Saturday, August 22, 2020

Coketown

Coketown is a novel composed by Charles Dickens in 1854. Coketown is a portrayal of a run of the mill town in the Victorian age after the mechanical upset which happened during the eighteenth century. Charles Dickens portrays the opposite side of the coin during the Victorian age by utilizing metaphor in his depiction of the town: â€Å"Coketown [†¦] was a town of red block, or of block that would have been red if the smoke and remains had permitted it; in any case, at issues stood it was a town of unnatural red and dark like the painted essence of a savage. (line 1-3) He utilizes the hyperbole to portray how the smoke and remains have painted the red blocks dark, by contrasting the hues and a â€Å"savage†. By doing this, Charles Dickens makes the portrayal increasingly exact in light of the fact that the peruser improves image of what it is he is attempting to depict. Charles Dickens utilizes saying various occasions. In addition to other things he contrasts a distraug ht elephants’ head development and the repetitively development of a steam-motor and portrays the numerous plants as â€Å"vast heaps of building brimming with windows. The content is by and large exceptionally melancholic, and it truly makes the Victorian age look like garbage. Charles Dickens is presumably attempting to appear, that with the manufacturing plants and the better approach forever, life has gotten substantially more arranged and sorted out however not really better, in light of the fact that the independence is gone and consistently resembles the one preceding: â€Å"inhabited by individuals similarly like each other, who all went in and out at that hours, with a similar sound upon the asphalts, to accomplish a similar work, and to whom consistently was equivalent to yesterday and tomorrow, and consistently the partner of the last and the following. †(line 10-13)

Sunday, August 9, 2020

On CAT PERSON The Internet Is Obsessed With... a Short Story

On CAT PERSON The Internet Is Obsessed With... a Short Story 2017 continues to surprise and astound, and who would have guessed that the internet would be falling over itself around a short story. When was the last time the internet even read a short story? Does the internet know what a short story is? Has it read one since it was required for high school English? Lets cover this breaking story in more detail. So wait, whats happening? The December 11th issue of the New Yorker features a short story called Cat Person, by Kristen Roupenian. Everyone is talking about it. By which I mean Twitter is talking about it. Whats the story about? Its about a 20-year-old college student named Margot and this guy Robert who she becomes romantically involved with. Its a third-person limited narrative focusing on Margot and her internal life. That sounds like it has sex in it. The internet loves sex. Does it have sex in it? Yes it does, but its not exactly the sexy kind of sex. So why does the internet care so much? Excellent question. I have a few theories. Theory #1: The story is illustrated with a too-close-up image of lips kissing that comes up when you share the link on social media. It kind of makes you stop and go, Eww, what? I think it may act as some kind of tractor beam. Theory #2: The internet loves cats and they expected something very different than what they got. Spoiler alert: cats are a minor plot point but thats all. (Maybe this is not true of the internet as a whole, but its certainly true for a subset of the internet and they demand a cat-focused story as recompense.) Theory #3: People dont know its fiction. This is actually becoming kind of a problem. Because Margots story sounds similar to the kind of thing youd see in a confessional personal essay, peoples initial reaction to it is to have a hot take just like they would if it was a nonfiction piece. Even if you do know that its fiction, you may react to it as if it were real. Who is Margot, is Margot a feminist, why didnt Margot do a different thing? Margot isnt real and the author has confirmed that the story is not autobiographical. So what are all the hot takes? Many women pronounce it too real. (I admit, I am one of them.) It taps very deeply into experiences many women have had where we look for ways to explain away mens bad behavior as signs that they are really good, ways women construct narratives around people they date, etc. Its also limited to the perspective of a young woman who is probably white, well-off, and attractive. So it may be relate-able, but its not universal. There are some complaints. Many have noted its fatphobic. (Margot has several critical and judgmental thoughts about Roberts body.) This is pretty legit and it probably deserves a content warning for readers who dont want to encounter fat shaming language. Margot is also pretty shallow about bodies generally, and its generating discussion about how women are conditioned to think of themselves and others. People also feel the need to say they do not like it. Because the internet hates it when people like things and everyone who doesnt like the thing feels the need to speak up and let everyone know that they definitely did not like the thing. How is the actual story? Dont ask me. Thats up to you. I liked it, I liked the pacing and the point of view and the way we get to see clearly Margots flaws and her youth and her bad decisions. I found the ending too obvious. While reading the story I was reminded of reading Difficult Women earlier this year and how I saw stories in it about women and love and sex that I had never seen before. Short stories about men obsessing about women are revered as classics, but stories from the point of view of a woman that feature love, lust, and sex still feel painfully new. I like that we get to do that for a little while. I love short stories, but I hate hot takes. Should I read it? This is Book Riot and we are pretty pro-reading-things, so if you like stories, yes. Read it. You are welcome to read it and then not read any of the hot takes. In fact, you can read it and you dont even have to tell anyone you read it. You can read it and then carry the knowledge that you read it to your grave with you. But the internet really needs my particular hot take, which I promise is not at all similar to any of the million hot takes generated thus far. I mean, if it means that much to you, go ahead and have your take. Is this going to change the landscape of short stories as we know it? That remains to be seen. I would love to see us talk more about short stories the way we talk about novels and movies and other things we love to dissect online. Maybe the hot takes are not so bad. Maybe serious conversation about short fiction is exactly what we need right now. If youre looking for more short stories about women, Id recommend Difficult Women by Roxane Gay, Her Body and Other Parties by Carmen Maria Machado, and Back Talk by Danielle Lazarin (available for pre-order). Sign up to Unusual Suspects to receive news and recommendations for mystery/thriller readers. Thank you for signing up! Keep an eye on your inbox.