Rep The Realness

Rep The Realness

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Fahrenheit 451 Questions

1. The world that Montag lives in is similar in the sense that we've adapted as a society to living life more dependant on technology and technological forms of entertainment. Although our society is not as far gone as it is portrayed in the novel, the prospect of the world evolving to a point where it becomes very similar to the one described by Bradbury is not that farfetched. Although the world may be seen as a utopia through the eyes of characters such as Beatty, it is clear that this censored, war plauged reality is anything but.
2. Clarisse is an important character because she is one of the few people in the world with a sense of self identity and imagination. She is driven by her sense of curiosity, and Montag identifies with her because of it. Montag, who begins to suffer from a crisis of identity, attempts to find himself through his meetings with Clarisse.
3. I suspect that Beatty had suspicions of Montag and may have programmed the hound to react to him in an effort to scare Montag and keep him in line. 
4. The woman was so passionate in her fight for preserving knowledge and her books that she would rather burn with them then continue living in that world. Witnessing this, Montag begins to speculate as to why someone would be willing to die for the sake of such a trivial thing and his curiosity and want to explore literature grows. 
5. The description serves as a way to explain the painfully obvious pointlessness and mindlessness of the trash Mildred constantly indulges in. 
6. It shows the lack of appreciation for life and the therefore the pointlessness of it. If life is not valued and respected by society then what's the point of it? Clarisse's death was easily dismissed and was talked about as if it wasn't anything significant.
7. Montag is not so much physically sick as he is mentally and emotionally sick. He is overly stressed after experiencing the burning of that woman and her house and does not wish to go back to work without reflecting on his life and choices.
8. It shows the constant guilt and pressure that Montag must have been feeling throughout the novel. It explains many of the sentences that were intended as forshadowing for that moment of unveiling. Montag claims his hands have a mind of their own because he impulsively continued to steal books.
9. Beatty explains to Montag that society has evolved of its own accord to the point it is at. People became more interested in the "fast life" and left less time to enjoy in activities such as reading, and slowly it began to fade from society.
10. Ignorance is bliss, and it certainly seems to be the case with Mildred. My definition of happiness is the antithesis of how Mildred sees it. Mildred puts material values over anything else because thats what she has been conditioned to value.

LOCKDOWN

Completely unprofessional. The situation was handled poorly and the lockdown was executed in a very unorganized manner. I know because I was one of the students locked out of the damn classroom by my own teacher. Lockdown was executed with no warning during the final minutes of lunch. The alarm sounded with no follow up instructions with at least a 15 minute delay before someone spoke over the intercom. This left students scattering in all directions with little to no instruction from an authority figure. I had to find a security officer to unlock a classroom door just to let me in to somewhere "safe." At the time i was unaware that it was a non-emergency lock down, and I can confidently say that 90% of the students AND staff were unaware of the actual events taking place. I was crammed into a dark classroom full of loud rambunctious students all wildly speculating about what could be the cause of this infringement on our daily schedule. We were left to our speculations until about twenty minutes into the lockdown when we were then informed that the lockdown was a "non-emergency lockdown." Groans came from students mixed with the simultaneous sighs of relief from faculty. At this point we were all sitting expectantly, waiting for the "Go" to continue with our daily proceedings. But our patience was met with silence. And we were then forced to sit in the same position on the floor for FORTY MORE minutes. A whole period, wasted. And for no good, significant reason. I can now say that I am not at all confident in the security effort provided by the school, and had it been a real emergency, I among many other fellow students could have been caught in the middle of extreme danger. I am greatly disappointed as a third year student at Righetti High school to experience such a poor attempt at "providing safety." 

Friday, October 24, 2014

FAHRENHEIT 451 QUOTES

1.  "No." Said Montag. "My wife's dying. A friend of mine's already dead. Someone who may have been a friend was burnt less than twenty-four hours ago. You're the only one I knew might help me. To see. To see..."

2. "Don't step on the toes of the dog lovers, cat lovers, doctors, lawyers, merchants, chiefs, Mormons, Baptists, Unitarians, second-generation, Chinese, Swedes, Italians, Germans, Texans, Brooklynites, Irishmen, people from Oregon or Mexico. The people in this book, this play, this TV serial are not meant to represent any actual painters, cartographers, mechanics anywhere. The bigger your market, Montag, the less you handle controversy, remember that!"

3. "No wonder books stopped selling, the critics said. But the public, knowing what it wanted, spinning happily, let the comic books survive. And the three-dimensional sex magazines, of course. There you have it, Montag. It didn't come from the Government down. There was no dictum, declaration, no censorship, to start with, no!"

4. "Burn the book. Serenity, Montag. Peace, Montag. Take your fight outside. Better yet, into the incinerator.... Let's not quibble over individuals with memoriums. Forget them. Burn all, burn everything. Fire is bright and fire is clean."

5. "That's the good part of dying; when you've got nothing to lose, you run any risk you want."

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

THE MASTER KEY

Kindling for the ignorant,
Bonfires built up with misconceptions
Of faith, 
With the intentions
 of a cleansing flame,
Unattended and unkempt, 
 It is ever consuming, 
with innumerable lives it claims,
 But still
 there is none to blame.

Venom spewed from the mouths of snakes whom hate Snakes,
Judgment passed by those whom wish not to be judged,
 yet live half-lived lives 
forever serving the idea of Judgement.
But whom holds the gavel, 
 And what force compels it to strike,
And is the hand that holds the gavel
not the same as the hand that  
 clenches the pen?
And when the pen moves, is it acting  upon the same intentions as the gavel?
 And if the intentions are unbiased then why is their judgment? 

Lies backed by lies,
Proof backed by faith,
Faith backed by preference,
Preference backed by bias, 
Bias backed by ignorance,
Ignorance backed by man.

And where in this formula lies the equation, 
 That sums up all variables, 
The fractions,
 and decimals 
that are carried over
by the conception of godliness and ungodliness? 

What lies at the end of the equal sign, 
begins at the end of ignorance.
Self - realization,
 not a lockpick.
But the key that effortlessly slides into the master lock.

- By Chase Kelly (P.O.W.) 

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

VOCAB CANDIDATES

1. Harlequin
2. Juvenile 
3. Delinquents 
4. Contemptible
5. Perished
6. Garment
7. Receptacle 
8. Veiled
9. Toil
10. Retaliation 

Friday, October 17, 2014

VOCAB: Definitions #7

DEFINITIONS:

Pratfall - a fall onto one's buttocks; a stupid and humiliating action.

Bewilderedly - to do something in a state of confusion or disorientation. 

Titillation - a tingling feeling of excitement.

Theremin - an electronic musical instrument. 

Tabloids - similar to a newspaper, but focuses mostly on popular pop culture happenings and drama. 

Centrifuge - a machine that applies centrifugal force to its contents to seperate fluids of different densities. 

Haltingly - done with uncertainty.

Probing - seek to uncover information about something.

Stagnant - having no current or flow and often producing an unpleasant smell as a result.

Cacophony - a harsh, discordant mixture of sounds.

SENTENCES:

Pratfall - Unfortunately, he couldn't slow down his momentum and took an embarrassing pratfall on the wet grass.

Bewilderedly - He awoke in the hospital bed, looking around bewildered, unsure of how he got there.

Titillation - He kissed her cheek and a feeling of titillation overcame her.

Theremin - He waved his hands over the instrument and the theremin began to emit different pitched noises.

Tabloids - Hey, did you see the picture of that alien they found in the tabloids?

Centrifuge - For his science project, he demonstrated the capabilities of his home made centrifuge to the class.


Tuesday, October 14, 2014

VOCAB CANDIDATES

1. Meloncholy
2. Noncombustable
3. Inefficient
4. Haltingly
5. Computed
6. Feigning 
7. Incinerator
8. Bewilderedly
9. Nonexistent 
10. Torrent 

Friday, October 3, 2014

FAHRENHEIT 451 QUESTIONS

What is the significance of the salamander symbol in Fahrenheit 451?

Based on prior mythological knowledge, I can make the accurate assumption that the salamander is incorporated for its connotations relating to fire and flame-retardant capabilities. Salamanders where most closely related to the mythological creature known as the dragon, infamous in folk lore for its fire breathing capabilities. It would be plausible that Guy would have a tattoo, to symbolize his resistance to flame and being burnt. 

Describe Montag at the beginning of the novel.  Do you think he's a hero?  Why/not?

Montag by my standards is certainly not a hero. At least no proof of him being so has been shown in the text thus far. He is a conformist. But he is also doing what he needs to survive. In his defense, based on his lack of knowledge of the past, it is safe to say this way of life is all he has ever known, Something I found interesting about his character, is that he is a "living" contradiction to the statement "ignorance is bliss." Although he is beginning to embody the statement "curiosity killed the cat."