Thursday, May 20, 2010
Extreme Circumstance
The Habituation Blues
WHY?!
Jobs
Are you brave enough?
here i want to say: Are you brave enough to not regret on anything in the long river of life.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
The End of the Road
Metaphorically Speaking
Metaphorically Speaking
“The script looks like a Road!”
“Neal, I finished writing about us. On the road”
This was written in the introduction part of the novel. Jack seemed very excited about finishing the script. He described the script as a road and writing it felt like he was on the road again. I always thought this story was Jack’s, but now I feel like this book was like a friendship book for Jack and Neal. It’s a story about freedom that Jack and Neal had. Jack writes “ Which I keep thinking about; about two guys hitch hiking to California in search of something they don’t find, and losing themselves on the road, and coming all the way back hopeful of something else”. I feel like to be on the road was to go on a self searching journey. They were separate people and were on a separate journey but was on the same journey. I think the journey made them grow just a little more, and made their friendship just a little more deeper.
The conversation on Women
Neal and Jack had a conversation on women at one point in the novel. They always had conversations on women but this night, Neal was more serious and was more enlightened (?) He had this expression as if he understood the world or something. Jack described what Neal was talking about as not understandable but understandable and is very pure. Neal was crying out about how women can never understand what men are thinking. He wished Louanne would believe his eternal love towards her. Jack tells him, Men doesn’t understand women too. Neal responds to this, that the relationship is not that simple. I think it is. Men can never understand women and women can never understand men. Female and male think in a different way, and I personally think it is hard to make female and male understand each other.
ps. I dislike how Neal said Louanne should understand and believe in the eternal love he gives her, when he is always flirting with other ladies.
crazy diamond
Shine on you crazy diamond.
Well you wore out your welcome with random precision,
rode on the steel breeze.
Come on you raver, you seer of visions,
come on you painter, you piper, you prisoner, and shine!"
Understanding where you are...
“ Undertand the country, and you will be fine. You will survive.”
My dad taught me when I was a child. I never understood it. As I grew up, his words faded away.
In page 222, Neal and Jack has a serious conversation on how one can be fine traveling anywhere in the country if one knows one part of the country well enough and the native language of that country. That is because every inch of the country are the same and the people are the same. This reminded me of what my dad taught me. I wonder what it means to be able to understand the country and to be able to speak in the language spoken in that country.
I personally think this is something someone can understand once they go on a long Journey, after experiencing being far away from their home, or someone that has been on the road once.
Age
The meaning....
What does it mean to be on the road?
To be on the road means to be free from everything.
It doesn’t mean Jack became free, because he was on the road or just a while he was on the road. To be on the road at least once in a life, opens up the door to freedom. To be “On The Road” is an idea of freedom. The way one thinks after being on the road is freedom. Like Jack, his thoughts are free, more then he himself is physically free.
Emotionless
In the novel On The Road, Jack interacts with a lot of people while he is on the road. He likes and has fun interacting with others, but there is something strange about him. Jack never stays with one person (friends/ girl friends). Most of the time, he leaves when the relationship with that person becomes a little awkward/ uncomfortable. Jack is a man that seems excited and interested in anything, but he actually doesn’t really care about anyone he interacts with. This makes me think that he interacts with others just to have a story to talk about, and there are no meanings in the relationship he sort of builds up while he is on the road.
The Difference
Jack is a man. A human just like any other. But there is a special fact that makes him different from us. He has “Freedom”. Or at least he is very close to Freedom compared to people that goes to school six days a week, and being restricted by time/ schedule. Jack is free because he is not restricted by time. Being on the road makes that possible. Then does Jack have fun with his freedom? Of course he does. Jack is always happy to be on the road and is always excited to be on the road again. He probably likes the feeling of being free from relationships with others, being restricted by time and being able to move under no pressure.
lesson
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Whiskey and Wine
Goals
Old Age
views of women
"You've got brown in you ears."
: (
Drugs
Monday, May 17, 2010
$Money
A Greater Understanding
The Fuuuuture
Two snaps and a drumroll
Finale
Bill
Sunday, May 16, 2010
What is a relationship?
Genre
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Can you hear the "Beat"
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Dear Neal
Sunday, May 9, 2010
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Jack's Lack of a Backround
Jack's Fears
Friday, April 30, 2010
Suddenly!!
Through out the book there are poetic moments and stagnant moments through. No matter how well his ideas move together, everything is exciting to read because it's so raw.
Makes me wonder, how much does re-editing detract from an author's real voice/experience? How much are they faking in hopes of getting the publishers attention?
No future no past (an observation)
Women and Jack again
Thursday, April 29, 2010
One Big Red Line
"It was my dream that screwed up, the hearthside idea that it would be wonderful to follow one great line across American instead of trying various roads and routes."
First, I'd like to acknowledge the immaturity at the very beginning of the sentence, blaming the dream for his problems. He tries to hide the realization that someone had to dream the dream and implement it in reality.
However, the rest of the quote plays to life experience. As one might try at first, there is no red line from birth to death, or rather, no desirable one. Everyone tries to carve one themselves at some point, but are quickly pushed off by unforeseen difficulties. Hopefully, one might come to the realization, whether out of enlightenment, frustration, or a combination of the two, that by trying to carve a straight line is boring, and allows one to miss out on some of the finer points of life.
Conflicting Accounts
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics
A Generation Lost In Space
Through the lens of this book, one sees those who fought the war in the years following. The effect is twofold, both stemming from the ever infamous post-traumatic stress disorder. First, these young men had seen many other men their age, and no less capable than themselves, gunned down in their prime. Many had been allies. Many had been friends. Many had perished at one's own trigger finger, with no real difference between life or death other than luck. The blood of both one's friends and enemies can be almost unbearable. The need sets in to forget such atrocities, and many of them turned to smoking, drinking, and hard drugs. William Burroughs, a character in the book, was a famous heroin addict.
War forces people to mature much faster than they normally would. Many of those who came into contact with this particularly grizzly example were only 18. Many even lied about their age to enlist early. Forced to act older due to extreme circumstances, they could have either felt that they had been robbed of their childhood, and try to return and cling to their past, or could subconsciously associate the sense of maturity and responsibility to the senseless killing found on the desert, forest, and naval slaughter fields of the second World War.
(Note: These are my own thoughts on the psychology of this phenomenon. The post war lives of soldiers is not something I generally read into as much as I should.)
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
In reply to Kayla's idea
I don't think the book has a genre, suffice to say: it's all genres.
Jack is constantly unclear about his identity as a writer, therefore he embodies every tone, and literary idea. The road is the main focus, but everything that he perceives transcends those of other writers. He notices the fantastical elements, as well as the romantic, and dramatic tid-bits.
Save Jack
Monday, April 26, 2010
what are women for Jack?
Jack and his personality.
Getting Groceries 2
Getting Groceries
Sunday, April 25, 2010
the 6th post!!!!!!!!
but for Lisa!!!!!!
Time is not a big figure in Jack's or his friends'(mostly Neal's) lives. They go somewhere when they want to go, they leave when they want to leave. In general they don't have real control or a plan for their time. So, it brings us back to the point: they live completely as possible in the moment.Neal always lives in his own "schedule"
what will happen next
this is some description about Neal by Jack.
from Jack's description about Neal, that Neal is a quick thinker, he can come up ideas fast, and that made him a con man. And same thing can apply to Neal's life style: reckless and live in present.And those are the ideas that Jack learned from Neal, they were trying to have every kind experience that they could possibly get. Jack's friendship with Neal is at first so strong that he is willing to follow Neal anywhere without a second thought. As they travel back and forth across the country, they share each other's life stories, dreams, philosophies, and visions.Jack wants to be with Neal just to see what will happen next.
Book
It's not an autobiography
To: Mr. Kerouac, Love: Willie Nelson.
One, two, three, four
On the road again
Just can't wait to get on the road again
The life I love is making music with my friends
And I can't wait to get on the road again
On the road again
Goin' places that I've never been
Seein' things that I may never see again
And I can't wait to get on the road again
On the road again
Like a band of gypsies we go down the highway
We're the best of friends
Insisting that the world keep turning our way and our way
Is on the road again
I just can't wait to get on the road again
The life I love is making music with my friends
And I can't wait to get on the road again
On the road again
Like a band of gypsies we go down the highway
We're the best of friends
Insisting that the world keep turning our way and our way
Is on the road again
Just can't wait to get on the road again
The life I love is making music with my friends
And I can't wait to get on the road again
And I can't wait to get on the road again
And then there is Neal
Girls, Girls, Girls
Friends
post war and Jack
Part 1: A different point of view
The Jailkid
When an infant enters the world, they are greeted by a range of stimuli so great that the lack of sensory overload is remarkable. Everything is new, and nothing is boring or common place. Nothing is too ordinary to fail to spark excitement. As we grow older, we shed this outlook, object by object. But on occasion, a door is opened to a new range of concepts. (I learned three programming languages in three weeks when I learned what each one was capable of.) And in one of these doorways, we find Neal, who has seen the door to intellectualism, and looking for the key to the locked complex.
ati-hero
Rebellion is the way to go!!!
friendship in the book
Addiction
A movie came out in recent history about an effect Jack seems to suffer from. The Hurt Locker is about a man who enlists and is deployed to a bomb squad in Iraq, leaving behind his wife and young child. He becomes the leader of his bomb team when his predecessor is terminated by a radio activated improvised explosive. He comes close to death very, very many times, and survives to return home to his family. He eventually confesses to his son (please pardon the excessively long quote)
"You love playing with that. You love playing with all your stuffed animals. You love your Mommy, your Daddy. You love your pajamas. You love everything, don't ya? Yea. But you know what, buddy? As you get older... some of the things you love might not seem so special anymore. Like your Jack-in-a-Box. Maybe you'll realize it's just a piece of tin and a stuffed animal. And the older you get, the fewer things you really love. And by the time you get to my age, maybe it's only one or two things. With me, I think it's one."
He then proceeds to reenlist in the armed forces, with the same position he previously held.
I am still fairly early on in the book. So pardon me for getting what I've heard about what is ahead wrong, or reiterating what you already know. But at one point in the opening, Jack says
"I was beginning to get the bug like Neal. In all, what Neal was, simply, was tremendously excited with life, and though he was a con-man, he was only conning because he wanted so much to live and also to get involved with people who would otherwise pay no attention to him."
As Jack had said he had caught the bug.
"I shambled after as usual as I've been doing all my life after people that interest me, because the only people that interest me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones that never yawn or say a commonplace thing.. but burn, burn, bur like roman candles across the night."
The problems these two characters face seem completely different in nature. One believes that he can only abide by one life, and the other decides he cannot choose. But the nature of the problem is the same. Each has experienced a situation nearly surreal in nature, the character from The Hurt Locker, experienced war, a location so different than anything else imaginable, and Jack Kerouac "caught the bug" from Neal, went out on the road, and most likely made drug use a norm. (At one point Jack says he had collected 50 from his veteran benefits, suggesting a tour in World War II.) Whatever the experience, they have come into contact with a reality so entirely different than that of an average citizen.
With this contact, civilian life suddenly seems mundane, routine, and quite harshly pointless. They lose all connections to it, when they find a reality that they deem for better or worse "more exciting", than the life they experience at home, and therefore cannot abide by it. Therefore they find the only option to keep searching for that rush they have become so addicted to. The reason Jack Kerouac moves so frequently, I would argue, is because of an addiction to the rush that he can only find On The Road.
Tally 2
I just tallied posts and comments. I'll have chart for you in class tomorrow. It's 1:55pm, Sunday, April 25.
Keep going!
Lisa
Reality
Pressure
On the Road Alone
home
Jack
Friday, April 23, 2010
How many roads must a man walk down
Veiwpoint
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Can I go as far to say....
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Did it make it into the final cut?
On pg. 244 Jack writes about the couple drug habit, did descriptions like this pass the sensors, making it into the actual published edition?
Monday, April 19, 2010
Who is Jack?
Sunday, April 18, 2010
The Purity of the Road
I was struck by this quote, it's poetic. And further emphasizes Jack's sentiments from the beginning of the book. He's constantly searching for that clean slate running away from his depression.
I'm starting to feel that Jack was never truly happy, he never lived in the moment, though [mind you,] not many people can, but I'm starting to get frustrated with his itchy feet, and excessive internalization. Arrgghh...so thoughts?
Food will do you good...
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Vagueness around Jack's character
Jack's friends' perceptions of him
MARKING PERIOD 5 END
At this point on the blog I have tallied all previous posts and comments.
Keep posting, commenting and intellectualizing Jack's experiences. I am so happy this book is leading us into the good weather.
REMEMBER, you will create a formal assignment based on your blog posts and journal entries, so the better your posts are, the less work you'll have to do later!
Lisa
The Man Jack Is
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Who am I? Who are you?
Style of Writing
Memory, All alone in the moonlight
Man-Boy
Black, White, Grey
Meanwhile..
Why Bea?
going back to normal after madness
different point of view.
Monsieur Cru
Pull of his own life
It's exhausting reading this because he never seems relaxed, or situated.
Jack and Neal
Manana
I am traveling with him when I'm reading.
Working in the jail
Who else was very surprised that Jack worked in a jail? He's passive as an authoritative figure, and enjoys drinking with the inmates. Maybe he was using the profession as another way to meet "mad people."
questions by Asta and Sarah
Max and Katherine's 3 questions
2. Should Jack have stayed with Beatrice in the end?
3. Where were Jack and Bea picking cotton?
Questions
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Randomn moment.
Whitman quote
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Amazes Me...
Kerouac chose Whitman because...
Whitman's quote perfectly introduces the book as an invitation to the reader. It encourages them to immerse themselves in the book, becoming equally as vulnerable as Kerouac was while writing it.
The least likely place for Neal to be born...
I liked this quote, but don't really know what to make of it. What does it say about Neal's character? And how Jack perceives him?
Movement
Friday, April 9, 2010
Travelers guide
New faces
Walt Whitman's Quote
Whitman quote
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Urban Dictionary is helpful
An amphetamine tablet taken as a stimulant.
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=benny