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Thursday, October 28, 2010
Ashoks Fellows
Jean-Claude Decalonne is helping to provide more adequate teaching to youths who live in at-risk areas. By getting parents teachers and school boards more involved in teaching using more effective and different styles of teaching.
Caroline Casey is helping Irish people adapt their businesses to serve and employ people with disabilities. By providing them ways to change things so they better suit the disabled.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Cry, Nameless Characters
Monday, October 11, 2010
Cry, Different sections, why
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Cry, The Beloved Country-repeating lines
- People go to Johannesburg and they don't come back
- Hills, Mountains
- You can get lost in the streets
- Soil
- Crops, Broken Tribes
- All roads lead to Johannesburg
- Shanty Town is up overnight
Paton uses the symbol soil, which shows up repeatedly, to smbolize the black people that are suffering. He says the soil is sick and it doesn't produce crops and descirbes it using blood as a simile.
Paton repeats the line, All roads lead to Johannesburg, to show how everything in South Africa revoles, or is connected through this one town. He also uses the phrase All the buses lead to Johannesburg to show how everything is connected back to that one place.
One line that was used repeatedly was, Shanty Town is up overnight. I think Paton repeats this line so that we realize what happened in such a short amount of time. These people who weren't having anything done for them built their own makeshift houses to show the white people who weren't helping them that they would not be ignored.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Cry,The Beloved Country characterization
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Cry, The Beloved Country Tabs
In chapter three I tabbed the section where Paton is describing Stephan's fear of traveling. I thought that this would later play apart in the story when he is actually traveling to Johannesburg. I have a feeling that this fear will cause some sort of problem in the future.
I tabbed the first part of chapter four because I saw that Paton repeated his description of the soil. I thought that it might be used as a symbol in the rest of the novel. I think Paton will use the soil to represent the people in the story who are suffering.
A little later in chapter four I tabbed where railway-lines and stations were repeated twice. I tabbed them because they stuck out to me. I don't remember Paton repeating anything else like that and it showed that he wanted to place emphasis on those two words.