Beginner A, Post 6, 'Themed Free Post 2'
- Number of words: 160
- Students have to leave comments on at least 3 of their mates' posts and on the teacher’s post.
- Students have to leave comments on at least 3 of their mates' posts and on the teacher’s post.
As usual, I will leave you with a sample. This time, the introduction of an essay on English Literature that I wrote some time ago,
"The Scarlet Letter as a biformous narrative: Characterization.
Hawthorne’s novel, ‘The Scarlet Letter’ can be said, inhabits ‘biformity’, a term which has been coined by Michael Kammen in his essay ‘Biformity: A Frame of Reference’. More particularly, the novel’s ‘biformity’ can be found in the construction of one of its main characters, Hester Prynne.
As a starting point, ‘Biformity’ can be shaped as an ambivalent state of two opposing philosophical and moral forces that, “Subject people to more extreme contrasts and abrupt changes during a lifetime or a generation than is normally the case with other great nations” (Kammen, 101) Moreover, ‘biformity’, is said to develop “a tension between newer and older human ways of acting and believing”. (Kammen, 99)
‘Biformity’ can also be explained through the creation of a national identity, a creation of a collided and contradictory identity, which furthers back in time to the creation of the Puritan collective. America`s first settlers are said to be contradictory as well, or, as a better term can encompass, America’s first settlers might possibly have lived in a ‘biformity’, or, as Kammen points out, to have lived in ‘extreme contrasts and abrupt changes during a lifetime’ (Kammen, 101).
Such are the contrasts that the national American character proposes, that ‘biformity’ falls into a further conceptualization concerned with its historical and philosophical implications, as Leo Marx points out: “The dialectical tendency of mind – the habit of seeing life as a collision of radical opposed forces and values – has been accentuated by certain special conditions of experience in America”. (Kammen, 107)
The character of American people, according to Marx, is said to have a dialectical tendency to see the conformation of life as a radical collision of opposed forces. Reality for American people is dialectical, in constant contradiction, and within this apparent struggle of opposing forces, the national character of America emerges. (...) To be continued.
References
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The Scarlet Letter. Wordsworth Editions Limited. 1992.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The Scarlet Letter: An authoritative text. Essays in Criticism and Scholarship, Third Edition. WW Norton and Company. 2005
Kammen, Michael. People of Paradox: An Inquiry Concerning the Origins of American Civilization. Knopf, New York. 1972.
Eliade, Mircea. The Sacred and The Profane: The Nature of Religion. Harcourt, Inc. 1957.
What an interesting post! I have a question for you, do you like american culture?
ReplyDeleteI think American culture is more of a collection of varied foreign cultures, so there may be a biformity.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting your essay!
ReplyDeleteI have a question, can you recomend some books of the literature from United States?
What a good blog, I had never heard that concept, "Biformity".
ReplyDeleteI believe that life consists of this ambivalent state that contains within it, contradicting forces
ReplyDeletevery interesting review! the end left me wanting more haha
ReplyDeleteIt’s interesting to think about it like something inherent to the modernity, overall, the reality of the North American continent as a whole.
ReplyDeleteInteresting essay. I have never heard of that nove before but your reflection has really nice arguments.
ReplyDeleteThis is a very interesting document, i hope that people who reads this document can reflects about the american people.
ReplyDeleteThe truth is that I have never been very interested in American culture, however I am struck by the concept of "biformity", I had never heard it
ReplyDeletewooow! where can i continue reading this essay? :o
ReplyDelete