English 4, Post 4, 'Themed Free Post [II]'

 Warm Salutations,


Prospective Biochemists, Chemists and Food Engineers and Pharmaceutical Chemists from FCQF,



This week, I am bringing to you the fourth out of eight blog sessions.



In this particular session, you will be asked to do the following class assignment:


Comments: Leave a comment on your teacher’s entry + 3 of your classmates' posts
Word Count: 200 words
You are free to write any topic you want to, in any manner. 



As usual, I leave you a critical review I wrote some time ago for you to read and comment on,


Mobilizing the object of study, Hemingway’s “The Sun also rises”


The following work attempts to look for an intertextual dialogue to occur between T S Eliot’s “The Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock”, Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby” and Hemingway’s “The Sun also rises”. For this to be achieved, several passages from both the poem and the novels have been selected in order to find a point of convergence concerning one paramount topic, the one of the ‘solitude in the quotidian’.


As a mode of the beginning, the topic that may follow up: ‘the solitude in the quotidian’, portrayed in Fitzgerald’s and Eliot’s passages it is now reversed to the coming across of ‘company in the quotidian’. It is in the following lines of Hemingway’s novel that one may find such development of such topic “We stayed five days at Burguete and had good fishing. The nights were cold and the days were hot, and there was always a breeze even in the heat of the day.” (Hemingway, 66)


In the lines above, the voice of narration in Hemingway’s novel is presenting the interaction with the quotidian in a positive outlook. The passage of time is told as a natural, and there is no tedious tone. There is no accountancy of days and nights, but accounting for pleasant experiences in the quotidian. To have “a good fishing” can be accounted for as a pleasant and satisfactory experience found in the quotidian. (...)


References


·         Eliot, T. S., and Frank Kermode. The Wasteland and Other Poems. New York, N.Y., U.S.A.: Penguin, 1998. Print.

·         Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York, NY: Scribner, 1996. Print.

·         Hemingway, Ernest. The Sun Also Rises. New York: Scribner, 1996. Print.


Comments

  1. It is very difficult to understand a title and create an opinion in your head, I imagine that writing a review has a greater complexity.

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  2. It's pretty interesting how daily life can have two approaches so different from each other.

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  3. In my house there is a book by Ernest Hemingway called "Fiesta", although I have never read it.

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  4. Is interesting this other point of view of cotidian

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  5. It is interesting how each person has a different point of view on a subject, and how sometimes they are so opposite as it is in the case of the daily life in this blog.

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  7. This is the blog that cost me the most to read haha, although it brought back memories of my teacher who had mentioned this novel at school

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  8. Is interesting how that two works can be analyzed that way.

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  9. I also felt that it was in the voice narrative of the Hemingway’s novel that one could find a pleasant feeling in the everyday.

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  10. I like how the daily life it's not necessary a bad thing, and i think that the lines of Hemingway's novel shows that has good things.

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  11. What a great author Hemingway is', although sometimes it is difficult to understand his messages, what an interesting reflection.

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