Friday, February 26, 2010

week 5

Hi all,
For the blog this week, write an observation and/or comment that you have relating to one or another of this week's readings. Also, below are some topics to start thinking about for essay two.

EN 110-ESSAY TWO Topics

(1)

Present your own view of how family members relate to one another during the holidays. To support your argument discuss elements of one or two of the following: “The First Thanksgiving” by Sarah Vowell, “Fish Cheeks” by Amy Tan or your own holiday experiences.

(2)

Agree or disagree with the position taken on photography in one or more of the following: Susan Sonntag’s “On Photography,” James Nachtwey’s“Ground Zero,” Babbette Hines’s “Picture Perfect,” N. Scott Momaday’s “The Photograph,” or Ethan Canin’s “Vivian, Fort Barnwell.”

(3)

Explain what makes childhood (or, if you wish, innocence) important for the way of seeing in one or two of the following texts: “The Little Store” by Eudora Welty, “Seeing” by Annie Dillard, “Once More to the Lake” by E.B. White, “Ode to an Orange” by Larry Woiwode, or “Vivian, Fort Barnwell” by Ethan Canin.

(4)

Develop an argument in which you agree or disagree with David Guterson’s criticism of suburbia in “No Place Like Home”.

(5)

Define and explain how memory adds or subtracts to the meaning of things that people see in one or more of the following selections: “Seeing” by Annie Dillard, “Once More to the Lake” by E.B. White, “Ode to an Orange” by Larry Woiwode, “The Little Store” by Eudora Welty, or “Vivian, Fort Barnwell” by Ethan Canin.

(6)

In paragraph nine of “Homeplace,” Scott Russell Sanders writes that “many of the worst abuses” in this hemisphere have come about through “the habit of our industry and commerce…to force identical schemes onto differing locales”. In paragraph nineteen, Sanders gives an example of this practice near where he lives. Think about why Sanders considers the practice to be a form of abuse. (Specifically, what or who does he imply is being abused?) Then, based on your own observations, think of an example in which a franchise or corporation has established the same store floor plan, or same product lines, advertising campaigns or… to do business in local communities that are rather different from one another. Do you agree or disagree with Sanders that this corporate practice is a problem? What difference does it make if businesses approach one community in the same way that they approach another? If there is a leveling effect, in which places lose their authentic character, why is this a bad thing and what are the benefits to communities of having a national chain, if any, that Sanders fails to mention? The point (your thesis) is to agree or disagree with Sanders that the proliferation of national chains is one of “the worst abuses” of industry or commerce.

(7)

Compare and contrast Guterson’s criticism of suburbia to Sanders’s criticism of the corporate practice of selling the same products in stores that look the same in different communities. Are the planning principles, the corporate motives, or the social consequences that each writer criticizes similar or different? What are some of the possible explanations for these similarities or differences? Discuss your own examples of the practices that these writers dislike and use the examples to identify what Guterson and Sanders agree on and what they disagree about. Explain where their points extend one another or are complementary.

(8)

Take a position on the argument about suburbia in David Guterson’s “No Place Like Home” by relating Guterson’s point to the attitude that Billy Collins’s expresses about the names of new residential subdivisions in the poem “The Golden Years”. (The poem is online if you want to search for it or ask me for a copy next class.)

(9)

Argue for the relative importance or unimportance of things that are invisible (including things that are seen indirectly or indistinctly) for our experience of the visible world. In your argument, be specific about what sort of invisible things you are discussing. To help you be specific about this, refer to and discuss the significance of relevant points and passages from one or two of the following texts: “The Little Store” by Eudora Welty, “Seeing” by Annie Dillard, or “A Matter of Scale” by K.C. Cole.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

week 4

Hi all,
For this week's blog, please post the (revised) intro. paragragh to essay one. Also, if you are using one of the approaches to the intro. paragraph that we discussed in class, please note which approach that is.
Best, Paul Holchak

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

week 3

Hi everyone,
Make sure you read the posts that your classmates put up last week if you have not done so. They contain original observations and raise some very interesting points arising out of our discussion. This time for the blog I want you to post an outline of the ideas you will be working with in essay one. (Remember the list of topics for essay one is on the syllabus under class #5). The outline can be informal or more organized and traditional. For examples of both sorts of outlines and a step by step discussion of them, see pp. 51-53 in A Writer's Resource (the second book we are using for the class). All of the best, Paul Holchak

Thursday, February 4, 2010

week 2

Hi,
For this week's blog assignment, please post your thoughts about the similarities and differences that you see between:
the story "I Stand Here Ironing" by Tillie Olsen and the photo "Mom Ironing" by Tracy Baran, or
the similarities and differences that you find between the three readings we discussed in class this evening,Thursday 2/4 (see the syllabus for the titles). Be sure to post before noon, Tuesday.