Sunday, December 16, 2012

Outside Reading #7

Stories can help encapsulate a time in our life. For example, the song Stop This Train by John Mayer had this effect for me. In the song, John sings. "Stop this train/I want to get off and go home again/I can't take the speed it's moving in/I know I can't but honestly/won't someone stop this train." I listened to this song so many times that it became ingrained in my mind and taught me about the continuum of life. The song also helps me to reflect on that time period in my life when the song was first released and I listened to it repeatedly. John sings, "So scared of getting older/I'm only good at being young." This part of the verse reminds me of the fear I had of getting older when I listened to it when I was younger. Stories like the one told in Stop This Train by John Mayer can become associated with a certain time in our life and allow us to reflect on them later.

Outside Reading #6

Stories can help us to dwell in place and appreciate your home. In The Catcher in the Rye, Holden feels at peace when he visits his home. After he gets home, he enters D.B.'s room, "I went around the room, very quiet and all, looking at stuff for a while. I felt swell, for a change. I didn't even feel like I was getting pneumonia or anything any more. I just felt good, for a change" (159). The sense of relief that overcomes Holden shows evidence of the healing powers of one's home. This feeling is similar to those felt in familiar places. When Holden visits the Museum of Natural History, an important part of his childhood, he goes over to look at the mummies. He says, "I was the only one left in the tomb then. I sort of liked it, in a way. It was so nice and peaceful" (204). Holden is overcome with peace when he revisits a core part of his childhood because he is so familiar with it. The Catcher in the Rye teaches us of the importance of familiar places.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Outside Reading #5

Stories are important in our lives because they educate our desires. One such example is in Freakonomics. The explanatory note says, "[Levitt] seemed to look at the world not so much as an academic but as a very smart and curious explorer" (XXIV). This book taught me to take the perspective of Levitt and be curious about the world, always wanting to learn more. This mindset was further encouraged by the other sections of the book. The book suggests, "The fear created by commercial experts may not quite rival the fear created by terrorists like the Ku Klux Klan, but the principle is the same" (68). Levitt takes a unique approach to analyzing the world, by looking not at the external properties but more in depth at the root causes of something. This original way of learning about the world and seeing its interconnectedness attracted me and, along with many other books, educated my desires.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Stories Teach Us the Consequences of Certain Actions

Stories are important because they teach us the consequences of certain actions. One such example is in the fairy tail, Hansel and Gretel in which we are taught not to judge a book by its cover. In the story, the children come across a cottage and "starving but delighted, the children began to eat pieces of candy broken off the cottage." The children learn that going closer to this seemingly perfect cottage is a mistake. While the cottage looks welcoming, it is simply a trap. When the witch discovers the children, she exclaims, "I shall fatten you up and eat you!" This emphasizes that while the outside of the cottage is inviting, inside lies a disturbing witch. Ultimately the story of Hansel and Gretel, like many other fairy tales, teaches us to not make assumptions based on superficial evidence.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Outside Reading #3

Another important characteristic of stories is that they allow us to see through the eyes of other people. In the book Matterhorn, a novel of the Vietnam War, the reader can see how the soldiers viewed the war. Mellas, the main character observes, "It was all absurd, without reason or meaning. People who didn't know each other were going to kill each other over a hill none of them cared about." While most people at the homefront during a war view the war as simply an event, the soldiers actually view it as a meaningless tug of war for positioning that is controlled by their superiors. Ultimately, they view themselves as pawns manipulated in the game of war. Another view of the value of war can be seen in another part of the book. Mellas says, "Victory in combat is like sex with a prostitute. For a moment you forget everything in the sudden physical rush, but then you have to pay your money to the woman showing you the door. You see the dirt on the walls and your sorry image in the mirror." Again the reader is shown the perspective of the soldier in that war seems important in the moment but afterwards it is viewed for what it really is: a dirty, pointless event. Stories give life to the perspective of the characters, like those of soldiers in Matterhorn.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Outside Reading #2

Stories are important because they can create community. Community is identified in the StarTribune article Edina Does It Again. For example, in the article they describe our game, "Edina's heroes were numerous." By writing this article, the StarTribune created a story that our football team could rally around. This community can also be seen in the quotes that the writer includes. They quote quarterback Mark Handberg, "It's all about belief in ourself...we knew we could beat Wayzata. And we knew we could beat Eden Prairie. That is what it's all about." By including this quote, readers can connect to the community of the Edina Football team and get a sense of the camaraderie. This is just one of the ways that stories are important; they create communities.

http://www.mnfootballhub.com/news_article/show/184450?referrer_id=484170

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Reason #1 We Need Stories

We need stories because they are a playground for language. Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five is a prime example of how language can be used satirically in a way that "plays" with the reader's mind. He writes, "Billy is spastic in time, has no control over where he is going next, and the trips aren't necessarily fun. He is in a constant state of stage fright, he says, because he never knows what part of his life he is going to have to act in next" (29). In this context, language is used to create a false reality that seems real, similar to a playground game. This satirical use of language is also seen when the Vonnegut describes horrific deaths. He describes Billy Pilgrim's ironic view of death, "Billy found the afternoon stingingly exciting. There was so much to see--dragon's teeth, killing machines, corpses with bare feet that were blue and ivory. So it goes" (83). Here, death is described nonchalantly and thus characterizes the phrase as a satirical motif. Books like Slaughterhouse Five create the playground for language to play, creating a game that the reader is involved in playing.