With the semester drawing to a close, I believe now is a good time to look back and reflect on what i have learned in this intermediate composition class. I think that my persuasive writing has progressed over the course of the semester, due to this class, and i now have a better concept of what is expected of me when writing a persuasive argument. Overall, I feel that everything i did in this class was somewhat successful and i am not worried that i did anything poorly, in the class. However, I do have one major concern with the class.
I feel like the papers where not spaced out properly in the class. Over the course of the semester we were required to write four papers. Up to this point we have only completed two of them and, with the end of the semester and finals just a few short weeks away i am worried i wont have enough time to put my full effort into writing the final two papers. The papers themselves aren't the biggest time commitment but, I will have to balance my time between writing them and studying for my other classes.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Movie poster
Movie Poster Analysis
Questions to Consider:
1. Is the movie
title prominently featured? Is the text easy to read?
The title of the movie is not
prominently displayed on the movie poster. In fact it is almost in the corner
of the poster and is in all lower case showing that the emphasis is on the
images not the text.
2. Are the main actors shown? If so, which
ones? What do their appearances and expressions convey about the movie?
The poster is dominated by a
picture of two of the main characters clutching, as if after an accident or
“Crash”. Below them are images of a few of the other main characters in the
film. Since the film follows the lives of a multitude of different characters
lives no one main character predominates the poster for the movie.
3. What is the design of the movie poster?
Does it accurately reflect the mood and tone of the film?
The expressions on the faces of all
the actors in the poster all seem to be either upset or depressed. This sets
the mood for the movie as potentially dramatic/tragic, obviously not a feel
good movie.
4. What other images are included? What do
you notice about the framing of the images?
Other than the facial expressions of
the main actors, the only other noticeable feature of the poster is the out of
focus lights in the background, which suggest the movie is set in a city or
urban area. The main image on the cover of the couple clutching each other
seems to be the center point of the poster because it is framed by the actors’
names as well as the other minor pictures on the cover.
5. What text is shown on the poster? Is
there a catchy slogan? If so, what does it tell you about the movie's
story?
Running down the side of the poster,
the names of all the major actors in the movie are listed. There are twelve
actors listed which seems unusual for the poster for a film but, looking closer
you see why they are all listed; they are all big name actors. At the top of
the poster it states 6 academy award nominations and 2 golden globe
nominations. These Nominations are clearly meant to lend credit to the quality
of the film.
6. Is there any
other important information included on the poster?
There isn’t
any other information other than the title, the actors, and the nominations.
7. Why do/don't
you think this movie poster is persuasive?
The
multitude of big name actors and the nominations suggest that this is a quality
movie that would be worth your time to see. The distressed faces of the seven
main actors on the cover also makes you want to watch the movie to see what
caused these emotions to come pouring out.
Monday, April 16, 2012
Space Race
Thumbing through the pages of the March 3, 1961 edition of
Life magazine, one theme was very apparent, the fascination with the space
race. The cover of the Magazine depicted John Glenn, Virgil Grissom, and Alan Shepard
looking u in the sky. Recently it was announced that one of these three men
would be the first American in space. Obviously the thought of a man in space
was on the forefront of everyone’s mind as almost a third of the magazine was
devoted to this theme of space. However, what I found most interesting in this
article was not the fascination with space but, the interest in beating the Russians
at every step along the way.
The
article I chose to focus upon spanned pages 32-33 and it discussed the space
exploration timetable for both the Soviet Union and the United States. The
article started out by discussing what both nations had already achieved in the
space race. The Russians had up to this point already launched numerous satellites,
landed a probe on the moon, and launched and retrieved to dogs from space. The
article then used an exasperated tone to describe the Americans achievements,
which consisted of only getting a few satellites into orbit. Clearly the author
of this piece was less than satisfied with Americans achievements in space up
to this point. It almost seemed as if he were trying to goad the space program
into taking greater actions by being pessimistic towards their efforts. From
here the article gets much more entertaining.
The
next section of the article discusses the space exploration time table from
1961 to 1973. Back in this time period it seems that the expectations of conquering
space as the final frontier where exceedingly high. According to the graphic
representation of the space time table the Russians were expecting to have a
man on the moon by 1967, only six years after this issue was published. From
here, it seems, they expected to have a rover on both Mars and Venus by 1968
and a permanent orbiting space station by late 1969. The fact that the only permanent
space station, a project consisting of over seven of the wealthiest nations,
has not been completed and it is over forty years later, is a testament to the
optimism of the time period. The United States’ space exploration time table
seemed almost underachieving compared to the soviet one. The first major US
breakthrough, getting a man in space, was scheduled for 1962, almost a year and
a half after the soviets had achieved the same goal. From here, the US had no
other major projects scheduled until 1971 when it planned to land its first man
on the moon.
What
interested me most about this article was the respect it gave to the Soviet
Union as a nation. Today every American believes that we are the greatest
nation in the world. However back when this article was written, it is clear
that we have not always thought this way. The notion of any country beating us
in anyway technologically is unthinkable. This is why I found it so interesting
that the article says that the Russians not only beat us into space but will
beat us to the moon and mars as well. However, it is still apparent in the writing
and in some of the other articles in the book that the US Space program and the
American people were not going to give up and let the Russians beat them to
space and, they would do everything in their power to win the space race.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Bite Me Reflection
When reading over the article "Bite Me (or not)", the main message i got out of the article was that the concept of "abstinence porn", as seen in the Twilight book series, is not as wholesome as some proponents of it would argue. The writer of the article states that some readers of the books see the lack of sex in the relationships, in the story, as influencing the teenage girl reader to practice abstinence. However, the author draws from multiple points in the series to try and dispel this notion.
Some of the examples the author uses include the images of a teenage mother in the final book. The writer says this is equivalent of a 1950s housewife, not the best time period for womens rights. She also describes that the heroine in the novel never really has any control over her virginity. Edward, her lover, always has the power to take it from her. She never has any choices in the book. She also included some fan fiction of a rape scene, to further incite this point.
Some of the examples the author uses include the images of a teenage mother in the final book. The writer says this is equivalent of a 1950s housewife, not the best time period for womens rights. She also describes that the heroine in the novel never really has any control over her virginity. Edward, her lover, always has the power to take it from her. She never has any choices in the book. She also included some fan fiction of a rape scene, to further incite this point.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Movie experiences
One of the earliest movie experiences I can remember well is going to see the movie "Shrek" when it first came out. I remember this time in particular because it was the first movie I went to see at the newly built Century 11 theater downtown. Before going to see this movie I had always gone to the rundown movie theater closer to my house. Before we got to the theater, we stopped at seven eleven to get candy to the theater; my parents preferred not to spend $5 for a pack of M&M's. We also had ordered our tickets on-line through "Fandango", something we had never done before and I was quite excited about.
When we got to the theater, we went though pretty much the same ritual as we always did in movie theaters. My parents told me and my sister to go to the bathroom so we wouldn't have to go during the show. Then I went and got an ICEE from the snack bar. The movies were the only times I can ever reember getting one of these frosty treats in my childhood.Once inside the actual theater i would always want to sit up in the front but, my parents would protest against it and we would end up sitting somewhere in the middle of the theater.
The movie itself was great. I remember being thoroughly entertained watching "Shrek" for the first time. The part i remember most about the movie though, was my parents were also entertained by it. This was something that did not often happen when we went to see kids movies. Later on, I realized this was due to the abundance of adult humor that is also present in the movie, which i did not understand at the time. I also remember "Shrek" in particular because it was the first movie I had seen with the new type of 3D animation that got away from the cartoon drawing animation i was used to.
When we got to the theater, we went though pretty much the same ritual as we always did in movie theaters. My parents told me and my sister to go to the bathroom so we wouldn't have to go during the show. Then I went and got an ICEE from the snack bar. The movies were the only times I can ever reember getting one of these frosty treats in my childhood.Once inside the actual theater i would always want to sit up in the front but, my parents would protest against it and we would end up sitting somewhere in the middle of the theater.
The movie itself was great. I remember being thoroughly entertained watching "Shrek" for the first time. The part i remember most about the movie though, was my parents were also entertained by it. This was something that did not often happen when we went to see kids movies. Later on, I realized this was due to the abundance of adult humor that is also present in the movie, which i did not understand at the time. I also remember "Shrek" in particular because it was the first movie I had seen with the new type of 3D animation that got away from the cartoon drawing animation i was used to.
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