Thursday, July 23, 2009

Consider Freud and Lacan next to Reznor....discuss amongst yourselves (note the nature of the images; the lyrics are below the video):


Right Where It Belongs
by NIN (written by Trent Reznor)

See the animal in his cage that you built
Are you sure what side you're on?
Better not look him too closely in the eye
Are you sure what side of the glass you are on?
See the safety of the life you have built
Everything where it belongs
Feel the hollowness inside of your heart
And it's all...
Right where it belongs

What if everything around you
Isn't quite as it seems?
What if all the world you think you know
Is an elaborate dream?
And if you look at your reflection
Is it all you want it to be?
What if you could look right through the cracks?
Would you find yourself...
Find yourself afraid to see?

What if all the world's inside of your head
Just creations of your own?
Your devils and your gods
All the living and the dead
And you're really all alone?
You can live in this illusion
You can choose to believe
You keep looking but you can't find the woods
While you're hiding in the trees

What if everything around you
Isn't quite as it seems?
What if all the world you used to know
Is an elaborate dream?
And if you look at your reflection
Is it all you want it to be?
What if you could look right through the cracks
Would you find yourself...
Find yourself afraid to see?



Tuesday, July 21, 2009


"Use the Force"


Part I: Defamiliarization 

In this photo: A man, dressed in black garb, stands at the center of a confrontation. He has buttons on his chest and, overall, looks like a robot. His mask hides his face. He is assessing the situation before him. To his left and behind him, there are men in white garb that also look like robots. Their masks hide their faces. The one closest to the man in black garb is carrying his gun at the ready. The white man furthest from the man in black garb is facing to the right as if to communicate with one of the other, several, men in white-robot-esque garb. In addition to the men in white robotic garb and the man in black in the foreground, there lie men in white robotic garb in addition to men, without masks, dead on the floor. There seems to have been a violent confrontation that has ended in death of two different factions of men; the men with masks have won it seems. The setting is one of the inside of a space vessel. It has several compartments on its vertical, left and right walls, while a series of two bright lights lines the ceiling. Red lights are obscured by smoke-possibly left from the gunfire of the confrontation.


Works Cited

http://www.galacticbinder.com/images/vaderfirst1.jpg



Part II: Semiotic Analysis--what meaning the signs carry in the photo

First off, we can look at the images in the picture to determine what they represent to us. The setting, for one, is white. White, in the photo, most likely represents a sterility associated with the inside of a spaceship in which our characters operate; The ship's walls are plastered with buttons and compartments which reveal that every inch of the ship has a function, a purpose. Furthermore, the ship's interior could symbolize the need Mankind to make everything useful for the greater good of his race--man---in a purely utilitarian and industrial sense. Also, the bright, fluorescent light in the ceiling adds additional effect to this sense of sterility, but also symbolizes the clarification of power--that is, that there is always a power struggle involved in space in this context, Star Wars. On a basic level the ratio of dead humans to dead Stormtroopers symbolizes the growing concern that technology is vehemently replacing humanitarianism, that the Empire (Capitalism/ the Ruling Class) is coming to rise. Notice the hazy hue being cut by the fluorescent light above, as well; it symbolizes a growing clarification of the ruling class, who has the power if you will, after war. Darth Vader, the villainous black figure represents not only the transition from organic life innate in mankind transforming/being outweighed by the rise of avarice, power, monarchy, technology (Vader is half man and half machine)--he also, represents the evil side of the coexistence of good and evil in the photo. Also, his color, black, denotes his status among his soldiers, the white Stormtroopers, in the image; For him black symbolizes a higher level of military status, evil, and power, while the white Stormtroopers are all the same color--this has the effect of making each Stormtrooper seem generic, as one arbitrary and faceless and indistinguishable face/personality/motive/function among many. This also makes sense considering that the white Stormtroopers have no capes, while Vader, the most powerful figure in the picture, does; the cape denotes power, military status, and strength for Vader. The men on the floor, whose faces are visible, represent the decline of what is natural, organic, and good in humanity in a space-time war; the fact that they, too, are wearing the same uniforms reveals that they, like Vader and his croons, employ military status in times of war. In contrast to Vader and his army, the fallen "men", here, are dressed in simpler and more basic, less technologically advanced garb; this difference symbolizes the dominance of a technologically more advanced Empire over the democratic and humanitarian efforts of simpler men dressed in simpler attire. Altogether, semiotically speaking, the photo is a glimpse into symbols in imagery--it's a statement on the decline of humanity at the foot of technology and power; it's a glimpse into Darwinism and Marxism: the stronger--in this case, technologically more advanced and powerful--force will dominate the lesser advanced despite intent.

Works Cited

http://www.galacticbinder.com/images/vaderfirst1.jpg

Mini Analysis 1




"Survival of the Un-fittest": Aristotlean Logos, Ethos, and Pathos in Michael Douglas' speech arguing that "Greed Is Good"

In the clip above, Michael Douglas' deceptively brilliant character, Gordon Gekko, rebuttals his own defamation as a harmful influence on the Teldar Company. We can see the power of his speech in the way he incorporates Aristotle's three rhetorical appeals; Ethos (appeal to credibility), Logos (appeal to logic), and, perhaps most importantly, Pathos (appeal to emotion). In his speech, Gekko first establishes his ethos when he says that he is "the single largest shareholder" of Teldar, and later appeals to his audience with his credibility again when he boasts of the economic prowess Teldar has enjoyed "Since [he has] been" the largest shareholder of the company. After he establishes why the audience should trust him, let alone continue to listen to him, Gekko establishes a Logos approach; he spits out a plethora of numerical figures to boost his Ethos, while simultaneously erecting a sound Logos; he does this explicitly when he says, "Teldar paper has 33 Vice Presidents--each earning over 200 thousand dollars a year. Now I have spent the last few months analyzing what these guys do and I still can't figure it out". To hammer his point home and elevate his audience's interest and conviction in his case, Gekko offers his way of doing things while shaming the board that has attempted to defame his credibility; he offers, "In my book, you either do it right or you get eliminated" before he tactfully and plainly incorporates his Pathos. Gekko's appeal to the audience's emotion is couched in his Ethos first, and is supported by his intermittent and factual evidence, examples of Logos. He does this with subtlety and affirmation when he uses Democracy to strengthen his Pathos: he says to the audience, "you own the company. That's right, you, the stockholder". In addition, Gekko addresses his own criticisms and flips them on his head in braiding Pathos, and Logos together after he has skillfully incorporated an effective Ethos--"I am not a destroyer of companies; I am a liberator of them!" When Gekko finally has the audience where he wants them, hanging on to his every word and becoming more convinced as he speaks more, he uses Logos and Pathos to realistically address the larger problem of the United States in likening the country to a corporation in itself--he finishes with the line, "Greed will not only save Teldar Paper but that other malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A." The power and poignancy of Gekko's argument lies in how he weaves Ethos, Logos and Pathos together.

Works Cited

Classical Literary Criticism. Trans. T.S. Dorsch and Penelope Murray. London: Penguin Books, 2004. 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5JZp215Bgyk

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Analysis 1

"

"Censory Perception": Book II of Plato 's Republic and Pacino's Speech in Michael Mann's The Insider 

In Plato’s The Republic, he outlines a construct for what he deems to be the best society in the wake of reconstructing a people after a war. At the heart of his consideration of such a new civilization is the concept of truth and how it is represented to the public; Plato sets up how the poets’ truth is to be censored. Plato's The Republic is still poignant today, as in Michael Mann’s movie The Insider, one of the central themes in which the story draws tragedy deals with the concept of censorship and the ethics that are involved. In the clip, Al Pacino’s character, big time television producer Lowel, quarrels with the CBS corporation to air a version of the most controversial anti-tobacco interview in U.S. history—Lowel’s source, Jeffrey Wigand, had been working for a major tobacco company when he stumbled onto evidence which suggested that his tobacco company, among others, deceitfully put addictive chemicals in cigarettes, which have been scientifically proven to be toxic to the human body.This clip from The Insider meshes nicely with Plato’s concept of censorship of the poet’s truth, and the problem of what truth is and how it should be conveyed, in his The Republic
 
Al Pacino’s character, Lowel, is essentially explaining why his primary insider, Wigand, will not be completely and truthfully represented on the airing of his show, and makes an important assertion regarding the representation of truth. Lowel says, “And Jeffrey Wigand, whose out on a limb—does he go on television and tell the truth? Yes. Is it newsworthy? Yes. Are we going to air it? Of course not. Why? Because he’s not telling the truth? No—because he is telling the truth; that’s why we’re not going to air it. And the more truth he tells, the worse it gets” (Mann, 3:12). This speaks to the idea of censorship of the bad traits of the Gods in book two of Plato’s The Republic. When Plato says that, “founders need to know the patterns on which poets are to compose their stories, and form which they must not be allowed to deviate, but they don’t need to compose the stories themselves” (Plato 17), he makes the point that what ever class is the ruling class, the class of people whose duty it is to guard the imagined city in this case, has the duty to censor the stories of the poets; poets are the conveyers of values and truth. This raises an interesting problem though—the founders, or the ruling class, according to Plato, don't convey the truth, the poets do; the founders or rulers, the ones who decide what truth is best for the masses, essentially censor what the poets tell the people. Similarly, in Mann’s The Insider clip, Pacino’s character, Lowel, makes a statement on this same problem. His role as newsman is superseded by his corporation, CBS’, CEO ruling class; that is to say, that Lowel’s bosses at the top decide what truth his show is to convey to the public, for their means (money), not for his (explicit truth to the public). Lowel’s speech, thus, demarks the innate problem in censorship which Plato hasn’t considered—what if the poet, knowing he is censored by the founders or the guardians or the Philosopher-Kings, sides with ultimate and absolute truth despite his status? In Plato’s day, the poet would probably be killed, but in contemporary America, this concept of censorship is paramount. 
 
Towards the end of the clip, of his corporation’s CEO’s making a decision to cut his segment, leaving out crucial information on his issue from the public, Lowel says, “these people are putting the whole reason for doing what we do on the line” (Mann, 3:51). Aside Plato’s assertion, “god is not the cause of everything, but only of good” (Plato 19), Lowel’s observation on his status as a newsman versus his abdication of rights and power to his superior business man in the corporate headquarters of CBS, sheds new light on an old Platonic concept. Lowel implies that his goal in his role as newsman is to, as objectively as possible, convey the truth of the news to the public with his television segment, while his superiors, the business men who control the money and therefore his content, forget the very reason they hired people like Lowel. This highlights the issue that although the ruling class, the deciders of how truth should be conveyed to the public, are really forgetting the point of the poet, or the newsman; in censoring and choosing their own truth, these people in power undermine the very purpose of the poet and newsman in themselves—undeniable and frank truthfulness.
 
Not only does Plato define God as good, he says that God is not the cause of everything. Aside Plato's characterization of God, Lowel’s assertion gains new meaning. In Lowel’s world, God, or the inspiration for his truth, is symbolized by the CBS corporation. Lowel's  bosses perceive that truth lies in money, and in money only. When Lowel defines himself as a  producer and newsman, and not a businessman, he is fighting an uphill battle; to Lowel, his bosses are like Plato's conception of God because they have the final say on what he airs-- they have the final say on how the truth is represented to the public. In addition, Plato’s conception of God implies that God is relative—that every people thinks their God to be good by definition and that, perhaps, while He isn’t the cause of everything, He should be taken out of the equation when dealing with moral relativism. This is at the heart of The Insider clip. Lowel’s morality, his God, his goodness, is unadulterated truth to the public; the corporation’s God, and goodness, is money on the other hand. It depends whose side you’re on.
 
Works Cited
Classical Literary Criticism. Trans. T.S. Dorsch and Penelope Murray. London: Penguin Books, 2004. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIjpP-XngKA