Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Blog Response #5: Persepolis The Perspective of Comics

 For next week, be sure to read the first part of Persepolis, which goes from the chapter called "The Veil" to the chapter called "The Dowry." After you read it, watch the video below and respond with a comment (and reading the book will be necessary when you see the question). Enjoy! 




Sunday, February 14, 2021

Paper #2: The Human Condition

NOTE: Be sure to do Blog Response #4 by Monday or Wednesday (whichever class you have)! It's the post DIRECTLY BELOW this one. 

Paper #2: The Human Condition 

PROMPT: In our first paper, we looked at how three stories could share the same conversation based on advice, and how you, as the writer, could connect all the stories through context and quotation. For this paper, I want you to take a similar approach, but instead of advice, I want you to use THREE STORIES in the book to introduce a serious conversation on-going in our society. This conversation must be something that you can read or learn about elsewhere, and that the stories in this book give a ‘human face’ to, rather than just being a story of facts and statistics.

SOURCES: Your paper should use one of the stories to introduce the topic, and then weave in the other two as you discuss different aspects of the topic using SECONDARY SOURCES which gives a broader scope to the conversation. Secondary Sources are articles, websites, books, videos, and other media that add depth and context to the subject matter. I’ll post a video this week to discuss ways to conduct useful research beyond a Google search.

EXAMPLE: The story on page 386 is one of a psychotherapist from Holland who says, “I’m a psychotherapist to some of the most successful people in Holland…They’ve accomplished so much, but they’re still driven by this fear that they’re not going to make it. And they start to ask themselves: ‘Is this going to be the rest of my life?’” This would be a great way to introduce the concept of IMPOSTER SYNDROME, which is a psychological condition than many people suffer from, and no amount of success or money can entirely eradicate. So this could be a great topic to research, and you could connect this to other people in the book who seem to suffer from the same condition (or people who don’t—to understand why they don’t seem to).

REQUIREMENTS:

  • 3 stories from the book that connect to the conversation in useful ways; you must discuss them all in your paper, and provide enough context to understand each story. You can use one story more than another, but all three must be introduced and discussed.
  • 2-3 Secondary Sources from articles, websites, books, etc. These must be QUOTED and discussed as well, and connected to the overall conversation. ALSO: Dictionary definitions are not good secondary sources. Find an actual article that discusses the issue.
  • Remember the keys to a good conversation paper: conversation, context, and quotations.
  • DUE  FRIDAY, MARCH 5th by 5pm

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Blog Response #4: Truth Feels Heavy

 Be sure to read the last chapter of Humans for next week and watch the video below. This is your last blog response for the book, and I'll give you a break next week (promise!). We'll also discuss Paper #2 next week, assuming we're able to meet in person (lots of snow predicted!). If that happens, I'll inform you of everything you need to know on the blog. Respond to the video below in a comment by your classtime next week! 



Thursday, February 4, 2021

Read "Struggle" pp.277-347: No Blog Response! (see below)

 I forgot to mention in class that there's NO BLOG RESPONSE this week, since I want you to work on your Paper #1 due tomorrow by 5pm. However, be sure to read pages 277-347, and consider this statement from the introduction to "Struggle:

“Every person I meet is my master in some point, and in that I learn of him” Ralph Waldo Emerson.

“I still learn something new from each person I meet. Everyone has a unique expertise. The quickest way to find a person’s expertise is by learning their struggle. What they’ve battled. What they’ve carried with them the longest. Because it’s what they’ve thought about the most.”

We'll talk about this next week! See you then...