Monthly Archives: October 2017

Brittle

Brittle (adjective):easily broken, cracked, or snapped

Example (brittle clay,brittle glass)

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/brittle

This word was encountered in the article  “Walk with Me”by David L. Ulin which states ” I found the address moved my stuff out of the car: a suitcase and a pile of books. The air was thin, the darkness brittle. I was alone”. This was located on the second page , last paragraph, ninth sentence.

What this word meant to mean was fragile. Reading this sentence it mad sense to me as to what the sentence was trying to say. Which was since she was being kicked out she felt useless and broken inside. Due to the fact that who ever kicked her out hurt her as a person. So her being a woman she was easily hurt and broken inside. For example when somebody is in a marriage and the partner cheats on the other. What usually happens is that the partner who cheater is unwilling to tell the truth because they know that what they will say will break that person. Especially if they are in love or the best couple it will really bring the bad side of them where they can snap and get angry.

summary of a literary visors strolls in from the airport

what i gather about the essay is that unlike the other Author this author is trying to come off a different way a little . even though he is not excited about the city itself and that he doesn’t think that NY is better than every where else . he is coming from a point where he talks about his 26 mile walk from the airport to Manhattan which was interesting which i myself will never walk 26 miles with all the transportation in place. He goes on to discuss the different neighborhoods he walks by he also talks about different places in Brooklyn that no tourists would ever want to come but he did . He also talks about  his different routes through different neighborhoods was suggested by one of his friends and how one of the neighborhoods he visited he really admired a lot.he came across many neighborhood that he wasn’t so happy about either and how he felt bad for he also was disappointed  on his walk through period even though their was some interesting things that he saw on his journey  he wasn’t really pleased with nothing that he saw along the way . The walk through Brooklyn to Manhattan was a good thing for him to do he compared his walk to when he was doing drugs it was something that he wanted to do. maybe to get experiences of walking through neighborhood where tourists other wise would not want to see and maybe just the walk itself was good for him

Facsimile

Facsimile (noun):an exact copy

  • A facsimile of the world’s first computer was exhibited at the museum.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/facsimile

This word was encounter in the “Walk with Me” article by David L. Ulin which states ” The Statue of liberty has never made me feel at home, either in New York Harbor or on La Vegas Boulevard, where it stood squat and compressed as I drove past, a facsimile in incremental scale”. This was located on the first page, second paragraph,last sentence.

When I viewed the word I knew I have heard of the word but really didn’t understand the full  meaning of it. This word is usually used to describe books or even paper material. What this mean is that its exact copy. For example most people make an exact copy of graphs to do some type of research.

Colson white head city limits

this author comes off to me as a cocky New Yorker and that he is stuck in his way. first he talks about how he was born and raised in NY and how it has ruined it for other places that he visits like nothing else compares to the city of NY.He believes that NY is the best city and nothing else compares to his city.Which to me i would not agree with their are a lot of cities  that are very great to visit. i think that if Colson white head would give other cities a try he might would find out that other cities are nice as well.I like the part where he says “their are eight million naked cities in this naked city.meaning that everyone has their own view of their NY. Which I can agree that every one has their own little NY. He also talks about parts of New York which once was and still is his New York to him.I also like the part in the essay where he mentions that  we each walk past each other every day and never know that maybe we were neighbors before. I think that to sum the article up that Colson White head was kinda stuck up and that he believed that we each have our own views of our own little NY for ourselves and that we view Our NY  different then he view his .

Elusive

Elusive (adjective):hard to find, capture, or isolate

https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/elusive

This word was encounter in the article “Walk with Me” by David L. Ulin which states ” Like las Vegas itself, he was elusive; I’d see him , and then I would not.”This was located on the first paragraph,second to last sentence.

When I encounter this word I was stuck on what it meant. Once I actually looked it up I knew that the word meant that it was difficult to capture or find. So what this meant to me is that for somebody who is trying to find an animal for example that it will be difficult for them to find the animal. So in the sentence” Like las Vegas itself, he was elusive; I’d see him , and then I would not it meant that the homeless guy that she was seeing was never solid. Which meant that he was always disappearing and appearing and it was hard too actually know where he was at all times.

Reading a visual text

Read the following visual texts:

Steinberg, Saul. “View of the World from 9th Avenue.” The New Yorker, March 29, 1976.

—. “View of the World from 9th Avenue.” Saul Steinberg Foundation. 1976.

Make two columns: observations and interpretations.

Start adding details to the observations column.

Observations:

NY looks well developed

tall buildings (not very) 12 stories?

cars: are they 1970s models?

streets crowded with people, cars: or gives the impression, even though not high #s

NY is he biggest area

traffic light at 9th Ave

no traffic light at 10th Avenue

West Side Highway

somewhere above Houston and below 59th St

Avenue numbers indicated on streets

 

 

elsewhere: not well developed, lack of detail

everything is next to each other

Hudson and Pacific (labeled) not far apart

other side of the world seems closer

Across Hudson from NY: Jersey

Jersey just seems like dirt–beige or brown

west coast of North America is yellow (sand?)

different areas are different colors

country borders labeled

US drawn as rectangular in perspective

map not drawn to scale

drawn with colored pencils

using the conventions of maps: labels, colors, borders

what is labeled? Hudson River, Jersey, Canada, Chicago, Washington, DC, Kansas City, Nebraska, Las Vegas, Utah, Texas, Los Angeles, Mexico, Pacific Ocean, Russia, Japan, China–“Jersey”=lack of respect

aerial view

Magazine: The New Yorker. Read by NYers, others, cultural studies magazine, elitist appealing to well educated readers who have exposure to cultural events and arts.

March 29, 1976, 75 cents.

Steinberg (Saul Steinberg)

Message or thesis statement of this text: New York is more detailed compared to the more spaced-out locations included in the image because according to Steinberg, it’s more lively (exciting, dynamic, unique, popular) than anywhere else that seems mundane, non-descript.

NY is more crowded than everywhere else?

 

Facsimile

Facsimile(Noun): An exact copy

“The Statue of Liberty has never made me feel at home, either in New York Harbor or on Las Vegas Boulevard, where it stood squat and compressed as I drove past, a facsimile in incremental scale.”

I first seen this word in the text Walk with me by David L. Ulin in the second paragraph. I didn’t understand the word and it was my first time seeing it.

Example: A facsimile was reproduced by the team to keep the original trophy in the showcase.

Nematodes

Nematodes (Noun) : Any of a phylum of elongated cylindrical worms parasitic in animals or plants or free living in soil or water.

” This is the ultimate polis, through which humans move like nematodes” – Charles McGrath

I assumed it was a science related word because McGrath used it to describe movement in humans. I encountered the word in the reading from A Literary Visitor Strolls In From the Airport by Charles McGrath on the fourth page in the first paragraph.

 

Apocalyptic

Apocalyptic – of, relating to, or resembling an apocalypse

Website: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/apocalyptic

I encountered the word by hearing “Apocalyp.” It does sound like Apocalypse and Apocalypse means the complete final destruction of the world, especially as described in the biblical book of Revelation. In “A literary visitor strolls in from the airport,” it says “…when ranting a diatribe he buries in the garden of his ex-wife is dug up five centuries later, in a now post-apocalyptic world.” It says world after apocalyptic so I thought it would mean something like Apocalypse

Example: The form of apocalyptic is a literary form; for we cannot suppose that the writers experienced the voluminous and detailed visions we find in their books.