Friday, January 26, 2007

Five important things in Carnival and Young Goodman

Young Goodman Brown



1. Faith

2. Faith's Ribbons

3. Brown's Test

4. The ritual

5. Brown's attitude before he dies



Carnival of Crime



1. Conscience

2. His Aunt

3. What the main character wants from his conscience

4. Other peoples consciences

5. The crimes that the main character commits at the end





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Thursday, January 25, 2007

Young Goodman Brown

Summary



Young Goodman Brown is a story about a young man who is sure of his purity and the purity of other members of his congregation. Brown is married to a woman named Faith whom he leave behind when he enters the dark forest for a test. When Brown enters the forest he is greeted by a mysterious man whom is later identified as the Devil. As Brown and the Devil walk through the forest, they, or the Devil, runs into towns people that are on their way to a meeting. While the Devil talks with these travelers, Brown watches from afar, appalled by the sight of his godly companions associating with the Devil. Night falls on the forest and Brown proceeds to the meeting of the towns people, deep within the forest, to find that they are worshiping the Devil in a sacrilegious

witch ceremony. As the ceremony culminates, he sees his Faith initiated into the group and is himself invited into the group. The ceremony ends and all the people dissapear leaving Brown to wonder if he had imagined it or not.





Interpretation



The interpretation of the story is entirely an internal struggle for Brown. Because Brown leaves his "Faith" behind when he is tested by the Devil, he loses his faith to the worship of the Devil. I also see Hawthorne as emphasizing the fact that not all people are as perfect as they seem,especially those that appear to be very devoted to Christianity. The story is an obvious stab at religious belief and those that practice it in a way that is not congruent with the teachings of the religion. I view the story as internal; a fight between good and evil within Brown and how he views the world because of his struggle. I also think that the story is pointing out the corruption that good can have on a person by warping their view of the world into something that it never can, nor ever will be. Life is full of sin just as every person sins, therefore the world will never be as place of heavenly bliss nor will people be as good as they wish to be.







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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

The Facts Concerning a Recent Carnival of Crime in Connecticut by Mark Twain

Summary



Mark Twain's story is about a man who comes into contact with his conscience. While waiting for his aunt to visit him, there is a knock at his door. When he answers it, he is surprised to see a little man covered in mossy green hair. The mossy man begins accosting him over a recent meeting with a woman whom he had lied to. As the conversation between the two continues, the man learns that the mossy man is his conscience. No one but the man can see the conscience and he and the conscience argue about moments in his life. When the aunt finally arrive, the man is grateful to find that his conscience is weighed to the floor and become immobile with guilt because his aunt has begun to scold him about a girl he was to be caring for. As the conscience is subdued by guilt, the man jumps on it and strangles it until it is dead. After the death of his conscience, the man embarks upon an evil rampage.



Interpretation



Themes that I identified would be in terms of a moral lesson. I liked that Twain referred to a conscience that was so small that it cared for nothing and in contrast, the conscience that was so large that it made the man fear everything he did was wrong. A moral lesson that might come from this story might be that a person should not inhibit their conscience. Another theme that seems to be at play is that there needs to be a balance between the good and the bad otherwise one will take over the other in an unhealthy way. I can see the story as psychological in terms of the balance between what feels good and what reason deems good. Morally the story is telling the reader the results of a conscience that is not listened too, or removed completely, and what becomes of the man. Psycologically, the story is a struggle for power within the man's head, between his ID and Ego, which echoes morality and the morality of the person. A man that ignores his conscience will not be a morally good person, and a man that removes his conscience will be completely amoral. The psychological aspect aside, the story is about morals.





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Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Shades

Summary

"Shades" is a story that begins with the explanation of darkness taking over the light, or it could be better described as the transition from day to night. Bolesław Prus describes the darkness as always being present but often hidden of secluded. Here are a few themes that I have identified:

the notion of a savior
pessimism/optimism
good vs. evil
ID vs. Ego
the unknown or the unpredictable

And here are a few definitions by way of the wikipedia article/s:
Wikipedia(Shades)

"The English word "spirit" comes from the Latin spiritus, meaning "breath" (compare spiritus asper), but also "soul, courage, vigor", ultimately from a PIE root *(s)peis- ("to blow").

"A lamplighter, historically, was an employee of a town who lit gas street lights, generally by means of a wick on a long pole. At dawn, he would return and turn them off using a small hook on the same pole. From time to time, he would come along with a ladder and renew the mantles. In some communities, lamplighters served in a role akin to a town watchman; in others, it may have been seen as little more than a sinecure. There is a long history of the role of a lamplighter-as-lightbringer as a symbolic figure in literature."

I felt that these words were very important to the story, and in fact, I think that they define the story and its themes and/or meanings. As I read the story, I first felt pain and defeat, but as I met the lamplighter, my hope rekindled (pun intended). Even though the lamplighter was never seen, nor known, he was a bringer of light and hope. In the darkness, he provided a lighted path. Reading this story brought to mind religion. I continued to think of the notion of a prophet or a savior. The lamplighter acts much in the same way as a prophet or savior (for people in our time). And there are even examples that point to this notion: "there appears the curious figure of a man with a small flame over his head. He dashes down the sidewalk as if pursued by the darkness, stops for an instant at each lamp, then having kindled a merry light, vanishes like a shade" (Shades). I also thought it peculiar that the lamplighter "vanishes like a shade" and "disappears like a shade." After following the link to shade and finding the above Wikipedia definition, I found that the definition fit my notion of a prophet or savior quite well. I became a bit more interested and ventured to the OED to find more definitions of "shade" to solidify my savior theme. Here are a few:

the shades: the darkness of the nether world; the abode of the dead, Hades.
The visible but impalpable form of a dead person, a ghost.
A spectre, phantom.
Applied to the condition of the present life in contrast to that of heaven.
An unsubstantial image of something real; an unreal appearance; something that has only a fleeting existence, or that has become reduced almost to nothing

These definitions fit very nicely with my savior theme.

I felt that there were a few more themes playing in the story. One theme that I noticed was the good vs. the evil or light vs. dark. This theme seemed to go with the savior theme quite well and with another theme that I identified. Taking from Sigmund Freud, his definition of the psyche with the ID, Ego, and Superego seemed to be at play within the story as well. The theme of the ID vs. the Ego fit well with the light vs. the dark as the mind battles towards harmony between the passions and the intellect. And, to me, it seems that all of the themes that I have identified work together to tell the story of light vs. dark. The conclusion of the themes:

"Amid the murk of life, where wretched mankind gropes its way along, where some smash into obstacles, others fall into an abyss, and no one knows a secure path, where superstition-bound man is prey to mischance, misery and hate — in the dark trackless areas of life, lamplighters also bustle about. Each carries a small flame over his head, each kindles light along his path, lives unknown, labors unestimable, and then disappears like a shade..." (Shades).

There is hope in a dark world.