Blog for students and professor of Rouzie's Textual Analysis course, spring 2011, Ohio U./Athens
May 18, 2011
Phantom Limb
I really enjoyed watching the documentary, Phantom Limb. It was so interesting to see all of the steps of dealing with loss. The part of the film that caught my attention most was the first scene on separation. This section was about his brothers death and how his family dealt with it. I found it so interesting that he chose not to use any voice overs and instead used text in between home video clips. The fact that his family still to this day doesn't talk about the death of his brother was shown by not having any voices in that section. I think he included his personal experience with the death of a loved one to show his credibility on the topic and also to show the wrong way of dealing with death. He knew that he and his family didn't deal with the death of his brother in a healthy way, and through the rest of the film he shows all the ways that are healthiest in dealing with the loss. Seeing the home videos of his family really made me feel for his family's loss. I think this section of the documentary was imperative to the film because it caught the audiences attention and had them emotionally involved from the very beginning.
May 17, 2011
Phantom Limb
This documentary illustrates a series of steps that takes the viewer on a trip through the grieving process. I thought it was interesting how the documentor never actually appeared or spoke in his film, but still presented himself as an example of his theme. He used visual metaphors along with the written narration to help get the point across (the collapsing buidlings and sheared sheep). The majority of the documentary takes on a depressing tone but at the end reverses it by repesenting the final step of grief with a birth, showing that the end can sometimes beget a beginning.
Phatom Limb
From the very beginning of the movie I was very interested. I wasn't exactly sure what to expect. Whether it was simply about the death of the directors brother or plainly about death. In reality the movie was about both. The movie was very relateable for everyone. The fact of death is a topic that most people have encountered and experienced in some point. The movie didn't hide anything. What was really interesting to me were the steps after death. They may not have gone in an order that works for everyone but the creators of the movie weren't scared to jump into that topic and touch upon things that people aren't used to hearing about. Death is something that physically and emotionally hurts and people don't usually want to bring that kind of pain up or resurface old emotions and feelings. Another thing that was very interesting to me were the pictures and examples that went along with the steps. For example the stage of shock gave an example of rats being shocked. I really never thought about how rats being shocked could relate to death in any form. Everything connected and built a real meaning. It was for the viewer to interpret those meanings and form them into something that related to their life in the past or currently.
May 12, 2011
"Third Bank Of the River"
The title was the first thing to perplex me from the Third Bank. A river only has two banks, I suppose the implication here is that her father becomes the third bank of the river during his term spent on it. I also began thinking of the boat, the vessel, that contains the father’s body. I feel like this is symbolic for not crossing over...as in stuck between banks, becoming the third bank. Through the writing, I feel the abandonment of the speaker, but I also feel the strong undercurrent of his obvious love and confusion at the behavior of his father. The oddest part for me is when their father won’t come to the shore of the presentation of the granddaughter. Then everyone really gives up on the father and moreover, they move on with their lives expect for the speaker who cannot. Even in rereads I haven’t the faintest thought of why or what is the compelling reason for this father to leave his family, the river means something other than how I’m reading it. The ending made me recall “The Storyteller” in that he offers to take up the mission of his father and stay on the boat and how the Storyteller took up the telling of the stories.
May 11, 2011
The Third Bank of the RiverIn
In "The Third Bank of the River," João Guimarães Rosa does explore these separate, symbolic opposites in the lives of members of the narrator’s family. He then crafts, out of the conflict, a third position which can be, at best, described as a treaty between two very unlike things. Often times, these extremes are the very definitions of characterization we come to expect in a short story, and, by reading between these lines, Rosa was able to jumble these words up "The Third Bank of the River" into a work of unclear and allegorical by nature. By never exactly defining the third part that is created, the author is able to explore this clearly important topic in greater depth. The importance of the crossing is that, in every case the author presents, it represents the journey from one position to its opposite, continuing until the characters reach their final destination, the third, middle situation. It is in this way that father’s crossing has a profound effect on the family and the way they play out the rest of their lives.
Caillebotte's "Young Man"
I have posted a large image of this painting so you can see the details (unlike in the book).
Dr R
Dr R
May 10, 2011
The Third Bank of the River
While I was reading the Third Bank of the River I kept trying to think ahead as to what the author was trying to get across. One of the things I kept questioning was what exactly did the father leaving symbolize. I knew there was more to the story then just the simple fact that the father left for no reason. After reading I came to the conclusion that for me he personally symbolized a form of death. One day he just decided to leave and to the son his father was gone forever. The author gives us many clues as to why we should look at the father leaving as symbolic. Guimaraes Rosa gave very little detail and explanation. It was as if she wanted us to form our own opinions from our own lives in order to make sense of the story. Another explanation for the father leaving was to be a symbol of divorce. The father was leaving and the son could still see him but could not connect to his father like he used to. That is just like when a mother and father get a divorce and usually one parent leaves the house and the other one is the primary guardian. In this example the father left and the mother took care of the children.
May 9, 2011
My Presentation Poem for Tuesday, I will bring copies to class
The Man In The Glass
Peter "Dale" Winbrow Sr
When you get what you want in your struggle for selfAnd the world makes you king for a day,
Just go to the mirror and look at yourself
And see what that man has to say.
For it isn't your father or mother or wife
Whose judgment upon you must pass.
The fellow whose verdict counts most in you life
Is the one staring back from the glass.
You may be like Jack Horner and chisel a plum
And think you're a wonderful guy.
But the man in the glass says you're only a bum
If you can't look him straight in the eye.
He's the fellow to please-never mind all the rest,
For he's with you clear to the end.
And you've passed your most dangerous, difficult test
If the man in the glass is your friend.
You may fool the whole world down the pathway of years
And get pats on the back as you pass.
But your final reward will be heartache and tears
If you've cheated the man in the glass.
May 5, 2011
Please incude the author/artist name
Yes, be please include the author or artist name of your presentation text. I'd like to see the year published or recorded, something about the genre too.
Try to post these enough in advance for folks to read them.
Thanks,
Dr R
Try to post these enough in advance for folks to read them.
Thanks,
Dr R
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