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Author Archives: susan
LITERATURE: A Death in The Family – Reader Involvement
I seem to be reading this part of the story in careful, hushed tones. Has the author, James Agee, brought this about? Does the reader become funereal with the waiting for confirmation of death? In preparation for the ceremonies that … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: A Death in The Family – Emotion Level
So it ended up taking about twenty-three pages to find out that Jay is dead, but there is a building up of emotion–if not tension–Agee does well. It still seems to be slow, but then again, that may just be … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: A Death in The Family – Drama
While it looked like i hadn’t been reading at all, I did manage a page or two at a time on this and the fact that I’ve been taken with a hypertext project I’m working on is not totally to … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: A Death in The Family – Perspective
At the end of what evidently appears to be Part 1, we have a chapter again from third person pov, focusing on the child, Rufus. The scenario is when his mother is pregnant with his brother and we see through … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: Catchup on Confessions
As you know, I’ve been busy writing and haven’t read much in a week or more so Augustine and Agee are still awaiting my return. But thanks to J-Walk, I found a great site to give you a quick review … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: A Death in The Family – Psychological Realism
There is a section of the novel that goes back into an early time in Rufus’ childhood that Agee has incorporated into the story at a point where we are wondering what Jay has walked into at his own father’s … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: A Death in the Family – Plot Threads
While the story is a very close look at a family, Agee uses the omniscient third person to separate the characters and reveal their inner conflicts as well as their own viewpoints of their interactions. As mentioned, I suspected some … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: A Death in the Family – Tone
Even while the relationship of Jay and Mary is presented as a loving and happy marriage, there is subtlety in their dialogue before Jay leaves to see his sick father, and prior to that, in the easy relationship between father … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: A Death in the Family – Imagery
Talk about your similes and imagery: (…) and along both banks the trees which crowded the water like drinking cattle began to take on distinctness one from another. (p. 41) Continue reading
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LITERATURE: A Death in the Family – Laying the Framework
Agee appears to reveal his story slowly, lovingly using each word to fit within and enhance his characters and their relationship to each other. There’s a whole chapter that covers an evening that has six year-old Rufus going to see … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: A Death in the Family –
Just started on this today but it’s amazing how quickly I’m learning to switch worlds. From the unknown and odd Flatland, or Sandoval’s alluring parallelism, I’m back to a post-war America where family is stable–no mother would dream of leaving … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: Up Next – A Death In the Family
I just pulled it out to make room for putting back Flatland, but this novel by James Agee certainly appeals as a down-to-earth, exciting reality story, judging by the back cover: "There’s nothing quite like the excitement of coming upon … Continue reading Continue reading
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LITERATURE: Flatland – Finale
Tremendously interesting book, despite the fact that it likely could have been read much faster and I sort of dragged it out a bit. What I appreciated was the concept of presenting the one-dimension, two-dimension, and three-dimensional worlds and populating … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: Flatland – Power
Many layers of this story, in fact, explaining layers of life, planes, dimensions. There’s the obvious lessons of dimensioning geometric figures. There’s the even more obvious statement on society and the oppression of women and the lower classes. What’s interesting … Continue reading Continue reading
LITERATURE: Flatland – Relativity
Oddly enough, a place like Flatland, Orwell’s world of 1984, Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale, all strike me as only extremes of what we live ourselves right now. Square has awakened from his dream of Lineland to find a visitor from the … Continue reading Continue reading
The Lost Children: A Charity Anthology