Wednesday, June 4, 2014



NEWS OF A KIDNAPPING: Goodreads Book review

*****


"I read this text after a recent trip to Medellin, Colombia. Pablo Escobar, drug baron/champion of the poor (depending on whose perspective you take) was at one time the 7th richest man in the world due to his vast international drug business. His legacy on that city is complicated, but twenty years after his bloody death--shot ignominiously by the Colombian Special Forces as he fled across the terracotta rooftops--the city is a resurgent, sunny and peaceful town that deserves to be defined by its present day success, rather than by the shadow of its most notorious son. 

Garcia Marquez died the day after I arrived to Medellin and the waiting staff in the restaurant where I was having lunch stopped what they were doing, as did the rest of the diners, to watch the news of the passing of this Nobel-prize winning national icon. His flair for storytelling is unsurpassed from a literary perspective, but of crucial importance to this telling of a true life spate of kidnappings--coordinated by Escobar in an attempt to protect him from the fate of extradition to the United States-- is his background as a journalist in the early part of his career. His journalistic skills equipped him with the drive to tell the truth and the necessity for meticulous fact-checking ahead of publication. So, as he researched this story, he left no stone unturned when speaking to the survivors, their families, and the families of those who were tragically assassinated by Escobar's henchmen. 

The non-fiction account of the strategy and planning involved by the authorities, including access all the way up to former President Gaviria, together with the devastating emotional impact upon the families involved is a testament to the incredible power of humans to overcome adversity and at the same time for the nation of Colombia to become galvanized and united in their heroic attempts to free those prisoners. 

Garcia Marquez is passionately patriotic, but the style of writing in this account is objective and leaves the reader to form their own opinions of Escobar's motives and methods (he ascribes some of his motivation as coming from alleged abuses carried out by the Police against young men within the slums, arresting and sometimes murdering them without evidence of due legal process). However, the story stands as a powerful monument to the thousands of innocent lives lost during this time of crisis during the early 1990s. It is so wonderful to see how Colombia has overcome these deep scars today, and to know that the sacrifice of those who gave their lives for the freedom and prosperity enjoyed by the country today will not be forgotten."

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Tips on Doing an IOC:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SYB2OV8DzJI


Nick’s Opinions of Gatsby…and Our Own

In your groups, re-read the following (assigned) pages of The Great Gatsby and observe Nick’s impressions of Gatsby. On the Gatsby Classwork Google Doc, please write Nick’s opinions of Gatsby (which can change in the same scene) and the key phrases from the passage to share with your classmates in the next class session. 

1.        Nick first meets Gatsby (46-47; ch. 3)
2.        Nick drives into New York with Gatsby (64-69; ch. 4)
3.        Nick, Gatsby, and Wolfsheim have lunch (69-74; ch. 4)
4.        Jordan tells Nick about Gatsby and Daisy (74-80; ch. 4)
5.        Nick and Gatsby arrange Gatsby’s reunion with Daisy (81-85; ch. 5);Nick and Gatsby wait for Daisy on Nick’s lawn (89-90; ch. 5).
6.        Gatsby shows his house to Daisy and Nick (90-96; ch. 5)
7.        Nick, Tom, and Daisy attend Gatsby’s party (1102-111; ch. 6)
8.        Tom confronts Gatsby in the New York hotel suite (128- 136; ch. 7)
9.        Nick and Gatsby talk at Gatsby’s house the morning after Myrtle’s death (147-150)
10.        Nick makes Gatsby’s funeral arrangements (168- 174; ch. 9)

Rees P7 Gatsby Response Journal:

https://docs.google.com/a/amersol.edu.pe/forms/d/13Sy00m9xW3NdIM0Gq9g95_5J_D4o9OUtcuyACnaYCbQ/edit
Gatsby Contextual Links

Thematic: American Dream

The End of the American Dream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2tUIx5DlxaI

Awakening the American Dream: Kevin Maggiacomo@ Ted: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eL3GXXJJoM

Library of Congress:  Teaching materials: http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/themes/


Friday, February 28, 2014



Point of View: The Great Gatsby


Group 4:
·         The best way to create mystery is t narrate the story from Nick’s pov as we do not know about Gatsby’s past.
·         Nick is not a reliable narrator as he is self-questioning
·         When Nick relates Gatsby ‘s romance he quotes Jordan Baker (who may be biased herself)
·         Nick sees everything and informs us how e should feel.

Group 3:
Writing in a first person creates a lot of limits. For example, it prevents the author from having a character who can display the ‘genuine’ feelings of all characters (which you would get with a third person narrator), yet Fitzgerald manages to overcome this by using the transgressive first person narrator who allows Nick’s narrative voice to stray into the minds and perspective of other characters, such as his depiction of the death of Gatsby.

Group 2:
Advantages of a first person narrator is that Nick sees everything from outside—this is important given the crazy events of New York society over that summer. Bu the limitations again are that he has to imagine details of the real depth of emotion regarding Gatsby’s feelings for Daisy.  Nick sits aside from the dialogue, but he is a narrator who provides us with two perspectives as he is not always sure what is going on.
Group 1:

As the reader experiences the events through Nick Carraway’s point of view, but Fitzgerald also inserts his own viewpoint through Nick, and critiques aspects of New York society including class dichotomy. (Marxist critical theory).