Archive for April 9, 2008

The Notebook (un-sappy version).

The Princess Bride: Helpful Notes

  1. Character Summaries

Buttercup

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    • The greatest factor in her decision making process is life over death
    • Examples: she would rather marry Humperdink than be killed and she would rather swim for her life than have her throat slit.
    • However, after losing Wesley she doesn’t feel she has a reason to live. Odd…
    • She is the ‘most beautiful’.

Wesley

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    • His sole motivation in life is his love for Buttercup.
    • Not even ‘death’ can stop him from attaining her.
    • He is the ‘best at surviving’.

Inigo

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    • Became a lame drunk after losing the count
    • Sole purpose in life is to find and kill count out of revenge.
    • He is the ‘best swordsman’.

Fezzik

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    • Only drive in life is fear of being alone.
    • Doesn’t like fighting but does it to please others.
    • Is the ‘strongest’.
  1. Themes Etc (relating to post-modernism)

Disrupting the Illusion

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    • The author uses exaggeration to ensure the audience believes the story is fictitious.
    • The story is constantly interrupted and commented on by the boy for the same reason.

Black Humor

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    • Too many instances to count

Arbitrariness of Time

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    • Things are ranked (best kiss out of 5 kisses)
    • Interruptions
    • Etc.

A Streetcar Named Desire: Class Notes

Two Key Ideas:

1) Guilt of abandonment

2) Binary opposites

Various Themes:

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    • Blanche’s delusions vs. reality
    • Mitch’s delusions vs. reality
    • Progress vs. stagnation
    • Death vs. life
    • Illusion vs. reality
    • Cruelty vs. kindness
    • Superiority vs. inferiority
    • Desperation
    • Stella’s love for Blanche vs. her dependency on Stanley
    • Blanche’s need to feel superior vs. Stanley’s need for power

A bit about Blanche…

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    • Her lies come from an inability to confront the truth
    • She sees things as they ought be to…but aren’t
    • She uses fantasy to protect herself from tragedy
    • Her defenses are shattered by Stanley
    • She came from the old south called “Belle Rêve” or ‘Good Dream”

How Cruel!

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    • Blanche sees deliberate cruelty as the only thing that is unforgivable
    • Stanley is intentionally cruel

How Primitive…

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    • Stanley is often compared to an ape or primitive man
    • He is the romantic idea of a man untouched by civilization, which allures Stella
    • Stanley has no problem with driving Blanche mad and possibly raping her

Desire

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    • Central theme
    • Desire is at the heart of Stanley and Stella’s relationship
    • Stella is either surprising it or pursuing it without abandon

So Lonely

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    • comparative theme that is the extreme opposite of desire
    • Blanche seeks protection from this from strangers

Questions to think about

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    • Which character do you have the most sympathy for?
    • Why do women stay with abusive men?
    • Why are women attracted to bad boys?
    • Based on scenes of Stanley bowling or playing cards, what are his views on life?
    • Did Mitch love Blanche?
    • Would your first loyalty be to your spouse or best friend?
    • Would you tell your friend if you found out something terrible about their spouse?
    • Why does Blanche drink?
    • Why does Blanche lie to ShepHuntleigh in the letter?
    • Why did Blanche flirt with the newspaper boy?
    • How does Blanch affect Stanley and Stella’s Marriage and why does he want Blanche to leave?
    • How does Stanley and Stella’s relationship change?
    • How does Stanley and Blanche’s relationship change?
    • How does Mitch compare to Stanley?
    • What does the Mexican woman selling flowers for the dead symbolize?
    • What does light and the paper lantern symbolize?
    • What does the music symbolize?

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