Saturday, May 28, 2011
Brave New World: Society Today
Brave New World: The Role of the Savage
Brave New World: Implications of Absolute Government Control
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Life of Pi: Brutality
"I stabbed him repeatedly. His blood soothed my chapped hands. His heart was a struggle - all those tubes that connected it. I managed to get it out. It tasted delicious, far better than turtle. I ate his liver. I cut off great pieces of his flesh. He was such an evil man. Worse still, he met evil in me - selfishness, anger, ruthlessness. I must live with that. Solitude began. I turned to God. I survived."
This quote really caught me off guard. I was surprised by the transformation of a young vegetarian boy that was so committed to religion into a monster. Pi's original good nature was so quickly lost to an ease of cannibalism and this really made me think of how much an event can change a person. “It is simple and brutal: a person can get used to anything, even to killing" I did not expect this book to be so gruesome and have parts of cannibalism and murder from the knowledge that I had of the book prior to reading it. This passage really shows the brutality of humanity how people can change so easily with necessity.
Life of Pi
Life of pi has 100 chapters and is divided into 3 parts. Part number one tells the story of pi’s life before and after an unnamed horrifying event that caused great suffering to Pi. Part number two describes in great detail the event not spoke of in the first part. Part number three begins by investigators asking Pi questions, Pi telling the story of part number two and this part ends, the book ends with the investigators opinion on the story and the main characters life. I really liked the format of this book. The last part tying the whole book together by starting before the first part, and adding the second part in the middle of it in chapter 97 “the story” made the book more interesting to me. Another aspect I liked of the book was the use of listing. Throughout part two there was a lot of repetition, and although this made some of the book hard to read, I found that this really portrayed the sense of boredom and urge to survive that Pi was feeling.
Life of Pi: Unique Conclusion
"As an aside, story of sole survivor, Mr. Piscine Molitor Patel, Indian citizen, is an astounding story of courage and endurance in the face of extraordinarily difficult and tragic circumstances. In the experience of this investigator, his story is unparalleled in the history of shipwrecks. Very few castaways can claim to have survived so long at sea as Mr. Patel, and none in the company of an adult Bengal tiger."
This passage is the last paragraph of Life of Pi. I thought it was an appropriate ending, because it fundamentally represents Mr. Okamoto accepting Pi's first story, and by extension, accepting God and not accepting humans and purely animalistic species. Pi presents Mr. Okamoto with the possibility of shaping life as one would like to, seeing it in its most beautiful form. While Mr. Okamoto believed Pi's second, more tragic and horrible story, he prefers the first, and so Pi tells him to believe that one. It is not clear what choice Mr. Okamoto makes, until this final paragraph, which shows him accepting the tiger story which he at first finds so hard to believe. This passage made the meaning of the book clear to me. Although before reading the book, I was not expecting this book’s ending to be what it was. I really enjoyed this conclusion and made the book very unique.