Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Week 6






















       On the Road to Yosemite, CA



Welcome back to class. Hope you had a good weekend.

Today I'll return last week's midterm work and look to you for the summary/responses (#4) to 
 the chapters by P.M. Forni and verb exercise.

Remember, you were to use your own words, and to include title, author, and one or two quotations from
the text to show some of the original.

We will discuss the graded work in class, the midterm, and I'll review with each of you, as needed.  See the main
points below:
Summary/Response Checklist:

Make sure that you identify the author’s name, the title of the article, essay, chapter and/or book from
which the summary is drawn.  Reference these in your opening lines. 

Include one or two direct quotations to show the original textual matter and lend support to your claims.The 
formatting of these items is demonstrated on the handout accompanying the photocopied
chapter "Think the Best." You were also to include a few direct quotations from the text, as illustrated
in the example passage below:

     The author  P.M. Forni used both process description and cause/effect mode to argue that in the
interests of civility we ought to think well of others, as a matter of practice, because in doing so we
encourage people to be and do their best, including ourselves. “Believing that they are good, I want to
be good for them,” he wrote.


Other Sample Beginnings:

-----------------------------------------------------Summary Response Introductions

In the play A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche famously says, “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.”  And we all
do in so many ways, which is the central idea that P.M. Forni develops in the chapter “Think the Best.” This is one of
 twenty-five chapters in the book Choosing Civility.  Indeed, we find salvation in others.  He quotes in epigraph the
 Apostle Paul:  “Be not forgetful to entertain [. . . ].”




In P.M. Forni’s Choosing Civility, specifically the chapter “Think the Best,” he reminds readers that we all have a spark of
 the divine in us, or at least that it helps to think that way, elevates us and all who we come in contact with us. In epigraph,
 he quotes Paul of Tarsus:  “Be not forgetful to entertain strangers for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.” 
 I am reminded of a something Abraham Lincoln wrote, and here I paraphrase, if you look for the worst in man you will
surely find it

-------------


Next Assignment (6): If we were given the chance to rewrite some chapter in life, or to relive some
moment now resigned to the past, what revisions would we make, or what insight would we bring to 
the moment now?

What lessons are there in wondering, what if . . . ?

What if we could time travel? We can in some senses. We can pretend that we had been born in a 

different era and imaginatively enter into the lives of those who have lived before us. Thanks to
the research of scientists and historians of every stripe, the past unveils its secrets, and is now
recorded in new layers of story and imagery, all adding to our knowledge of life on this planet.
We may learn how other human societies lived and what they believed, how they and 
other species met the challenges of life, how they at whatever time did navigate, nourish and 
reproduce themselves, defend themselves and their young. If you were given a day, week, month, or
year to live wherever and whenever and however you choose, what choice would you make?

We can say, had I known such and such a thing, I might never have done what I did. Sometimes we 
rewrite the past with our inner voice, as a means of understanding what has worked and not worked
for us, thus reshaping our thought and behavior as we move forward in life. What if we were still
 stuck in outmoded ways of thinking and behaving? What if the possibility for personal change were
 to be taken from us? Transformation begins with our thoughts, and with the language we use to 
express ourselves. Thank goodness we can imagine possibilities beyond the given or present!

Essay 6: In 350-500 words you are to explore a hypothetical scenario; that is, one that you 
imaginatively enter into, with whatever sure knowledge makes it all plausible and meaningful as an 
essay. You are writing non-fiction, remember, seeking to show a truth. You might think in terms of 
the difference made if one or another event had occurred (or not) in your personal life or in history. 
What effects on the past, present, and/or future do you imagine in this hypothetical scenario? 
How might the past look, how might today be different, and how might the future look?

This essay assignment provides good practice with verbs–past, present, future–and in using 

comparison and contrast mode. You will likely use the subjunctive mood and conditional (modal) 
tense forms as well as simple and perfect tenses.

Imagine that you had been born under or into circumstances other than those you were
 born into; for example, a different place and/or historical era, a different family, a different body (or 
species), and so on. Describe what your childhood was actually like, and what it might have been 
like (under the changed circumstances); what your present life might be like (as opposed to what
 is actually happening); imagine your future, actually or hypothetically. Or look at any important 
decision you made or did not make and trace the consequences of having taken an opposite track. 
If we had the chance to do things differently, if we had superpowers, the omniscience of a goddess, 
what would we do with these?  Of course, we don't have superhuman powers, and we must make
do with what we have–but there are insights that reflection brings when we think of what might
have been, or what might be if only . . .   This "other" life is what Cheryl Strayed ("Sugar") refers to in the
piece called "The Ghost Ship That Didn't Carry Us" (class handout).

Modern technology allows us to see the world in ways we could not without it.  We'll look at the 
short film here:  https://www.ted.com/talks/louie_schwartzberg_hidden_miracles_of_the_natural_world
You could write about what is revealed by Schwartberg's camera eye, and your response to it.
If we had the power to examine a dragonfly's wings in slow motion, what would we discover? We 
now have the technology to make such an investigation possible, as the film reveals.



Checklist:

*Title the essay.

*Proofread to make sure you have a clear central idea and adequate support.

*Remember your audience and write on a matter of intrinsic or practical importance.
*Edit your sentences for clarity of expression and grammatical correctness.

Note:

The use of narration and description, with scene setting, vivid detail and action, will make readers see
 and feel the particular experience(s) and ideas you have in mind.

– Comparison/contrast mode will show the actual versus the imaginary, and make it clear that your
 focus is hypothetical.

  

You might start in this way: 

Had I been born an only child, instead of being born the fifth child of six,
I might have got more attention than I did.  I might have been spoiled!  My parents had little time for me,
as it was, with so many to care for.


Or:
If I were sixty-five (you can fill in any future age) and to at my life, what would I want to see I had 
accomplished

Or:   If I could do one thing differently, rewrite the past, I would go back to the time . . .

Or:   If we were to walk, fly, or swim the proverbial mile in the life of (fill in whatever human,
animal or insect subject interests you) we would discover . . .


Or: If we were to travel to the ends of the earth and back, we would discover a great deal about life
on this planet, including the fascinating  . . .

Or:  If I were rich, free of all financial obligations-I would travel. 



Essay 5 will require homework, time to think. It involves formulations of
thought and verb tense usage that may be challenging forsome of you.
We will practice the tense usages in class and then have a go at writing the piece.






























































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