Saturday, December 13, 2014

Emily Dickinson

I enjoyed reading some of her poems, a lot of them are hard to understand but there were some that really spoke to me and I got what she was saying. She really seemed to speak from things she felt or had experienced, and while she did seem to talk about death and mortality a lot I never got the feeling of it being too morbid.


I feel like Emily Dickinson says more in few words than some people say with a lot of words. In the above quote, this says so much in just one sentence and it applies to a lot of people. I thought about my daughter when I read this, she is very artistic, my niece is very athletic, in my family sports is everything, not to me, but to my immediate family. When my daughter would get a hit, or catch a ball, the smallest victory for her was sweeter than the big win of people who expected to win. This is what I mean when I say I don't get a lot of what Emily is saying, but when I do, I really get it, and it really means something to me.


Friday, December 12, 2014

The Letter of Shame

I remember reading this when I was younger, it's interesting to me how we can read something when we are younger and we think we remember it perfectly, then we read it again later in life and it's nothing how we remember it. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is one that I read when I was younger and remembered it entirely different than what it actually was. As I read the Scarlet Letter, I realized this was that way too. All I remembered was Hester Prynne being a bad lady, and because she did bad things she had to wear the red A. Reading it now, I get a totally different perspective from it, what I took away from it was that Hester wasn't a bad lady, she was in a bad situation, To me it's a story of two people who under different circumstances could be together, but instead she is ridiculed and tormented while her husband who doesn't really love her anyway is out for revenge. To be in what seems a hopeless situation, Hester keeps going, even though she has to wear this letter, she still wants to be the best mother she can be, and does charitable work to try and redeem herself, I think more for her daughters sake. It takes a strong person to be so wronged, yet still willing to do things to help other people. This story really took on a different meaning to me this time around, we have all done things we regret, how horrible would it be if we lived in a time that we had to walk around with our sins on our chest. 


Thursday, December 11, 2014

Uncle Tom's Controversy


She is probably the author that I was most familiar with in this particular section, her book Uncle Tom's Cabin is controversial among some but in my personal opinion she felt like she was standing up for what was important to her. For a white woman in that time to stand up against slavery is amazing, to be a strong woman today is fantastic, but to be a strong woman in the era that she and Fanny Fern were alive in is extraordinary, I often wonder what drove these woman, what motivation did they have to stand out in a time that it wasn't that acceptable for them to.


The Fern

I had never heard of Fanny Fern before this class, but she was by far my favorite of this pod just because of her humor and wit. She stuck up for women in a way that made people feel like it was okay to speak out about things that were wrong, she could put men in their place in a time where that probably wasn't ideal. This lay was way ahead of her time, she was funny and smart and quick witted and we need more people in the world like Fern. It's no surprise that she was the highest paid columnist and that Nathaniel Hawthorne was a fan of hers.
I do plan on reading more of her work, she is one of those people I wish I could sit and talk to because I thinks he would have a lot of educational things to say about life.