Friday, June 26, 2015

Blog 6: final blog

Please reflect on the course overall for you. What did you learn? About writing? About reading? About yourself?
Think about the texts we read, the film we watched, and the research you did. Were you surprised by anything? Were the topics relevant to you? Please make suggestions for future course topics, films, readings, novels, etc.
What will you do to keep practicing writing in the future?

Friday, June 19, 2015

Blog 5: The House I Live In


Read the following director's statement from Eugene Jarecki about the creation of The House I Live In. If you were to make this film, would you have followed a different process? Think about the sources that you might use to make a point about the topic. 



DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT
(by Eugene Jarecki, from Bmorenews.com)
I have been thinking about making this film for over 20 years. I first met Nannie Jeter, a prominent character in the film, when I was just a few days old coming home from the hospital. From that day on, she became a second mother
to me, and her children and grandchildren a second family. IamwhiteandNannieandher familyareblack,and growing up in the wake of the civil rights movement, I think I imagined we were all living in a post-racial America—a place of greater equality and justice. Yet, as we grew older, our paths diverged; where I found privilege and opportunity, Nannie’s family found a new kind of struggle that re- emerged with a vengeance for black Americans in the post- civil rights era.

When I asked Nannie what had happened, she felt that it was chiefly the rise of drugs in America that had ravaged the lives of people in her family. But the more I talked to experts, the more I heard the same thing: whatever damage drugs do to people has been made far worse by the laws America has enacted to stop them. Suddenly, the so-called “War on Drugs” began rising into view as something I had to investigate and better understand. I wanted to know what it was that had most fundamentally hurt people I love.
With this in mind, I began interviewing people across the country whose families had been pulled into a vicious cycle of drugs and the criminal justice system. Alongside dealers, users, and their family members, I spoke to police, wardens, judges, medical experts, and others to begin to understand how it was that America came to launch a war against its own people.
I interviewed experts who broadened my understanding of the subject in ways I wanted to share with others. I learned that drug abuse is ultimately a matter of public health that has instead been treated as an opportunity for law enforcement and an expanding criminal justice system. I spoke with scientists desperate for a drug policy based on data rather than rhetoric. I saw how this misguided approach has helped make America the world’s largest jailer, imprisoning its citizens at a higher rate per capita than any other nation on earth, and how the drug war has become America’s longest war, now entering its 40th year and costing more than a trillion dollars to date.
For people to understand the scale and urgency of this crisis, I felt that facts, figures, and expert testimony weren’t enough, so I sought out individuals whose lives were directly and deeply shaped by the War on Drugs, hoping their stories would reveal some of the everyday tragedies left in its wake. Ultimately, with my beloved Nannie Jeter as inspiration, THE HOUSE I LIVE IN grew into a larger examination
of race, class, and capitalism in America—of a tragically misguided system that preys upon the least fortunate among us to sustain itself.

—Eugene Jarecki, Director 

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Blog 4: Paper 2 reflection

After submitting your second paper and getting feedback on your first essay, you should feel somewhat differently than you did in your last reflective blog post. How was writing the second essay compared to the first? Did you see any change in the way you approached the topic, the assignment, or the writing process?
Please write a new reflection describing how you wrote your essay for this blog post.

Monday, June 1, 2015

Blog Post 3 Glass Castle

So far in the book, we have read about the narrator's unconventional childhood. Her parents are both neglectful of her well-being and caring about her growth and development. The life lessons they choose to teach her are often difficult ones, but she seems educated and capable as a very young child.

In American culture, parenting is depicted on TV and in movies as one thing: parents caring for children, teaching them life lessons, while facing stress to provide for them. Can you think of what looks like a typical parenting scenario on American culture? Does that depiction line up with how your own family functions? Or do you have more in common with the Walls family?

Write your blog post comparing these situations to your own.