Thursday, June 2, 2011

Final Post

Final Post



            I believe that you should read my very first entry from the 3rd quarter and my ninth entry.  I believe that these two entries had deep and essential insight on the stories.  I believe I caught and analyzed the main message by the storyteller.  I asked questions that challenged what the story teller did.  I asked questions that can help the reader and storyteller learn more.  I believe the evidence that I chose essential towards sending the message that developed after reading the story.  The message may not have been the lesson that was intended at that time, but the message I received is important to the reader.  It may be something simple, or it may be something that is life changing, but the message is important for the reader to hear.  I believe that I made the connection to the average citizen who was living in the time period the story was told.  Whether it connected to a klansman, a family struggling in the Great Depression, or a veteran from Vietnam, I was able to connect the story to the history.  I depicted the story and found the message that was meant to be told to the average citizen during that time.  People should read my first and last entry because those were the most honest messages and morals I was able to spread based off of the stories I read.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Entry 9

Larry Heinemann

Vietnam War Veteran



First off, I would like to say that I chose this section because the section title is Second Thoughts on the American Dream.  Earlier this year, I read the book The Great Gatsby which had a major theme that revolved around the “American Dream.”  I chose Heinemann, the war veteran, because I wanted to see how the American dream would change after a war like that.  I wanted to see how people thought of life and how people wanted to live life.  What were the goals that Americans were trying to reach? While discussing his feelings of the post-war life with Terkel, Heinemann said, “When I got back here, I was scared and grateful and ashamed that I had lived, ‘cause I started getting letters: So-and-so got hit, So-and-so burned to death.  My good friend flipped a truck over an embankment and it hit him in the head.  I had been given my life back, I felt a tremendous energy.  At the same time, I felt like shit,” (Terkel 417).  Heinemann shows that he does not know what to do with himself after the war.  He experienced the most traumatizing and fearsome events in Vietnam that he should worry about, but he is now liberated from that feeling and is free.  He demonstrates the confusion that he has for his future.  He does not know if he should feel happy for his life or sad for the dead.  I believe that Heinemann shows that the individual should not live to capture an American dream.  He shows that it only brings confusion and trouble. Based off of his story, I believe that his dream during the war was to return home alive.  Once he reached his dream, he was only saddened by the people that could not reach it.  He also had nothing else to work for after he reached his dream.  He portrays the idea that the individual should just live day to day instead of reaching for a unreachable goal.


Jacob Lawrence

Artist



I chose to read the story by Jacob Lawrence because I wanted to see the creative way that he describes his life.  He shows the beauty of what it was like to live during the twentieth century.  I chose him because I wanted to see what an artist would believe is beautiful about that time period.  He knows that what the individual does without the help of technology or others is true beauty.  While describing that beauty, Lawrence says, “The tool is an extension of the hand.  The hand is a very beautiful instrument.  Think of what we can do with the hand, its dexterity.  It’s been with us hundreds of years.  You look at works of art and the tool hasn’t changed.  It maintains its beauty,” (Terkel 521).  In the present day, we now have machines to create vehicles and furniture.  We have computers and calculators to help the individual do amazing things.  There is no beauty behind letting an inanimate object doing ones work.  The individual should take pride from the work that they complete.  That is the beauty that Lawrence is trying to describe.  What is the point of letting a machine create an object?  It gives no sense of pride to the individual.  Throughout the whole twentieth century there was no technology to help those individuals work.  They had to work tough, long hours, but the reward was much greater than the reward that one receives today.  I believe that life would have such a greater reward if the individual works with his hands instead of relying on a computer.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Entry 8

Dolores Dante

Waitress



            I was interested with this passage because Dolores believed that she could help save so many people by being a waitress.  She chooses to be a waitress because she can pass information she learns from one person to the next person.  While she is describing her decision in becoming a waitress, Dolores Dante says, "Everyone wants to eat, everyone has hunger.  And I serve them.  If they've had a bad day, I nurse them, cajole them.  Maybe with coffee I give them a little philosophy.  They have cocktails, I give them political science," (Terkel 330).  By this, she is saying that she can help individuals with problems.  She can help people enjoy their day because she is serving happiness in her food or her gestures to people.  It is powerful to see one person do all they can to help another person in need. She shows the morale that people need to have during a time of low morale.  People are down because of the Vietnam War, and people like Dante can help them rise above it.  She answers the question, what can people do to gain morale?  How can an individual help make other individuals happy?  She shows what she can do to help people remain happy while working.  People struggle while working, and Dante is an important figure when it comes to being a happy worker.  When the individual is happy while working, more work can be done which will further progress the country.  And by progress, I mean that the country can progress by becoming better people and, the work will help progress technology. Overall, she interests me because it helps me learn how to become a better person and help others become better people.



Phil Stallings

Auto Worker



I was interested in this reading because it helps me learn how to avoid issues and to make goals. Stallings use to get into trouble with other employees at work.  He demonstrates how to move passed trouble.  In order to prove how to do this, Stallings says, "Lots of times I worked from the time I started to the time of the break and I never realized I had even worked.  When you dream, you reduce the chances of friction with the foreman or with the next guy," (Terkel 355).  He thinks of things that make him happy to brush off the friction and tension between workers.  Again, I believe that this issue shows how we can progress as humans.  Instead of instigating an issue with people, individuals can avoid the issue.  By focusing on their dreams, they can avoid the tension plus build a foundation for their future.  They build the foundation because by dreaming the individual sets a goal for the future.  The goal leads to the work that is put into the future.  Overall, Stallings demonstrates a way that the working society can overcome problems.  By getting rid of problems, work will be more smooth and much more can get done.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Entry 7

Dennis Hart: Cab Driver

I was interested about how joining a group or organization gave him the confidence to overcome his fears and doubts.  Hart grew up moving often due to the poverty that he faced.  Because he was always on the move, he spent the majority of his time alone working for money.  While alone, Hart got in fights all the time.  He lost more than he won, but he kept fighting because he believed that he could not back down.  He joined the John Birch Society.  While describing his experience with the group, Hart said, "I got scared.  I'm a three-time loser and I came through this.  I can't fail again,"(Terkel 239).  He almost drowned three times because he was alone.  When he was alone he was scared because anything can happen to him.  In his life, three life threatening events happened to him when he had no support.  The group may give him confidence because when he does face a dangerous situation, he will have the support to continue.  Hart is an example of the way that somebody should live their live.  They should join a group because it gives them a sense of safety.  He constantly had to fight his battles, which could have led to fear and loneliness. 

Tom Kearney

Tom Kearney was a police officer who made very little pay.  I was interesed about his story because he hints at the reasoning of the corruption of the local police.  While explaining his experience on the force, Kearney says, "There was no money for two years.  At that time, the firemen and policemen weren't paid," (Terkel 263-264). The reason why the police and firemen were corrupt was because they were not making any money.  They made money to feed their families by taking bribes.  If the government were not going to pay them, it only makes sense to take the bribe.  The only thing that does not make sense is why Kearney did not take the bribe.  What causes someone who makes no money to turn down a bribe? Is it only his values? or is there some other reason behind it?  Kearney said to a man that bribed him, "No harm trying.  But i just don't go that way," (Terkel 263).  He shows how it is tough being the man with authority.  I believe that the reason he was able to make it through the situation was because his dad had done it as a fireman.  It shows how family can make or break the corruption.  If ones family was able to overcome the poverty before, then it is what breaks the corruption.  When the family is unable to overcome the poverty, the officer will act corruptly because its the only way to feed his family.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Entry 6

Peter Ota



            The most surprising concept that came from this piece was the humiliation and separation that the internment camps brought.  Peter explains how Execution 9066 forced his mother into a sanitarium, his father to Missoula, Montana, and his sister and him to Santa Anita.  The order is breaking up this family which is awful.  I believe that the order was made out of vengeance and that it was not thought out thoroughly.  According to Peter Ota, “Shame in her culture is worse than death.  Right after that day she got very ill and contracted tuberculosis.  She had to be sent to a sanitarium.  She stayed behind when we were evacuated.  She was too ill to be moved.  She was there till she passed away,” (205).  The embarrassment and betrayal of the United States destroyed her will to live.  The government destroyed that family’s beliefs and freedoms.  During that time, society may have said that it was okay to do that.  But, I believe that it contradicts the United States value that every man is created equal.  During World War II, the Nisei were not treated equally to other man which is what is the most distraught thing about this.  The Nisei are people that believed in America over Japan.  They chose to leave Japan to come to America.  Did the government ever think about that?  These people trust the United States for a better future, and the United States destroyed the Nisei’s lives after that.  America is a diverse country, so they should not punish one type of people because their homeland is threatening America.  It is just sad to hear a story of a woman that lost her will to live because of the betrayal of the government towards her family and culture.



Betty Basye Hutchinson



            I found it quite interesting how she was so determined to become a nurse in the war.  I understand that her brother and boyfriend went to the war, but she does not understand what she is getting into.  She does not know what war brings and causes to people.  She just assumed that she had to go to people and help the wounded.  Did she even consider that she was going to get to know these people that were hurt?  According to Hutchinson, “He was very hard to manage because he would scream when they changed his dressing.  He was insistent that he never was gonna leave that room until they brought him back to where he was before.  The staff couldn’t quite figure this out.  Why isn’t he quiet?  Why can’t he be brave when they’re changing his dressing?  What does he think we are, miracle makers? This mystique builds up that bill can’t handle it as well as the others.  Be brave, be brave,” (215).  Here she is saying that Nose needs to be brave about the change.  They want him to grow up and accept the change.  I think that those nurses should stop doing this.  The only thing about war they understand is the injuries.  They do not know the trauma that it believes.  Do the nurses know what the soldiers are thinking about in the process of dying?  Do they feel the pain that the soldiers feel? No, so it does not make sense why they are forcing the soldiers to change what they want.  Those soldiers have already endured too much pain and trauma.  I believe they should have the right to choose his dressing.  The nurses are contributing to the war, but the soldiers are the reason why the war would be won are lost.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Entry 5

Peggy Terry



            I just found this entry so interesting because of the relationship that she had with the war.  During the Depression, her family had no work and now that the war came along they were able to find work.  While describing her history, she says, “Each of us worked a different shift because we had little ones at home.  We made the fabulous sum of thirty-two dollars a week.  To us it was just an absolute miracle.  Before that, we made nothing.  You won’t believe how incredibly ignorant I was.  I knew vaguely that a war had started, but I had no idea what it meant,” (190).  She relied so much on the war because it was the reason why she was able to find work.  She did not even know what was happening to the troops that went out to fight.  She could not focus because she had to find and spend all of her time working.  The war was a miracle for them, but they do not have the time to support the troops that go out to fight.  They do not take part in the collective sacrifice because they do not have anything to give.  I believe that it raises the question, should the country participate in collective sacrifice right after the Depression occurred?  Can all Americans give up resources for the troops?  It is interesting because the Terry family benefited so much from the war, but they did not help the people who are fighting for them.  I just believe that the Terry family should attempt to participate in the support of the war because of the help that they received from the war.



E. B. (Sledgehammer) Sledge



            The reason for fighting for the soldiers was so interesting to me.  It was actually more surprising than interesting.  One would think that the soldiers would fight for the country that they live in, but that is not the case for the soldiers during World War II.  The secondary belief for soldiers choosing to fight in the war is for the benefits that it brings for the soldiers when they come back.  While Sledge is talking about the war, he says, “The only thing that kept you going was your faith in your buddies.  It wasn’t just a case of friendship… What was worse than death was the indignation of your buddies.  You couldn’t let’em down.  It was stronger than flag and country,” (197).  The soldiers simply wanted to fight for the soldiers because they are the only people that they know out there.  It is hard for them to care for their hobbies and family back home because they do not know if they will be home to appreciate them.  Out in Europe, the soldiers found something to appreciate, and it is their fellow comrades.  The soldiers family have less influence than the soldiers because they are not in Europe.  The other soldier’s presence is what keeps the soldiers going.  Without the confidence and relationship with fellow soldiers, the life and will of the soldiers would not have been at the high level it needed to be at.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Response 4

Introduction response

            The introduction was quite interesting because I was really able to explore why so many people wanted to fight in the war.  Was it because there was nothing at home? Was it for the adventure?  I believe that the real reason why so many people were excited for the war is because it gave them something that they had to do.  It’s interesting because Studs Terkel said, “It appears that the disremembrance of World War Two is as disturbingly profound as the forgettery of the Great Depression: World War Two, and event that changed the psyche as well as the face of the United States and of the world,” (Terkel 161).  He is saying that World War Two is forgotten offensive because it had a huge impact on the world.  The part that I find most interesting about that quote is that it compares it to the forgettery of the Great Depression.  Once World War Two came up, almost all of the people forgot that the Depression had occurred.  I believe that the reason is because the war gave people that had no jobs something to do.  People were either going off to fight for its country, or they were sent to the factories in order to make supplies for the troops.  It is almost as if World War Two unified the country when it was in tension.  The war created a sense of pride in the country after a time of depression.  Everyone had to do their part, unlike in the Great Depression when nobody really had a part to do.  The amount of roles that the war brought to the citizens is the reason behind the sudden change in thinking of Americans.

Robert Rasmus

            My first thought on this story was that it was going to be a typical story about another soldier who went to the war to fight for the country.  After getting into the story, I realized that the stereotype of the soldier can be completely different.  While explaining his story, Rasmus says, “When I went in the army, I’d never been outside the states of Wisconsin, Indiana, and Michigan.  So when I woke up the first morning on the troop train in Fulton, Kentucky, I thought I was in Timbuktu.  Of course, I was absolutely bowled over by Europe, the castles, the cathedrals, the Alps.  It was wonderment.  I was preoccupied with staying alive and doing my job, but it seemed, out of the corner of my eye, I was constantly fascinated with the beauty of the German forests and medieval bell towers.  At nineteen, you’re seeing life with fresh eyes.”  He grew up living a boring life, and the war was a new adventure for him.  I believe that so many people went to fight in the war because they were able to experience a whole new place.  It was a place where change can occur after the Great Depression.  People can go from being a nobody, and transforming into a lieutenant in a battalion.  The soldiers only wanted to live life in a new aspect that was different from the typical citizen that came from Timbuktu.  Rasmus showed me that the soldier did not only fight in the war in order to give back to the country.  The soldier fought because they want to witness the adventure and thrill that war can bring.