AMS 001C Midterm
Live Audience Influence on Autobiographies
Determines the inclusion of certain identity contents and the exclusion of others - narrator may choose based on the audiences reactions.
Harper High School Student who shot his brother
Devonte
"When I Was Puerto Rican" Identity Quest
Did Santiago lose her Puerto Rican purity when she moved to the U.S.? Was she ever purely Puerto Rican to begin with? Did she become a hybrid by moving to the States?
"Homecoming King" (2017)
Discusses the experiences of his family after 9/11 - generational gap between him and his father. His father believes that their treatment is the price they must pay for living in American. A show that is both funny and, at times, serious.
Oral Performed Autobiographies
Distance between narrator and narratee, and implied audience and consumer is minimized when the story is addressed to a live audience that immediately and audibly responds.
"Bread Givers" Themes
Diversity, Identity Construction, Americanization, Boundaries between: - Self and the World - Old World vs. New World values - Jewishness vs. Americanness
"Sleep Story" (1987) dance description
Dorfman jogs in one place while reciting a story about a San Francisco sculpture, his family, Holocaust victims, contemporary deaths (some from AIDS). Tension is set up between his efforts to speak coherently and clearly enough to be understood while is breathing becomes more labored from the jogging.
"When I Was Puerto Rican" Author
Esmeralda Santiago
Master of None: "Parents" Themes
Families and secrets, relationship dynamics, generational divides, parents living vicariously through their children, stereotyping and experiences with racism (both overt and microaggressions).
"Don't Let Me Get Me" (2002)
Follows Pink's life from school days to LA career. Aggressive tone, centered around the self. Credible personal pain, Break free from image-making industry demands (comparing her to Brittany Spears)
Anzia Yezierska's Rhetoric
juxtaposition of ghetto with Anglo-world. Exposes brutal reality of capitalist class-ridden urban society of early 20th century America. Lays the ground for socio-cultural identity Sara (main character) envisions and enacts
Core of story in Mom and Me and Mom
Maternal Absence/Abuse
Story of Detection
A narrative of filiation in which the son or daughter conducts a journey to discover the story of the lost or abandoning parent.
Hurston's criticisms
Accused of racist dialects given to characters in her stories. Accused of painting a black life as "quaint", which causes pity from the white audience. Hurston called "America's favorite black conservative".
Charlayne Woodard
Actor, Playwright, teaches at USC, recieved multiple awards.
Psychology-of-discovery Motive
A self-authorizing and empowering journey.
Memoir
A specific, concentrated period within a life. Illustrates the influence of world-wide events and movements upon individual personal destinies.
Multiple Acculturation
A term that suggests that the U.S. common culture is a product of the intersection of diverse cultural, racial, and ethnic elements within U.S. society. When immigrants acculturate to mainstream American society, they bring some of their own cultural practices into mainstream society.
"Sleep Story" Author
David Dorfman
Debate over American National Identity
"What is an American?" The public debate about whether immigrants amalgamated successfully into one American "race" Nativist movement and Cultural Pluralism, Melting pot theory
Education Today: "I Am Malala"
123 million young people worldwide still lack basic reading and writing skills. Girls compose of 61% of this number.
"The Promised Land" (1912)
Adopted the myth of the American Dream, showed how America ran counter to the economic, political, and cultural oppression of Europe. She pointed to her own success as proof of the abundant opportunities held out to immigrants who abandoned the old to embrace the new wholeheartedly.
Nativist Movement
Americanization > erasing the original cultures, especially the languages, of 27 million new immigrants to the United States (1880-1920)
"Me and a Gun" (1991)
Amos was raped and was threatened with a knife. She was told that he would take her to his friends and cut her up, but she got away because he needed more drugs. She was left paralyzed and urinating all over herself for years
Author of "Bread Givers"
Anzia Yezierska
Performing Arts
Art forms in which artists use their voices and/or the movements of their bodies, often in relation to other objects, to convey artistic expression. All are intended to be performed in front of a live audience.
Indictment of revenge
Assembling evidence in an alternative jurisdiction.
Performances of the Self
Autobiographical performances mark the multiple, non-unitary constitution of the self, and the notion that the "self" is not fixed, given, deep, or essential. "performing the self" is often criticized as being "narcissictic" or "egotistical"
"Chicken Soup" author
Blondell Cummings
Maya Angelou
Born in 1928 in St. Louis. Raised by her grandmother after her parents separated. Was raped by her mother's boyfriend when she was 7 and became mute for a while. She worked as the first black female streetcar conductor in San Francisco. Lived abroad in Egypt and Ghana - helped Malcolm X. with organization of Afro-American unity.
Mary Antin
Born in Polotsk, Russia, in 1881. Her first poem was published in the Boston Herald when she was 15. The letters to her uncle were published in the American Hebrew. Mary Antin became a symbol for those who championed the nation's capacity to assimilate the immigrant and the immigrant's capacity to enrich America.
Esmeralda Santiago
Born in San Juan district of Villa Palmeras into poverty, moved to New York at 13.
"Born in the U.S.A" Author
Bruce Springsteen
Performing Arts in Autobiography
Can be enacted in many media - short features, documentary films, theater pieces, installations, performance art (music, dance), monologue.
Maya Angelou's relationship with her mother
Captivated by Vivian's beauty, strength and aura. Admires her mother's self-reliance, resilience, and casual approach to sexuality. Recognizes her mothers flaws. She gradually depends on her mother and becomes more objective in her assessment of her mother's personality.
Harper High School Assistant Principal
Chad Adams
"Mom and Me and Mom" Themes
Changing connection between mother and child: Grandmother vs. Maya, Vivian vs. Maya, Maya vs. Guy. Ambivalence towards Maya's mother - evolving relationship.
"In Real Life" Author
Charlayne Woodard
Zora Neale Hurston
Comes from a family of 8 children, her father was a Baptist preacher and town mayor, her mother was a teacher. Worked as a maid to get money for her education.
Cultural Pluralism
Countered Americanization and Melting Pot Theory by rejecting all efforts to coerce cultural minorities to assimilate. Celebrated diversity, insisted that ethnic minorities had a right to maintain and develop their original cultures.
Harper High School Social Worker Working With Devonte
Crystal Smith
Autoethnography
Description of Hurston's narratives - blends of autobiographical and ethnographic elements.
Four motives of Self Writing
Franklinesque, Legacy, Psychology-of-discovery, Indictment of revenge
"Homecoming King" Author
Hasan Minhaj
Symbolism on the book cover of "I am Malala"
Headdress color, confident stare, knowing smile - questions raised. Confidence and persistence in the face of adversity. Is enigmatic stare addressed to reader or oppressors?
"The Promised Land" Author
Mary Antin
Harper High School Principal
Leonetta Sanders
"Coal Miner's Daughter" Author
Loretta Lynn
Author of "I am Malala"
Malala Yousafzai
Author of "Mom and Me and Mom"
Maya Angelou
"In Real Life" (2000)
Mirrors Woodard's childhood experiences of growing up in Albany, New York. Tells her story about trying to become an Actor in New York.
"I Am Malala" Themes
Modern international human rights discourse: education is considered a "fundamental human right". Life of a young girl caught in the vortex of war and religious extremism.
"Dont Let Me Get Me" Author
P!nk
"Sleep Story" (1987) Purpose
Past cultural loss (holocaust) vs. his own personal loss (Uncle Bob, his girlfriend) and the respective losses in his artistic and dance communities (his ballet teacher Ernie Pagnano). Uses memory of the past to make sense of the present situation. His stories become more entangled with each other as his body becomes more distressed.
Core of Story in Bread Givers
Paternal Abuse
Stand up Comedy as Autobiography
Performances as expressions of identity - simultaneous construction of personal identity and cultural critique. Live performance - breaks down the boundary of creator and performer. They are entertainment but also an expression of the performers involvement within their geographical communities and beyond.
Hasan Minhaj
Political Science Major at UC Davis. Did stand-up comedy on the Daily Show. Grew up a child of Muslim Indian immigrants.
This American Life Podcast (2013) Themes
Public Schools in the US, gun violence, gangs. Since 1999, 187,000 students attending atleast 193 primary or secondary schools have experienced a shooting on campus during school hours. Hispanic students: 2 times as likely to experience violence as white students, Black students: 3 times as likely.
Melting Pot Theory
Rationalized the coercive essence of Americanization - hastened the process of immigrants adopting "American culture"; also fostered a number of less explicit agendas (eradicating radical ideologies in the U.S.)
Autobiography as compared to Memoir
Recounts the story of a life that is (generally) more all-embracing, with a greater chronological sweep and a more linear structure.
Hurston's cultural commentary
Represents stereotypes as different forms of herself. Understanding that she was "at the center of the national stage, with the spectators not knowing whether to laugh or weep". Hurston's statement about slavery being the price for civilization mirrors the ideas of white artists and intellectuals, who looked to black people for originality.
"The Promised Land" and the Autobiography Genre
Represents the affirmation of personal identity and a record of social history. Represents the effort to understand and define the minority experience in America.
"Chicken Soup" performance description
Scrubbing a floor on her hands and knees, repeatedly stands and convulses. She then goes back to serenely scrubbing the floor.
"How it Feels to be Colored Me" Themes
Self realization, importance of Self-Identity, segregation and racial Identification, cultural commentary on stereotypes and misconceptions. Heavy black dialect - artistic aesthetic that prioritized the creative significance of working class black culture to the creation of "high" art.
Anzia Yezierska
She grew up in a Jewish Settlement in the Russian Empire and moved to New York. Two works of hers were adapted into films and she became known as "Sweatshop Cinderella". She grew frustrated by the insincere nature of Hollywood and her alienation from the Jewish ghetto.
"Born in the U.S.A" (1984)
Story of a Vietnam vet who returned home to discover that the economy in his hometown was crumbling and he had little hope of a better future or even a job. Decisive attachment to political and sociocultural issues at a time when Ronald Reagan was reviving a patriotic pride.
Franklinesque Motive
Studying and writing one's life as useful - practically and morally; an exercise in democratic citizenship
Imaginative Reaffiliation
The desire to know and gain closeness to a parent who was unavailable in life.
"Me and a Gun" Author
Tori Amos
"Chicken Soup" (1981)
Unhappy woman who hated doing this domestic task of scrubbing the floors, was "going crazy". Is it protest art?
Malala Yousafzai
Was born on July 12, 1997 in Mingora, Pakistan. named after Malalai of Maiwand, the "greatest heroine of Afghanistan" who inspired the Afghan army to defeat the British in 1880. Blogged for BBC about living under the Taliban's threats to deny her an education. Used the pseudonym Gul Makai.
This American Life
Weekly public radio program and podcast since 1995. New theme each week.
Legacy Motive
Writing life as a gift of love and memory, passed on to posterity.
Reb Smolinsky
Yezierska's father. Life focused on the promise of heaven and offering charitable contributions to others. Knowledgeable, but knowledge does not translate well in America. Patriarchal.
"How it Feels to be Colored Me" Author
Zora Neale Hurston
Podcasts
deeply-reported, sound-rich audio portraits of private and public figures in American life. Heard from subjects directly, or people who knew the subjects best It feels real: the wall between the author and the audience disappears.
Narratives of Filiation
memoirs - usually of a father or mother - by a son or daughter whose parent was remote, unavailable, abusive, or absent.
Malala's memoir
opens the door to some of the greatest challenges of our modern world. It is about politics, education, culture, religion, and violence against women and girls.