out to be for the status also. She ends up blaming it on Carrie like a coward as a way to accept what she did. After Tommy saying she needs to apologize and other ramblings between the two of them they revert back to what stupid people usually revert back to, sex. A few articles later we find out that some of the scientists that were on the "White case" wanted to deny that Carrie's powers ever existed because they went against physics itself. I wonder what this says about human nature. Maybe that sometimes we deny something just because it doesn't make sence even if we have the evidence that it existed. We're back at the White house were we get some imagery about what Margaret looks like. She is ironically sitting in front of the 4 foot bloody depiction of Christ which feels a little like foreshadowing. She wears bi-focals and has blue eyes like Carrie. She always wears a hat and carries around her deceased husband's Bible, he is known as "Daddy Ralph" to Carrie. Carrie becomes angry at her mother because of her not telling her about what was happening to her, and Margaret slaps her hard in response and starts to compulsively quote the bible. What really shocks me the most is that Margaret even views women as weak. She eventually kicks Carrie all the way to the church like room in her house that even has an alter. Again Margaret starts referring to the puritan sermon "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God". Carrie still tries to fight her although her mother is violently making her pray by means of physical abuse. We find out that whenever Carrie does wrong in Margaret's eyes she is thrown in her closet for extreme periods of time to pray. Bravely she lashes back at her mother and is surprised to find that she is scared of Carrie a little. Probably because she knows better than anyone else what she is capable of. Eventually after much cussing from Carrie (which is kind of comidical). After being locked in her closet for 6 hours she finally broke and begged her mother to let her out and an hour later Margaret came to let her out. The longest time she ever stayed in there was for more than a day. I wonder why she didn't just break down the door with her mind? Maybe her telepathy wasn't strong enough then. In the next article we get a little bit of mom's background. She came from semi-rich parents who owned a roadhouse (one of the things that she defiantly can not stand.). Her father was shot in a barroom accident and her mother went on to re-marry, which Margaret didn't approve of at all because she then began attending fundamentalist christian meetings which is how she met Ralph. She goes on to move away with Ralph whilst boasting to her mother and her husband the life that her and Ralph had which was, as she says, like Mary and Joseph but ironically she ends up (according to her mother) getting pregnant out of wedlock and miscarries the baby which really sends her over the edge. A year later Carrie was conceived. And so we cut back to Desjarin coming into her gym class to punish them for what they did to Carrie and that ends these 15 pages. :]
"Angry God ." Online Image. ONETHING Challenge. July 11, 2011. Aug.9,2011 <http://onethingchallenge.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2011-08-02T09%3A50%3A00-05%3A00>.
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Reading Response 2: Remembering Her Past
Page.30
Page 16 starts out with very heavy imagery when she is describing in detail what the concrete looks like, "Quartz glittering in the cement."; and a simile "Slowing down and speeding up like a car with carberator trouble.". For some reason which I do not know she keeps on talking about things that are on the sidewalk like gum stamped flat , pieces of tin-foil and penny candy wrappers. I think the reason why King put so much detail into the sidewalk was he wanted to create an image of suburban life or maybe even the area in which Carrie lives. We see more of Carrie's character when she imagines that Chris Hargensen is all bloodied and beat up. Despite her major differences from say the average teenager she still defies her mother just like any other teenager does, but just by doing small things that she knows would annoy her mom. Her mother is also revealed to have a very puritain like way of thinking when she talks to Carrie about "sin" and "backsliding" and the imagery of an angry Christ killing the people that made Carrie's life difficult proves that the way of thinking (atleast when it comes to the way she thinks about Jesus) carried on to her. It reminded me alot of "sinners in the hands of an angry God". Carrie remembers about how she took up sowing when she was a kid so that she could pay to go to Christian Camp even though her mother thought it was sinful, and unfortuantly her mother was proved right because Carrie had to go home because of the severe bullying she received there. It is most unfortunate because her mother, instead of comforting her like she should have, told her that she deserved it because going to that camp was a sin in the first place. She even forbade her to take showers at school because she thought they were sinful but she did it anyway. When she's walking down the street to her house, remembering and all a little boy named Tommy Erbtrer started taunting her and calling her names. By a mere glare Carrie knocks the kid off of his bike. She describes her telekinetic actions as her mind "flexing" like a baby muscle. He serves as a foreshadowing for what may happen in her future regarding her abilities. What I find most lovable about Carrie is that she still loves her mother after all she has done to her, she proves this when she is thinking about breaking Mrs.Yorraty's picture window because she is a neighbor hates her mother, or it could just be that she doesn't know that her mother is seriously mistreating her but I hightly doubt that because earlier Carrie talks about how her mother has left her at a disadvantage ever since she was little and the hate-love relationship that she has with her home/homelife. Her house is described as a small white house, blue shudders, with ive creeping up the side. Carrie sees stones outside of her house and is reminded of the day that the storm of stones came down on her house and remembers details about it that she forgot. It suddenly cuts to another article interviewing the girl who basically triggered all of it, the girl in the white bikini that Carrie talks about before the cut to the article. Her name is Estelle Horan, chain smoker and has a husband and two kids. It all started when Carrie's mother complained to Estelle's mother about Estelle laying out in her bathing suit, which she of course found sinful. Estelle's mother took great offence and bought her daughter a white bikini to sun bathe in too offend Margaret more. Little Carrie was described by Estelle to be very pretty and having dirty blonde hair, she also talks about Maragret ruining her which could be clues that Margaret really is a bad character/ one of the main antagonists in the story. She also talks about how strange her father was, who always carried around his bible and .38 revolver. Everybody was scared of him and wouldn't even make faces at him to his back because of how ominous he seemed to be. After young Carrie goes over to Estelle's house (which is apparently next door) she asks her about her breasts which are revealed when one fell out when she was taking a nap, and she says what they are and Carrie says she'll never have any, because if you have breasts you have sinned, hence why her mother calls them "dirty pillows" which I actually find quite hilarious. Even at such a young age Carrie in a way mimicks her mother in the "holier than thou" complex that she has. Estelle wanted so badly to save little Carrie from that life although she was too dumbstruck to do that, and just as she's ruminating about this Margaret comes out and starts "whooping" and making all sorts of ungodly noises whilst shaking all over. She started yelling things about "sluts" and "strumpets"and starts clawing at her neck and cheeks which evoked Carrie to run to her and Margaret squatted and took Carrie in her arms as if she was going to crush her. She was now to the point were she was drooling and took Carrie back in to the house, Estelle said she heard praying, screeching,and sobbing and Carrie being forced into her closet to pray. By that time her mother was eaten up with guilt, but in my opinion if she really was she would have at least called child services but of course she was a coward and was too scared. And this actually makes me think, how different would Carrie be if she was put in a foster home? I personally think it would have done her a world of good and maybe would have avoided the end result of her upbringing. So first it started raining ice, which leads me to think Carrie had to be an extremely strong TK because she could even control the weather when she was but a child, then came the rain of stones which strangely landed on her house and only on her house. Whatever Margaret was doing to Carrie it apparently put her under enough stress to make her do all of that. Estelle also describes what all is going on in her house and how her and her mother were clinging to each other scared for their lives. Of course, none of that got into the local paper for the reason that the townspeople were scared, and I think that's another reason why Carrie isn't socially accepted because of her and her mother being so feared. Then we see a little foreshadowing with Estelle saying "Now there's this other thing..." which was also put in there to entice the reader to keep reading I'm sure. She also said that what happened to the White house was an act of god, which is ironic because of the attitude her mother has about God. We even see a little assonance and consonance when they find lyrics from a Bob Dylan song (Just Like a Woman was the name of it) written over and over again in one of Carrie's notebooks "Everybody guessed/ that baby can't be blessed/ 'til she finally sees that she's like all the rest..." I think this really represents Carrie's longing for acceptance and social redemption. The Carrie enters her house and we get alot of imagery about what her house is like and what's in it. There is a strong smell of talcum powder in the living room which contains various pictures of a wrathful or gory Jesus and some of which gave Carrie nightmares as a child. The most striking piece that is in the living room is a 4 foot cross which had a bloody Jesus crucified there. Carrie accepts what is happening to her logically and calmly because she actually knew what was going on with her but the knowledge was somehow suppressed in her mind, probably because of her mother. Her mother also is a clean freak because to her "cleanliness is close to godliness", but in my opinion whatever mental disease she has, because it is now clear how unsound she is, has now manifested itself into severe OCD. Carrie found that her mother did posses pads. As any other puritain-like Christian her mother makes her wear many layers of clothing. Carrie also demonizes her piers because of what they have done to her, and I believe she is justified in thinking they are all bad but it makes me wonder, did she ever look for good in them? Did she even want to look? At the end of the next 15 pages we find out why Carrie is thick in her weight, and it is because she eats and eats to fill the gap that is inside her.
Note on the picture: This is actually from another Stephen King novel "Firestarter"but it fitted my image of what Carrie looked like whilst she was making it rain ice and stones.
MLA:
"Firestarter ." Online Image. ScreenRant . No date. July 19,2011 <http://screenrant.com/stephen-king-firestarter-universal-reboot-robf-92238/>.
Page 16 starts out with very heavy imagery when she is describing in detail what the concrete looks like, "Quartz glittering in the cement."; and a simile "Slowing down and speeding up like a car with carberator trouble.". For some reason which I do not know she keeps on talking about things that are on the sidewalk like gum stamped flat , pieces of tin-foil and penny candy wrappers. I think the reason why King put so much detail into the sidewalk was he wanted to create an image of suburban life or maybe even the area in which Carrie lives. We see more of Carrie's character when she imagines that Chris Hargensen is all bloodied and beat up. Despite her major differences from say the average teenager she still defies her mother just like any other teenager does, but just by doing small things that she knows would annoy her mom. Her mother is also revealed to have a very puritain like way of thinking when she talks to Carrie about "sin" and "backsliding" and the imagery of an angry Christ killing the people that made Carrie's life difficult proves that the way of thinking (atleast when it comes to the way she thinks about Jesus) carried on to her. It reminded me alot of "sinners in the hands of an angry God". Carrie remembers about how she took up sowing when she was a kid so that she could pay to go to Christian Camp even though her mother thought it was sinful, and unfortuantly her mother was proved right because Carrie had to go home because of the severe bullying she received there. It is most unfortunate because her mother, instead of comforting her like she should have, told her that she deserved it because going to that camp was a sin in the first place. She even forbade her to take showers at school because she thought they were sinful but she did it anyway. When she's walking down the street to her house, remembering and all a little boy named Tommy Erbtrer started taunting her and calling her names. By a mere glare Carrie knocks the kid off of his bike. She describes her telekinetic actions as her mind "flexing" like a baby muscle. He serves as a foreshadowing for what may happen in her future regarding her abilities. What I find most lovable about Carrie is that she still loves her mother after all she has done to her, she proves this when she is thinking about breaking Mrs.Yorraty's picture window because she is a neighbor hates her mother, or it could just be that she doesn't know that her mother is seriously mistreating her but I hightly doubt that because earlier Carrie talks about how her mother has left her at a disadvantage ever since she was little and the hate-love relationship that she has with her home/homelife. Her house is described as a small white house, blue shudders, with ive creeping up the side. Carrie sees stones outside of her house and is reminded of the day that the storm of stones came down on her house and remembers details about it that she forgot. It suddenly cuts to another article interviewing the girl who basically triggered all of it, the girl in the white bikini that Carrie talks about before the cut to the article. Her name is Estelle Horan, chain smoker and has a husband and two kids. It all started when Carrie's mother complained to Estelle's mother about Estelle laying out in her bathing suit, which she of course found sinful. Estelle's mother took great offence and bought her daughter a white bikini to sun bathe in too offend Margaret more. Little Carrie was described by Estelle to be very pretty and having dirty blonde hair, she also talks about Maragret ruining her which could be clues that Margaret really is a bad character/ one of the main antagonists in the story. She also talks about how strange her father was, who always carried around his bible and .38 revolver. Everybody was scared of him and wouldn't even make faces at him to his back because of how ominous he seemed to be. After young Carrie goes over to Estelle's house (which is apparently next door) she asks her about her breasts which are revealed when one fell out when she was taking a nap, and she says what they are and Carrie says she'll never have any, because if you have breasts you have sinned, hence why her mother calls them "dirty pillows" which I actually find quite hilarious. Even at such a young age Carrie in a way mimicks her mother in the "holier than thou" complex that she has. Estelle wanted so badly to save little Carrie from that life although she was too dumbstruck to do that, and just as she's ruminating about this Margaret comes out and starts "whooping" and making all sorts of ungodly noises whilst shaking all over. She started yelling things about "sluts" and "strumpets"and starts clawing at her neck and cheeks which evoked Carrie to run to her and Margaret squatted and took Carrie in her arms as if she was going to crush her. She was now to the point were she was drooling and took Carrie back in to the house, Estelle said she heard praying, screeching,and sobbing and Carrie being forced into her closet to pray. By that time her mother was eaten up with guilt, but in my opinion if she really was she would have at least called child services but of course she was a coward and was too scared. And this actually makes me think, how different would Carrie be if she was put in a foster home? I personally think it would have done her a world of good and maybe would have avoided the end result of her upbringing. So first it started raining ice, which leads me to think Carrie had to be an extremely strong TK because she could even control the weather when she was but a child, then came the rain of stones which strangely landed on her house and only on her house. Whatever Margaret was doing to Carrie it apparently put her under enough stress to make her do all of that. Estelle also describes what all is going on in her house and how her and her mother were clinging to each other scared for their lives. Of course, none of that got into the local paper for the reason that the townspeople were scared, and I think that's another reason why Carrie isn't socially accepted because of her and her mother being so feared. Then we see a little foreshadowing with Estelle saying "Now there's this other thing..." which was also put in there to entice the reader to keep reading I'm sure. She also said that what happened to the White house was an act of god, which is ironic because of the attitude her mother has about God. We even see a little assonance and consonance when they find lyrics from a Bob Dylan song (Just Like a Woman was the name of it) written over and over again in one of Carrie's notebooks "Everybody guessed/ that baby can't be blessed/ 'til she finally sees that she's like all the rest..." I think this really represents Carrie's longing for acceptance and social redemption. The Carrie enters her house and we get alot of imagery about what her house is like and what's in it. There is a strong smell of talcum powder in the living room which contains various pictures of a wrathful or gory Jesus and some of which gave Carrie nightmares as a child. The most striking piece that is in the living room is a 4 foot cross which had a bloody Jesus crucified there. Carrie accepts what is happening to her logically and calmly because she actually knew what was going on with her but the knowledge was somehow suppressed in her mind, probably because of her mother. Her mother also is a clean freak because to her "cleanliness is close to godliness", but in my opinion whatever mental disease she has, because it is now clear how unsound she is, has now manifested itself into severe OCD. Carrie found that her mother did posses pads. As any other puritain-like Christian her mother makes her wear many layers of clothing. Carrie also demonizes her piers because of what they have done to her, and I believe she is justified in thinking they are all bad but it makes me wonder, did she ever look for good in them? Did she even want to look? At the end of the next 15 pages we find out why Carrie is thick in her weight, and it is because she eats and eats to fill the gap that is inside her.
Note on the picture: This is actually from another Stephen King novel "Firestarter"but it fitted my image of what Carrie looked like whilst she was making it rain ice and stones.
MLA:
"Firestarter ." Online Image. ScreenRant . No date. July 19,2011 <http://screenrant.com/stephen-king-firestarter-universal-reboot-robf-92238/>.
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Quote Blog: "A Frog Among Swans"
"Carrie stood among them solidly, a frog among swans." Pg.4
This quote really speaks to me because of the feeling of not belonging that was prominent for me all through during my years of growing up, and it's not just me because we are all human. As a human there's always going to be sometime in your life were you feel like you don't belong and that reflects that through this sentence. I believe King hits a nerve with everybody by portraying that feeling in his main character and I think he wanted to address this feeling through his whole entire story.
MLA Citation for image
Alephunky . "The Ugly Ducking ." Online Image.www.deviantart.com. No date. July 17,2011 <http://alephunky.deviantart.com/art/The-Ugly-Duckling-127256844>.
This quote really speaks to me because of the feeling of not belonging that was prominent for me all through during my years of growing up, and it's not just me because we are all human. As a human there's always going to be sometime in your life were you feel like you don't belong and that reflects that through this sentence. I believe King hits a nerve with everybody by portraying that feeling in his main character and I think he wanted to address this feeling through his whole entire story.
MLA Citation for image
Alephunky . "The Ugly Ducking ." Online Image.www.deviantart.com. No date. July 17,2011 <http://alephunky.deviantart.com/art/The-Ugly-Duckling-127256844>.
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Reader Response 1: A Woman Scorned
July 9th, 2011 Pg. 15.
Note to the reader: Im having to stop every 15 pages due to the number of reader response posts needed and the big build of the book (the book is a delux edition that has King's novels "Salem's Lot" and "The Shining" along with "Carrie"), so the natural numbering of the novel is off.
The story starts off in a town called Chamberlaine which is probably in Maine, the state in which most of King's stories take place. It begins with an article, which is an ongoing theme within the novel, from a news paper from Westover, Maine called Enterprise which reports a rain of stones that fall on the house of one Margaret White causing damage to her house and risking the life of her then 3 year old daughter Carietta, or Carrie, the main character. On the second page it full on admits that Carrie has telekinetic powers, which means she can do things with just her mind. She is not socially accepted and is a chunky brown hair, brown eyed girl with acne all over her body. The entrance of their gym teacher Miss Desjardin offers the description that she has somewhat of a manly figure. And so the story of Carrie begins with an omniscient point of view which has no singular speaker. It also cuts back to an article, this time from a book that was written about her called "The Shadow Exploded" which reveals that she has extreme potential as a great and powerful telekinetic or TK as it is later called. Her powers, though, only seem to come out in times of extreme stress. Carrie is 16 years old when she unfortunately starts her period in the gym shower, and in turn is open to extreme ridicule by all the girls that see it to the point were they start throwing sanitary napkins and tampons at her whilst yelling "PLUG IT UP!!!". Carrie goes into extreme shock and falls back into the corner of the shower stall. This strikes a chord with me because I've also had to deal with bullying when I was younger and I hate that nothing has changed since the 70s when this was written to now because of the simple fact of human nature. Miss Desjardin, though, proves to be a white knight in the situation and helps Carrie out even though she doesn't quite understand whats going on with Carrie. Carrie knows nothing about things of that sort and is extremely naieve thanks to her overly religious mother who is a character that also strikes a chord with me because that character type is the most hated for me. The fact that whenever they are interviewing students in the article they always referred to them as "surviving student" which I find very suspicious and a foreshadow to an upcoming event. When Miss Desjardin has to slap Carrie across the face it shows that she has an optomistic view on teenagers because she hated having to slap Carrie and it said in the book that "she still believed all students were good". Carrie tried to blot her lipstick with a tampon further proves her naivete because of her not knowing what it's for. And as expected everything starts falling and breaking. When Carrie is taken into the principals office the assistant principal, Mr.Morton, tells more about Carrie's mother and builds more on the erratic behavior that is her mother, like when her mother was a teenager she beat a fellow student with a handbag because she saw them smoking a cigarette. The first 15 pages end with Desjardin telling Mr.Morton that she will severely punish the girls who harassed Carrie, which is my favorite part in the story because the concept of revenge is extremely appealing to me.
below is the MLA citation for the photgraph i used for this blog. I know its a bit gory but its extremely accurate to the story.
Rogers , TS . "Stephen Kings Carrie ." Online Image.Teaessare Illustration and Design . March 17, 2010 . July 9,2011 <http://teaessare.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.html>.
Note to the reader: Im having to stop every 15 pages due to the number of reader response posts needed and the big build of the book (the book is a delux edition that has King's novels "Salem's Lot" and "The Shining" along with "Carrie"), so the natural numbering of the novel is off.
The story starts off in a town called Chamberlaine which is probably in Maine, the state in which most of King's stories take place. It begins with an article, which is an ongoing theme within the novel, from a news paper from Westover, Maine called Enterprise which reports a rain of stones that fall on the house of one Margaret White causing damage to her house and risking the life of her then 3 year old daughter Carietta, or Carrie, the main character. On the second page it full on admits that Carrie has telekinetic powers, which means she can do things with just her mind. She is not socially accepted and is a chunky brown hair, brown eyed girl with acne all over her body. The entrance of their gym teacher Miss Desjardin offers the description that she has somewhat of a manly figure. And so the story of Carrie begins with an omniscient point of view which has no singular speaker. It also cuts back to an article, this time from a book that was written about her called "The Shadow Exploded" which reveals that she has extreme potential as a great and powerful telekinetic or TK as it is later called. Her powers, though, only seem to come out in times of extreme stress. Carrie is 16 years old when she unfortunately starts her period in the gym shower, and in turn is open to extreme ridicule by all the girls that see it to the point were they start throwing sanitary napkins and tampons at her whilst yelling "PLUG IT UP!!!". Carrie goes into extreme shock and falls back into the corner of the shower stall. This strikes a chord with me because I've also had to deal with bullying when I was younger and I hate that nothing has changed since the 70s when this was written to now because of the simple fact of human nature. Miss Desjardin, though, proves to be a white knight in the situation and helps Carrie out even though she doesn't quite understand whats going on with Carrie. Carrie knows nothing about things of that sort and is extremely naieve thanks to her overly religious mother who is a character that also strikes a chord with me because that character type is the most hated for me. The fact that whenever they are interviewing students in the article they always referred to them as "surviving student" which I find very suspicious and a foreshadow to an upcoming event. When Miss Desjardin has to slap Carrie across the face it shows that she has an optomistic view on teenagers because she hated having to slap Carrie and it said in the book that "she still believed all students were good". Carrie tried to blot her lipstick with a tampon further proves her naivete because of her not knowing what it's for. And as expected everything starts falling and breaking. When Carrie is taken into the principals office the assistant principal, Mr.Morton, tells more about Carrie's mother and builds more on the erratic behavior that is her mother, like when her mother was a teenager she beat a fellow student with a handbag because she saw them smoking a cigarette. The first 15 pages end with Desjardin telling Mr.Morton that she will severely punish the girls who harassed Carrie, which is my favorite part in the story because the concept of revenge is extremely appealing to me.
below is the MLA citation for the photgraph i used for this blog. I know its a bit gory but its extremely accurate to the story.
Rogers , TS . "Stephen Kings Carrie ." Online Image.Teaessare Illustration and Design . March 17, 2010 . July 9,2011 <http://teaessare.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.html>.
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