Author Archives: KayB

Summary for Self

In “A Literary Visitor Strolls In From The Airport” by Charles McGrath , the author talks about a writer who travels through New York without using public transportation. He shows aspects of the city and gives insight on sights that many may not have noticed as a New Yorker. In the feature article McGrath speaks about Mr.Self who opens the reader’s eyes about traveling to particular areas by walking. For example, he talked about asking directions and responses that he got. The author draws his readers in with examples to make us think about the experience of walking through the city as opposed to driving. One of those would be Self’s walk from JFK airport to the Crowne Plaza Hotel, which is a 26 mile walk. His walk’s trajectory goes from Queens to Brooklyn to Manhattan. Throughout that journey he talks about some of the sights he sees including some familiar and unfamiliar areas such as Eastern Parkway, the projects on Glendale and Flatbush Avenue. He offers specific details of what he experienced visually. In addition, he tends to comment about what these sights say about life in America. For example, “There is a deep sadness to American society, greater than the sadness of any kind. It’s because America has such ideology of success”. The author expresses how Will Self’s walking is a stress reliever for his addiction to alcohol and drugs, noting that “ walking made him feel better than drugs ever did”. Mr. Self takes us around Queens, Brooklyn, and Manhattan and as he gets close to his destination, he makes commentary about architecture of landmarks such as the Municipal Building. Mr. Self finally concludes that NY is more complex than what the naked eye sees. According to Self, “Actually , instead of looking at individual buildings, it makes more metaphorical sense to think of New York as one enormous chunk of masonry that has been cut up and carved away”.     

Summarizing Colsen Whitehead’s Article

In “City Limits” by Colson Whitehead, the author speaks about life as a true New Yorker and how the city is portrayed and viewed by those who live there. He mainly grabs the reader’s attention by using his personal experiences and hypothetical scenarios to show everyone has their own private New York. According to Whitehead, a true New Yorker tends to remember the old things but they also notice change. For example, Whitehead talks about the Pan Am building, which is referred to as the Met Life building today. This is an example of old New York overlapping new New York. He states that someone else might just see the Met Life building and they’re wrong but he states that he is also wrong. This is because he sees what it used to be, the Pan Am building. This relates to his other point of New Yorkers being resistant to change. He later goes on to speak about the the changes in everyone’s “private New York”. Our private New York is described as our own experiences of New York through the changes we see. In our private New York we may not have known each other but we may have encountered the same places or things. Whitehead also notes that, as we remember the city through our experiences, it also remembers us and our many flaws. In our New York, the city sees us at our best and worse & has yet to judge us. Whitehead makes a comment about how NYers should respect and appreciate the city as much as it does for us. For example, “New York City does not hold our former self against us. Perhaps we can extend the courtesy”. Throughout the article, Colson Whitehead’s tone tends to shift, along with his perspective. He seems to have an informal tone for that focused on himself and his own feelings about the city in the beginning. It later shifts to talk about how the city treats us and the appreciation we have or should have for it in return.  

 

Topography

Topography (Noun)-  The art or practice of graphic delineation in detail usually on maps or charts of natural and man-made features of a place or region especially in a way to show their relative positions and elevations.

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

“By Mr.Self’s usual standards, the walk from Kennedy to Manhattan, about 20 miles, is a mere stroll. What recommended it was that it would take him through parts of the city that most people never notice while driving in a car: an experience that Mr. Self, a student of psycho-geography, believes has imposed a ‘windscreen-based virtuality’ on travel, cutting us off from experiencing our own topography”.

I encountered the word while looking over our reading for the hundredth time. Ive heard this word before and from its context I understood that it means our surroundings. The meaning went in depth and gave more explanation to the word. I now understand that it means the arrangement and detailing of particular area.

Carousing

Carouse (Intransitive Verb)- To drink liquor freely or excessively

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

I encountered the word while reading our second article and it stood out to me because it was a word I had not seen, heard, or encountered in any other reading.  I deciphered the word from it context and knew it related to his addiction.

“But Mr.Self has been clean for eight years or so, and some of the energy he used to expend on carousing now goes into epic hikes, sometimes as long as 100 miles – from London, say, into the Lea valley and through the Epping Forest to north Essex”.

Sentence: I try not to carouse when I am going through a stressful time in my life.

Image: Carousing

Suggestive Guidelines

Monuments have been created and put up to show the importance of an event, a person, or group of people. They provide a foundation for the social upbringing of today’s society. They’re set in place for remembrance of what our society was like years prior. Sometimes they go unnoticed because there are many ways of defining a monument. The most popular forms are plaques or statues. Due to recent controversy about particular Confederate monuments and whether they should stay or be taken down in Charlottesville, North Carolina, Mayor De Blasio is being asked to conduct a thorough examination of the monuments in New York City. He has plans to come up with a criteria for evaluating monuments based on a set of questions that the Mayor’s office could use to represent the progress of American history. In my view, guidelines for the criteria could potentially include location, who/what the monument represents, what impact it has, and why it is significant to today’s society.

A monument has a big impact on the people around it and its location. An example of a monument with an appropriate location would be the Frederick Douglass monument that was recently placed in Harlem. The monument is  significant to Harlem’s African American society because Fredrick Douglass largely impacted the black community with his heroic actions as an abolitionist. The monument shows how important he is to African American history and reminds us of the great things he accomplished at great risks. However, if we were to place this monument in another area or community, there might be a debate on its social impact in the community. Based on this we must create a criteria to evaluate a monument that includes its location and whether or not it is relevant to that neighborhood or population. Furthermore a monument’s location can impact the community, either positively or negatively. According to Archivolti, monuments can help a community economically. Most bring about jobs and more money around that area is due to the fact that many tourist may be interested in viewing a specific plaque or statue.

Moreover, when creating a monument many tend to think about who it’s for and what it should represent. Thus the criteria for evaluating a monument’s status  should break down whether this person contributed to American society. An example of that would be the Christopher Columbus monument located in Columbus Park in Brooklyn. Christopher Columbus, according to American textbooks, he discovered America.That information, as we know, isn’t historically accurate because Native Americans already owned and lived on the land.  According to Zahniser, Columbus Day is now being renamed “Indigenous People’s Day”.Critics may say “Why Columbus? He didn’t do anything important.”. When deciding on whether a monument is good in its community, one must ask if it has positive or negative connotation behind it. The most important thing is to keep a monument if it doesn’t bring about hate.

Similarly, a monument’s impact should show the “ link between the past, present and future” (Amemco.us). It should show American growth from a particular event or set of people. Monuments have the ability of bringing a community together or tearing them apart. Most are used for the grieving of those who have passed away. Examples of that would be the 9/11 waterfall for all those that died during the four coordinated terrorist attacks, the Prison Ship Martyrs monument put in place for remembrance of the prison and soldiers who died during the Revolutionary War, and even the African Burial Ground National Monument that was put in place in [dedication] to Africans of early New York and Americans of African descent. (National Park Service). The impact of a monument is very important because without significance, there is no real reason to keep a monument standing. It can be relocated to where it is best suited.

This brings me to my last criteria used to evaluate a monument which is how it affects society today. For example, some critics have said that monuments bring about gentrification. Gentrification is “the process of renewal and rebuilding accompanying the influx of middle class or affluent people into deteriorating areas that often displaces poorer residents” (Merriam-Webster). Gentrification occurs because many neighborhoods try to renovate for the attraction of that monument or relating to the removal of it. Gentrification also relates to the maintenance of monuments because with the desire to improve them may be to keep up with the neighborhood. These changes make our mayor question whether they help the economy or not. Along with that is the question of who pays for these improvements or removals. Rumor has it that they are paid for by taxpayers.

In conclusion, the protest of the removal of a statue of confederate icon General Robert E. Lee saw great tragedy, being described as one of the largest white supremacist events in recent  American history. Mayor De Blasio is being asked to conduct a thorough examination of the monuments in New York City. Criteria for these examinations could potentially include location, who/what the monument represents, what impact it has, and why it is significant to today’s society.  

 

Work Cited

  1. Archivolti, Raffaele. “Why Preserve and Restore? Importance of Saving Historical Monuments.” Linkedin, Raffaele Archivolti, 11 Nov. 2014, www.linkedin.com/pulse/20141111100252-151087658-why-preserve-and-restore-importance-of-saving-historical-monuments.
  2. Amemco. “Important Monument Information.” Important Monument Information, www.amemco.us/monument_info.htm.
  3. “Gentrification.” Merriam-Webster. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. 07 Oct. 2017.
  4. NPS. “History & Culture.” National Parks Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, 10 May 2016, www.nps.gov/afbg/learn/historyculture/index.htm.  
  5. Zahniser, David. “L.A. City Council Replaces Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day on City Calendar.” Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles Times, 30 Aug. 2017. Web. 10 Oct. 2017.

 

Writ

Writ (Noun)- a formal written document; specifically : a legal instrument in epistolary form issued under seal in the name of the English monarch

“Successful collaborations are like democracy writ small. Members of a civil society expect to have individual freedoms and opportunities, but in order to exercise and protect those rights, they need to participate in the larger social system.” (Why Collaborate?” by Ellen Lupton)

The term means that something is written in the term of protecting those of its audience.

~An example would be: Our writ to freedom of speech is seen in the Constitution.

 

Contemporary

Contemporary (Adjective)- marked by characteristics of the present period : modern, current

I saw this word while reading an article and could not understand its meaning in the sentence.

“Some people believe that such civil behavior is in danger of disappearing in contemporary American life.” (“Why Collaborate?” by Ellen Lupton)

My understanding of the word in its context is that it means civil behavior is starting to disappear in modern American life. With that being said, not many are doing right by their fellow community members.

Group Gathering

Trans-continential

Trans-continental (Adjective): extending across or relating to two or more continents.

I encountered the word while reading an article.

“Design world legends Lorraine Wild, Louise Sandhaus, and Rick Valicenti recently formed the trans-continental partnership Wild LuV, which is allowing them to work together and tackle big commissions that draw on all of their talents (http://www.wildluv.com/).” (“Why Collaborate?” by Ellen Lupton)

The word used in its context means an international partnership that was spread to one or two countries.

My understanding of the word is something that is spread or relating to two or more countries.

 

Agitate

Agitate (Verb)- To stir up public discussion of

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

“In response to recent and ongoing protests around the country- and most notably in Charlottesville,VA- agitating on one side for both the removal of controversial monuments and on the other for their preservation, Mayor Bill de Blasio called for an examination of New York City’s monuments.” (Project#2: Monument Surveying)

This word came to my attention while I was reviewing the requirements for Project #2. I used the sentence it was used in to help define the word and that helped out a little. I still wanted to find a way to define it in my own words.

After researching the word, the understanding became more clear but there were at least four definitions that I needed to decipher through to see which one best fit the sentence I had read. now my understanding of the the word to that word to its context would be “to create a buzz about a particular topic”. In the sentence, it was saying that there was great discussion about the removal and remaining of certain monuments around the world that was creating buzz in NYC also.

 

 

Part One: Exploring Ideas

I feel that finding monuments may be a little hard for some or myself because there are so many to choose from. Another thing that may be challenging would be collaborating with other students to agree on one source we find relatable to the selected monument. My main goal for the assignment is to learn something new about whether monuments should stay or not. I plan to build up my understanding of the monument that I choose to evaluate. I have little to no knowledge of monuments in NYC. Some monuments near City Tech are the Christoper Columbus Statue/ Monument, Robert F. Kennedy Monument and Prison Ship Martyrs Monument. These are the closest and most popular in the given area. There are many more monuments else where  but given such short time, a closer monument would be a better choice for the project. The resources that I used so far was my prior knowledge and internet sources like Google and the NYC Parks website. I researched the Robert F. Kennedy Monument and I think he deserved a monument for his hard work. Examples of his work would be his history of being an attorney and later following his brother’s footsteps and becoming a president. He deserves to be memorialized because he was an activist, often called a carpetbagger. Robert F. Kennedy was a supporter of Civil War and didn’t deserve to be assassinated for his views and ideas. The significance of monument compared to now is that it demonstrates that not many support anyone who is a supporter of the other side of a controversial topic. For example, when Obama was president. Not many liked his views and how he wanted to help the poor and lower classmen. They saw him as a weak and  destructful president. What are your views and what did you come up with ?