Welcome!!

Hello,
This is Lupita Perez, creator of this blog. In this blog you will see various text and media. The information shown now is related to activities done in my AP English class. I am working on adding and fixing the blog to make the information more related to the AP English Literature Test. Feel free to leave any comments or questions.

**This blog is still under construction!

Monday, November 28, 2011

Thinking Outside the Box

Both the “Allegory of the Cave” by Plato and “No Exit” by Sartre express the idea of limitations on the human mind. In Plato’s work, we see that people are limited to new knowledge because of themselves. They are too afraid to leave their comfort zone and explore what’s out there. We tend to go with the flow and limit ourselves. In “No Exit” the characters’ thinking is limited because they are isolated. They go with what they already know and listen to others’ opinions and thoughts. They see that as their only way of new knowledge.
Plato’s allegory uses dialogue that tells a story to illustrate his ideas, while Sartre uses an actual conversation between a few characters in order to set a specific tone and express the theme. In the “Allegory of the Cave” the people are limited to their thoughts not by force, but because they choose to. The “shackles” in the story represent the characters themselves. Even after the man who had escaped came back to teach them, they still refused. The scenario isn’t that they can’t understand, but that they themselves refuse to learn and understand. They set their own limitations. On the other hand, the people in “No Exit” have actual limitations. They can only learn from what’s in their surroundings. For example when Garcin was told he was ugly by Estelle, he had to go by others’ opinions and his memory on whether to believe it or not.
The major difference between these two stories is that the prisoners in the cave refused to think and lived a dull life being intrigued by shadows. In “The Exit”, the characters think about their situation and tried to escape the room which was symbolic of their position. Plato and Sartre’s works share the same idea about the limitations on the human mind. Their obvious distinction is that in one story the limitations are caused by the people themselves, and in the other the restrictions are made by other uncontrolled reasons.

Refined Big Question

Why is there a school dress code and why do teachers feel they should control students appearance?

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Literary Term "Characterization"

Definition
 The means by which a writes reveals a character’s personality or appearance.
There are two types of characterization:
1.Direct Characterization
 The author directly describes the character.
 
The writer tells us directly how the finish look or act

 

 


 

 2. Indirect Characterization
The author uses actions as well as other characters’ actions, words and thoughts to describe that one specific character.
 
We can see the guy is attractive because of the girls' reactions.

 

Self Searching

When I searched my name I found a few things, but only one of them actually related to me. It was a photo of me at the Upward Bound program, the summer before my freshmen year. The other things I found were about a famous singer called Guadalupe PĂ©rez Arias and a lot of links to different peoples' Facebooks and Myspace.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Literature Analysis

*The Tortilla Curtain, by T.C. Boyle is a novel about a man named Candido Rincon and his much younger wife, America, who entered the United States illegally, dreaming of a better life in California. Unfortunately, they are homeless and camping at the bottom of a hill in a national park. Another couple, Delaney and Kyra live in a gated community. Delaney is a writer and Kyra is a successful real estate agent. The two couples’ paths crossed unexpectedly after Delaney hit Candido with his car. They both decide not to call the police for certain reasons, but from that moment on, the two couples are constantly influenced by the one another.
After the accident Candido wasn’t able to get a job because of his injury. This causes many problems and even brings him shame. He is unable to feed his wife, who is pregnant. Candido tries to find a job in the city and even America finds a job, which can be very dangerous. Delaney’s family also has problems, but not as big. They struggle with a coyote running lose and potentially criminal, illegal aliens.
One night Candido causes a huge forest fire that reaches the gated community. In the midst of escaping the fire, America gave birth to their daughter Socorro. They hid in Delaney’s shack and their America confesses that she was raped one night and she things that might have caused the baby to become blind. Delaney is about to enter with a gun and confront them when the shack is knocked over by a landslide. America and Candido survived, but sadly the baby drowned in the river. The novel ends with Candido saving Delaney from drowning in the river.

*The theme of this novel is the fear and hatred towards foreigners.

*The author’s tone for this novel is very serious and sad. Boyle includes nothing but serious and sad events.
“He couldn’t seem to control his hands. ‘I’ve had an accident,’ he said to himself, repeating it over and over like a mantra, ‘I’ve had an accident.”
“It was crazy to refuse treatment like that, just crazy. But he had. And that meant he was illegal- go to the doctor, get deported.”
“A gabacho sat on the sidewalk with his long hair and begged for change and the sight of him struck her with terror: if he had to beg in his own country, what chance was there for her?”
*Boyle uses many different literary elements and techniques to express his theme and clarify his tone. Boyle uses imagery, diction, symbols, foreshadowing, and allegories. He is very descriptive throughout his entire novel and uses well-known vocabulary in order to have his entire audience understand what is being expressed.
“Everywhere he turned he saw those red-flecked eyes, the rictus of the mouth, the rotten teeth and incongruous shock of gray in the heavy black brush of the mustache- they infested his dreams, cut through his waking hours like a window on another reality.” ---Imagery
”He was dreaming still, dreaming with his eyes open, images shuffled like cards in a deck till he didn’t know what was real and what wasn’t” ---Diction
“Money had changed hands. There were no witnesses and the man was gone, out of his life forever.” ---Symbols
“And what about fire danger? The canyon was a tinderbox this time of year, everyone knew that.” --- Foreshadowing
“And Candido, despite his exhaustion, despite everything, began dragging the big balky sheet of plastic up through the unyielding brush, and as the branches tore at him and his fingers stiffened and the helicopters swooped overhead, he thought of Christ with his cross and his crown of thorns and wondered who had it worse.” ---Allegory

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Big Question

Why do schools have a dress code policy? When was it first regulated?

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Essay 11/8/11

Language, which it itself is a type of action, plays an important role in many stories and play. In the play Hamlet, we see Hamlet’s use of language majorly differentiate him from epic heroes such as Beowulf. Because of the self-overhearing and dialogues in Hamlet, the audience can clearly recognize what makes Hamlet different. Hamlet seems to be more clever, stronger, and has the ability to recognize what type of person he really is.
After reading and analyzing Hamlet’s “To be, or not to be” soliloquy, the audience can identify Hamlet as being more clever than other epic heroes. Unlike the hero Beowulf, Hamlet weighs the pros and cons of most situations. He thinks critically about what results might come from taking certain actions. “To be or not to be—that is the question.” Just in the first line alone of the soliloquy we see Hamlet’s cleverness as he sees both sides of a situation and figures out what the best thing to do would be, in this case it was whether to commit suicide or not. On the contrary, Beowulf would have gone with his first instinct and just acted.
Hamlet’s use of language also differentiates him in the sense that he is mentally stronger. Throughout the entire play we see Hamlet take many actions all based on an oath he made at the beginning of the play. He swore to avenge his father and he stayed focused and didn’t allow anything or anyone get in the way of his promise. He even murdered his friend Laertes for becoming an obstacle in the way of getting to Claudius.
The biggest use of language found in the play is Hamlet’s self-overhearing. Hamlet overhears himself and in doing so he gains self-knowledge. In his article The Performative Utterance in Hamlet, Bloom considers this, “the royal road to individuation.” Hamlet had the ability to speak out loud in any given opportunity in order to realize himself and who he is. Other epic heroes would not take even a second to try and realize who they were because they would be too determined on “slaying a dragon.”
Hamlet’s use of language greatly differentiates him from epic heroes such as Beowulf. We see him practice self-overhearing and question himself throughout the entire play which is what makes him stand out. Hamlet’s use of language makes him more clever, mentally stronger, and gives him the ability to realize himself.

Monday, November 7, 2011

"Procrastination"

After thinking about it for a while I realized that the major concept that I learned in this class was, “Procrastination is BAD!” Although we have been working very hard on the blogs and learning new ways to use technology and its pros/ cons, the biggest lesson I’ve gotten from it is not to procrastinate. From personal experiences I can say that I am a huge procrastinator. I tend to let myself get distracted with texting, Facebook, and anything else. We must take control of our lives in order to meet deadlines and achieve goals; mainly by pushing the bad habit of procrastination aside. If we let ourselves continue to procrastinate we will become stressed at the last minute and our work will be of very low quality.


Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Roy Christopher

  • What got you involved?  Roy said he got into 80's BMX and there were magazines that they did. Eventually a we design began
  • Is media good or bad?   Roy said it's a mix of both good and bad. Media makes new information more assessible, but it also causes distractions and makes it hard for us to focus. 
*The older generation doesn't trust the youth with technology. 
* Roy considers "Multi-tasking" as a myth. When you are doing more than one thing at a time, you divide your attention. You aren't 100% focused and the quality of the work decreases.  
 "We are fish in the water. The water (technology) is our environment.