Thursday, December 24, 2009

Week 1 A Passage To India

'There is no painting and scarcely any carving in the bazaars. The very wood seems made of mud, the inhabitants of mud moving. So abased, so the Ganges comes down it might be expected to wash the excrescence back into the soil." This quote from A Passage To India, by E. M. Foster on the scenery and life of Chandrapore, is very significant to the flow of this novel because it in a way sets the mood of this community and the racial tension that is supposed to exist between the British and the Indians. After reading this quote, I felt that the community would be life-less and that this "excrescence" would be this sense of racial tension that occurs in the lives of the natives and the British colonials. This tension resulted in the British feeling like they were superior to the Indians, which relates to the reason for their dwellings on a higher ground than that of the Indians dwellings. This type of tension relates to the same racial tension that persists today among minorities. From the tension that occurs between African Americans and Hispanics to the tension that still persists between African Americans and Caucasians. There are some among these races that feel that they are superior to others among different races, and so they themselves will cause tension by exercising this "superiority". Another reason I felt this way about Chandrapore because of it's dull description, was because there were no paintings drawn anywhere in the bazaars. Paintings bring objects and ideas to life with color and sharp images. Reading that there were none of these, made me think of Chandrapore as "city full of the dead". These first depictions of the city, showed me that the mood of the novel would be boring.

Questions For Discussion

1. Did anything resonate with you as you read the description of Chandrapore?

2. How do you think the tension between the Indians and English will excel?

3. Does Chandrapore's description connect with the people of this community?

Sunday, April 26, 2009

How Soccer Explains The Sentimental Hooligan

In this chapter of How Soccer Explains the World, Foer explains the rising of Hooliganism and it's downfall. Throughout the chapter Foer explains his interview with a man by the name of Alan Garrison and he tells about his life as a soccer hooligan and the leader of one of the English organized crews of soccer hooliganism. Throughout the interview Alan tells about his childhood and how he came to like an English soccer club know as Chelsea, and then how he came to be a hooligan for that club. he explains his battles, brusises and then how the hooliganism or at least the original hooliganism started to decrease. Alan started to explain how big corporations who invested in the soccer teams started influencing on who went to the games from rebellious young men to young men and women with office jobs and the average worker. In the end Alan discussed how hooliganism then started to become organized and the hooligans would run if they had organized a beating against a rivals's club fans and saw the cops around. He explained how his pride in hooliganism of Chelsea had died along with the globalization of these big corporations such as McDonald's.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

How Soccer Explains The World Chunk #1

How Soccer Explains The World, by Franklin Foer discusses the ways in which globalization has produce both cultural and economic failures. Foer does this with his use of soccer as a metaphor to show how the game explains this globalization. Foer when he was young, was horrible at soccer and because he couldn't play; decided to thoroughly study the game and soon became an expert in all aspects of the game. This is why he's able to explain why soccer explains the world and does this in his first chunk with the gangs created in what used to be Yugoslavia. He explains that fans of rival teams would create games and attack each other and even threaten opposing teams players. This was also mainly do to the different forms of governments being fought over by the Serbs who were against communism. Foer uses anecdotes of a once powerful instigator and notorious criminal of crimes committed by rival gangs while also producing an interview with those, who once were a part of these games. Thus Foer's first chunk explains different gangs, violence, and sects produce from globilizations failures.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

"But What Do You Mean?" by Deborah Tannen

Deborah Tannen's essay, "But What Do You Mean?", discusses the ways men and women differ when holding a conversation with the opposite sex. Tannen explores seven topics of discussion where men and women differ from including; apologies, criticism, thank-yous, fighting, praise, complaints, and jokes. Tannen uses anecdotes, expert opinions, and contrasts to show how women and men would differ in a conversation. Tannen's contrasts range from women being more sensitive when holding a conversation with someone from men being straightforward in a conversation, and not holding back the truth. Tannen claims that women tend to take the other person's feeling's into account when talking with him or her; while me on the other hand, don't. Tannen's essay serves to show how one can have a conversation with someone of the opposite sex and still get his or her point across without confusing the other person.

Do you think Tannen feels critical towards the way men tend to hold their conversations?

How do you think Tannen's essay can help with conversational boundaries presented in her essay between men and women?

What does Tannen mean when she say's that "men are designed to maintain the one-up position, or at least avoid appearing one-down"?

anecdote: I recently sat in on a meeting at an insurance company where the sole woman, Helen, said "I'm sorry" or "I apologize" repeatedly. At one point she said, "I'm thinking out loud. I apologize." (391)

diction: Although the problem might have been outright sexism, I suspect her speech style, which differs from that of her male colleagues, masks her competence. (391)

irony: When you state your ideas, you hedge in order to fend off potential attacks. (393)

metaphor: When the other speaker doesn't reciprocate, a woman may feel like someone on a seesaw whose partner abandoned his end. (392)

personification: "Troubles Talk" can be a way to establish rapport with a colleague. (394)

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

D.C. to Wall Street: Drop Dead

Investors' anger at Obama is misplaced. Stock indexes don't 'think.' They don't like one president and dislike the next.

Daniel Gross's Newsweek article D.C to Wall Street Drop Dead, suggest that Wall Street who fueled the financial crisis in the stock market are now blaming Obama who's trying to fix the problem and wasn't even in office when the problem arose. Gross say's that this" bout of wealth destruction" started in October 2007 during Bush's presidency. He even restates what it seems many articles are saying, and that is that some believe Obama is doing too much. Except in Gross's article he just states that the only thing Obama should get rid of on his to-do list are Wall Street's opinions and ignore the Dow. As Gross say's, "Having deprived Americans of so much of their wealth, the market is today like Rush Limbaugh: an unpopular loudmouth prone to emotional outbursts."

Why does it seem that everyone is trying to make Obama out to be the bad guy when the economy wasn't his fault to begin with and all he's trying to do is make it better?

Does Gross sound as if he is trying to defend Obama or just make Wall Street sound as if they are "cry babies"?

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Time Magazine: Obama's Reform Agenda: Is He Trying to Do Too Much?

David Von Drehle and Michael Scherer's Time Magazine article, Obama's Reform Agenda: Is He Trying Yo Do Too Much?, suggest that Barak Obama is trying to do too much and in reality is doing too little. The author's uses other expert opinions that also agree and believe that Obama's number one concern should be the economy. According to this article the wealthiest investor in the U.S., Warren Buffet stated that, "Job 1 is to win the war, the economic war. Job 2 is to win the economic war...". Retired CEO's of the Intel corp and General Electric's also agree with this comment. The article later goes on to say that, " promising higher standards for hiring, tighter controls on spending and greater transparency in execution", Obama is just setting himself up to let the Nation down. I agree that Obama is trying to do too much at once, but at least by adressing the issues and coming up with plans that would fix each issue instead of waiting for one to be solved; Obama is setting up guidelines that the Nation will know he will be following. This way the citizens of America won't have to wait in vain and in darkness. They would have some sort of deliverance to look forward to.

How would the authors claim affect the rest of the U.S. are who are currently behind Obama's policy's if the citizens of America were to read this article?

Why do the authors of this article believe it's such a bad thing or at least unintelligent idea to try and fix the Nation's problems all at once?

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

What we are really eating…

In the last chunk of Fast Food Nation, Schlosser brings attention to what could actually be in the meet we eat at fast food restaurants. He first starts off with an anecdote about a young man of the age of twenty who had gotten sick from eating beef he had at a barbeque. When the beef was tested it was found to have the lethal food borne pathogen, E. coli O157:H7. Then as further investigation shows the same beef company who sold this beef also supplied Burger King with that same beef. The result of this was a beef recall by the company who had created the beef. Schlosser then goes on to say that about 200,000 people are contracted with a food borne disease everyday resulting in about 900 hospitalized and 1 fourteen deaths. He then goes on discussing the symptoms of this lethal pathogen and others that have arose. He list one symptom of E. coli which occurs in children and has been none to have a 1 in 5 or 5% kill rate. What was most irksome was his description of how the workers who pack the meat and or slaughter the meat defecate and urinate on the floor where the meat could have contact with. They even upon finding a rat or any sort of outside substance in the beef merely pull it out and continuing packing. What’s more is Schlosser also stated that the meat packing industry even attempted to stop a sort of “science-based investigation” that would have perhaps looked into the problem and found solutions for the occurring food borne pathogens. Schlosser here is trying to elucidate the dangers of eating fast food problems specifically the beef because of what could be inside of the meat; so that consumers will become aware of what they are really consuming.

Does Schlosser’s description on the worker’s sanitary habits in the Meatpacking Industry give you second thoughts about eating beef?

Why is it, that, E. coli O157:H7 is able to live in salt water?

If the most common cause of a food borne outbreak is consuming undercooked meat, would that mean that if it’s cooked fully the pathogen would be killed and the meat would become completely harmless