Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Symbols, Motifs, Buzkashi

Buzkashi Video, as promised... what does this video teach us about Afghani culture?

1) sym·bol/ˈsimbəl/

Noun:
  1. A thing that represents or stands for something else, esp. a material object representing something abstract. A symbol's meaning can shift to represent more than one thing, especially in a longer piece of literature.

Examples from the Kite Runner (so far). What do these represent?
  • Hassan's Hairlip
  • The Pomegranate Tree
  • "Feeding from the same breast"
  • Kites
2) mo·tif/mōˈtēf/

Noun:
  1. A recurrent and distinctive feature or dominant idea in an artistic or literary composition. 

Examples from The Kite Runner:
  • Tragedy and Loss
  • Father and Son Relationships
  • Wounds/Scars/Disabilities
  • The Connection between the Social and Political
  • Discrimination (Pashtuns vs, Hazaras)
  • What is Masculine?

3) Other terms - foreshadowing, metaphor

4) Next Journal Topics (pick one or two):

  • Characterize Baba and Amir's relationship. Why does "hate" enter into their father/son relationship? What quotations show us, the readers, the raw truths about their feelings towards one another?
  • Children are not colouring books.
  • Much of this novel is about discrimination and cultural divides across political/social/religious lines. Is it human nature to hate the "other"? Do we in Canada have our own stories of ugly discrimination? Or, what about right here in the hallways of Highland, what ugly divides and discriminations happen here? How can we deal with this sort of hatred?
  • Do you identify with Amir in any way? Most students see at least a glimmer of themselves in the complicated relationship he has with his father. In what ways are you like Amir?
5) What is reflective writing? 

Reflection is a form of personal response to 
experiences, situations, events or new information. 
It is a ‘processing’ phase where thinking and learning 
take place. There is neither a right nor a wrong way 
of reflective thinking, there are just questions to 
explore. 

Reflective writing is:
• your response to experiences, opinions, events or new information
• your response to thoughts and feelings
• a way of thinking to explore your learning
• an opportunity to gain self-knowledge
• a way to achieve clarity and better understanding of what you are learning and thinking about in class
• a chance to develop and reinforce writing skills
• a way of making meaning out of what you read and discuss in class

Reflective writing is not:
• just conveying information, instruction or argument
• pure description, though there may be descriptive elements
• straightforward decision or judgement (e.g. about whether something is right or wrong, good or bad)
• a summary of course notes
• a standard formal essay

6) Time to work on journals or questions...