Showing posts with label Anger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anger. Show all posts

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Angry Men (Last Post for the Semester)


Angry Penguin
Angry Penguin (Photo credit:
Wikipedia)
I wrote the following last night and sent it off to my prof, just making the midnight deadline.

I learned a lot this term about men and anger, and I wasn't the only one.  One of my classmates did her analysis on the film Training Day, based on her belief that the main character's need to "lash out" came from issues with his father (who was not in the home when he was growing up).  According to what she found, there is considerable cultural support for that kind of behavior; she referred to a song by Tupac Shakur about the problem that fully described the emotions involved. 
Another student (and I can't remember what film he used) was looking at how men rank each other, and anger, that is, not showing anger, was an important factor.  It seems to me that this is actually true across the board, even in the urban setting of Training Day.   I don't enjoy crime dramas, and I think the main reason is that they tend to present people -- both criminals and police --acting out their issues through rage, which I think is a cheap way to heighten drama.  Maybe that's why I prefer science fiction (and westerns, for that matter):  the men in those films tend to need a lot of self-control to get the job done.  And maybe I've learned something else.  Are men who can't control their anger capable of accomplishing anything?   


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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Evaluating my Research Paper

Anger
Anger (Photo credit: ZORIN DENU)
Yes, this is twice in one day.  I have to make up for not posting while I was in a frenzy over getting my paper finished.  I think it turned out pretty well.  Actually, not to brag, but I really impressed myself (I can't be sure it would impress anyone else). 
My introduction was solid, at least I think it was.  I opened with a description of Doc and his wife, where he is kind of taking out his frustration on her.  The funny thing is that after I switched to looking at anger, Doc suddenly became a lot more important to the project.  One of the scenes I analyzed was after his wife was taken by the aliens -- he has a sort of transformation because of this, and his anger gets channeled into his determination to get her back.  My second scene (which came first in the analysis section of the paper) was Lonergan bringing home the gold and the argument that ends with them being captured.  I decided that it was significant that both of them were interacting with women when they showed their anger, and I think I pulled enough in from my sources to cover it.
The last scene I analyzed was Dolarhyde torturing the guy who got left behind when the aliens killed all the cattle.  I picked this one because he is so businesslike about what he is doing.  The guy doesn't seem to recognize how angry he is, but it seemed obvious to me that when he is truly enraged, he suddenly turns cold and stops his usual irritated behavior.  Here I am sure that I supported my interpretation with evidence from the "text" and my source material.
All in all, I'm happy with the paper.  I could have done more with the lit survey on anger, I guess, but I didn't want to run out of room for the analysis, and you can tell that I don't exactly excel at . . . well, call it terseness for lack of a better word.
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Thursday, March 29, 2012

It's the Flu!

¿INFLUENZA?, AJA Y QUE MÁS....JAJAJ

¿INFLUENZA?, AJA Y QUE MÁS....JAJAJ (Photo credit: Immer_Lebend)
I am sick.  My mom can't stop reminding me that I should have gotten a shot.  I had already figured that out on my own. 
Anyway, as long as I'm home, I'm trying to get through my draft for next week.  I already have one draft, but it's crummy.  My thesis doesn't work.  Maybe it's got the flu, too. 

I can't concentrate very well, thanks to the fever, so I'm not getting very far. 
Right now, I'm thinking about anger and violence, and anger and power.  And, how it all connects up with the masculine ideal.  It seems as though this comes out in the Lonergan character.  He only gets visibly angry once in the entire film, and that is when no other men are present.  When there are, you can't tell if he's angry, or even irritated, for that matter.  This seems to be part of a cultural image of strong men.  So, it's obvious that I need to think a lot more.
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Friday, March 23, 2012

The Anger Games

Angry Talk (Comic Style)Angry Talk (Comic Style) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)We're back from spring break this week, and I've turned in my annotated bibliography, but there's something funny about that:  I'm not going to be able to use too many of the sources I listed.  I have to change my focus.  There just wasn't enough material on the fathering angle, at least not the things I wanted to talk about.  And then it hit me that there is something else interesting going on, which is how each of the men in the film deal with anger. 
For one thing, anger seems to be Dolarhyde's default setting -- it's like he's permanently pissed off.  Lonergan is a good contrast to him:  he only rarely gets angry, and he doesn't automatically react to new threats with anger; he's more interested in dealing with the problem.  Doc gets angry out of frustration, mainly because he has no power to change anything, given the situation.  Nat, despite his attachment to Dolarhyde, doesn't use him as a role model.  He's actually more like Lonergan.
So.  I spent spring break doing fresh research, and I came up with some good articles.  I'm going to mix the material on anger with the basic men's studies material, and I'm pretty sure it's going to work this time.  It better-- the draft is due in a couple of weeks.   
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