BSU English Blog
Friday, April 29, 2011
Final Post
So, I guess this will be my last Blog post for this semester now that my first year of college is wrapping up. School, will end and I will go back to work until September, all the while probably wishing I was still in school so I didn't have to be at work. But while I am there, crushed by wave after wave of tourists rabid for seafood, I'll think about what I learned from doing my ethnography. I'll think about people and sub-cultures we can see everyday and never realize that we are looking at a culture. I am 15 pages deep in my final paper now. I wrote about the gym here at BSU, the one I force myself to go to a few times a week. The purpose of this project was because I wanted to see why people pushed themselves to work their bodies, to sweat and drain themselves even when on the surface they already looked healthy and trim. This essay was pretty easy for me because the gym is an easy place to observe without being totally obvious about it. People were friendly, and some of the interviews I got were really interesting as well. To wrap this up, I am glad the spot I chose worked out so well.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Nickle and Dimed
The readings this week that stuck out to me most were called: Nickled and Dimed and The Working Mind. Nickled and Dimed which is a story about a woman trying to learn how some families surive on only minimum wage jobs. Truth is, they hardly do. It's nearly impossible for a family to solely live comfortably off of only minimum wage jobs. As the daughter of a fisheman and paraprofessional I can understand how people worry about living when it comes to saving money. My parents both work seasonal jobs, for three months in the summer my mother can't bring home a paycheck and in the winter my father can't fish, lobster or captain the whale watching boats. Our winter salary depends heavily on his job plowing the highways for the state, and so it depends on the snow falling enough for him to get some hours in. Living on a minimum wage sucks. I work hard all summer for it, plus great tips at Woods Seafood and even at 19 I know that no matter how good the pay seems now, I can never survive off of it. I've always lived a comfortable life, but that is because both my parents, hard working individuals with no college degree which brings me to The Working Mind. My father works very hard, can repair anything, read the weather patterns and has some degree of electrical wiring knowledge. He spent one semester at college and was a struggling student all his life for he suffered from dyslexia. My mother also did not even attend college but works to help several students daily in grade K-5. So both these readings I could easily connect to and understand.
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Interviews
Reading Nicole Williams essay on her interview process at the bowling alley was done in a very interesting way. Instead of reading about a typical Q&A process the author uses a different approach in her writing where she merely puts down the conversations between herself and women in the bowling leagues without making it seem like I was reading an interview. Through one woman talking who is an experienced member of the bowling alley we are given a much broader view of the establishment as a whole and other members that take part regularly in the bowling alley. Interviews are a great was to get to the nitty gritty details of a place because more often then not people who've been there for years will probably have no problem telling you their pros and cons of a certain place. A great example of a casual but informative interview is from Hank Green a member of the Youtube famous duo the Nerd Fighters or VlogBrothers. Below is a video of Hank interviewing his local mayor:
Friday, March 25, 2011
Julius Caesar bowled?
I never realized before reading Nicole Williams paper on her interviewing experience at her local bowling alley, the popularity of bowling in America, nor the ancient routes of the sport I once only associated with old men in matching powder blue shirts. As an avid reader of both Egyptian and Roman history never once have I some across any textual or pictorial evidence of the pharaohs or Caesars bowling. According to Discovery, stone ball remains were unearthed 57 miles away from Cairo, capital of both present and ancient Egypt.
In addition to the ancient forms of bowling balls the discovery of pre-disco bowling lanes were unearthed as well. Almost the same size length and width wise as the modern bowler would be faced with today. The Egyptians however used two balls of different sizes (today in case you are unaware, we use two balls of the same size but the weights vary.) I found it very interesting that this sport could trace its beginnings back so far to two great and famous civilizations. Makes the sport feel a lot more cultural to me than ever before.
Link to the unearthing details: http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2007/07/25/game_arc.html?category=archaeology
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Thursday, February 17, 2011
A Writer's Notebook
The reading for this week in my English class talked of a writer and her connection to her notebook. It was a crucial tool like the log books were for the truckers in Friday Night at Iowa 80, and just as important to their professions. As an English major I've taken several creative writing courses before, but I've never taken a notepad with me, though if inspiration strikes and I have my laptop available I will type a few ideas before I can lose them if I come across a thought that seems important. I've never done research on an environment before, and especially not on a culture of any sort. This essay made me realize how crucial it is going to be to have to carry some sort of way to accurately record what I feel, hear, see, smell etc while I am observing my area of study. Writing for creative and fictional purposes never posed this challenge for me because you only need to remember small pieces of information and then your imagination is to be trusted to do the other 90% of the work for you. This can't be the case when doing this project because this isn't a place for imagination, but accurate observation has to be the main goal. Notes are key.
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