Sunday, December 11, 2011

Book 1-The Sun Also Rises

"'Good night, Brett,' I said. 'I'm sorry you feel rotten.'"

Thus far, Jake is the only character that loves even when he is rejected.  Count Mippipopolous, despite being undoubtedly a warm and friendly soul, has not quite been put to the test.  Most likely, he, like the average human, looks for give and take in most sorts of relationships.  Cohn and Brett belong to the opposite end of the scale as Jake, with Brett being the more extreme.  Jake and Robert are for better or worse friends, and have a fairly healthy relationship. Robert's personal problems begin to undermine their relationship, but ultimately Robert commits to fill his own emptiness.  This decision draws Cohn away to other fantasies.



I imagine Cohn looked somewhat like this in his boxing prime. Yet he never liked the sport, only the feeling of superiority.  As if the moustache couldn't do that on its own.

Lady Brett is far from the controlled and reserved English lady.  Never faithful, she seems to double cross all of her husbands or lovers.  Yet Jake is faithful and loving to her always.  I can understand why Brett would feel so uncomfortable with committment, but its strange that she so closes herself off to love.  To her, marriage does not mean a relationship based on love, rather it smells of earthier things and  necessity.  Towards the end of chapter seven when she, Jake, and the count go out for the night reveals her.  She does not enjoy dancing.  Dance channels the vitality of life, and serves as a metaphor for the way humans live as a whole.  We make rules to protect us from the overly powerful and electric energy of the supernatural.  Brett seems to reject these rules that society passes along, even if it is to her and others' disadvantage.  Jake always wishes her well, even as she rejects him, that is the most beautiful love.

The bullfighting motif runs beneath the surface of the piece, popping in and out of consciousness.  Jake says that the only people that live their lives to the full are bull fighters.  Jake seems to take some chances himself.  In some ways Jake parallels the bull.  He is stabbed at by others like Cohn, although he does not mean harm.  The real dance is between him and Brett, the matador.  They criss cross and circle close and far, but it's pretty clear Jake's going to get burned.  Even so he does this with love.  Thus far he hasn't changed, although a vaccuum around him is tempting him to spill apart. 

      



 

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

The Sun Also Rises

" 'All the rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full...'"
-Part of the epitaph to The Sun Also Rises (from Ecclesiastes)
     Several of the characters in this novel are empty. The allusion in the epitaph is an accurate metaphor for the lives of some of the characters. They fill themselves, yet never are full. Robert Cohn feebly attempts to satisfy the inner emptiness he feels. Robert, self-conscious of his ethnicity and anti-semitic sentiments against him, seeks exterior experiences to bring him fulfillment. Whether it be boxing victories or potential South American travels, he does not want to settle, yet lacks the fortitude to overcome obstacles to his goals.
     The love triangles seem right out of Canterbury Tales. Everybody loves Brett. She loves Jake, but I doubt she will marry him. I think that not many men see Brett at anything less than her physical beauty, with the exception of Jake. Cohn sees her merely as the next thing. She infatuates him, there is not any real love or anything like it.
     It is fitting that the story is told from Jake's point of view. He is a good man, not cocky or overbearing, yet confident and secure. His knowledge of people and human nature enables him to be so. Jake knows Cohn better than Cohn knows himself. People are Jake's expertise, however, he does not use this gift to manipulate or control others. He brings Georgette with him to the club, but gives her free rein for the evening. Privacy motivates him to do so, he does not want to make his feelings for Brett too obvious, nor hers for him.
     Conflict over Brett may be the main issue as the novel progresses. How exactly the characters will change or stay the same, I am not sure, although I will soon find out.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Crime and Punishment

"A gloomy sensation of agonising, everlasting solitude and remoteness, took conscious form in his soul."
     Raskolnikov's crime tortures him immensely.  The title contains multiple levels of meaning, one of which being the inevitability of punishment in this novel.  As Zossimov (the doctor) intuitively knows, Raskolnikov's illness is more of a somatoform disorder than a physically caused illness.  In this case, the body reflects the tortured state of the soul and spirit.  The pawnbroker and her sister suffer immensely less in duration of time than Raskolnikov does.  There are no winners in sin or crime, only losers; no one goes unpunished.
     The crime has consequences.  The immediate one may be the torture of Raskolnikov's soul, which I think in turn causes his behavior to be erratic and almost nonexistent.  Raskolnikov's behavior is chaotic.  At one point he thinks about throwing all the stuff he stole into the river.  What?  That almost makes the whole crime pointless.  He needed money and at the time still needs money.  The irony is that after the crime, he gets money and support from his family and friends because he is in such a weak state.  Before he did the murder, while he was still thinking about doing the crime, I thought to myself that he really does not need to do the crime at all.  He has options for help and plenty of people who could help him.  It is his pride and idealism that makes him such a pragmatist ironically.  He disproves of his sister's fiance, and thinks that because the pawnbroker is somewhat of a dragon herself, he can justify slaying her.  He is really just doing what is practical to him.  He chooses to be selfish.  And therein is the source of his torture.  A person cannot be an island unto himself.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Whaddaya Want?

AP Lit. Recently (starting last year) lit has become increasingly appealing to me.  The different layers of meaning are interesting in themselves, and its really cool when everything falls into place and "I get it!"  AP Lit is all about those kinds of experiences.  The unique thing is that all literature can be interpreted differently, and the process and reasoning behind any conclusion give it "correctness" so everyone can go home at the end of the day feeling at peace. Basically, I want to learn and discover new things about the world and the people in it through AP Lit.  As much as things are different, lots of things seem to be the same across works; making the connections between pieces themselves is also something that gives meaning to my literature studies.  Reading does factor into the process and the more one has to work with the better the final product will be.  I'm not the fastest reader because I like to pay attention to details and those subtler things, so hopefully I will be able to get through it all.  It will help come May to have a good foundation of reading beneath me.

(Yeah, that's me-nbd)
Overall, its been a good class so far, and I expect good things to come.