Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Accidental Love (p. 44-175)
Posted by New-meme at 6:02 PM 0 comments
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Accidental Love (p, 1-44)
Posted by New-meme at 7:35 PM 1 comments
Thursday, April 29, 2010
A Natural History of Love (42-90)
Posted by New-meme at 7:34 PM 2 comments
Friday, April 9, 2010
A Natural History of Love (17-42)
Posted by New-meme at 5:45 PM 2 comments
Thursday, April 1, 2010
A Natural History of Love (13-17)
Summary
So far we have talked about Cleopatra and love poems in Egypt. Now it breaks love into 6 key themes. The first theme is "Love's alchemy, or the power to transform". This theme is all about how we have problems with who we are and by loving our partners, or our significant half, we learn to love ourselves. The second theme is "Idealizing the beloved in images drawn from nature". This theme talks about why we refer to someone as a gem, or a flower, or the moon, but we don't say skyscraper. It's about using nature to express our love for each other. The 3rd theme is " Love is enslavement". It's about how when were inlove we give part of our freedom away, and how were more willing to give it someone we love, then the government or a dictator. The 4th theme is "Being Disabled", meaning how we can't keep our mind of the person and how we never seem to be focusing on anything but them. It talks about how love becomes a sickness that we all want. The 5th theme is " A secret kept from one's parents" this theme is all about us not being able to express love to the person or people we love but were willing to express it to strangers. We keep it a secret from the person we really love. The 6th theme is "Redoubling of the senses", and this is all about a lover's touch. These are the 6 themes of love. Then it starts talking about incest marriage and how some thought it to be normal, while other thought it to be wrong and condoned in the bible. We long for the desire to love, and to be loved.
Quote
"...every now and then, people go haywire, lose their ability to think clearly, have stomachaches, can't sleep properly, and spend hours daydreaming. Such a state has all the earmarks of disease and, as the Egyptian love poems remind us, people have always described love as sickness" (Ackerman 13).
Reaction
I agree with alot of what the 6 themes of love is. When people are in love they do feel like they can't do nothing, and everytime they try it's like their minds walks and we start thinking about the one we love. I also agree with the fact that were more willing to give away all our freedom to the one we love, rather than the government. The quote above, once again, states how when your in love your always daydreaming. It also describes love as being a sickness.
Posted by New-meme at 9:46 PM 1 comments
A Natural History of Love (3-12)
Summary
Love. Hard to define because love had many different meanings. There's a love between a girlfriend and her boyfriend, parental love, and love for material things. Love can bring the most sane people almost to the brink of insanity, it can make the toughest people become soft. Love can make the strongest people, become weak. It's a word that means so much, but is often used lightly. This book "A Natural History of Love" gives you the inside and out about love. It not only takes us to modern times but first it takes us, way back. I'm talking about Egypt, Greece, Rome, and even the middle ages. But first we take a trip to Egypt and learn about how they used and thought about love. First it talks about Cleopatra and her romance. Cleopatra was born in 69 B.C and was mainly Greek. she had everyman she wanted, and every men wanted her, they couldn't help it. One thing I really found interesting was that Cleopatra was married to Mark Anthony, and they had kids together. The book talks about their love and how she and Caesar had a history as well. Cleopatra's life was filled with everything she wanted, she was elegant, and wore the things. She was pretty pretty, it was the things she wore, the way she carried herself that made men follow her when she entered a room. Everyone thought that she was the best, but she had a lot of bad history. For instance, she killed her siblings in order to become queen, but Egyptians didn't seem to write about that kind of stuff. Then, the book talked about what Egyptians thought about love, and their idea can seem to be a bit sexual today. Egyptians expressed their love in many ways, and the most common was in music, dances, and poems. More frequently it was in love poems. Their poems are amazing and beautiful!
Quote
"Keeping our failings a secret, we assume no one on earth is as neurotic, no one as uniquely flawed. The rampantly beautiful person we are attracted to couldn't possibly be as frail. He is a contagion of virtues. Loving him, we sing his praises, highlighting all his good points. We redefine him to himself. Through love on learns to feel lovable" (Akerman 12).
Reaction
So far I found this book to be very very interesting. The whole definition of love keeps me thinking. I like the fact how the book talks about all the different love countries and romance time periods. The quote above is a way we feel when we love someone. It was talking about how were all imperfect and sometimes we find that the person we love have no flaws and that were the ones who have to work on things. The quote is saying that when we love someone we can't seem to find things that they need to work on, and that by loving them, by being in love, we learn to love ourselves and they learn to love us.
Posted by New-meme at 9:06 PM 1 comments
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Rosemary's Baby Movie
Sections/Characters minimized in the film
One of the characters minimized in the film was the doctor. In this book he seemed to be on every chapter and Rosemary would go to him every week, but in the film he didn't seem to appear much, and when his scenes did come, some were cut short.
Sections/Characters emphasized in the film
There was actually no characters that were minimized in the book that were emphasized in the film. The characters with the big part were Guy, Rosemary, Roman, and Minnie. The film was all about Guy and Rosemary, as in the book.
Narration
There was no narration, or a voice from "above". The character's did all the explaining to us as part of their scripts. In the book there was a narrator who told us the story when it wasn't Rosemary telling us, but in the film it's mostly the actors.
Recurring images(motifs)
A recurring image is when Rosemary keeps thinking back on the "dream" she had, which was reality. Another is when the film kept showing her in pain and the necklace that Minnie and Roman gave her.
Use of music/ sound effects
There's a use of music in the beginning of the film. There's a lullaby, it's not your regular one though, it sounds mysterious, almost as if your going to see something horrible and scary in the first scene. It gets your heart pumping expecting something to pop out. This lullaby is almost like the soundtrack of the film. It begins it and ends it. But through out the film there are some sound effects. For example, when Rosemary is running, or when she's scared and just found out something. Like in the scene when she was in the telephone booth, and when she turned to get out she saw a man that looked like the doctor. She was scared, the they used sound effects to show the man turning around.
Film Terms
In the movies there were a lot of medium shot, and long shots. But most of all there were close-up shots to show emotions and most of them were Rosemary's. There was a lot of POV (Point Of View) shots as well. One of them was when Rosemary was brought through the closet and her eyes were opened, we saw the bottom of the cabinets, we saw the people standing around her, and we saw Satan all through her eyes. Another example was when she went to open the door for Minnie and she looked through the peep hole.
Posted by New-meme at 10:21 AM 0 comments