Saturday, November 21, 2009

Motif: Mockingbird

In the beginning of the year I thought I had a fairly good idea of what motif was. I didn't. I had one dictionary.com definition I got for the glossary we had to do to get in to Honors, I called it good and ran with it. Actually I learned what motif is when we began comparing what we said in our glossary definitions and combined them together to get a slum idea of of what it was. I finally 'got' what motif is when we read To Kill a Mockingbird and I realized it was a hidden thing that recurred in the book.

The motif in To Kill a Mockingbird is the mockingbird and how killing it is a sin. The mockingbird never does harm to anyone and represents innocence in the novel. The motif comes up when major events that showcase themes in the novel happen and the mockingbird fleshes it out and brings out the deeper meaning in the important events. An example is the Robinson case, the mockingbird is Tom and this bring out the theme of injustice v. justice.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Symbolism Extra Credit



Some back round information on this jellyfish picture before I go in to its symbolism; the Irukandji is 2.5 centimeters in diameter and has venom powerful enough to cause excruciating muscle cramps in the arms and legs, severe pain in the back and kidneys, headaches, nausea, restlessness, sweating, vomiting, high heart rate and blood pressure, often leading to a stay in the hospital. The point is its a mean SOB in a fragile unassuming shell.

During the dramatic reading I was Judge Taylor. He's getting nigh onto seventy years old, he appears to sleep during long court sessions and rules his court room with the proverbial iron fist. Like the jellyfish his bark is worse then his bite(like how I mix dog metaphors with jellyfish?).