Slam Poetry Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JAq6VpmgB0
The video that I have chosen is showing a slam poem written and presented by Michael Lee that is called "Pass On." The poet has great delivery as he manages to show his emotion thoroughly but still keeps himself controlled so that he enunciates effectively. What he is saying is personal but easy to relate and sympathize with. It's powerful and convincing but he is not speaking with facts, he is only speaking using what he believes is true and correct. For example he speaks about a friend of his that was murdered and how he was searching for "him" in someone else for nine years. The person he found was a young male that was playing basketball. As Michael asked him how many years he had been playing basketball for the basketball player responded, "nine years." This is something that does not prove a life after death as it could merely be coincidental. Michael Lee is essentially talking about how the dead live on through random people all over the world, whom haven't even met the deceased. I guess you could say that he is speaking about one possible form of life after death. In the book Elsewhere, which is my ISU book the author writes about another possible form of life after death which consists of you staying yourself but travelling to another world, with other dead people. The video and the book present two different perceptions of the issue that is life after death. This is one of the reasons that I personally don't believe in life after death. It is something that is easy to start believing in to comfort yourself but when you take a step back and look at it you can see the flaws in the idea.
Sunday, 19 April 2015
Saturday, 18 April 2015
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
Retell: The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is a movie based around the time period of the holocaust. It focuses on a boy named Bruno whose father is promoted in the military to a concentration camp commandment in Berlin, where he does not currently reside. When Bruno and his family move to Berlin things change drastically for them. Bruno no longer has any friends and is constantly bored, as he is living in a very rural area. His boredom causes him to explore and this is when he discovers the concentration camp that lies just past the large forest next to his house. Here he meets another boy named Shmuel who is around the same age as him and as he talks to the boy through the guard fence he realizes the realities of concentration camps. Shmuel tells Bruno that his father is missing and would like to find him. As a result, Bruno takes his place in the camp and unluckily the same day all the Jews are sent to the gas chambers and joining them in their deaths is Bruno.
Reflect: The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is a movie that does a great job at portraying the type of tragedies that occurred during the holocaust. It really has shocking and vivid scenes that make you realize how horrible the holocaust actually was. For example in the ending scene when all the Jews are taken into the gas chamber and killed it feels very real. The movie showed their naked bodies that portrayed there level of malnutrition, it showed how scared and hopeless the Jews felt. It has a way of making you want to put yourself in the Jews shoes and this causes you to think critically. The fact that this movie addresses something real and significant that occurred in our history and has an effective way of doing so, to me makes it an iconic movie that will never get old.
Relate: This movie revolves around the holocaust and the tragedies that took place. Just like the holocaust many other genocides have occurred in history. For example in 1762 thousands of Sikhs and people that helped the Sikh people were slaughtered and captured by afghan forces. While it may not be as large as the Jewish genocide, they contain many similarities. In the movie you can see that the Jews were captured by Nazis and held in concentration camps until they were most likely killed in the gas chambers. The afghan forces captured Sikhs and killed them after gaining any information they needed. Also in the movie you can see that anyone who helped the Jews was look at as a traitor and was also punished. The same thing happened to the Hindus who tried to help the Sikh people.
Reflect: The Boy in the Striped Pajamas is a movie that does a great job at portraying the type of tragedies that occurred during the holocaust. It really has shocking and vivid scenes that make you realize how horrible the holocaust actually was. For example in the ending scene when all the Jews are taken into the gas chamber and killed it feels very real. The movie showed their naked bodies that portrayed there level of malnutrition, it showed how scared and hopeless the Jews felt. It has a way of making you want to put yourself in the Jews shoes and this causes you to think critically. The fact that this movie addresses something real and significant that occurred in our history and has an effective way of doing so, to me makes it an iconic movie that will never get old.
Relate: This movie revolves around the holocaust and the tragedies that took place. Just like the holocaust many other genocides have occurred in history. For example in 1762 thousands of Sikhs and people that helped the Sikh people were slaughtered and captured by afghan forces. While it may not be as large as the Jewish genocide, they contain many similarities. In the movie you can see that the Jews were captured by Nazis and held in concentration camps until they were most likely killed in the gas chambers. The afghan forces captured Sikhs and killed them after gaining any information they needed. Also in the movie you can see that anyone who helped the Jews was look at as a traitor and was also punished. The same thing happened to the Hindus who tried to help the Sikh people.
Friday, 17 April 2015
War Artifact
I have chosen this picture to be my artifact related to war. It seems to show a young soldier who is lost in his thoughts while sitting on the train in the country he is fighting for. I chose this picture because it really made me think critically about war and brought a lot of questions to my mind, and I really thought it would do the same for everyone else. Is he going to war or has he just come back? Is he thinking about something horrible he has witnessed? What kind of stress is the war putting on him? How is his life different from mine? These are some of the questions that came to my mind and they really help me look deeper into the concept of war. War is sometimes glorified and we don't realize that it is people just like us who are fighting wars. Seeing this young individual really puts war into perspective and makes you question it.
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