- The number of billionaires has grown by more than 13% during the pandemic (Business Insider)
- These master’s degrees can boost your salary up to 87% (CNBC)
- Here are all the trailers from Netflix's first-ever Tudum event (CNET)
- How Onlyfans spurred an exodus of sex workers who are creating their own websites (Vice)
- Privacy changes you might want to make to your Venmo account right now (Washington Post)
Saturday, September 25, 2021
Money News 9.25
Wednesday, September 22, 2021
Close Reading
Sometimes, it's not until a piece of art is examined in fine
detail that new meanings arise. When cultural context, the artist's intentions,
or even your own prior knowledge, are set aside a new way of "seeing"
the art can emerge. This is the purpose of a close reading, sometimes called an
explication.
For this essay, you will conduct a close reading of a film scene that depicts
some aspect of wealth. The goal is to delve deeply into a scene in hopes of
uncovering new ways to understand it. You will have wide latitude in how you
choose to engage it. However, your focus should be concise, minute details. For
example, instead of examining the Mona
Lisa, as a whole, you'd consider only the hands.
As always, ground your analysis in a strong thesis, supported by evidence from
the scene. Choose only one of the following twelve scenes for your analysis:
- "I Do Love Our Adventures" from Downton Abbey (Michael Engler, 2019)
- "There's Sparkling, Right?" from Parasite (Bong Joon-ho, 2019, South Korea)
- "There's A Lot of Children Starving in America" from Crazy Rich Asians (John M. Chu, 2018)
- "We Own This" from Fifty Shades Freed (James Foley, 2018)
- "There is No Nobility in Poverty" from The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)
- "I Want You and Daisy Both to Come Over to My House" from The Great Gatsby (Baz Luhrmann, 2013)
- "It's Not Too Much, is It?" from Marie Antoinette (Sophia Coppola, 2006)
- "Aren't You Bored by All This?" from Y tu mamá también (Alfonso Cuarón, 2002, Mexico)
- "Why on Earth Would You Pick Me to be Your Princess?" from The Princes Diaries (Gary Marshall, 2001)
- "Dickie Greenleaf?" from The Talented Mr. Ripley (Anthony Minghella, 1999)
- "You Could Almost Pass as a Gentleman" from Titanic (James Cameron, 1997)
- "I Actually Have a Way Normal Life for a Teenage Girl" from Clueless (Amy Heckerling, 1995)
- "Really Offensive" from Pretty Woman (Gary Marshall, 1990)
- "Could You Pass the Salt?" from Batman (Tim Burton, 1989)
In your works cited, list your film in the following manner:
Knives Out. Directed by Rian Johnson, Lionsgate Films, 2019.
Required:- Approximately 2 pages
- MLA Style, including parenthetical citation and works cited
Sunday, September 19, 2021
Week 6: Tue 9.21/Thu 9.23
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans spend about 1% of their gross annual income on alcohol—about $565 a year for the average household. |
Week 6: Tue 9.21/Thu 9.23
Read: Read: UNACCEPTABLE—1. Future Stars – 8. Play Ball
Class: Reading discussion; Multimedia presentations; Lecture—"Close Reads - A How-To"
Upcoming:
Week 7: Tue 9.28/Thu 9.30
Read: UNACCEPTABLE—9. “Isn’t It a Great Day to be a Trojan!” – 17. Name Your Price
Class: Reading discussion; Multimedia presentations
Due: CLOSE READING