Friday, February 14, 2014

Cultrally Abstract

Cultrally Abstract


Personally, I cannot explain my culture. I know I'm more than one dominant ethnithicy, however it's not very important in the eyes of others, and apparently I've adopted that way of thinking. I hail from German roots from both my Mother & Father's side of the faimly, yet we don't hold any traditons concerning it. Our family has been cultrally diffused into becoming the typical middle classed family. Yet I still feel anxious when people ask me what I am. I want to say my faimly's from Germany, but all I can say is "I'm Black" Plain and simple.

However, I've done a pretty good job of following my parent's dominant heritage. I understand the struggles they went through growing up and respect them for it, yet I don't feel that's the world we live in anymore. Don't get me wrong, segregration, racism, and hatred will continue to exist in our society, but not to the same extent of being shot for what you believe in. And because of the sacrafices made by others of my ethithicy, I can't be anything but proud of who, and what I am without disrespecting their legacy.
When it my time comes to teach my kids about our culture. I want them to understand that who we are as parents, should not define who they are as people, but they should look to understand us as people to better understand themselves.

Oh the Horror





Edgar Allen Poe's short story, "The Fall of the House of Usher", is very well know as the father of horror stories. But what made "The Fall of the House of Usher" so great that a lot of people decided to base their stories off of it? In his story, Poe used multiple strategies that later on became a key component of horror stories. Five of the components that I would use if I were to write a haunted house story are the creepy setting, imagery, looking through a narrator's perspective, weird behaviors, and a vague ending.

The first technique Poe used was the unclear ending. What exactly happened? Did the sister and the main character's friend actually die? Did they even exist? That was absolute brilliance from Poe. He did not guide you through the story. This allows many different interpretations of what actually happened, which will leave the world guessing until the end of time.

Another techniques I would steal from Poe is his use of extreme detail to describe the house. He described not only the appearance in such great detail that the image is burned in my head, but he described the feelings that the house was giving off. He did an excellent job of putting the reader at the doorsteps of that house.


The last technique is the background characters given for each charter. this allows the reader to understand fully who these characters are and why they are in the predicament that they are in at the start of the story.

I must be doing something wrong

Good - Bad, Nice - Evil, There's always something to fight the light. But without darkness, the light cannot shine. So in a way, What we think is "good" is dependent on what we think is "bad". In the story Young Goodman Brown, the story presents a deep question. Is it better to show your sins openly, or hide them and deny what you do.
Nowadays, the supernatural has become acceptable and desirable. All forms of entertainment is base on the mysterious supernatural. A lot of time our fascination for the unknown is driven by the motive to escape our man made scientifically explained home to a place where your not in control. For instance, getting lost in a the television series Supernatural will do that for you. The series provides an opportunity for the viewers to be exposed to the best and worst of both worlds.
One of the reason for this continuous growth of America's obsession with the occult is tied in with our want of a happy ending. Hollywood showed us through movies, like "World War Z" and "Warm Bodies", that even through all the struggles, there will always be a happy ending. We use these movies as an escape from our real lives and hope that we are able to live the lives of those people on the big screen where everything always ends up the way they wanted to.





We probably would never be able to see vampires or zombies in real life, but it never hurts to hope for it to happen, right? For all we know, the supernatural is probably way more real than the world we are living in now. There could have been a vampire in your science class all along and you most likely would not have known about him.