Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Use Purell

It is safe to say that getting shot by an arrow, is a safer bet than drinking water. Not only in Africa has disease turned the tables of conquest; Guns, Germs, and Steel  shows how an entire empire fell to the hands of sickness. Can this time the fallen empire, be European?

Overhearing the Manager´s Uncle speak of leadership, and specifically of "standing the climate"(58), Marlow realizes Kurtz´s ingredient. As stated in Part One, Kurtz´s ability to immunize himself from any disease in Africa makes him an idol-figure. It is not the natives´ military power that determines the fate of the Europeans, it is mother nature. Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond tells the story of the many conquering expeditions that Europe has been involve in: from Sub-Saharan Africa to South America. The most interesting is Mexico´s story. In short; the Spanish Armada lead by Hernan Cortes had not to fire their weapons, all they had to do was interact. One by one the Aztec population started to fall of disease. Such ¨superhuman¨ features made the Conquistadors resemble gods to the Aztec people: domination. 

A similar story starts to unravel in the beginning of Part Two. The only thing that needs to happen for a leader to rise and conquer is surviving interaction. Interaction with the natives, and the "patient wilderness" as Marlow states it. The problem is that unlike Guns, Germs, and Steel, Marlow´s expedition is not intended on evangelizing natives or direct interaction, Marlow´s plan is to take mother nature´s sons away. They are only after the "ivory-that can be smelt in the air..."

It seems as though this expedition isn't human versus human, but a battle between Man and Superman. Will Marlow conquer mother nature or fall ill like Mr. Kurtz, at the height of his power?

Monday, October 29, 2012

Soldiers...Of Fortune


Patriotic? The word empire, has become a word much too glorified. A word that many times is paralleled to "King and Country," but far too many times have these Sir Francis Drakes forgotten their principles and gone to conquest a name for themselves. The word; nation is lost and the highest bidder comes into plain view. Mercenaries. 

One cannot help asking as the novel runs deeper into Africa, the true meaning of glory. "He was the only man of us who still followed the sea..." Marlow is the first to question the significance of imperialism. As he furthers into the Congo, and hears the stories of: money, ivory, and Mr. Kurtz. The connotation of glory and light starts to quickly fade away. "ELDORADO EXPLORING EXPEDITION..."  suffices in expressing what this "nurturing of less privileged peoples" in Africa was all about: money. This idea of: money, foreigners, and  Man-of-Wars, created a comparison to what Conrad is trying to express; BlackWater. 

Even though Marlow doesn't seem to be a cold-blooded "conquistador," his whole situation of being English, working for a Belgian Company in Africa, creates an image of a Mercenary. He may not be committing the atrocities but his companions are. A "Soldier of Fortune" is the image that is created in my mind when these imperialistic descriptions are narrated. “The word ‘ivory’ rang in the air, was whispered, was sighed. You would think they were praying to it." Mercenaries are often described as nationless, men living in exile. Men who have given up the nationalistic sentiments that lie in fighting for your country by selling themselves to the highest bidder. In addition, the map that illustrated the "proportions and disproportions" of Africa shows that not only King Leopold was enforcing his self-interests with foreign forces. 

As Part One comes to a close, Her Majesty´s Empire seems to be not so majestic after all. And the reader  is left wondering whether or not; God should save the Queen?





Friday, October 26, 2012

Mismatch

"Hide your wives and daughter; hide the groceries too.
The great nations of Europe comin through."

The irony in this phrase is that the singer expresses Europe as "great nations" but such nations of glory are also cautioned. Nations of such wealth were still stealing, and still raping. The irony is that Europe is supposedly more civilized but the fact that less civilized persons have to hide their families and their groceries are the satire imposed. 

"There's pictures in a museum, some lines written in a book
but you won't find a live one, no matter where you look."
There is no irony present in this part of the song. The author wants to exaggerate the fact that the conquerors write history. He wants to mention the forgotten memories and cultures of the indigenous personnel, especially by mentioning that even the birds were extinct. 

"Church told him were gay,
soooooooooooooo
he had them torn apart by dogs on religious grounds they say
the great nations of Europe were quite holy in their way."

The irony here is that the church should symbolize an authority, but an authority of good, an insituticon to spread the word of god. The complete opposite is mentioned in the song, an insituiotion that compels their "loyal disciples" to spread the word of god by killing and discriminating. The exact opposite of the word of god. "The holy way" of Europe is in fact not holy, its the complete opposite of holiness. 

Monday, October 15, 2012

Bromden to Chief Bromden

 Cagey. Foggy. Secluded. Futile. Are the adjectives that symbolized Bromden. Words that provoked:  uncertainty, misery, and the complete illustration of an unrecoverable human being. But with Mcmurphy´s "fox ability to make a quick dollar..." Change becomes a daily factor in Chief´s life.

Chief Bromden throughout the beginning of the novel is depicted as the insane of the insane. He hides from his fears, he lets the tyranny and medications get the better of him. The fact that he poses to be deaf and dumb, signifies the lack of will, not only on behalf's of the Chief: but on behalf of the whole ward to dignify themselves against Miss Ratched´s treatment. Not even Cheswick and Harding started talking the talk until Mack came into the picture. In addition, not even the information he narrated was reliable at the beginning, but once Mack starts getting momentum on his "revolution", the clarity of Chief´s ideas become evident.

Once Chief reveals desire, change is evident. The Chief discloses his hunger to go on the fishing trip(179), he finally shows the reader that he has emotion, that really has some sort of pursuit: a goal. Even though he ends up not signing himself up that day due to his fear of unmasking his "deafness", the reader connects with Chief. But as Macmurphy states several times in the novel, paraphrasing: "power is not present without laughter." The word laughter symbolizes an emotion, something that is close to impossible to portray without words. The most essential change that needed to happen to chief was to speak, to finally engage in a conversation where he conveys his thoughts, his beliefs. On page 186, after giving in to Macmurphy comedy. Besides talking, he finds himself on the verge of laughing, the key to power. One shouldn't take the fact that Chief talks as the most important but the fact that the Chief laughs, he finds something funny, almost as though he finds a sense to life.

The reader then starts to see a pattern, when everybody laughs, they're invincible, such as the parts in the gasoline station, the fishing trip. The laughter gives a sense happiness, a sense that produces power. But at this height of the novel, Chief has changed indeed but hasn't acted alone. He hasn't had the drive to act on his own drive. Not until he finds himself being taken advantage of by Mack, he then does something that had never happened before: he acts on his own anger. He stomps off to be alone, he cries, thus showing that Chief can lift the panel, expressing colossal strength, but his tears show expression. Both attributes are used by Kesey to construct the image of the new Chief, a normal human being.

The Chief finally reaches the peak of his evolution with the suffocation of Mack and his escape.(281) He acts on his criteria, on his beliefs, and on his experience to dignify Mack. He suffocates him creating a Hero, and a villain out of Big Nurse. He then escapes, not like Mack was going to escape, he escapes with a plan in mind, he foresees his future and embraces the present.

Confident. Free. Ambitious. Happy.

Monday, October 1, 2012

"Intimidation"

The Big Nurse, is not: your typical soccer mom. Expressed as villain, but seen as a saint by many, Miss Ratched Always gets her way. An authoritarian. Repressive. Undemocratic. Are the perfect parallels to Miss Ratched´s depiction. A woman who has a deeper voice than men. 

"Intimidation" is a word that is used frequently by Chief Bromden. A word that besides existing in the text: it has a deep connotation throughout Miss Ratched´s confrontations. Intimidation is a word that helps the reader visualize what is thought by the characters in the ward. "Just sitting....smiling...she has taken control...making everyone aware she is the force to be dealt with."(133) In a room full of men, such confidence, such finesse, is what turns the tables to Miss Ratched´s favor. Carrying herself as something better, more elegant and smarter: is what separates the woman from the "boys." Using the term "boys" to represent the male staff underlines the colossal figure that Miss Ratched consists of. 

A mother figure. A woman who calls the her superiors out: "You are very-very wrong." Iron-will is the engine. An engine that feeds on "patience-years," fear, and confidence. A stubbornness that "acted like confidence...that worried."(137) The words are hypnotizing, and with absolute composure, even the manipulators are put to sleep: "...only way to lift his commitment is by acting like she wants..."(150) Even McMurphy seems to fall under such intimation exercised by the Big Nurse.

"She couldn't be wearing lipstick," and failing to "conceal her big old breasts" symbolize that such "outsized badges of femininity" are a not an expression of hard effort into intimidation. Such natural aspects on the physical side, complements the simplicity of intimidation coming naturally to the Big Nurse.