Showing posts with label Essay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Essay. Show all posts

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Indian Fairy Tales Unit Story Analysis Essay: Week 12, Tricksters and Fools


In the unit ‘Indian Fairy Tales’ by Joseph Jacobs, there are a lot of stories that include the characters meant to be tricksters and fools. In ‘The Cruel Crane Outwitted', the trickster is at first the crane who tricks the fish from a drying pond to jump into his mouth on the promise that he would take them to a fuller pond and let them in there. The fish were reluctant to believe the crane at first but after some tricks they believed his words and hopped in his mouth one by one as the crane flew to the other pond and had each one as a snack. The fish were obviously the fools at this point in the tale. The crane though, greedy for more deceit tried to do the same to a crab that resided in the drying pond. The crab however, thought ahead and was able to have a plan in case the crane double crossed him. Which is smart, making him the trickster instead because the crane did end up trying to trick the crab. The crane was shown no mercy and was killed after he pleaded for his life and let the crab go into the pond. A similar tactic was shown in the fairy tale ‘The Tiger, The Brahman, and the Jackal’ where ultimately the tiger was the trickster who preyed on the brahman who was the fool. At the end of the story is where the jackal was the best trickster, much like the crab, because he turned the original trickster into a fool. The tiger was tricked back into the cage in which the brahman foolishly let him out of. Lucky for the brahman, the jackal was a ‘good trickster’. I think there are good tricksters and bad tricksters in these tales because the tricksters who trick the fools deserve to be tricked themselves and are by the ‘good tricksters’. Those are just two of the stories that I found to be similar in nature regarding tricksters and fools in this unit. There are many other fairy tales however that include a trickster and a fool and also like I was explaining, good and bad tricksters. The story of Harisarman is a good read as well in this unit because it included an ‘accidental trickster’ who gets lucky in his trickery and is never played to be a fool by a ‘good trickster’.
artwork by John D. Batten from BlogSpot.com 
 

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Life of the Buddha Unit Essay Review: Week 11


The reading unit I chose to read this week was “The Life of the Buddha” by Andre Ferdinand Herold. Overall, I thought this unit was a good read. It was way easier to start and finish this reading assignment since it had a shorter length than the book reading assignments and the stories were split up into sections. The sections gave a note about what it would be about at the beginning and I thought this was nice and kind of like the reading guides from the Epics class. Although I did not write my storytelling post this week I think it would be easier to write based on a section of the reading. I was able to structure my reading diary around the stories so my thoughts were both more organized and useful than earlier reading diaries.

I have heard of Buddha the monk throughout my life so picking this unit was out of curiosity about his life since I did not know much other than his big belly and smiley face appearance. I was really surprised after reading this unit because I did not expect him to have a different name, be seen as godlike by many who passed him, or leave his family without much compassion. I think his state of mind throughout his life leading up to him becoming the Buddha was perplexing at times because he seemed distant from the truths of the world seeing death and sickness as something he could conquer. My impression before reading about his life was that the Buddha was all about peace and serenity. My favorite story from this unit was ‘Siddhartha’s first meditation’ because it really showed him sitting and the world understanding his deep thought (with the unmoving shadow over him) and the passing people gawk at his peaceful state. Then I thought it was crazy that after awakening from this state, he simply says to his father the must stop working in the fields, I was hoping for more insight into what that meant or why it was important. My least favorite story was the one where everyone in the kingdom found out of Siddhartha’s departure and was stricken with such great grief. The horse dying was a total shocker since Siddhartha was leaving to conquer this happening in the first place. I would like to read more about where Siddhartha's life goes from when he became the Buddha and I was please to see there were numerous links I could visit to read more about certain parts of his life (his marriage to Gopa for example). The fact that he has a son and was still more passionate about becoming a monk than leaving him is weird to me when I compare the love that Siddhartha's father has for Siddhartha even when he knew from his birth he would never stay in the kingdom.
I really like the ability to choose the stories from the Mythology and Folklore option. This gives me a lot of freedom to choose what I want to read about and I can gain more knowledge outside of just Indian Epics.
'self control' of Siddhartha from wikispaces