This blog is meant to be used as an example for first-year composition students. Rhonda is a fictional community college student who will perpetually be taking the two-course sequence. This is her online writing and research journal (her 2012 research entries run from 1/20-5/5/2012; Eng101 reading journal that year runs from 8/22-12/5/12). For an explanation of the course, see below for Rethinking Teaching the Research Paper.
Showing posts with label political thrillers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label political thrillers. Show all posts
Monday, October 20, 2014
It's a Conspiracy!
As a result of a lot of family issues, I've been letting this go for a couple of weeks (my aunt is better, maybe, and my uncle is not-- they decided his heart wasn't in good enough shape for spinal surgery), but I've been keeping up with the work otherwise. My annotated bibliography looked good to me; I just hope that it looks good when it's graded. I finished revising my review of scholarly literature on the political thriller genre (just in time: it's due today), so here I am to talk about what I've found.
It seems that the crucial element that defines the genre is the presence of a conspiracy. This is what puts Divergent into the same category as The Manchurian Candidate and Enemy of the State. What makes it less obvious to a casual viewer is the presence of kids. In those films, a single innocent person somehow stumbles upon a conspiracy to overthrow an elected leadership and has to survive numerous attacks while trying to take the whole thing apart. It's probably needless to point out that this innocent person is usually an adult (and male).
And, I just thought of another difference, but I'll save that for my next post.
Sunday, September 21, 2014
How Scary is Scary Enough?
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A very scary Angela Lansbury in The Manchurian Candidate |
The strange thing is that they all have been asking me about my research project, and not just the usual "hows-school-going" kind of questions everyone asks when they see me. Rebbie says that they're trying to think about something besides what's going on, so if it helps, I'm up for it. Obviously, it's going to help me, anyway, and I can't think of anything else I can do to help them.
My aunt actually led me to a question I should have been asking. She sees Divergent as a horror film, not a political thriller. And her question is: "aren't political thrillers a subgenre of horror?" She made a good case, using The Manchurian Candidate and V for Vendetta for examples. After seeing The Manchurian Candidate, I can see why she said this. It is totally creepy, especially considering it was made right before JFK was assassinated. And the Kate Winslett character is a lot like the one Angela Lansbury played in TMC, so maybe the horror connection is not too farfetched.
I need to think more about this, and I need to use this in my research into genres.
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