Sunday, May 6, 2012

final presentation

Technology

Ryan Seaton      
Eng.102
Laura Cline
5/6/2012
Technology
This semester I learned a few new strategies using technology, and applying it to this online class.  At first and pretty much throughout the class I have had a problem with the blogs.  It would seem like this would be one of the easier things that we have done in this class, but somehow I continue to have problems hyperlinking my comments to the instructor.  Even though it has worked for me numerous times, I will do the exact same thing and it will not work.  I have gone to tutors at school, and have taken Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Access.  I did very well in these classes and somehow posting my work to the blog, getting the URL’s, and all of the other ways we have had to do our work has been really frustrating.  I have taken at least 7 online classes and did very well with them, but have had a hard time with this one.  Some of the things I did like about this class were reading other students work and being able to respond to their writing.  I found students comments very useful at times, and enjoyed reading their feedback.  It was convenient to be able to work from home most of the time, and it helped by fitting into my schedule.  I usually like taking classes at school better because of the personal relationship you build with your instructors and with other students.  I found it really hard this semester to contact the instructor when needed, and receiving the feedback I was looking for.  I liked the class as a whole and really did learn a lot about online learning in a completely different way.  Check out some more info on online learning.  http://www.westga.edu

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Blog #13

Reflection of the course
1. What skills have you learned in this class and how might you apply them to writing in your career or future college courses?  I have learned how to write a critical analysis paper much better than I have in the past.  I believe these skills (although it took me a few tries to learn them) will help me a great deal in writing analysis papers in future English courses.  I have also learned a lot of computer applications like blogging that I have never used before.  Posting URL’s in assignment links were also very new to me.  I have learned to critically analyze novels and get a much broader view into how I interpret the readings.
2. How have the readings in the class affected you?  I have had a much broader perspective to the different styles and themes of our assigned reading.  Winter’s bone was a very interesting book to read, and it was not so much the entire story, but the style of writing that Daniel Woodrell had written really introduced me to new perspectives in literary works.  Up in the Air was a novel that was hard to keep my attention, but after watching the movie I was able to see the voice of the main character in a new light and I appreciated the book after rereading most of it.
3. How have you met the learning outcomes for the class (which can be found on the syllabus)?
Writing  focus statements were difficult for me to understand at first, but I think that I learned a lot more as the semester went on.  2. Applying reasoned development strategies gave me a good idea to think about how I was going to approach my writing. 3. Selecting and applying voice was something that I think I have learned through lots and lots of practice. 4. Using organizational strategies was something that I was very good at, but some of my assessments from students helped me to organize my papers better. 5. Using and selecting details I think that I learned to pinpoint certain themes that were most important to the plot. 6. Applying sentence structure strategies were hard at first, and I am still sometimes struggling with.  But I think they have improved over the semester. 7. Identifying and evaluating multiple meanings and perspectives in language was very difficult for most of the semester to figure out what exactly was expected, but after reading the book over and over I feel that I have a much better understanding. 8. Locating, evaluating, integrating, and documenting information was hard for me especially reading the brown book, and also the little brown handbook. 9. Applying conventions of standard written English I think that I had a good grasp on, but was not always graded well on it so I had to apply myself more in this area. 10. Interpreting and analyzing texts was something I learned a lot about in this class.  I learned how to read all of our assignments in a new way. 11. Evaluating and analyzing professional and student writing was fun and interesting to read other classmates work, and also be able to read what they suggested I improve or what they liked about my writing.
4. How has your writing or your writing process changed? I have learned to analyze and interpret writing in many different ways, and have learned to really think more critically about how I write.
5. What were your challenges in the class?  How were you able to overcome them? My challenges in class were really figuring out how to correctly analyze writing, and all of the computer applications we used in this class took a little while for me to get down.  But overall I think that I learned a lot about how I write and got a better perspective on how to analyze other writing.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Rough Draft of “Up in the Air” essay
  Walter Kirns novel “Up in the Air” is a form of Juvinalian satire writing.  “Underneath the enlightenment ideals of rationality, order and knowledge, society embraced a pervasive obsession with “decorum,” (Jonathan J. Szwec, 2011).  Ryan Bingham is a travelling businessman in career transition counseling.  The form of dark satire involved in the characteristics of Ryan Bingham and in many aspects of this novel are that there are many forms of tragedy involved with the daily habitual routines of the line of work Ryan is in.  His basic description of his job is to travel around under the employment of his firm ISM (Integrated Strategic Management), and fire people from their jobs in what he has prided himself as being the most effective way to handle the jobs requirements.  There are numerous personal conflicts involved with Ryan and all of the personal relationships he has in his life.  Through the experiences described both in the novel which was published in 2001, and a movie based on the novel released in 2009, there are many similarities to the overall theme that gets to the heart of the story.  However, in the time that has elapsed in the time from which the book was written there have been drastic changes in the world, business, and economy.  The movie captures many of the struggles that Ryan is faced with in the movie as well, but the movie has made some significant changes that show a much different side of the character Ryan Bingham.  The movie also adds a character named Alex that is a sort of love interest as well as a character that really adds a lot of self-recognition to both of the characters as they travel and learn from each other the harsh circumstances that are involved with their line of business.
  With the Juvinalian satire as a theme for the characters in this novel, it is a very dark reality that is involved with the expectations and daily formalities involved with career transition counseling.  Ryan Bingham has been with INS as a career for many years and has been collecting his frequent flier miles for the duration of his employment.  Ryan’s goal is to reach one million frequent flier miles and become the seventh person in Great West Airlines history for achieving that status.  Ryan intend on quitting his job with INS and is convinced that Myth-Tech has been looking into hiring him.  Ryan Bingham has only one week left under employment of INS before he accrues his frequent flier miles and will want to quit working for INS.  The name Myth-Tech seems to be a just that; a myth.  Ryan is determined to earn those flier miles and has many conflicts with his family in achieving this.  Ryan’s sister is engaged to be married in this last week Ryan is on his way to achieving his goal.  Some of the forms of dark satire are demonstrated in Ryan’s attitude and dialogue with his sisters and his mother.  He is unwilling to give up any of his frequent flier miles to a friend of the family that wants to come to the wedding but cannot afford to do this without help.  The conflicts he has with his mother really show that his priorities are not to his family and that his dream of achieving his goal comes before anything else.  There is some very funny situations especially in the movie in this form of dark satire that take sometimes disturbing circumstances and make light of the situation or a joke of it.  When many of these situations are causing extreme isolation and obsession over what Ryan believes are what is most important to him.  The business dealings he has with people he is firing also are intended to make the reader or audience laugh when people are fired from their jobs.  In one instance in the movie a woman tells Ryan that she is going to jump off a bridge and kill herself when she learns that she is being fired.  That was not so much one of the humorous aspects of the satire, but was certainly part of the dark portrayals of Ryan’s business.
  There are other sad parts of the movie and the book when Alex is left or broken up by her boyfriend, or when Ryan learns that a woman that he realizes that he loves turns out to be married with children.  It is another example of the dark humor when Alex is dumped by her boyfriend when she goes out with Ryan and the woman he is seeing to a rap concert and gets really drunk.  These are not things that most people laugh at but Bingham turns the situation into something very comical.  These are also very good qualities in Ryan and the story which could be described in the book and movie as Horacian satire that are tragic to the characters yet they make you laugh.  Many of the scenes when people are being fired and their reactions are outrageous they are also very funny.  Bingham has a very very good style of writing that take real events that happen to people every day, and he shows you how the same situation can be devastating and fatal to some people and have very tragic outcomes, and the same thing will happen to another person that is tragic and their reactions he describes are very funny.  For a writer to get those kind of emotions out of the characters and make you feel what they are feeling, or at least make you sympathize with their situation are things that we all go through at times in our lives.  It is a good writer that can make you feel those struggles, or joy, or embarrassment, or whatever it may be that people can relate to real life situations that they have been through or have seen friends or family go through. 
  Ryan Bingham is portrayed as a very confident person in this novel and movie, but his isolation and vulnerability are also very evident.  In the movie he is taking Alex on the road with him to teach her that the business that they are in is not some kind of easy, unemotional thing that is affecting the lives of the people they are dealing with.  Her character really gives a real description of portraying the hard nose, unemotional type of person that can deal with people in those situations and not be affected by it.  This novel really represents what our economy is like. People are suffering, and struggling through life in this day and age every day in the circumstances this novel is depicting.  The novel was even written before 9/11 and the recession in the United States really happened.  The movie kind of brings the same plot or storyline, but updates it since the wars in Iraq, and all the terrorist threats we have had on our nation.  Traveling sales people did not have to go through half the security and threats of terrorism that have happened since the war in Iraq and Afghanistan have reappeared in many years with attacks on US soil now.  The job crises in this country was very well portrayed in the scene in the movie where Ryan goes to an office building that is almost completely empty with only two or three people working there, and he is there to fire someone or everyone.  This story hits home with a lot of people who have been fired from their jobs that they have worked for the company almost their entire lives.  This movie shows the impact that the people who have to do the firing have on their lives.  It shows that it is not an easy job.  That companies have to hire people to fire people.  I also recognized the Juvinalian satire as well as the Horacian satire when Alex first came to the company INS and had what she thought was the brilliant idea of just firing people over a computer screen, and Ryan confronting her with several scenarios of how an employee may react when you are telling them they are losing their job.
  “Up in the Air” had very many realistic things that really made many valid considerations to how many people are affected by the recession that has been going on time after time for generations that make this novel timeless in many ways.  Not only were the main characters lives shown in a realistic way, but how they suffered as human beings doing the firing, and that the people being fired were not the only ones being affected.  Walter Kirn Talso showed the affect that it has in many different lives involved in the theme of this book.  The satire was expressed both humorously and tragically as pretty much everything in life has a side to it.  It was interesting to read something that was tragic yet somehow makes you look at points in your life that you have felt the same way and can laugh because you have been through it and you can identify with it.
Works Cited
Walter Kirn. Up in the Air. novel, 2001
Howard Bretherton.  Up in the Air,film, 2009
Jonathan J. Szwec.web. 2011  

"Up in the Air" Thesis

Walter Kirns "Up in the Air" is a novel written in 2001 about a man named Ryan Bingham who works as a traveling career transition counselor.  Ryans career is centered around working for the firm ISM, and traveling to different companies that hire ISM to fire their employees.  The book "Up in the Air" was later made into a movie in 2009.  There have been many changes in the world since 2001 as far as the economy, traveling, technology, and a broad view of the world of business.  The movie has also changed or gives another side of Ryan Bingham that the book does not, such as the relationships he has with women and his family are described more deeply giving his character more of a vonurable and humanistic side of Ryan Bingham.  The book describes Ryan much more cold and unfeeling to the relationships he has with his family, relationships, and coworkers.  Ryan is also accompanied by a co-worker and possible love interest named Alex.  Both the book and the movie show an isolated man whos main interest (more so in the book) of obtaining 1 million flyer miles which only 7 other peoplehave achieved with Great West Airlines.  It is 10 million in the book, but this goal seems to dominate every aspect of his life.  This movie demonstrates how the life of a traveling businessman can isolate himself from other qualities of life that fullfill most peoples lives. Ryan Quoted in the book "to know me is to fly with me".  Not to know me you would see me interact with my family or people that he would love.  His life is strictly business and casual sex with people of similar professions.  He admitts that being married or having children are of no interest to him, and is basically focused on achieving his "Holy Grail" of 1 million frequent flier miles.  The movie ends with Ryan donating his miles to charity and has some sort of revelation of what is more important to him in life.  To read more about obsessions click here http://symptoms.rightdiagnosis.com/ 

Sunday, April 1, 2012


Ryan Seaton

Laura Cline

Eng 102

4/1/2012
Mid-Term Check In
  So far, my biggest challenge in this class has been in some of the expectations involved with literary analysis.  I have gotten really good suggestions from Ms. Cline about how to properly write a critical analysis paper and her suggestions of visiting the tutoring center where at some visits I received a lot of help, and other times not so much.  Another challenge of mine has been procrastination.  It has been hard for me to fit in all the work I have in my other classes, as well as work outside of school.  It has been difficult timing the hours I have available to work on assignments, and a lot of times the assignments have taken longer than expected.  This is also the first class that I have had where we have had to use blogging which I have never done before now.  I have had trouble with PIE paragraphing and have had to go over the material several times and I still seem to have difficulty with it.  Also, my works cited page has fallen short of correct formatting a few times.  I have always done very well in all of my English classes, but somehow I am not doing as well as I think that I am when writing the essays.  I think that I am putting more time and effort into this class than my others that would seem like they would be more difficult, but I am not doing as well in this class.  My biggest success as far as the comments on my writing has been a good understanding of the material, characters in the book, and writing style, although I am having problems with the correct analysis.  The readings h

ave affected me by really looking into the readings and characters in new ways, and critiquing the writing.  I enjoyed “Winter’s Bone” a lot, and read it in 2 sittings.  The book held my attention, and I could relate to the authors style of writing having spent some time in the south.  “Up in the Air”  has been very difficult for me to relate to the authors style of writing and the subject matter is extremely boring to me, and it has been hard for me to hold my attention.  My goals for the 2nd half of the semester are to keep learning all I can to write a good analysis paper, and develop my skills on writing the works cited in text, and at the end of the paper.  I hope to accomplish a more effective balance of my time, and making sure I am dividing my time equally to get the best results from all of my obligations.  I hope to have a broader understanding of analyzing different types of writing, and hopefully be able to pull my grade up to an A.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

ENG-102: Essay #3

Essay#3
Winter’s Bone is a story by Daniel Woodrell seen through the eyes of a sixteen year old girl named Ree Dolly.  This story portrays the economic struggle and social class of the people in the small towns in the Missouri Ozarks, which involve the gender roles and the over-all mentality of the majority of the people struggling through poverty, drug addiction, and domestic violence.  Some of the themes that stood out for me in this novel were how the people of Rees’ town and neighboring towns adapted to their living conditions, gender roles, and the outlooks of the characters view of their futures.  The hopeless position Ree was experiencing really gave the reader a broad view of how hard it would be to escape the life that she had grown up in, and how many generations of her relatives fell into the same lifestyle depicted in the novel.  Ree has obligations to her family that she has no other choice but to abide by, and the responsibilities many of the women in her family and in their surrounding towns have had to endure for generations.  Ree is a very strong individual with a determination to provide for her family that few people I have encountered have the strength, courage, and will to do.  Although Ree attempts to do whatever is necessary to see that her family is taken care of, she also has strong intentions to leave.  Woodrell makes continuous assertions of the overbearing role of male dominance in this story, and his purpose in writing this story seems to be the difficulties and struggles that everyone has to face in their lifetime no matter whom you are and where you come from.  But, what one can accomplish through self-sacrifice and determination is what is at the heart of this story.  It is my intention to point out the struggle of a sixteen year old girl with little education at best, and the social class and gender discrimination she was described as experiencing.
  The setting of this story was in the deep winter of the Ozarks.  “Woodrell has brilliantly played out the hillbilly landscape — its weather, its wilderness, its lack of culture and its primitive tongue: grated Parmesan is “sprinkle cheese,” given names are “front names” and sanity is described as a condition in which one’s “parts are gathered.” His Old Testament prose and blunt vision have a chilly timelessness that suggests this novel will speak to readers as long as there are readers, and as long as violence is practiced more often than hope or language.”(“The New York Times Book Review”)  Rees’ father is a well-known methamphetamine cook that has a court appearance, and Ree is told by a sheriff that unless he shows up for the court appearance Ree, her mother, and two younger brothers will lose their house on account for their father putting their house up for bond.  Ree is faced with finding her father through many different dangerous associates of her fathers including her relatives.  Ree has no job or income on account that she is only sixteen taking care of her mentally ill mother, and two younger brothers.  Ree has only a few days to track her father down with no transportation in the dead of winter with no vehicle, warm clothes, or people she can count on to look after her family she was left in charge of.  Ree seems like she knows how to handle herself and knows how cautious she must be in questioning people about her father’s whereabouts.   She knows that they are all somehow involved with the drug distribution in her town, and that nosing around in their business could bring about dire consequences to her and her family.  Ree puts herself in great danger in trying to save her family’s house and find her father.  The men of her family and town in general do not seem to respect women at all.  The women are all scared of the men in this story, and this makes Rees’ quest for information very difficult.  Woodrell goes into great deal of imagery throughout the book that makes the book seem slow at times, but it also gives the reader a real sense of the scenery and the struggles that Ree is facing.  This excerpt describes Ree in a way that gives the reader a good description or picture of what she has lived through and how she has been shaped by it.  Ree herself is described as “brunette and 16, with milk skin and abrupt green eyes. ... She stood tall in combat boots, scarce at the waist but plenty through the arms and shoulders, a body made for loping after needs.”(Woodrell page 3)  Woodrell seems to point out in many ways the heart of the main character Ree as being a young girl with all of the dreams and emotions that a sixteen year old girl should have, but have to put her own feelings and ambitions aside in order to do what is right or what is expected of her.  This description of Ree gives the reader an idea of the manual labor Ree has been shaped by her hard work, and the attire she wore as representing the daily work she has been expected to do.
  The men in Rees’ family were described as very hard-nosed, dominating, and violent country folk.  The wives of all of Rees’ uncles, cousins, and distant relatives all seem to share the same qualities of the men as being hard-nosed and tough.  Ree described one of her relatives that lived near her as having a permanent frown somehow chiseled into her face after all of the harsh winters and tough upbringing the women had in their family.  Ree described her Uncle Teardrop as “scary”.  She described him as having a look that seemed to stare straight into her soul, and a wife that did not dare to talk back to him in fear of being beaten.  Ree also had a friend named Gail that she knew since she was little that had a husband that cheated on her, and was usually always verbally abusing her.  These characteristics of the men and women seemed to be almost described as normal.  Ree seemed to view men as being very brutish and unattractive.  Some of the ways Ree described Teardrops wife and her friend Gail almost made her seem as if she had homosexual tendencies, but that was never mentioned or clarified in the book.  But, the way Ree would describe how she loved the way Victoria smelled and the relationship she had with Gail made it seem like she favored the company of women over men.  Ree had also described in the book how one of her relatives had drugged and raped her when she was very young.
  Ree described how she wished she could get away from the life that she lived by joining the military.  Ree would often escape her troubles and life in the form of listening to music.  These descriptions gave the reader the idea that she was not happy with how she was living, and wanted to be far away from everything that was going on with her family.  Ree loved her little brothers very much and was scared for them that they would grow up to be just like the rest of the men in her family.  She would describe how the boys were always getting into fights and getting into trouble at school, and she would always be trying to teach them things so that they would be able to take care of themselves once she had left. “This is the basis for literally every encounter Ree has in the first three quarters of the movie.  It’s so schematic that after a while it begins to feel like a fairy tale about the female solidarity.  Even Ree’s two younger siblings play into this, although in a slightly different way.  Both kids do violent things in the film.”(Overthinking It. Website)   
  Ree is described as a very dedicated family member who only wanted the best for her family.  Woodrell went into great detail how she took care of her mentally ill mother, and showed a kind of patience with her family that really gave the reader a real sense of patience and love that she had for them.  This book really inspired me to rise above in situations that seem hopeless.  This was in no way a happy story, but it was the kind of story that really made you ask yourself what you would do if you were in her shoes.  Woodrell really put that question to the test for me a number of times throughout the book.  The overall theme or point that I got from this story was that family is very important right or wrong.  That sometimes a person needs to put the benefit of others before their own wants.  I think that is what makes a person have real substance to their character.
Works Cited:
Woodrell, Daniel. Winter’s Bone. New York: Back Bay Books, 2006. Print.
Overthinkingit, ”Winter’s Bone, Film Noir, and Feminism” Web. 2 May, 2011.
New York Times Review of Book.  ”Winter’s Bone” n.d.  Web.  11 March, 2012.
02: Essay #3ENG-102 Essy #3: http://ryan-seaton.blogspot.com/ /

Essay #3

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

methland

Methland is an article by Nick Reding in 2005.  The story takes place in oelwein, Iowa.  The beginning of the article describes the town and population.  The story goes on describing the small town with farms on the outskirts of town that soon the town was divided by "the farmer and the tweaker"(Reding page 6).  The story goes on describing methamphetamine's progression in the US from 1999.  The story goes into a story about two of the townspeople Sean and James.  Sean being a meth user, and the story soon shifts its focus on Roland Jarvis.  Jarvis was an extreme example of the horrors of using meth.  Jarvis was a meth cook and user that had been severely burnt in an explosion of his meth lab.  Jarvis had one of his arms burnt down to a nub, and still years later continued to use meth.  My interpretation of why Reding wrote this article was to describe what happened to his hometown after being gone in college for years, and what is happening all over the country in big and small towns.  The devastating affects meth had on his town was described as a quiet small town with church going citizens, to half the population turning to meth addicts ruining the economy, and turning his town into what he described as a ghetto in Compton.  He named the article The Most American Drug because it was the fastest growing and most used drug in America.  Winter's Bone could also be described as one of the many small US cities that has been over-run with methamphetamine.  For more information on this click http://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/research-reports/methamphetamine