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Glossary

Feminist Literary Criticism

Feminist literary criticism

    Feminist is a term that known as a person that supports feminine. Literary is the content of the writing. Criticism is also known as the judgement of someone’s thought. In addition, Feminist literary criticism is defined as a person who is informing the theory of feminism by supporting it from the female’s point of view. There are several ways that it can be accomplished. Most feminist critics are arise from the female author as the most critics are based on female characters.      

    A vindication of the rights of women by Mary Wollstonecraft. Mary Wollstonecraft is also one of the famous feminist author. Wollstonecraft reacts to the education and defend to those who were attempting to deny the rights for women in education. She argues that women should have rights for education. She argues more that if women involved in education they will have the advantage of teaching their children to be educated and be companion to their husband. 

 

https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Feminism/Literature/A_Vindication_of_the_Rights_of_Woman

https://www.nypl.org/node/5672

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Glossary

Supernatural

Supernatural is that which exists (or is claimed to exist), yet cannot be explained by laws of nature. Examples often include characteristics of or relating to ghosts, angels, gods, souls and spirits, non-material beings, or anything else considered beyond nature like magic, miracles, etc. Supernaturalism, as opposed to naturalism, is a belief in the supernatural in interpreting the world or attempting to control it. It can vary from those who believe that supernatural powers or entities are constantly or continuously intervening in the natural world to those who, like Deists, believe that only the origins of the natural world and its laws should be sought in the supernatural.

The Book Paradise lost by John Milton is all about the supernatural being. We see how Milton justifies the actions of God in the beginning. Freedom of choice is god given yet, we are judged by the choices we make. In this book, Milton reminds the reader of the power God has over us. How we cry and beg for mercy to God. Paradise lost also talks about Satan and him being the supernatural who is filled with rage against God. In this reading, we also get a hint of seeing God as power hungry. Where God allows Satan to seduce human being on the wrong path, knowing that eventually people will get vulnerable and beg Mercy from the God. In this book, Milton shows the reader both sides of the supernatural being. One is God being the power-hungry Supernatural and the other is the Satan Supernatural being whose the only task is to defy God. Many of us believe in supernatural being and many don’t because that is something we can’t see with our naked eyes.

 

Fun links to related glossary word: https://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/20/arts/television/secrets-to-the-long-life-of-supernatural.html

 

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Introductions

Friend Who Traveled for Education

Wenting Wang is my partner in English 151W class. After we had a little chat in class about her life story, I was astonished. She transferred from Queensborough Community College to Queens College this semester (Spring 2018). Wang is a sophomore and majoring in Childhood education. In future, she would like to be a kindergarten teacher. Wang is originally from China and has traveled alone to The United States for her Bachelor’s degree. It’s been two years she has come to America and maintaining a life alone as a student. Her parents are funding her college tuition and living expenses from China and it is a lot of expense for her family. Wang hasn’t decided as of now about where she wants to teach after her Bachelors. She has a cat named Simba whom she loves dearly. Wang also loves cooking and reading but doesn’t like writing as much. Best of luck to Wang!

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Glossary

The Uncanny

The Uncanny: (strange or mysterious, especially in an unsettling way)

The uncanny is the psychological experience of something as strangely familiar, rather than simply mysterious. It may describe incidents where an everyday object or event is encountered in an unsettling, eerie, or taboo context. The uncanny places us “in the field where we do not know how to distinguish bad and good, pleasure from displeasure”, resulting in an irreducible anxiety that gestures to the Real.

The Uncanny can be related to Frankenstein by Mary Shelley where victor strives to create a new being by stitching various parts of human corpses to create a new being. He wanted to feel the power of creation and cheat death. On chapter 4 (page 49) Victor is filled with regret of the Hideous corpse like creation, “fearing each sound as if it were to announce the approach of the demoniacal corpse to which I had so miserably given life… A mummy again endued with animation could not be so hideous as that wretch. I had gazed on him while unfinished; he was ugly then; but when those muscles and joints were rendered capable of motion, it became a thing such as even Dante could not have conceived.” We can see how Victor is much more horrified when the muscles and joints started to move. This example of Victor explains the definition of the Uncanny. Something that is strangely familiar. In this example, that was a human-like figure (corpse) that is given life and we are unable to connect to it. It is something that is unnatural.

links to related terms:

http://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/t/uncanny

http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-liverpool/exhibition/mike-kelley-uncanny

 

Categories
Glossary

Ambiguity

Ambiguity refers to being doubtfully or uncertain of a meaning or intention. It can also mean something that can be interpreted in more than one possible way. Ambiguity can be seen in many different forms. It can be seen in movies, books, poems, and also real life situations. It can be used in forms of writing and in speech. We see ambiguity used in Mary Shelley’s On Ghost in many parts of the book for example:

“This visitation continued for several weeks, when by some accident he altered his residence, and then he saw it no more. Such a tale may easily be explained away; but several years had passed, and he, a man of strong and virile intellect, said that “he had seen a ghost.”

In this narrative of the text the narrator describes how the incident that they are describing can be explained away but it can also be interpreted as a form of a supernatural encounter. This shows ambiguity because it is explained that the event could have been interpreted in two different ways.

 

 

Work Cited:

“’On Ghosts’ by Mary Shelley (1824).” Pornokitsch, www.pornokitsch.com/2014/07/non-fiction-on-ghosts-by-mary-shelley.html.

“Ambiguity.” Dictionary.com, Dictionary.com, www.dictionary.com/browse/ambiguity?s=t.

“Ambiguity.” Merriam-Webster, Merriam-Webster, www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ambiguity.

Categories
Glossary

Supernatural

Supernatural refers to the existence of something or an event that is beyond what is seen or observed. It is also described as something that doesn’t follow the laws of nature. When we think of supernatural we automatically think of magic, UFO’s, or ghost. The element of supernatural is put into many movies and books even to this day. We see supernatural used in many ways such as supernatural events happening or encountering a supernatural being. We see examples of supernatural being used in Mary Shelley’s On Ghost in passages such as:

“This visitation continued for several weeks, when by some accident he altered his residence, and then he saw it no more. Such a tale may easily be explained away; but several years had passed, and he, a man of strong and virile intellect, said that “he had seen a ghost.”

This passage shows a supernatural element in it because of how the narrator talks about what happened all the way up to how the character claims that he had seen a ghost.

“No sooner had he mentioned the coffin with the crown upon it, than his friend’s cat, who seemed to have been lying asleep before the fire, leaped up, crying out, ‘Then I am king of the cats;’ and then scrambled up the chimney, and was never seen more.”

This passage shows a supernatural element in it because of how the cat starts talking. In this passage, the cat gets up claiming that “Then I am king of cats”. This is considered supernatural because cats do not talk. The supernatural style of writing can also be interpreted as a type of motif of writing in novels.

 

 

Works Cited:

“Omnipotent.” Dictionary.com, Dictionary.com, www.dictionary.com/browse/omnipotent.

“Supernatural.” Merriam-Webster, Merriam-Webster, www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/supernatural.

“’On Ghosts’ by Mary Shelley (1824).” Pornokitsch, www.pornokitsch.com/2014/07/non-fiction-on-ghosts-by-mary-shelley.html.

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In-class writing Notes

Evaluating multimodal assignments

The shared Google doc is available here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lK9dULA7rAq9bEhxGgDWtSzDbPacLweJziJMQAu6HFs/edit?usp=sharing

Please feel free to add your thoughts!

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In-class writing Notes

Notes 5/8

  • what is her relationship to sex?
    • has sex with Tommy very thoughtfully
    • doesn’t have other people to give good information
  • why does she look for her own face in porn magazines?
    • looking for an existential sense of self, identity, someone to be like
    • if she’s a clone, is she really exactly the same? is everything from her genetics?
    • if she’s abnormal, is it genetic?
  • why was Hailsham closed?
    • not the only school — there are others
    • Hailsham is special
      • others had worse conditions
    • cruelty to the clones maintains distinction between clones and human
    • Madame calls them “creatures” — maintaining distinction
    • clones make the individual expendable
      • death/mortality is what makes us individuals
      • clones never die — they “complete” — fulfilled their purpose — not a life cut short
  • starts with Kathy remembering Hailsham for donor
    • establishes Hailsham as special, establishes key relationships
    • why does this unnamed donor want Kathy’s memories?
      • he wants better memories than he has — happy way to end his life — wants imaginary life before he dies
      • he got the life that was set out for him
      • wants to live vicariously through her
      • wants to feel love
    • clones don’t have memories of who they’re based on — looking for their “potentials” — trying to figure out memories, identities
  • centrality of memory to the novel — why is the novel organized the way it is?
    • the whole thing is a memory
    • “Never Let Me Go” — reference to a memory
      • special tape that she kept hidden, lost it — joke was that all lost things go to Norfolk — Tommy finds it for her at a thrift store later
      • as a child, danced to it like she was holding a baby; thinks for a while Madame knew she was thinking about a miracle baby; later thinks Madame thought she was pretending to hold a lover; it turns out Madame perceived a girl clinging to an old world
      • symbolism of memory shifts throughout the novel
      • can’t detach yourself from humanity of clones — each repeat gets closer and closer to understanding
      • Kathy imagines a character clinging to a future; Madame imagines a character clinging to the past — dystopian — loss
      • “a little girl” ” creatures” — recognizing and not recognizing humanity
      • who vs/ what
  • what is the significance of rumor?
    • went to see the boat
  • how do they control the clones?
    • it’s normal
    • desire to be normal — don’t want to be deviant
    • group — threat of being excluded/shunned
    • everyone filling their roles — performativity, even down to Kathy and Tommy’s relationship
    • keep them happy so they don’t ask questions
  • role of education?
    • tapping into creativity, imagination
    • gallery
      • to prove that they have souls
      • indicates that souls can be interpreted — abstract thinking — thinking symbolically
      • “they do something like us”
Categories
Glossary

Sympathy

Sympathy

Sympathy means a mutual or parallel susceptibility or a condition brought about by it, a unity or harmony in action or effect. It also means an affinity, association, or relationship between persons or things wherein whatever affects one similarly affects the other inclination to think or feel alike or an emotional or intellectual accord. In Never Let Me Go, in a way we may feel a lack of sympathy to the donors because it was their duty to society. There were no fighting scenes, no emotions. And, the way that it was written it seemed just a way of life. On the other hand, they are humans with thoughts and creativity. Sympathy relates to the term ambiguity. Ishiguro puts the morals into question, which brings a sense of ambiguity. On one hand, the donors are a utility for society and made it normal for them to give all of their organs and die. There is a question as to whether they are human or not. If having a sum of trillions of cells organized in a way to perform certain tasks, then yes, they are human. If they are human, then their sacrifice can be seen as a form of abuse because they have thoughts and feelings too. However, once the concept of a soul is brought up, things become hazier because there is no way to identify if the clones have souls. Therefore, we cannot determine if the clones were human or not. But does it really matter if they are human or not or should they really just be seen as a commodity to benefit the nation.

Works Cited

“Sympathy.” Merriam-Webster, Merriam-Webster, www.merriam webster.com/dictionary/sympathy.