Sunday, January 26, 2014

12th Grade: Chivalry, Gender Roles, and Feminism

These texts and videos did seem to have gender roles portrayed as the main theme, but that is not what I found interesting. What interests me is how we are able to analyze our societies view on gender roles and how they were viewed thousands of years ago, when Chaucer wrote “The Wife of Bath’s Tale.  While analyzing these texts and videos, I realized that there are more issues than gender differences. Chivalry and feminism are also evident, but usually fall under the umbrella of gender roles.
            Chivalry, which I could not have defined before this assignment, was seen through the video of “Footloose” and the lyrics of the song “Holding Out for a Hero.” Not only was the song played within the video of “Footloose,” the video seemed to show two young males that were in a sense, “fighting for the woman.”  The men were showing off their masculinity and playing chicken, seeing which one would wimp out first. The men being displayed as masculine in this video promotes the woman’s role of a beautiful blonde-haired woman that looks good in a cowboy hat. Related to this clip, “Holding Out for a Hero” has a chorus that involves a woman seeking a man. The second part of the chorus is written “He's gotta be strong and he's gotta be fast, And he's gotta be fresh from the fight.” Reading over people’s blogs, this was not overlooked. We all seemed to notice that a woman was seeking a man, but did we all notice that Bonnie Tyler described the man as the hero?
            Next I noticed that there may be a connection between the song “Royals” and the text “A Titan’s How-To on Breaking the Glass Ceiling.” Within the song by Lorde, it seemed that she was trying to convey the message that royals were being trapped within the successes that they had accomplished. Although she sang, “we’ll never be royals,” she also resumed the song by later singing that she will be Queen and talks about ruling. That puzzled me. However, what I did conclude was that it addressed the stereotype between men and woman and that woman can only be living out of fantasies. Within the text written by Jodi Kantor, I noticed that she summarized feminism in a situation in which woman shared experiences and decided to stand up for themselves in the workplace. Feminism was the theme within this text because the author shared a personal experience in which a woman had to work harder and face struggles within the professional realm.
            To sum this all up, I am unable to blog about every single text or video, but I am able to share that the last few do all relate to one another. “The Wife of Bath’s Tale,” the Chevy commercial, “The Genderbread Person,” and the “Genderless Baby” all include or hint at gender inequality or gender roles. What interested me the most out of these was the insight that Chaucer included in “The Wife of Bath’s Tale.” His literature dates back and still includes the roles of women. During this time, (and occasionally still now) women were treated as material objects. In other words, they would often times do the dirty work for the men. Related to this, the Chevy commercial showed one of five men singing in a “manly” truck with the others looking uncomfortable and feeling awkward. Considering he is singing a song that is considered feminine, the others do not want to be associated with him. What makes this ironic was the fact that my roommates at home began singing this song in a sarcastic way when I played it; and did not believe me when I told them it was for a class.
            To wrap this up, I just found it interesting that it’s not just our society that undermines women, this dates all the way back to Chaucer’s poems, and most likely earlier than that. All of these texts are perfect examples of gender roles and how often times chivalry and feminism fall within it. Although we notice gender roles as the main concern or theme within our texts and videos, we also need to notice that it is not our only problem.
            

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

12th Grade: Nature

Very evident connections can be identified when given the specific texts on the 12th grade unit of nature.  The immediate theme that I was able to notice is the beauty and destruction of Mother Nature. Not only were natural disasters analyzed, positive and negative views on nature were seen through the effects of humans, and how we have interacted with these disasters in the past. Within “Snow Fall: The Avalanche at Tunnel Creek,” the author compares the dangers of Mother Nature (natural disasters) between a third person account of the avalanche experience of a professional skier with a first person account of the destruction at Tunnel Creek. Through this article, we are able to see that humans are always taking risks when nature is the supplier of what humans call fun.
            Not only is Mother Nature the cause of some of the disasters that harm us, we sometimes control our own fate. For example, the Gasland movie trailer explains that hydraulic fracturing blasts a mix of water and chemicals deep into the ground to create a mini earthquake to free up gas. Whether humans receive gas or not, our groundwater aquifers are becoming contaminated. “What takes Mother Nature millions of years to build can only take a few hours of machinery to destroy.” This quote can directly relate to the trailer by Spike Lee. To me, Hurricane Katrina is almost a lash back at what humans are doing to destroy our habitat and beauty of a world. Although majority of people see our nature as beautiful and forgiving, we ultimately are in control of what comes next. Not just creating disasters, we are in a sense creating nature’s death by pollution. As humans, we are blind to why natural disasters happen. To me, it is a direct reflection of what we are exactly doing to her (Mother Nature).
            Although the videos can be connected through the analysis of human and disaster interaction, the poems by William Blake take on a new direction. We not only see the interactions between nature and humans, but also with the interactions of animals as well. I read this poem as if William Blake was questioning why all three of God’s creations are fighting. I see connections between the images within the art gallery of Vanishing Ice to this poem, “The Tyger.” As humans are all very beautiful and unique in their own way, God created thousands of animals and hundreds of naturist elements to all be set apart in unique ways. Whether or not we are dissimilar or unique in our own ways, we find it within ourselves to destruct each other, and yet we “weep” when we are the ones being targeted.

            It is a love/hate relationship, nature and humans. Whether we as humans value nature as beautiful and can never resist the urge to take a picture of a scenic sunset, a helping hand is never offered when nature is calling. “Snow Fall: The Avalanche at Tunnel Creek” is a perfect summary of how when nature is knocking on our front door, however, only few people take the risk to lend help that nature is always seeking.