Friday, October 30, 2015

Blog #8 Rebel Without a Cause Day

I am Katniss Everdeen, a tribute in the Hunger Games from the 12th district. You may think I am a typical contender but that is not the case, I for one will not support going into an arena and fighting to the death.  I volunteered to take my sister’s place to protect her and in the end became the face of a rebellion against our nation. 

“At some point, you have to stop running and turn around and face whoever wants you dead. The hard thing is finding the courage to do it.”   -Suzanne Collins 

Fight song- "Girl on Fire" 





Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Blog #5 Personal Memoir Topic Approval

 Surface culture component: Language
The deep culture component of my memoir would be concept of time, I think this would be the best fit for my memoir because my junior year (last year) on the way to school my sister and I were in a car accident. Even though it was a minor accident it still made me realize how quickly things can change, people always say that everything can change in a split second and I never really understood the full extent of that saying until I had my car accident.
The turning point of my story is after the accident happened and my sister and I got out of the car to make sure everyone was okay. This particular moment was the turning point I believe because that was when it first hit me that it only takes a second for something bad to happen and that I had to be more careful and aware of my surroundings.
I've changed from my turning point by learning to be more careful and conscious of how little time it takes for something to go wrong.

Monday, October 19, 2015

Blog #4 Memoir Style Model Analysis : Scars by David Owen

The surface culture components for the memoir Scars would be celebration and then the deep culture component would be concept of self because the author was in a way celebrating the scars that he and others he knew had, he was saying they aren't something that you should want to hide. The deep culture component would be concept of self because he kept emphasizing that your scars make you who you are and they each tell their own little story about your life. The turning point of the memior would be when the author realizes that scars are something that you should take pride in and that they should in a way be celebrated. The author shows that he has changed at this point by showing that he has had a change of mindset about his own scars.
"On a hill in the neighborhood where I grew up, in Kansas City, was a suburban ruin that my friends and I called the Burned-Down House. There was a crumbling tennis court, which was enclosed by an overgrown chain-link fence, and there was a concrete slab with a dirt-floored crawl space underneath it, and there were two limestone chimneys. During the summer of 1972, when I was in high school, my friend Duncan and I sat on top of one of the chimneys lighting firecrackers with our cigarettes and throwing them at two other friends, who were sitting on a limestone retaining wall and throwing firecrackers at us. Between explosions, we tried to think of something less boring to do. Most of our firecrackers were Black Cats, but we had some cherry bombs, too, and one of those blew up a few inches above my left foot. When I could hear again, and when Duncan and I had stopped laughing, I noticed a nickel-size piece of cherry-bomb shrapnel embedded in the rubber toe cap of my sneaker. When I pulled on it, it came out of my foot like a cork, and blood spread up through the canvas and into the laces. Duncan drove me to the office of my doctor, a pediatrician. The waiting room was full of mothers and weepy three-year-olds, and I took off my shoe and handed it to the receptionist, to show her what the problem was. (Scars Owen)"  This paragraph stuck out to me because of the imagery that the author used enabled me as a reader to really visualize what he was describing. I also liked that you could obviously hear the authors voice throughout this paragraph as well as the rest of the memoir.