Schindler's List is a book about Oskar
Schindler's life in the time of the Holocaust. Oskar was born in Austria were
he worked under his father as an engineer of steam powered engines, this is where he
discovered his passion for running a business. At the beginning of the
war Oskar was offered a job, that he accepted, by the Nazi party to move to Crakow, Poland as an agent. Oskar originally
sees the Holocaust as an opportunity to exploit the cheap labour of Jewish people and make large amounts of money. He never hated the Jews like many people and while
having conversations with a Jew he talked to them just as respectably
as to anyone else. He bought an enamel factory off of a Jewish accountant at the
beginning of the war when Jewish people still had the right to own a business
although they were not aloud to get paid for working. As a result Oskar
employed a lot of Jewish people since the labour was cheap. As the war
progressed Jewish people were sent to ghettos and then concentration camps. The
labour that Oskar provided saved the Jewish people from being sent to extermination camps
where they were killed. The book describes Oskar's journey of saving over 1,100
Jewish lives at the end of the war.
Monday, 31 March 2014
Sunday, 9 March 2014
Post #8- A Streetcar Named Desire
There were many symbols in A Streetcar Named Desire one that stood out the most to me was Blanche's lies. In the play she explains that lying to herself and to others makes life what it should be rather then what it really is. Alcohol and light are other symbols which also connect with Blanche's lies. Polka music was a very obvious symbol that symbolizes the tragic night that Blanche's husband dies, the polka music is played throughout the movie leading up to the husband's tragic death. There are other less obvious symbols in the movie that are not as focused on as the other two making lying and polka music the major symbols in the movie.
Friday, 7 March 2014
Post #7: Quotations
“My children were
like phantom limbs, lost but still attached to me, gone but still painful.” (Hill 393)
Aminata refers to her children as phantom limbs, this is a metaphor for the feeling she still has for them. Aminata's feelings for her children are painful because she says "gone but still painful", even though there is nothing she can do about the loss of her children, her feelings are still painful.
"At times I still panic when surrounded by big white men with a purpose." (Hill 9)
This is one of the most significant quotes in the book because it shows how much slavery and inequality scarred Aminata into thinking that all white men are evil. Even though at this time Aminata is safe and the white men want to abolish slavery, Aminata's instinct over time has been not to trust white men.
"It excited me to imagine that fifty years later, someone might find an ancestor in the Book Of Negroes and say, 'That was my grandmother.'" (Hill 331)
This quote symbolizes identity, and how the free negroes have gained their identity again through an official document like The Book Of Negroes. This is similar to the first time Aminata writes her signature at the hotel for Soloman Lindo; this is the first time Aminata feels like she is free.
"Got a slave mama, then you is slave. Got a slave daddy, then you is slave. Any nigger in you at all, then is slave as clear as day." (Hill 153)
This quote states that the son or daughter of any slave is automatically a slave. This foreshadows Aminata's child, Mamadu, in being sold because of his status as a slave.
“He did not seem like the sort of man who would press a band of red-hot metal into my chest” (Hill 461)
When Aminata was on Bance Island near the end of the book, she compares the man who branded her to the man who owns the castle. This is significant because it foreshadows the argument she has with him about branding and she shows him her brand.
Aminata refers to her children as phantom limbs, this is a metaphor for the feeling she still has for them. Aminata's feelings for her children are painful because she says "gone but still painful", even though there is nothing she can do about the loss of her children, her feelings are still painful.
"At times I still panic when surrounded by big white men with a purpose." (Hill 9)
This is one of the most significant quotes in the book because it shows how much slavery and inequality scarred Aminata into thinking that all white men are evil. Even though at this time Aminata is safe and the white men want to abolish slavery, Aminata's instinct over time has been not to trust white men.
"It excited me to imagine that fifty years later, someone might find an ancestor in the Book Of Negroes and say, 'That was my grandmother.'" (Hill 331)
This quote symbolizes identity, and how the free negroes have gained their identity again through an official document like The Book Of Negroes. This is similar to the first time Aminata writes her signature at the hotel for Soloman Lindo; this is the first time Aminata feels like she is free.
"Got a slave mama, then you is slave. Got a slave daddy, then you is slave. Any nigger in you at all, then is slave as clear as day." (Hill 153)
This quote states that the son or daughter of any slave is automatically a slave. This foreshadows Aminata's child, Mamadu, in being sold because of his status as a slave.
“He did not seem like the sort of man who would press a band of red-hot metal into my chest” (Hill 461)
When Aminata was on Bance Island near the end of the book, she compares the man who branded her to the man who owns the castle. This is significant because it foreshadows the argument she has with him about branding and she shows him her brand.
Tuesday, 7 January 2014
ISU Proposals
Kite Runner – The Kite Runner is about a young boy who grows
up feeling guilt from an action in the past and wants to redeem himself for it
in the future. This is similar to The Book of Negroes because the book starts
off with Aminata as a young girl with a drastic event that made her want to
share her story in the future. I believe these books are suitable for the ISU
project because in both books the protagonist starts off young wanting to
achieve a goal all their life. Also, this will probably result in similar
obstacles in both books such as the violence in The Kite Runner since the
setting is in Afghanistan and the violence in The Book Of Negroes because of
slavery.
Schindler's Ark (Schindler's List) – This book is about a
Nazi party member who saves 1200 Jews from concentration camps. It is a true
story with fictional dialogue; this is similar to The Book Of Negroes because
even though The Book Of Negroes has a fictional story the events were real.
Both books are about discrimination and are based around similar historic
events therefore they have very similar themes such as dehumanization in the
holocaust and slavery.
Atonement – This book is about a woman’s life in the
nineteenth century; similarly to The Book Of Negroes the book is set up into
parts. The first part is about the woman’s childhood in England and her talent
is writing, which is similar to Aminata’s talent for reading, and writing. The
second part is her life during the war, which is also similar to the American
Revolution in The Book Of Negroes. The last two parts are about her life as she
grows older and writes a book about her life changing the facts and making it
more of what she wanted to happen. Since in both books the main themes are education,
reading and writing the books will be very comparable.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)