Sunday, May 1, 2011

Discussion Questions 21-22


CHAPTER 21 

1. What are the causes that contribute to the changes in the character of the migrant people? 

The movement changed them; the highways, the camps along the road, the fear of hunger and the hunger itself, changed them. The children without dinner changed them, the endless moving changed them. They were migrants. And the hostility changed them, welded them, united them-hostility that made the little towns group and arm as though to repel an invader, squads with pick handles, clerks and storekeepers with shotguns, guarding the world against their own people.  

2. As a result of the growing numbers of migrant people, what changes take place in the locals? 

There was so many people, the locals started to panic. The people that owned land were scared for their property. Men who had never been hungry saw the eyes of hunger. Men who had never wanted anything very much saw the flare of want in the eyes of the migrants. The locals gathered together to defend themselves. They reassured themselves and each other that they were good and the invaders bad. The locals became cruel and formed units, squads, and armed themselves with clubs, gas, and guns.  

3. How are the “little people” of California similar to the “Okies”? 

Little people or farmers were those who did not own a cannery. Since they didn't, they lost their farms to the great owners, the banks, and the companies who also owned canneries. The little farmers moved into town for awhile and exhausted their credit, friends, and relatives. Then they too went on the highways where the road were crowded with men ready to kill for work.
Both little workers and okies are no longer property owners. Their life belongs to the road, not the land. They both are categorized as invaders to the locals of the west.  

4. Explain this quote: “The great landowners were glad . . . And pretty soon now we’ll have serfs again.” 

Owners of farms and land sent out thousands of handbills to attract people to come work. Most, needing money or food badly, would work for anything as long as it was something. Wages stayed down for workers and the prices of the businesses profits went up. The landowners were glad that the handbills intended purpose had worked for them and continued to not really help the ones in need (Okies, Little Farmers) 

 CHAPTER 22 

5. What are the major differences between Weedpatch and the Hoovervilles? 

Hooverville was a stop on the side of the road full of boxes and people that didn't want them there. Weedpatch is a fenced in, welcoming camp full of tents, and 5 sanitary buildings of toilets, showers, and washtubs. The cops there are elected by the people where in Hooverville they show up on their own and cause mayhem. Cops outside the camp aren't allowed in without a warrant. In Weedpatch, there's a camp committee that helps newcomers and sets the rules. A guard asked the Joads lots of needed questions, like if they had money. Since they had little left they were able to waver the price of a dollar a week and instead just work it out around the camp. Women take care of children and the sanitary units. Theres dances. The people in Weedpatch, unlike Hooverville, work as a family.  

6. Is Weedpatch Steinbeck’s version of Paradise? Is there a serpent? Explain your answers. 

Weedpatch is the best hope for life for people on the road. Since most can't get a job, you don't have to pay to stay there and instead work to be there. The people can continue to look for jobs with no one hassling them about it. It's the best they can do. The serpent of Weedpatch is everyone who lives their. Their all in charge of what goes on in the camp and the rules that govern it.

7. Timothy invites Tom to join Wilkie and him at work, even though it means fewer hours for the Wallaces. How does this action contribution to the “we” theme of the novel? 

Timothy and Wilkie not only fee Tom breakfast, but invite him to come work with them. They did this without even knowing his name. The two men don't worry a whole lot about themselves, but about other people. They have work so they're going to help others find some too. It also contributes to the idea of extended family.  

8. What is the connection between the Bank of the West and the Farmer’s Association? How does the landowner explain this to the men? 

The Farmers Association is owned by the Bank of the West. Thomas, the one providing work, says that the bank owns most of his valley, and its got paper on everything it doesn't own. The wage the bank set for workers is 25 cents, and if Thomas was to go against that, it would cause unrest. He has to meet his paper to the bank. Tom found out that the association were the ones who sent the men to burn down Hooverville.

9. Why does the Association dislike the government camps? 

They don't like the government camps because they can't get cops or a deputy in them. The people make their own laws, and they can't arrest anyone without a warrant. They're scared they'll organize themselves. 

10. What does Ma mean when she says, “We come home to our own people . . . Why, I feel like people again,”? 

She has found people that actually care about others. They think more about the 'we' than the 'I' and help each other when someone's in need. She found people that were like them who were getting along just fine.  

11. Describe the atmosphere at Ma’s tent. What contributes to that atmosphere? 

Theres a few different atmospheres: Ma seems to have a feeling that the family isn't good enough to be there. They're dirty and feel the need to make a good impression to the committee. 
Pa doesn't believe that there's actually people that care in the camp. When he finds out that the manager stopped by for a cup of coffee, he accused him of snooping and wanted Ma to tell him what he actually wanted. He's not used to people being kind. 
Their not wanted wherever they go, and they continue to move around. All of which contributes to the atmospheres in the tent. 

12. What does the “sin-woman” represent? How does Rose of Sharon react? How does Ma deal with her when she appears again? 

The sin woman represents sin itself or the devil. She turns things that can make a person happy, like dancing, into a sin. She make everyone in the camp out to be sinful. The happier a person is, the more sinful they are in her eyes. Rose of Sharon is afraid, and when she shows up again, Na gets angry and tells her to leave.  

13. The members of the “committee” have a sense of self-importance. Is self-importance of value? Explain. 

The women's committee takes turns being the chairman. Self-importance makes sure that the chairman of the week is the one doing her job. Also, being on the committee, you have to be elected by the people in the camp. If they worry too much about themselves they won't last on the committee for long. Self importance isn't of too much value. 


 

14. How do the children handle adapting to their new environment? 

Winfield adapts better than Ruthie. She always tries to impress Winfield, but when she charges in on the neighboring kids mallet game, she scares them. The kids don't want to play with someone that acted the way she did. Winfield watched Ruthie take over their game, scare away the children, play by herself, and then run away crying. Winfield, like he was asked to, waited until the start of the next game to play.  

15. What do Pa, Al, and John discover about the availability of work? 

They discovered there was no availability to work. No one was hiring.  

16. After their emotionally torturous ordeal, what are Ma and Pa finally realizing? 

They're realizing that they've finally found a nice place and the rest of the family that left will never see it. They won't know whether or not Connie or Noah died or survived. They wish they could have all stayed together to share the nice place they've found.

17. The family is temporarily happy. What events foreshadow the problems to come? 

Pa and Ma talk about ducks, and pa says that he saw the ducks wedgin south. This means that winters coming early. He also talks about doves sitting close together on the wires - this could mean something - if you get too close to each other, the business will zap you. 

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Chapter 19


Summary: It explained the first immigrants to California, and how the U.S stole it from Mexico. The farmers that work there, farm from a distance or farm on paper. Migrants are compared to ants, which is another comparison to animals or living things that get squashed.

Themes:

People Vs. Moloch 

Chapter 18


Summary: The Joad family reaches California, and wants to cross the desert that night. Some of the family bathes in the river to cool off while Ma and Rosashorn sit with Granma who’s ill and hallucinating. The family realizes their money is running low, and another man in the river with the Joad’s isn’t helping their situation. He basically tells them the honest truth about California, and they learn what the word “Okie” means. Noah leaves the family, and heads down river. Ma feels like the more the family separates the more she starts to lose it. That night, they run into an agricultural inspector who wanted to check if they had any produce. He allows them to pass because Ma convinced him that Granma was sick, even though she had unknowingly died earlier that night.

Themes:

Strength of Women

People Vs. Moloch

Importance of Land and Family

People:

Joad Family

Police Man – Ma almost hits him over the head when he tells them they have to be gone by that time the next day

Man in River – tells them about California and how it’s not worth going to.

Agricultural Inspector 

Chapter 17


Summary: Bugs – farmers in their cars. There’s a suggestion that these people are plagues that are setting into California, or that they’ll get squashed like bugs normally do.
            People come together as one, and help each other as they continue to move.

Themes:

We vs. I

People vs. Moloch 

Chapter 16


Summary: A connecting rod broke on the Joads car, and since Ma refused to split up the family, they stop at a campsite. Tom and Casy go off to find a new rod at a junkyard where they find a man with only one eye who feels sorry for himself because of his ‘tragic’ loss. Tom calls him pathetic. They find a connecting rod and buy that and a socket wrench. After the truck is fixed, they head back to camp to find the family. The campsite tries to swindle money out of them for trying to park in the campsite, so instead they park along the road. A man laughs at Pa for saying their heading to California because there isn’t really work there.

Themes:

Strength of women

Meaning of family

People vs. Moloch

People:

The one eyed man – he tries to give up on life just because he lost an eye.

Joad Family 

Chapter 15


Summary: A waitress named Mae and a cook named Al work at a coffee shop on Route 66. Mae likes when truckers come in to the store because they not only leave the largest tips, but also because she believes that farmers are thieves. A man and two boys walk in and ask for a loaf of bread, but Mae doesn’t necessarily want to give them the bread because she works at a diner, not a grocery store. Al convinces her to give the children some bread. Mae sells a fifteen cents piece of candy to the two boys for a penny instead. Truckers that see her do this leave her an extra-large tip.

Themes:

We vs. I

People vs. Molach

People: Rich people, truckers. Okies, Al & Mac

Settings: Diner 

Chapter 14


Summary: People are starting to realize there are a lot more people in trouble than just a few. There are not just trickles of people and families heading west, but floods of them heading west, and sleeping and camping on the sides of the road. The Western citizens are afraid that the farmers will unite and revolt.

Themes:

We Vs. I

Meaning of Family

People: None

Chapter 13


Characters:

Sairy Wilson

Ivy Wilson

Summary: This chapter reinforces the idea of the connection to the land. The family grew up on the land they just moved from and now being disconnected from it everything is changing. The Joad’s dog got hit by a car and Rose of Sharon thought that seeing the dog die would affect her baby. Grandpa got sick and died, and the turtle continued on.
            The Wilsons, in the same predicament as the Joad’s decide to tag team their way to California. They offer to assist them to not only help burry their grandfather, but help fix their truck. It enforces the idea of family and friendship.

Themes:

Connection to the Land

The meaning of family – the strangers  (Wilsons) who help the Joad family. 

Chapter 12


Summary: Worries of this journey are brought into perspective. People and businesses try to cheat people out of their money. Cars continue to break down, and parts become harder and harder to buy when the salesperson swindles them out of their most needed money. 

Themes: 

People vs. Moloch 

Chapter 11


Summary: (Poetic Chapter) This chapter is what really disconnects the people from the land. There are farmers that work on it, but they’re not the real owners of the land – they aren’t part of it. The machines are starting to take over what man is used to doing. Moloch is ruling.

Themes

Nature vs. Machine

People vs. Moloch

Chapter 10


Summary: The Joad family is putting all their faith in the handbill, they don’t really know what California has in store for them – they can only hope it’s good. They talk about Route 66 and how their travels are going to go from Oklahoma. Casy, the old preacher, is allowed to travel with the Joad family to California even though Grandpa said that preachers are bad luck. Grandpa was all for leaving until they were really about to leave – he didn’t want to leave the land he was connected to. His family gives Grandpa a sleeping drug, and from their they start to head west.

Themes:

People vs. Moloch 

People:

The Joad Family 

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Chapter 9:


Summary:

The family has to sell most of their belongings so they can take their whole family to California. There are some serious sentimental feelings towards some of their things, but they know it’s for the best. The farmers continue to be ripped off by the business or bank.

Themes:

We vs. I

People vs. Moloch

Chapter 8:


Characters:

Grandma
Grandpa
Noah: oldest son, impression that he’s deformed but we don’t know how. He’s not interested in anything.
Al: the younger brother - mechanic of the family – he looks up to Tom because he killed someone, he thinks Tom is cool. 
Rose of Sharon: Rosashorn – younger sister – pregnant – married to Connie Rivers.
Ruthie: younger sister
Winfield: youngest brother

Summary:

Tom comes home to find his family getting ready to leave to California. His family updates him on everything that happened during his 4 years in jail. His grandparents and the rest of his family doesn’t believe that he was let out of prison and instead escaped.

Themes:

Importance of family

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Chapter 7

Characters:

Joe

Jim

Salesman

*Used car lot –taking advantage of people in need.

Themes: People vs. Moloch - the bank is influencing others and businesses and making it seem like their wrongdoing are okay. 

Chapter 6

Characters:

Muley Graves → the man who can’t leave the land. Muley – mule head. Graves – death.

Willy Feely → the tractor man/deputy – sheriff/the man owned by the back/the $3 a day man. 

Tom Joad

Jim Craig

Themes:

Importance of land

Importance of family

We vs. I. 

The turtle – keeps on going no matter what.

Words of the Day 4/11 - 4/12

Zenith: Noun: The shooting star was past the zenith in the sky where the boy was standing.

Scuttle: The boy carried scuttle of coal up from the cellar.

Declivity: The declivity of my running possibilies decreased when I reached high school.

Bemuse: The bemused teacher wondered the student was talking about in their essay.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Words of the Week 4/6/11

Rivulet: Noun: I ran by the small rivulet in the road.

Germinate: Verb: Jayce germinated into a mean person when she continued to make fun of me.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Words of the Day 4/4

Pique: Noun: The pique of the party was caused by Anna's stupidity.

Imperturbability: Adj: I'm imperturbabile towards the thought of track.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Words of the Week 3/31/11

1) Pique: Noun: a feeling of irritation or resentment resulting from a slight, esp. to one's pride
2) Imperturbability: Adj: unable to be upset or excited; calm
3) Rivulet: Noun: a very small stream
4) Germinate: Verb: being to grow and put out shoots after a period of dormancy.
5) Zenith: Noun: the point in the sky or celestial sphere directly above an observer.
6) Scuttle: Noun: a metal container with a sloping hinged lid and a handle, used to fetch and store coal for a domestic fire.
7) Declivity: Noun: a downward slope
8) Bemuse: Verb: puzzle, confuse, or bewilde
9) Petulant: Adj: childishly sulky or bad-tempered
10) Dissipate: Verb: disperse or scatter

Friday, January 28, 2011

Chapter 6

1. The news reporter went to Gatsby's house because he 'had heard Gatsby's name around his office in a connection which he either wouldn't reveal or didn't fully understand. The news reporter had heard some of the rumors that had been spread about Gatsby so he was trying to find out himself whether or not they were true.

2. Dan Cody is a man who owns a yacht where he and Gatsby met one day when Cody had set anchor over the most indiginous flat on Lake Superior. Gatsby borrowed a rowboat and pulled out to Cody's boat to inform him that the wind might catch him and break him up in half an hour. Transactions in Montana copper made him a millionaire. He made Gatsby his personal assistant and looked after Cody on his drunken binges. This gave Gatsby a healthy respect for the dangers of alcohol and convinced him not to become a drinker himself. When Cody died, his mistress recieved the money instead, and so Gatsby then dedicated himself to becoming a wealthy and successful man.

3. He wanted nothing less of Daisy than that she should go to Tom and say: " I never loved you."

4. Tom imagined that Gatsby is a bootlegger because 'these newly rich people are just big bootleggers, you know." Tom also feels like there's something going on between them because Gatsby "knows your wife."

5. There were the same people, or at least the same sort of people, the same profusion of champagne, the same many-colored, many-keyed commotion. There was unpleasantness in the air, a pervading harshness that hadn't been there before. It was different because Tom and Daisy were there.

6. He wants everything as they were before he left for war and have Daisy be able to 'understand' like she used to.

7. His real name is Jay Gatz and he's from North Dakota. He changed his name when he was 17 so he ould reinvent himself.

8. Dan Cody gave him to inspiration to become wealthy and successful.

9. Daisy didn't really enjoy the party just wanted to be there because of Gatsby which shows that it was probably because Tom was there too. Gatsby wanted to impress her but because he felt distant from her and didn't think she enjoyed the party he was depressed.

10. Daisy gives Tom a pencil so he can write down the numbers and addresses of other woman. She's trying to make it easier on herself for when she tells Tom she's leaving him for Gatsby. She usually would care, but now because she has Gatsby it seems less important. She's shooing him off on other woman.. not like he objects.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

1/26/11

Aspirations: Noun: I have high aspirations to WIN state again this year.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

1/25/11

Exasperate: V: He exasperated the class when he said he was giving us a quiz.

Affable: Adj: The affable son made his mother breakfast in bed.

Chapter 5 Gatsby

1.    For Gatsby, Nick invited Daisy to his house so they can be reunited. Nick also allows Gatsby to have his lawn mowed so it would be presentable for her. Gatsby, as a payment for the favor, offered Nick a business deal, which seemed really fishy to him. He cuts Gatsby refuses the proposal, ‘because the offer was obviously and tactlessly for a service to be rendered, I had no choice except to cut him off there’.
2.    Gatsby knocking down the clocks backs of the motif of time, and symbolizes the stopping of time that Gatsby needs with Daisy. They have met again, time has stopped.
3.    Nick asked Daisy is the chauffeur’s nose was affected by gasoline which refers back to her butler (the same man) who once lived in New York that had a silver service for people. He polished silver until it began to ‘affect his nose…’
4.    It had been 5 years from that November
5.    Daisy cries over Gatsby’s shirts made of exquisite material that he continued to throw onto his bed. ‘They’re such beautiful shirts, it makes me sad because I’ve never seen such - beautiful shirts before. She was crying more over Gatsby, and her crying over objects suggests that she’s materialistic. It shows that Gatsby is not only real, but that he has money which provides her with more comfort.
6.    Mr. Klipspringer is Mr. Gatsby’s piano man that doesn’t really know how to play piano or hasn’t had much practice. He’s always around Gatsby’s house just hanging out.
7.    Gatsby told Daisy that he could see the green light of her house across the bay, that was usually lit all throughout the night. At the time, they couldn’t find it through the thick fog. ‘The colossal significance of that light had now vanished forever.”
8.    The fifth chapter of Gatsby is most important part in the novel because it’s when Daisy and Gatsby finally come together and are reunited. It’s the inciting event to their own subplot, which is just the beginning.
9.    Something that was funny in chapter five was Nick’s joke about the butler/chauffer’s nose being affected by gasoline.
10.    The rain in chapter five was important to Gatsby because before Daisy got there it was raining, but when they were finally together again the rain stopped – symbolizing his problems are not only gone, but also his want for her has stopped because she is there.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Prestigious: Adj: The prestigious president spoke out to his people about the shooting in Arizona and said we 'have to do better'.

Prominant: Adj: Stephen Curry is much more prominent than Blake Griffen.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Video Questions

1. Fitzgerald uses the names he has in the story to reflect on where they come from and what their social class is. He also uses West/East Egg as symbols to show who is new/old money.


2. If you were old money you wouldn’t be nearly as wealthy or feel as good about yourself for having worked hard for what you have. I’d want to be new money because it shows that you’re ambition, aren’t lazy, and don’t have to depend on other people to help live.

3.
A) Valley of Ashes: symbol of the death of the American Dream. People who live there have lost the ability to achieve it.

B) Eyes of T.J. Eckleburg: symbolizes the eyes of God, and can make people question if he really does care if people live like that. It’s an old billboard that’s left in the Valley of Ashes.

C) Green Light: His dream of Daisy.  

D) Mantle clock: symbolizes the stopping of time, and that Gatsby wants to repeat the past.

E) Fay: Daisy’s last name means Fairy which can link back to her different tones of voices she uses. You can’t really trust all of what she says so that could be why her voice is ‘full of money’.. or maybe just that she’s from wealth.

4. Tom is old money, racist, and a complete womanizer. He’s married to Daisy yet has affair with other woman which proves him to be careless, unthoughtful, and selfish. Gatsby is new money, kind, and generous. His dream is to have Daisy yet she is stuck with Tom.

5. Daisy’s decision is mainly decided on who has safer money, and at the hotel she discovered it wasn’t Gatsby. Even though she loves him, she can’t leave Tom because of that comfort. Gatsby’s dream of having Daisy wash crushed and the idea of money being the only thing that is able to succeed in fulfilling the American Dream was something Daisy didn’t realize. Love is needed as well.

6. The Jazz age was right before the Great Depression and WWII. It was reflects back on the roaring twenties and it was where people made money off of music and were able to celebrate with it.  

7. Tom made the real downfall because he knew how Gatsby got his money. He knew that Daisy was basically a gold digger so by revealing this information she would remain his. Even though she knows that Gatsby would love her more, she’s weak and can’t stand up to Tom. This was at Plaza Hotel in NYC.. where dreams were supposed to be made not broken. 

1/21/11

Decadent: Adj: I am decadent because I eat double happy burgers every Friday.

Pastoral: Adj: I deleted farmville so I would be less pastoral.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Words of the Day 1/20/11

Mesmerize: Verb: I was able to mesmerize the baby with it's light-up mobile.

Sardonic: Adj: I sardonically repeated Anna's stupid comment to Mapi.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Words of the Week 1/19

Mesmerize: Verb: hold the attention of (someone) to the exclusion of all else or so as to transfix them

Sardonic: Adj: grimly mocking or cynical

Decadent: Adj: characterized by or reflecting a state of moral or cultural decline.

Pastoral: Adj: portraying or evoking country life, typically in a romanticized or idealized form.

Rendezvous: Noun: a meeting at an agreed time and place, typically between two people.

Indulgence: Noun: the state or attitude of being indulgent or tolerant

Prestigious: Adj: inspiring respect and admiration; having high status

Prominent: Adj: important; famous

Expatriate: Noun: a person who lives outside their native country

Exasperate: Verb: irritate intensely; infuriate

Affable: Adj: friendly, good-natured, or easy to talk to

Aspirations: Noun: a hope or ambition of achieving something

Gatsby Chapter 4

1. "One time he killed a man who had found out that he was the nephew to Von Hindenburg and second cousin to the devil."

2.) It reinforces the time of the roaring twenties, and it shows that time passes and changes. Gatsby wants to repeat the past which is impossible.

3.) Owl Eyes: He was the one who noticed the books were separated
Mr. Wolfsheim:
Fay: Like a fairy
Claud Roosevelt: allusion
Klipspringer, Poles, Mulready's, Cecil Roebuck, Cecil Schoen, Gulick: New Money
Chester Beckers, Leeches, Bunsen, Webster Civet, Hornbeams, Blackbuck, Willie Voltairs, Ismays, Chrysties, Edgar Beaver, Clarence Endive- Old Money

4.) 'It was a rich cream color, bright with nickel, swollen here and there in its monstrous tool boxes, and terraced with a labyrinth of wind-shields that mirrored a dozen suns. Sitting own behind many layers of glass in a sort of green leather conservatory, we started to town.'

5.) He told Nick that he is the son of some wealthy people in Middle West (they're all dead), he grew up in America but went to Oxford to get an education because going there was a family tradition. Nick didn't really believe he was educated at Oxford because when Gatsby was saying it he hurried the words out and also 'choked on them' as if it bothered him. When Nick asked what part of the 'Middle West' he was from he said San Francisco... that's not in the Middle West.
  Gatsby also mentioned that when his family died he became rich, traveled, and collected jewels and things of worth, hunted, painted, and did things for himself 'to forget something very sad that had happened to him long ago.'

6.) He gave the police officer a white card.. I would think of it like a get out of jail free card because he stated that, "I was able to do the commissioner a favor once, and he sends me a Christmas card every year." He obviously has hookups.

7.) Mr. Wolfsheim went to lunch a wore a shirt with cuff buttons that were made of human molars. He was the man who fixed the world series in 1919.

8.) Rosey was shot by a gang which reflects on the theme of the roaring twenties because it was organized crime.

9.) Daisy was always popular and they were together before he had to leave for the war. Jordan remembered the first time she saw him with her on the curb sitting in his white car. Rumors spread that she went to say goodbye to a soldier going overseas in New York. Gatsby came back and bought the house so it would attract her attention.

10.) Tom ran into a wagon owned by a girl who was his first affair.

11.) He wants Nick to get Daisy to go to his house and have Gatsby come so they can be reunited.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

1/12/10

Fractiousness: Adj: Jayce's fractiousness makes her seem like a child.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Chapter 2

1. The Valley of Ashes is a “fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens; where ashes take the forms of houses and chimneys and rising smoke and, finally, with a transcendent effort, of men who move dimly and already crumbling through the powdery air.”
 It’s like a ghost town. Wilson’s live there. It symbolizes represents spiritual death. It is tied in with the Death of the American dream (or the death of Gatsby’s American Dream).

2. T.J Ecklebury has the eyes of God, which represents the loss of religion. Ties in with the Valley of Ashes, as it is a spiritless ghost that looks over the wasteland.

3. 'He was a blond, spiritless man, anaemic, and faintly handsome.' He also has light blue eyes. He's different than his wife in that he is content living the way he is in the Valley of Ashes.. she wants to get out, but he's not bothered by it. George is spiritually dead because of how he lives and having it be okay.

4. New York is a place where people are able to make their 'American dream(s)' come true. It's a big town where people can make money.

5. The Town Tattle is a gossip magazine, which reinforces the idea of gossip throughout the cities and characters.

6. They live below the apartment that Tom and Myrtle have their affair in. He is not very successful, he needs an entry into the photography business.

7. She’s a gossiper who seems to always end up in everyone else’s business. She's fake and likes attention.

8. Tom started the lie about his marriage with Daisy saying that she’s Catholic and that’s why they couldn’t get a divorce. He tells people and Myrtle this so they don't ask why he won't leave Daisy. Tom doesn't want to leave her... just wants some extra booty on the side.

9. Catherine wants the American dream but made the mistake of marrying George who wasn't honest about his occupation. By living in the Valley of Ashes and marrying Tom she can't achieve wealth and happiness. By being with Tom she has a better chance and so she tries to act higher in class when she's with him. An example of class is when she waited for the lavender-colored, gray upholstered cab and also when she asked for a police dog. She wants the best.

10. When Myrtle asked for a police dog she was basically asking to be higher up in class... but because they had no more she ended up with a mut, like herself. She just can't raise her class status.. even if she's in New York.

11. Catherine goes to Europe to appear more ‘worldly’ but ends up getting ripped off in the first two days she’s there. (If she was ‘worldly’ she would have known better and would have been smarter while there.) She tries to act like she has money even though she doesn’t. Catherine is trying to be something she’s not to give people the idea that she’s higher in class. She's fake.

12. She says he is related to Kaizer, which makes people think that he is from old money when really he's from new money. She suggests he's a bad person but she really doesn't know him because he's mysterious... which also intrigues her.

13. Catherine regrets marrying George because she thought she was going to be able to achieve making her American Dream. If he actually did what he had told her they would have money and they wouldn't have been living in the Valley of Ashes. However, because they are, she ended up being considered a mut in a lower class than what she could have been with someone else.

14. Even though Tom is cheating on Daisy he still doesn't want to leave her.. and so he continues to cheat on her with Myrtle who starts to repeatedly say his wife's name. He gets angry and so to silence her he hits her in the face and breaks her nose. This proves that Myrtle really is just some hoe that he really doesn't care about. This could be upsetting to Myrtle because Tom is her escape and her ability to get the American dream... he doens't care about her nearly enough to help her or leave Daisy. 

1/11/10

Supercilious: Adj: I look superciliously at Anna because well, I can.

Infinitesimal: Adj: They made fun of the infinitesimal girl and called her anorexic.

Monday, January 10, 2011

1/10/11

Levity: Noun: The levity of the suicide class was rather inappropriate and was taken offensively to the speaker.

Extemporize: Verb: He chose to extemporize during the play when he forgot his lines.

Friday, January 7, 2011

1/7/11

Colossal: Adj: Dannyis colossal...seriously.. and no, not in muscle mass.

Complacency: Noun: Our team has become complacent.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

1/6/11

Feigned: Noun: She feigned sadness when her friends cat died.

Languidly: Adj: I languidly got off the couch to head to basketball practice.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Chapter 1 Study Questions:

1. Hope and dream are mentioned most likely because the main theme of the story is about people's want for the 'American Dream', to succeed.

2. Some of Nicks advantages go back to the idea of new money and old money. He works for what he has but his family does have some money from his great grandfathers harware business. Nick is able to travel from the west to the east and can maintain an eighty dollar payment for a house rental (even if it's not quite ideal) monthy. He keeps his judmements to himself for instance when Jordon told him about Tom cheating on his cousin, he didn't confront him. He also kept to himself when Tom was arrogant and made racist comments throughout the first chapter.

3. June 7th, 1922.

4. Nick seems like a pretty well set man in that he has money but doesn't flaunt it and is very kind but doesn't necessarily show too much emotion. He's able to listen to his cousin Daisy talk about her stressful life with Tom, and also Tom talk about all his 'scientifically proven' books he has read and have made him upset. Nick being the narrarator of this book I think will only make it better because he seems to sit on the outside of things rather than being involved in a lot of them. He's trustworthy and can be understood.

5. 'She was a slender, small-breasted girl, with an erect carriage, which she accentuated by throwing her body backward at the shoulders like a young cadet.' This could mean one of two things. One, she is confident about who she is and likes to sit up straight and show it like a 'cadet.' Two...she may just like the attention.

6. He thinks he has seen her somewhere before, and she seemed to know him too because he lived in West Egg. He later at the end of chapter one realizes he has seen her off of golf magazines. He remembers that he had heard a story of her that was unpleasant.. but he had forgotten it.

7. Tom's behavior shows that he's a racist, a sexist, and a womanizer. He needs more than one woman, he gets upset about colored people in books, and doesn't think Jordan should be able to be as successful as she is in golf.

8. Throughout chapter 1 he describes her voice in basically two different ways; happy/cheerful/ecstatic and sad/gloomy. She is said to have 'turbulent' emotions. "As if his absense quickened something within her, Daisy leaned forward again, her voice glowing and singing." "With an expression of unthoughtful sadness." "With tense gayety"
  It seems she plays this shining front but has all these other emotions not really expressed.

9. It is explaining Daisy herself. The best thing for a girl to be is a beautiful little fool... or in other words a complete gold digger like she is. She will have a nice home, money... and a man who cheats on you.

10. I feel that Tom is an ahole who is wealthy and likes to show it. He has and likes to be with his horses like most people with money did. He moved to the East most likely because he wanted to get closer to his other love affair in New York. I don't really think they're 'allied' but more opposites which can link back to the idea of 'new/old money'. Tom only cares about himself which there makes him opposite of Nick and also makes him a terrible husband. He continues to cheat on his wife even though she and everyone else knows.
Tom read a book called 'The Rise of the Colored Empires' about how if the white people don't look out the colored people will become the more dominant race. He get upset which shows he's a racist. Nick stayed silent throughout the conversation of the book.

11. The difference between Nick and the Buchanan's is that Nick is able to keep his mouth shut where they are not. They're old money and Nick is new money.

Words of the Day 1/11

Wan: Adj: The girls on the other team were wan after they lost the game by fourty points.

Prodigality: Noun: People who found little gold in the California Gold Rush were prodigal and lost everything because of it. 

Words of the Week

Wan: Adj: pale and giving the impression of illness or exhaustion

Prodigality: Adj: spending money or resources freely and recklessly; wastefully extravagant.

Feigned: Verb: pretend to be affected by (a feeling, state, or injury)

Languidly: Adj: (of a person, manner, or gesture) displaying or having a disinclination for physical exertion or effort; slow and relaxed

Colossal: Adj: extremely large

Complacency: Noun: a feeling of smug or uncritical satisfaction with oneself or one's achievements

Levity: Noun: humor or frivolity, esp. the treatment of a serious matter with humor or in a manner lacking due respect

Extemporizing: Verb: compose, perform, or produce something such as music or a speech without preparation; improvise

Supercilious: Adj: behaving or looking as though one thinks one is superior to others

Infinitesimal: Adj: extremely small

Fractiousness: Adj: easily irritated; bad-tempered