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Author: phussey (Page 2 of 6)

CPB Reflection 4/22/2020

Hey Jen!
Just putting in my calling card.
I have been keeping up with your CPB entries and noticed some trends. You have a way of finding a deeper meaning to specific phrases or lines in the book. A specific passage in a book that may seem straight forward to some (me included) you have a very amazing way of finding what the author may have meant when he/she originally wrote it. This, I feel, is a very strong talent and ability when it comes to reading books, especially novels that were published decades ago. I have noticed that novels published decades ago typically want to mean something beyond a book about a monster. These novels seem to be trying to say something and it is sometimes hard to find that deeper meaning. Even when we talked in our small groups you were very good at finding those hidden meanings in books.
I also observed that you find very accurate outside sources and images that support your point even more. Scrolling through your CPB entries at first glance their are always images that at first, you wonder how you were able to tie them into parts of the book but after reading your entry it always makes a lot of sense. I wonder if these thoughts of outside connections come to you as you read or do they typically come to you after you have read the book and when you look back at your notations?

Hey Olivia!

This is my “calling card” on your CPB entries

Your CPB entries have been so different but that speaks volumes to what spoke to you during different parts of the book. It was always fascinating seeing what passages jumped out at you and how you were able to see them in a different light. I always found it hard to find outside materials that matched my points but you were able to find matches perfectly. I saw a trend of you being able to find outside sources that criticized a specific part of the novel. This to me was interesting to see due to the hidden meaning that most of these books tend to have.  It seemed that the British Library was a big resource for you which is a very good source to find that outside material. I wonder if you always agreed with what these critics said? Or if you just found it interesting as to their ideas of what the book may be saying. I think this would be a great topic to discuss when you do your final reflection as to how you were able to find those connections and if they made you think twice or just interested you. Sometimes I would read critics discussing a section of the book and wonder how they came up with that…

I just wanted to also point out that, like my entries, some weeks were just a picture and quote, and others where more in-depth which I found to actually be more strong then you may have thought. When we read certain chapters, sometimes it was hard to find anything worth pulling and analyzing but you always found at least one passage that meant something and that got you thinking. You also always found beautiful graphics. Whether it was a short CPB or long, it always meant something to you. I have really enjoyed reading your CPB entries and they always made me think twice about a passage that I had already read once but did not think much about at first.

CPB Reflection 4/15

Seeing what people toke from the last few chapters from the book always interests me. I saw someone find evidence that Stroker said that the book was nonfiction. I had commented that it would not surprise me with the advanses that we have made through history and how people continue to change and evolve. It reminds me of the question as to if there is life besides here on earth. My anwser always is that their has to be others besides us. I had also commented that Frankenstein could be possible as well. I do no think back when the book was written could a creature such as Frankestein be possible but now a days definetly.

I also visited sites that just toke what quotes spoke to them the most. Some quotes talked about Dracula and how he seemed to take his time with his female victims. He seemed to be in no rush because he had time. I had commented a connection to The Beetle and how in both books the creature seemed to enjoy the torment of not making the duration of the torment quick. This instantly makes me think of them as an evil monster. I did also see quotes about other characters who to me seemed to be the focus of the book. I wrote mostly about Mina and her journey but every character seemed to have a big role to play with the defeat of Dracula and the protection of the people he affected.

Commonplace Book- Dracula

” There is a poison in my blood, in my soul, which may destroy me; which must destroy me, unless some relief comes to us.” (286)

” Then I shall tell you plainly what I want, for there must be no doubtful matter in this connection between us now. You must promise me, one and all- even you my beloved husband- that, should the time come, you will kill me.” (287)

Mina’s strength through this book was incredible. She was strong for both her and her husband, excluded and bitten but through all of that she still had the courage and strength to ask to be killed if the time came.

https://images.app.goo.gl/2HsNWFKueDzkU4cXA

QCQ #10- Dracula

“I cannot help feeling terribly excited as the time draws near for the visit of Dr Van Helsing, for somehow I expect that it will throw some light upon Jonathan’s sad experience; and as he attended poor dear Lucy in her last illness, he can tell me all about her.” (162)

Comment: Dr Van Helsing is a very interesting character and did not for so long tell anyone about his ways. His ways of dealing with Lucy when she died or even the meaning of his methods when she was dying. All of this is very suspicious yet everyone trusts him so much. Mina writes that she looks forward to his visit because he has information about Jonathan and Lucy. People seem to trust him so much, despite his secrecy, due to his knowledge and his being a doctor. Mina, on the other hand, has proven more times than any to be a very strong and tough-minded individual but was left out on many occasions. I know that this was because she was a woman. But, why trust Dr Van Helsing when he was being so secretive? Especially the fact that people around him were dying but he held true to not telling anyone the truth or at least what he knew.

CPB Reflection for 4/10

I visited many sites and saw a trend with many people finding outside sources that analyzed the novel for the many things that it could be. It seemed like with every novel that we read, there were many critics that can take the interpretation of the novel either way, good or bad. Some even go as far as to find a very different view of what the author may be trying to say. It is very interesting to see how someone can find what is book may be saying while another finds a whole different meaning. Many critics go as far as to break down who the author is and his history to find the deeper meaning.

Also, many cites that I visited, if not all of them, had very different pictures of Dracula. It is interesting to see what pictures people found and which ones they felt matched with how they saw the book while reading it. Other pictures where just depictions of what modern-day Dracula looks like. Something I find interesting is how different a character is portrayed in a book that has been out for some time compared to what TV and movies portray them as. I always wondered if the modern-day monsters were designed from the original interpretations of these monsters or if modern-day monsters are just thought up to look like pure evil or romantic. Vampires modernly are very romanticized, from the series Twilight or the show Tru Blood. It seems as if modern-day interpretations of monsters have to show them as beautiful creatures that always seem to have a romantic relationship. They are also always beautiful. But reading these books, it seems like monsters are never beautiful. I wonder why we have the need to romanticize monsters to make them seem more human?

Commonplace Entry- Dracula

“‘ Monster, give me my child’……. Somewhere high overhead, probably on the tower, I heard the voice of the Count calling in his harsh, metallic whisper. His call seemed to be answered from far and wide by the howling of wolves…..I could not pity her, for I knew now what had become of her child, and she was better dead.” (48-49)

https://images.app.goo.gl/sYxZcWNqBYvWJ3Yv5
https://images.app.goo.gl/RJGR38mCZ9TX8jeSA
https://images.app.goo.gl/uamg4kRQGLarfxtWA

QCQ #9- The Beetle

” I seem to have seen all that happened as in a glass darkly, – with about it all an element of unreality. As I have already remarked, the things which revealed themselves, dimely, to my perception, seemed too bizarre, too hideous, to be true.” (243)

Comment: I found it very hard to find a quote that really wrapped up my interpretation of the book. At first, I only thought about this book as a creature that’s main goal was to seduce and control anyone that it could. But, reading different essays about this book got me thinking. It is easy to see this book as just a shapeshifter that likes to torment people but digging deper into it to it, people have dipicted the book as expressing that the victorian era was being tested or that the book is talking about gender and feminism concerns.

The essay ” Conservation of Energy, Individual Agency, and Gothic Terror in Richard Marsh’s The Beetle, or, What’s Scarier Than an Ancient Evil, Shape-shifting Bug?” by Anna Maria Jones, dives into the victorian stigma and if the books meaning is the de-masculinity of some of the characters. This would explain some of the horrors that a character such as Lessinghan felt because being coerced by a being and losing his sense of control made him feel as if his masculinity was tested. He also felt as if his identity was gone for some time, losing the “man” that he once was. Lessinghan talks about this when he said: “I was aroused all at once, to a sense of freedom; to a knowledge that the blood which coursed through my veins was after all my own, that I was master of my own honour.” (244) To me this meant that only when he had a sense of his masculinity, was he able to break the spell upon him.

Another article shows a different but somewhat the same view called “Out of Time: Queer Temporality and Eugenic Monstrosity” by Thomas Stuart talks about how the book to him just expressed the victorian views and how books like The Beetle tested those views. This essay also talked about how the book goes beyond gender boundaries. I agree that the view of the transformation of the creature turning from male to female would be viewed differently with the views of the victorian age. Also characters like Marjorie who actually had a voice when women typically did not showed how the book pushed those classic victorian views. Marjorie reminded me of Jane Eyre and how they both were not afraid to speak their mind but both had people look at them differently because of their opinions.

I see both of the points made from these essay but I saw this book as seeing something different at a period in history when “different” meant bad. Whether someone was gay, or a woman who spoke their mind, or even a person who turned into a beetle was not only unspeakable but evil. You would typically read this book and only look at the creature as the one who needs to be analyzed but seeing the different perspectives showed that different was with ever character. Lessighan was not liked by many because he was a politician with a past that no one knew about. Holt was different because he had no job and was found on many occasion with little to no clothes. Marjorie was different for speaking her mind and loving a man that everyone advised against and lastly, Sydney was different for being smart and thinking that somehow Marjorie was his. But when you learn more about each of their stories you see that there is way more to them then what the differences they have to say about them.

Question: Was the beetle created to push the victorian views of what people should and should not be?

CPB Entry- The Beetle

“Judgment in my case has still to be given. You will find that I am not the guilty wretch you apparently imagine. And there are few things more disagreeable to one’s self-esteem than to learn, too late, that one has persisted in judging another man too harshly.” (182)

Paul Lessington seems to be a muitually disliked person but why. Just cause he is a politician with a mysterious past, one of which no one has any knowledge of. Whether it be good or bad and Paul does not seem eager to share with anyone. There seems to be something further going on with him.

QCQ #8- The Beetle

Quote: “I was not only incapable of resistance, I was incapable of distinctly formulating the desire to offer resistance. Some compelling influence moved me hither and thither, with completest disregard of whether I would or would not. “(page 69)

Comment: For class, we always talk about what the monster is. I say what, because it isn’t always a physical person that can be monstrous. You could say that in Jane Eyre the monster was her love for Rochester or you could look at Frankenstein only being a monster due to his monstrous looks and hatred towards Victor. For me, the monster in The Beetle threw Holt’s perspective is his fear. Holt’s fear not only left him frozen on MANY occasions and for most of it, even unable to speak showed how much fear consumed him. Holt broke into Lessingham’s house because, as the quote said, something was driving him to do so. I believe that thing was his fear. When he was trying to get into the locked drawer, he fired a gun which he knew would surely be heard and he would be found but he was still driven so intensely to get what he came for. I think his fear of the creature and man overpowered his fear of being caught.

Question: How strong can our emotions be and can they be the reason that our actions are sometimes monstrous? Does that mean the action is monstrous or we are?

CPD Reflection for 3/25/2020

CPB Reflection

3/25/2020

Paige Hussey

            After reading the Commonplace Books from a few classmates I did see a pattern. Many of my classmates found a lot of information about the author, Oscar Wilde, and the connection that many thought he had with the fictional character of Dorian Gray. I myself did read that many thoughts that the character Dorian Gray was a homosexual and this to some meant that Oscar Wilde was a homosexual. Even going as far as to use the book against Oscar to prove that he was a homosexual. People making connections like this to me seems odd. Odd in the fact that this is a book of fiction and to use a book of fiction against a writer seems like a stretch. It may have been true that Oscar used this book as a sort of outlet for his sexuality but to make that assumption is interesting. We all know at the time of this book’s creation, homosexuality was not normal, or okay. Maybe that is why this book was received so awful due to the stigmas around sexuality. When a book is published that has a very real and controversial message or even a part in the book that may not be entirely clear, I can defiantly see why people ripped it apart. Of course, reading it now I see no issue with its content and see no need to break apart ever word to try and find a hidden meaning as to what the writer was thinking. It makes me wonder if people used to read books like this and just try to find something wrong with it or something to pick a fight about. Could it be the times in which things were so controversial that people felt the need to protect the world from controversial topics?

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