Where's Home?

http://www.wetcircuit.com/wp-content/myfotos/wizard_of_oz/Wizard_of_Oz_00.jpgRushdie, in his analysis of "The Wizard of Oz" understands that home is where the heart is. He grew up in England but felt connections to his birthplace of India. He explains that the weakness of adults force children to decide their own destiny. This is explained fully in "The Wizard of Oz"critique.
Rushdie explains that the "The Wizard of Oz" never made money until it was popularized via the television. This idea transcends Hollywood and later Bollywood in India.

The world of The Wizard of Oz has possessed" thinking within us. "We are the stand-ins now.” In the typewrites clip we are completely immersed as viewers and for me it makes me feel comfort. 


Rushdie promotes the idea of fantasy with the viewer leading the way. As a viewer, Rushdie states that we must ulitmately decide where "home" is. The fantastical notion that home can be somewhere within a film makes us as the audience want a better life and home. The desire to find ones own and identify within a people remain most imperial when analyzing any text.




Posted at at 5:07 PM on Tuesday by Posted by Lorenzo | 0 comments   | Filed under:

Jack Bauer

http://images.fanpop.com/images/image_uploads/Jack-Bauer-24-36840_1280_960.jpg
Jack Bauerr is the epitome of a dad who obsessed with struggle. Although his role as father is seen a progressive stage in society, his failure to care for his work and family in unison falter. Jack Bauer is man of more than his work-- or so he claims.

Using ideas of Freud, we see how the unconscious of Jack's fears are seen in the treatment of his family. He loves his work as much as one should another human and thus subconsciously hates the world in which he is a part of at home--a father.

Jack then acts aggressive and masculine to counteract his unconscious effeminate want for a family he can love. Jack Bauer is the powerful male character of his biggest dreams.

Posted at at 4:37 PM on by Posted by Lorenzo | 0 comments   | Filed under:

Jameson

Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa painting has taken different form much throughout recorded history. A lady is a lady is a lady. No matter how many takes there are on the da Vinci classic, it will always remain to the viewer the Mona Lisa.

I feel that in order for any painting or work of art to have legitimacy, it must be first well revered in the context in which it was painted. In other words, it must have meaning to be loved. The Mona Lisa strikes me as a loved piece. Artists who feel the need to recreate it inherently have a love of the piece.

This is postmodernism. The trends or movements in art that react or reject the dogma, principles, and practices of established modernism. In light of recreating the Mona Lisa, da vinci's international style and encouraging use of elements from his preffered styles often play with complexity and can be seen in recreation.

Jameson would dub the photo to the left a challenge to"meta-narrative"-an abstract idea thought to be a comprehensive explanation of historical experience or knowledge. This is good for society and drives artists to question ubiquitous norms.


Posted at at 4:24 PM on by Posted by Lorenzo | 0 comments   | Filed under: