Elizabeth Bennet is the protagonist in the
novel, Pride and Prejudice by Jane
Austen. She is referred by her close friends and family as ‘Eliza’ or ‘Lizzy’
and is the second daughter out of 5, she is considered the favourite daughter
by her father and the least favourite by her mother. Her character qualities include that she is lovely, clever,
quick witted. The reader is positioned to admire her strong opinions,
independence and wit. Elizabeth overcomes the conventions of her class-bound society
to find romantic happiness with Mr Darcy. Along the way she has to push aside the society pressures of finding a husband, she rejects Mr Collins as she does not love him. This rejection of his offer as she refuses to marry unless she is in love would be an appealing character trait to many readers who would relate this. Even though at the beginning of the
novel she has a mistaken impression of Mr Darcy as a rude, overly proud but as the
novel progress she realises her inaccuracy in her initial prejudice against Mr
Darcy as he is actually a man of noble character.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Monday, May 7, 2012
Short Story Rationale (rough idea) - The Boxer
The aspects of journey that I will be exploring
in my short story are physical and inner journeys. The protagonist of the story
is a young boxer who joined the Jimmy Sharman boxing tent to learn how to
defend himself. The setting is the return to his home town for the local show.
The Boxer has learnt about himself though the many fights he has had. The
concept of journey in my story is that life is a circle and you have the option
to either repeating the journey or going down different path. I will represent
the concept of journey in the story through having a linear structure and the
setting will be in the boxing ring. The techniques used will be a flashback to the
boxer’s childhood and imagery of the boxing ring. The attitudes unpinning the
story that is you have control of your own journey.
My Daddy's a Diver Short Story Review
My Daddy’s a
Diver meets the short story genre requirements well except in a few areas,
an example being that it is only written from one perspective and it doesn’t have
a balance of showing and telling in the story. The story does meet many of the short
story genre requirements, one being that the story is based within a 24 hour
period. Another example is that it has a restricted setting which is the ocean
and their home. The story was a restricted number of characters; the father,
the daughter and the fish. The purpose of the story is to evoke feelings of
love, loss and companionship. The story connects on an emotional level with the
reader, the emotions it arouses in the reader are sadness, pity, hope and love. An example of how the uses language effectively
is “lifting its seal he let the seawater in, bathing his face, easing the sadness,”
this effectively shows how strongly the dad feels about the loss of his wife
and the burden of grief he has been left with. The values that underpin this text
are love and the importance of having a partner to share your life with. The type
of journey evident in the story is inner journey. This is shown by the realization of the
father from the death of his wife that there can be hope and redemption of the
new life and love from his daughter. The
story is very effective as it has strong imagery of loss but loss is also
represented in the killing of the fish’s companion. The story also is effective
as it shows the value of love one has for their partner in life and that love
is such a previous thing and must be cherished.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Unpolished Gem Homework Part 3 – What does this section say about “Journey”? Justify your response by referring to the text and quoting from it.
In the third part of Alice Pung’s novel,
Unpolished Gem it represents the concept of ‘Journey’ through the text as it highlights
the physical journey and also shows the inner journey they take as well. In the
beginning of this section, Alice describes her family’s achievement of finally
having their own ‘great Australian dream’ come true and how her family see immigrants
who just arrived in Australia starting to take their own journey. Alice refers
the ‘Great Australian dream’ in this section which is the desire to own a large
house and to have decent or well paying job. Alice’s family in the section seem to have
ended their journey in reaching their ‘Great Australian Dream’ as they are
moving into their new house. The physical journey conveyed in this section is the physical moving into their new house,
which also has inner journey aspect of
making their dreams come true from when they first moved to Australia. Alice subtly
conveys the aspects of inner journey in this section by using several different
angles. Many layers of meanings are shown in her inner journey, example from the text
being, “Gone were the days of where a one-dollar plastic brown vinyl coat a
birthday present from the government.” This sentence from the text makes the
reader look deeper back through her life, like how her family were once
immigrants to Australia and how their attitude has changed since then. Alice
and her family watch new immigrants arrive like they did once before, but they
feel pity, guilt, resentment and have a different understanding. They now
understand how to integrate into society by trying to remove the stereotype
about Asian’s and peasantry and how they have lost the amazement they once had.
Another angle of inner journey Alice expresses in the text is about the pressures
she had as a child to be successful for her parents as they work so hard for
Alice to have a better life. The text shows this pressure Alice feels as a
child, “parents killing themselves with dangerous chemicals just so you can
live a comfortable life, there no comfort within” (p.136). This section
explores the physical and inner journeys Alice’s family have been through to
build their life in Australia.
Friday, April 27, 2012
Unpolished Jem Part 1 Homework- Narrative
The
Bald Sparrow
Crack!
Crack! Went the eggs in the tall oak tree, there were three little eggs waiting
to be hatched. Large jagged cracks started to appear through the outer shell of
the eggs as they wobbled, the little nestlings trying to break free. The two
baby black feathered sparrows hatched from their turquoise blue eggs and the
mother called one Arnold and the other Harold. The mother waited in paiently
for her third baby to erupt from its shell, but it did not. The third egg was
not even moving and it did not look like the rest either thought the mother
bird. It was a golden brown colour which was very different to the other eggs.
The mother bird fed her hungey chicks, Harold and Arnold and then continued to sit on
the last egg for as long as it took to hatch. It took another week before the
mother bird finally heard tapping sounds and she looked down to see a tiny
crack forming on the egg. The egg slit in two to reveal a baby bird with brown tuft
and a large ugly bald head inside her nest.
“What
the hell is this ugly thing?” The mother bird thought as she stared speechlessly
at it. She couldn’t think of what to call
‘it’ so she called it Noname.
As
Noname grew older mother bird noticed more and more strange things about him,
like he didn’t have black feathers or a short blunt beak like Arnold and Harold
had. Noname looked completely different to his brothers, he had brown feathers
and a very sharp beak.
One
day Harold and Arnold were teasing Noname for being bald and different. No
matter how much Noname tried he couldn’t get them to stop calling him names.
“Weirdo,
loser, I hope you fall out of the tree Noname” called Arnold and Harold.
“I
am just the same as you, just leave me alone!” yelled Noname despairingly. It
was no use as the more he tried to be like them, the more different he seemed
from them. Noname’s bald head soon turned to pearl white feathers and his wings
became twice as long as his brothers. It was always so humiliating to be different;
he just wanted to be like his brothers with black feathers.
But
one day Noname realised that he didn’t need to fit in with his brothers and maybe being different was better. On that day Noname
decided to leave the nest, his brothers
and his mother bird to go off and have his own adventures. He decided he would
pick his own name which would be Eagle.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
English Homework- Bonfire
An early childhood memory was one of lighting
a bonfire with my cousin Anne, on a pitch black night during the summer
holidays. I remember my dad lighting a match and it rolling through the air and
landing on the kindling with a burst of flaming embers. The sparks of fire grew
hotter which engulfed the large logs spreading light around Anne and I. The
trails of baby embers flying towards the night sky drew our eyes to the
billions of twinkling lights above. I marveled at how clearly the stars shone as we sat by the bonfire, but to Anne
they were so familiar. As the flames dimed the quietness of the night was more
noticeable over the crackling coals. As Anne lived a long way from town you
couldn’t hear the city noises that I was used too, instead there were the
sounds of the birds and the dogs barking. We laughed together as we loaded
marshmallows upon our roast sticks and waved them over the shimmering coals. We
shared stories of our previous term at school and enjoyed the friendship we
have. It is always fun visiting Anne at her property as it gives me an insight into
life living on the land which is very different to my life on the Gold Coast.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Research Activity - Vietnam War
When did it occur?
- last for 10 years from 1962-1972
- countries involved were America, Australia, France, south Vietnam and north Vietnam
- Australian 60,000 personnel were involved
- first protests were small and non-violent
- in the early year Australias involment in the war was not widely opposed,
- As Australias commitment grew, as conscripts began to make up a large percentage of those being deployed and killed
- the public increasingly came to believe that the war was being lost, oppostion grew
- early 1970's more than 200,000 people marched in the streets of major cities in protest
- final stages of the war public opion began to change in 1969 55% of australians favoured withdrawing the troops.
- during 1970 and 1971 huge protests called Vietnam Moratoriums (stop the war) saw hundreds of thousands of people take to the streets to protest.
- Australia's national service scheme was introduced in 1964
- during the early years of the war, when Australia's contribution was limited to member of the regular army the public was disinterested
- only when the commitment increased to include national servicemen, particulary after 1968 Tet Offensive, did wide spread opposition to australia's participation in teh war develop
- after 1968 both United States and Australia began to withraw troops from Vietnam, teh period of major protest.
- they didnt have a warm welcome home
- arrived at the dead of night
- people blamed them for the war and the way it had been conducted
- many soldiers had been abused as baby killers , rapists and murders on their return
- by 1987 attitudes towards the vets had changed they were given a welcome home parade in Sydney, 25,000 vets marched to the cheers of several hundred thousand onlookers
- many stories of disturbed veterans suffering from post-tramatic stress disorder and continuing to suffer from their time in Vietnam
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