During our first week we have moved through the basic hero’s journey and read books I and II of Ovid’s Metamorphosis. By this point you should be comfortable with reading/journaling the two works; if you are having trouble please drop me a line.
Your assignment—due Monday, March 21st—is as follows:
To prepare for your essay, try to recall other works that have a similar plot or message as you read book III of Ovid (or look through your notes on previous books). If you have trouble making a connection, find a myth you enjoy and break it down into its most basic structure. For example, we will read “Pyramus and Thisbe†((The story goes that two lovers are separated by a wall (and families that don’t want them to be together) so they decide to meet under a mulberry tree one night. Our fair maiden goes first, dropping her white scarf on the way. In a twist only possible in Ovid, a lion (freshly bloodied from a meal) drops by to gnaw on the scarf (or use it as a napkin). Our young lad sees the lion and bloodied scarf and, heart-broken, kills himself on the spot. Our impatient maiden returns, sees her beau dead, and kills herself with the same knife.)) in book III. We can break that down into “boy and girl in love but separated, die of tragic irony.†You should be recalling Romeo and Juliet, as Shakespeare ripped off the story for his play, but that connection isn’t all that interesting. How about Shrek? He and Fiona are physically together but separated by a dark secret. This would make a more interesting comparison/contrast because the structure is similar (that’s the comparison bit) but the ending and moral are different (the contrast).
Looking for an example of poor decorum? NY Federal Reserve President Wm. Dudley on rising food costs:
“Today you can buy an iPad 2 that costs the same as an iPad 1 that is twice as powerful,” he said referring to Apple Inc’s latest handheld tablet computer hitting stories on Friday. “You have to look at the prices of all things,” he said. This prompted guffaws and widespread murmuring from the audience, with one audience member calling the comment “tone deaf.”via For Feds Dudley, iPad comment falls flat in Queens | Reuters. Comments Off on For Feds Dudley, iPad comment falls flat in Queens | Reuters
“Children’s literature of the variety produced by Crompton and others such as AA Milne, Enid Blyton, et al provided a false but satisfactory memory of assumed childhood experiences and was, for the next five decades or so of her career, a suitable fictional outlet to help entertain and distract from successively: economic depression, wartime, and post-war shortages.”via Bart Simpson & Dennis the Menace Would Be His Buddies: Just William: Series One < PopMatters. Comments Off on Bart Simpson & Dennis the Menace Would Be His Buddies: Just William: Series One < PopMatters
Here’s Ward Shelley’s Homepage; we looked at a few of his graphs in class. Our other source, at Golden Age Comic Book Stories, provides a run of political cartoons through the war. The Great War. Have other links? Share ’em in the comments or shoot me an email. Comments Off on Ward Shelley Homepage
IdiomDictionary!!! Comments Off on IdiomDictionary.com – Online Idiom Dictionary