Sunday, March 27, 2011
Connection Picture
The reason I chose this picture is when Pip gets money all his troubles seem to go away. When he receives his fortune he gets to be a gentleman, something he has wanted for a long time. He is also treated better by people such a Uncle Pumblechook. He was mean to him in the past, but upon the discovery of his riches Pumblechook suddenly changes his perspective on Pip. Also, Pip's new wealth can buy him anything he wants like furniture, servants, and friends. All of his new "gentleman" friends are only his friends because of his riches.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Great Expectations Connection
I think that a similar story to Great Expectations is The Sandlot. I thought of this story because I watched it a few hours ago with my little brother. The story lines are actually basically the same when you take into account that we haven't started stage three yet. The Sandlot is a man looking back on his life, evaluating his physical and mental triumphs and downfalls, while also sharing similar motifs such as guilt, bettering yourself, and crime and punishment.
The first way The Sandlot is similar to Great Expectations is that both stories are told by a narrator who has already lived through the sequence of events in the plot and is sharing his thoughts as he relives them. Pip does this in GE and "Smalls" does it in TS and although they are based in very different settings, they are still similar in theme.
In TS Smalls messes up by using his dad's baseball signed by Babe Ruth and hitting it into his neighbors yard. He and his friends work frantically work day and night to get the ball back before his dad notices the ball is gone. Smalls is almost torn apart with guilt when they think tat they cannot get the ball back. Pip in GE acts the same way when he steals the meat pie from his own house and lets it get eaten.
Another way The Sandlot is like Great Expectations is that, in TS, Smalls wants to be just like the neighbor kid Bennie Rodriguez who is a beast at baseball. Smalls looks up to him. When he finds out that the science project he works on in his room really isn't that cool in Bennie's eyes then he is suddenly ashamed of it. This is just like in GE when Pip, who is looked down upon by Estella for being poor, wants to become a gentleman to better himself. But once he does he then becomes ashamed of the entire social class he was once apart of.
Finally, TS is like GE because of the reoccurring theme in the novel, crime and punishment. TS portrays this theme by Smalls and his friends trying to get his dad's ball. They end up trying to trespass on private property and by committing this crime are punished by being attacked by a humongous dog. The same motif is appears in GE. First of all, the prisoners. They commit crimes and they pay for it by going to prison. And secondly, and although this was minor, Pip stays out by the church too long in the beginning of the novel and his punishment is in the form of the "tickler".
The first way The Sandlot is similar to Great Expectations is that both stories are told by a narrator who has already lived through the sequence of events in the plot and is sharing his thoughts as he relives them. Pip does this in GE and "Smalls" does it in TS and although they are based in very different settings, they are still similar in theme.
In TS Smalls messes up by using his dad's baseball signed by Babe Ruth and hitting it into his neighbors yard. He and his friends work frantically work day and night to get the ball back before his dad notices the ball is gone. Smalls is almost torn apart with guilt when they think tat they cannot get the ball back. Pip in GE acts the same way when he steals the meat pie from his own house and lets it get eaten.
Another way The Sandlot is like Great Expectations is that, in TS, Smalls wants to be just like the neighbor kid Bennie Rodriguez who is a beast at baseball. Smalls looks up to him. When he finds out that the science project he works on in his room really isn't that cool in Bennie's eyes then he is suddenly ashamed of it. This is just like in GE when Pip, who is looked down upon by Estella for being poor, wants to become a gentleman to better himself. But once he does he then becomes ashamed of the entire social class he was once apart of.
Finally, TS is like GE because of the reoccurring theme in the novel, crime and punishment. TS portrays this theme by Smalls and his friends trying to get his dad's ball. They end up trying to trespass on private property and by committing this crime are punished by being attacked by a humongous dog. The same motif is appears in GE. First of all, the prisoners. They commit crimes and they pay for it by going to prison. And secondly, and although this was minor, Pip stays out by the church too long in the beginning of the novel and his punishment is in the form of the "tickler".
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
*LATE- Chapter 9 Quote Response
The day that Pip is referring to is the day he spends with Mrs. Havisham and Estella. This day was life changing for him because he loses his childish, happy-go-lucky outlook on life. He realizes throughout the day that he was a lower class and that being higher mattered. Pip soon becomes ashamed of his home, family, social class, and life in general because he thinks he needs to live up to what he believes Mrs. Havisham and Estella like or tolerate. At this point in the book he realizes he is growing up. He used to want to be an apprentice to Joe and was enthusiastic about working in the blacksmith, but now Pip wants nothing to do with it and thinks lower of Joe because of it.
I think the turning point in my life was one day in baseball when I was ten. I just got onto a new team for an all-star season and the coach that was assigned to us was an out of state college assistant coach. Our team had practice in the middle of the afternoon one Sunday and I didn't want to be there because there was a big game, or something along those lines, on TV that day. Being the impatient ten year I was then, I began to mess around with the new coach thinking he would be friendly and kind. But when I was finished an at bat and stayed in the dugout too long, talking to one of my friends on the team, the coach proceeded to chew us out in a very vicious way for a ten year old. At most points I stopped listening because I was sad and angry, yet one thing he said sticks in my mind to this day and that is, "You can't mess with people now, you're in the real world son and next time your messing around you might as well go home because I won't tolerate messing around!" Now, 'messing' wasn't the exact terminology he used and that quote may actually be a slur of another coach's words I have heard mixed with this guy's, but it still taught me an important lesson. Behave well, follow rules, and don't stay in the dugout too long.
I think the turning point in my life was one day in baseball when I was ten. I just got onto a new team for an all-star season and the coach that was assigned to us was an out of state college assistant coach. Our team had practice in the middle of the afternoon one Sunday and I didn't want to be there because there was a big game, or something along those lines, on TV that day. Being the impatient ten year I was then, I began to mess around with the new coach thinking he would be friendly and kind. But when I was finished an at bat and stayed in the dugout too long, talking to one of my friends on the team, the coach proceeded to chew us out in a very vicious way for a ten year old. At most points I stopped listening because I was sad and angry, yet one thing he said sticks in my mind to this day and that is, "You can't mess with people now, you're in the real world son and next time your messing around you might as well go home because I won't tolerate messing around!" Now, 'messing' wasn't the exact terminology he used and that quote may actually be a slur of another coach's words I have heard mixed with this guy's, but it still taught me an important lesson. Behave well, follow rules, and don't stay in the dugout too long.
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Great Expectations Stage 2
In stage two of the novel Pip becomes a wealthy gentleman overnight. He fits into his new life quite quickly and soon acts as if this is the person he has been his entire life. Pip spends a lot of money when he realizes he has it because all he has to do is ask Jaggers for sum of it and Jaggers will willfully oblige. The spending of the money seems to make him very selfish because the money is coming from his benefactor and Pip does not have to work for any of it and does not care where it is coming from, just as long as he is getting it.
Pip, and his new unhealthy habit of spending money, fit into the motif we talked about in class that related to the longing for becoming a gentleman. When Pip was back at home with Joe he longed to become a gentleman with obscene amounts of cash. Well now that his wildest dreams have come true he is a gentleman, but along with that title comes descriptions such as spoiled, arrogant, and lazy. Pip now looks down on the group of society he was once apart of which plays along with another theme we discussed in class, irony.
Pip, and his new unhealthy habit of spending money, fit into the motif we talked about in class that related to the longing for becoming a gentleman. When Pip was back at home with Joe he longed to become a gentleman with obscene amounts of cash. Well now that his wildest dreams have come true he is a gentleman, but along with that title comes descriptions such as spoiled, arrogant, and lazy. Pip now looks down on the group of society he was once apart of which plays along with another theme we discussed in class, irony.
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