Monday, May 23, 2011

Friday, May 27

Hi class!
Remember that this Friday we have class starting 5:00 pm at Colegio Inter/Universidad UTIC (across from
Mita´i Restaurant).  If you can't make it by 5, that's OK, just come later, but COME PLEASE!

Remember that the Final Exam is Saturday... as well as those wonderful projects you're all preparing! :)

I forgot to mention it, but those projects are all going to the Embassy for them to see, since this is the last module they cover, so make them beautiful!

See you all on Friday, YES or YES!!!!!

T. Romina

P.S. 1 Those of you who haven't written on the blog (comments) have until this Friday morning to do so (so it gives me enough time to read and correct them before the Exam).

P.S. 2 Don't forget your movie worksheet for Friday and to vote on the Poll so I can have some feedback...

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

RECUPERATION CLASSES

Hi class!

Ok, your recuperation classes are going to be on Tuesday, May 17 and Thursday May 19, from 18:00 - 20:00 in Bernardino Caballero, Room 1.  The teacher will be Tom Hancock, who you already know.

Take advantage of the classes so we can have enough time to watch the movie! I was thinking we could watch it on Saturday, May  21 so then we can concentrate on the student book on our last Recuperation class, May 27 (which I will be teaching you).

The Final Exam will be on May 28, which is also the day you have the presentations of your projects (some other classes might be invited to watch them).

So, go to the recuperation classes next week and I'll see you on Saturday!

T. Romina

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Discussing Chapters 24-25

You guys know what to do!  Comment your ideas, feelings, likes, dislikes on the chapters we read on Saturday.  Whatever opinion you have is completely valid as long as you can support it, explain it, back it up with clear explanations and examples.  

Don't forget to also comment on at least one other person's ideas.  This, like every week's writing, is worth 10 points.

The deadline is Friday, May 6 at 8:00 pm.

Note: Many of you are not commenting on some other person's ideas... it's very important that you do this or you won't get the full 10 points! 

Tip: Remember, in a good piece of writing you must put your soul there, you have to be courageous to write your true thoughts, otherwise what you wrote can seem uninteresting... the more thruthful you are, the more interesting it is for others to read and know you as a person.  Bear this in mind when you put your ideas on paper.


P.S. I don't know what's the matter with most of you, but we only have a couple of more weeks of class left, so please complete all the work as much as possible.  Don't forget about your projects!

Summarizing Chapters 24-25

The person chosen, Cynthia, must write the summary for the last 2 chapters, 24-25.

See you all on Saturday!


T. Romina

Thursday, April 28, 2011

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT!!!

Hi Guys!
There's been a change, so tomorrow's going to be a holiday.... therefore we won't have recuperation class.  See u all next Saturday, May 7.


P.S.  All the Jane Eyre work still must be carried out!!!

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Discussing Chapters 21-23

You guys know what to do!  Comment your ideas, feelings, likes, dislikes on the chapters we read on Saturday.  Whatever opinion you have is completely valid as long as you can support it, explain it, back it up with clear explanations and examples.  

Don't forget to also comment on at least one other person's ideas.  This, like every week's writing, is worth 10 points.

The deadline is Friday, April 29 at 8:00 pm.

Note: Many of you are not commenting on some other person's ideas... it's very important that you do this or you won't get the full 10 points! 

Tip: Remember, in a good piece of writing you must put your soul there, you have to be courageous to write your true thoughts, otherwise what you wrote can seem uninteresting... the more thruthful you are, the more interesting it is for others to read and know you as a person.  Bear this in mind when you put your ideas on paper.

Summarizing Chapters 21-23

The person chosen by Pablo (I don't remember who it was.. sorry! ) must write the summary for the next 3 chapters, 21-23.

See you all on Friday at 6:00 pm!


T. Romina


P.D. It was Maida...

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Questions Chapters 18-20

Dear class,

Here's the link to CHAPTERS 18-20... If you have any problems downloading it, please send me an email about it.

T. Romina

JANE EYRE E-BOOK

Hi everyone!

I found the exact book we're reading in class in electronic format, in case some of you don't have some chapters... I know it's a bit late, but I hope it'll be useful anyway.  Just click on the link JANE EYRE E-BOOK and you'll be able to access it.    




Have a good week!

T. Romina

Discussing Chapters 18-20

You guys know what to do!  Comment your ideas, feelings, likes, dislikes on the chapters we read on Saturday.  Whatever opinion you have is completely valid as long as you can support it, explain it, back it up with clear explanations and examples.  

Don't forget to also comment on at least one other person's ideas.  This, like last week's writing, is worth 10 points.

The deadline is Friday, April 22 at 8:00 pm.

Note: Many of you are not commenting on some other person's ideas... it's very important that you do this or you won't get the full 10 points! 

Tip: Remember, in a good piece of writing you must put your soul there, you have to be courageous to write your true thoughts, otherwise what you wrote can seem uninteresting... the more thruthful you are, the more interesting it is for others to read and know you as a person.  Bear this in mind when you put your ideas on paper. 

Summarizing Chapters 18-20

The person chosen by Eligio (I don't remember who it was.. sorry! ) must write the summary for the next 3 chapters, 18-20.

Happy Easter everyone!


T. Romina

Edit: Was it Pablo?

Saturday, April 9, 2011

The Jane Eyres Since the Beginning of Film


As I’ve already mentioned a few times in class, there have been more than twenty cinematography versions of Jane Eyre, including from the silent film era.  I thought I’d do a little research so as to find out who they were, and what I observed was that the actresses who depicted Jane throughout time have been very different, physically.  I only found 14 of the actresses with pictures, but I’d like to share them with all of you and hear your opinions.  I’ll start with the oldest, which is from more than ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO, 1910 to be exact!


1.       Mabel Ballin, 1910
A 23 year old Jane, one of the youngest
Janes…






2.       Virginia Bruce, 1934 
Platinum blonde Jane!
24 years old...







3.       Joan Fontaine, 1943
Yes, the one from your books!
Saint Jane! 26 years old.




4.       Daphne Slater, 1956  
Only a profile photo,
unfortunately…
She was 28 years old.




5.       Mia Goossen, 1958
Super styled Jane..
She was 33 yrs
here, the oldest Jane of them all!

 



6.       Sally Ann Howes, 1961
Hmmm… interesting hairdo
for Jane. Looks like it’s loose,
which would have been
impossible for the times.
She was 31 yrs old here.




7.       Anne Bell, 1963
Is this another blonde
Jane? She was 23 at
this time.




8.       Susannah York, 1970
Red-Headed Jane; she was
31 years old when she took
on this role, which still
gives me hope that I can
be Jane one day too! ;)





9.       Sorcha Cusack, 1973
Scared Jane? She was
24 yrs old here, but
doesn’t she look a bit
older?




10.   Zelah Clarke, 1983
29 years old.






11.   Charlotte Gainsbourgh, 1996
French Jane.  25 years old.





12.   Samantha Morton, 1997
20 years old… wow she’s
the closest one so far in
age! Youngest Jane!





13.   Ruth Wilson, 2006
My favorite Jane! 24 years old.


And finally….



14.   Mia Wasikowska, 2011
New Jane, 21 years old.
                              
             So, what do you think? Which actress looks like your idea of Jane Eyre the most?
TRIVIA: Out of the 14 Janes shown, 4 of the actresses have names that begin with the letter 'S' and two are named Mia.  Only one is named Jane, 'Joan' in French.

Only 2 of the actresses can be considered to be close to Jane's age in the book (Samantha Morton and Mia Wasikowska with 20 and 21 years of age respectively), the rest are between the ages of  23 and 33, considered a bit too old to portray Jane, a teenager.

Jane Eyre is generally considered to be 'plain', but most of the actresses depicting her are or were considered beautiful in their time.

Jane is generally considered to have plain brown hair, although the book doesn't really specify. However, most of the actresses have always been brown-haired, with the exception of Virginia Bruce (blonde) and Susannah York (red-head)... the rest of the actresses have either dyed their hair brown or worn wigs (as is the case of Wasikowska).

Friday, April 8, 2011

Question Chapters 14-17

Hi everyone!
Yes, I made a mistake and posted the incomplete version of chapter 14! And nobody let me know... what a shock! Anyway, you'll have to do it this upcoming week then! Sorry!

QUESTIONS CHAPTERS 14-17

See you all tomorrow! Bright and early!

T. Romina

P.S. If there are any problems, please let me know as soon as possible!!!

Discussing Chapters 15-17

The assignment is the same as the first four times! :)  Comment your ideas, feelings, likes, dislikes on the chapters we read on Saturday.  Whatever opinion you have is completely valid as long as you can support it, explain it, back it up with clear explanations and examples. 

Don't forget to also comment on at least one other person's ideas.  This, like last week's writing, is worth 10 points.

The deadline is Friday, April 15 at 8:00 pm.

Note: Many of you are not commenting on some other person's ideas... it's very important that you do this or you won't get the full 10 points!

Tip: Remember, in a good piece of writing you must put your soul there, you have to be courageous to write your true thoughts, otherwise what you wrote can seem uninteresting... the more thruthful you are, the more interesting it is for others to read and know you as a person.  Bear this in mind when you put your ideas on paper. 

Summarizing Chapters 15-17

The person Clara chooses tomorrow will write the summary for the next 3 chapters, 15-17. 

Is it a boy's turn again? :)


T. Romina

Sunday, April 3, 2011

CHARLOTTE BRONTE vs JANE AUSTEN

Since we were talking about this on Saturday, I thought you'd be interested in reading this article...

‘Jane Eyre’ movie rekindles Austen vs. Bronte, the battle of the bonnets


 
By Monica Hesse, Thursday, March 17, 12:56 PM

Enough with the empire waistlines, the sparkly dialogue, the pride, the prejudice, the Colin Firth trudging out of the lake again and again on the late-night minithons on A&E. Enough with all that.

The devoted readers of Bonnet Drama have always known that if it came down to it, if someone held a flintlock musket to their heads and demanded an answer, that “I love Jane Austen and the Brontes equally” would not suffice. Sides must be chosen:
You are either a Janeite. Or you are a Charlottan.
The Brontes’ resurgence
“When I need order in my life, I read Jane Austen,” says Alison Owen, an English film producer. “When I’m feeling more emotional, and when I need that passionate punch, I turn to ‘Jane Eyre.’ ”
For two decades, Austen’s Janeites have held the public hostage in an infinite Regency-era loop. Elizabeth Bennet played by Jennifer Ehle, played by Keira Knightley, played by Aishwarya Rai. Elizabeth Bennet fighting zombies. A cultish What Would Jane Do movement emerged, as if Austen were not a favorite author but a chatty oracle.
The Charlottans have waited.
Now, victories:
On Friday, the nationwide opening of “Jane Eyre.” It’s the newest remake of the most famous novel to be written by Charlotte Bronte or her two author sisters, Emily and Anne. Owen is the producer; the director is Cary Fukunaga, whose last project was the Mexican gang drama “Sin Nombre.” This new “Eyre” stars Mia Wasikowska, the “Alice” of Tim Burton’s “Wonderland,” as plain governess Jane, and Michael Fassbender — an appropriate blend of sexy, cruel and mangy — as her tormented employer, Mr. Rochester.
In Britain, director Andrea Arnold is finishing up edits for a new version of Emily Bronte’s “Wuthering Heights” — the first version to cast a black actor in the role of Heathcliff.
 
In New York, a Bronte fan has launched a one-time magazine called “Eyresses,” dedicated to the painstaking worship of the 400-page novel. It includes a “Jane Eyre Community Cookbook” and an e-mail chain between two dudes who confess that they both secretly love the book.
A Bronte biopic has been in the works for years; the faithful hope it will get off the ground soon.
The faithful are very protective of their source material.
“There is nothing about this movie that is reinventing what the story should have been,” Fukunaga says of his film in a telephone interview. “The book is frightening,” he says, promising that his “Jane” preserves the Gothic elements that have been sacrificed in previous versions. “There are other ‘Jane Eyre’ films out there that are mostly treated as romance films.”
The problem for Brontophiles isn’t that the books haven’t been made into movies. With the exception of Anne’s works (everyone always forgets about Anne), many of them have; “Jane Eyre” had a made-for-TV makeover just five years ago. The problem is that so many of these adaptations have been lacking. Whereas “Pride and Prejudice” will forever be defined by Colin Firth, the cinematic world is still in search of the perfect Bronte adaptation.
“I cannot tell you how many Bronte films I have seen,” says Rebecca Fraser, a Charlotte Bronte biographer. “Orson Welles [1943] was very Byronic, but not so attractive. Timothy Dalton . . . people generally think that Timothy Dalton [1983] did not work.”
“The worst adaptation, that’s the 1934 one,” write Manuel Del Estal and Cristina Lara, co-sovereigns of the Bronte Blog, via e-mail. “It’s almost like a parody.” (They apologize for the electronic communication, but they are vacationing in Haworth, England, the home of the Bronte sisters, and they have authentically rented a house without a telephone.)
Most everyone agrees that the one starring William Hurt was a disaster. How could it not be? It bungled the best quote, with Charlotte Gainsbourg’s Jane telling Mr. Rochester, “I may be poor and plain, but I’m not without feelings.”
No. Incorrect.
The correct quote, to be spoken with immeasurable misery, is:
“Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain and little, I am soulless and heartless?”
Anyone who can’t see the difference is entirely missing the point.

The brutality of Bronte
Jane Austen is easy to love. Her heroines are smart; her heroes are righteous. People say funny things and wear lovely clothes and spend a lot of time going to balls or sitting in drawing rooms, meaning that the scenery is just gorgeous. Everything ends happily for everyone who deserves it.
The Brontes are more difficult. Things don’t end well. The writing is beautiful, but Mr. Rochester and Heathcliff — Charlotte and Emily’s two most famous heroes — are basically thugs in morning coats. They say savage things. They emotionally torture the women they claim to love. They keep other women locked in attics and blame drunken housekeepers for bumps in the night. Things burn. People die.
“Jane Eyre is basically like ‘Mad Max,’ ” offers Mikki Halpin, one of the women behind the “Eyresses” project. “It’s basically like a horror movie set in this very hostile terrain.”
More modernly, Jane Eyre is “Twilight.” The women who think it is sooo sexy that the vampire Edward Cullen is a borderline abusive boyfriend are the same women who will discover that borderline abusive boyfriends have been sooo sexy for 160 years.
Jane Austen? She, as others have pointed out, is “Gossip Girl.”
One doesn’t know what Austen would make of the Bronte sisters — she died before their works were published — but one does know how Charlotte felt about her:
“She does her business of delineating the surface of the lives of genteel English people curiously well,” Bronte wrote in one letter to a friend. “She ruffles her reader by nothing vehement, disturbs him with nothing profound. The passions are perfectly unknown to her: she rejects even a speaking acquaintance with that stormy sisterhood.”

The storminess of the Bronte women’s writing makes for an intensely personal reading experience — a private world of melodrama and creepy love. This might explain why there has never been a definitive film version. For any screen adaptation to approach the emotional pinnacles achieved by readers in their imaginations, it would have to include so much lavish emoting that it would end up looking ridiculous.

“It’s especially true with ‘Wuthering Heights,’ ” says Andrew McCarthy, the director of the Bronte Parsonage Museum in England. “As a naturalistic adaptation, it’s unfilmable, really. There almost needs to be a new media or a new art form.”
In some ways, McCarthy says, “the most successful adaptations are the ones that pay the least respect to the book.”
Hush, Mr. McCarthy, and we shall never speak of that statement again.
Must we choose?
Austen or Bronte. It’s not as if it has to be one or the other, as if one must die so the other might live, when all have been dead for 200 years (The Brontes! All died before 40! So sad!).
“No one asks why Shakespeare in the Park is redone every summer,” says director Fukunaga, slightly peevishly, and he’s right — there might be some latent, dismissive misogyny involved in the concept that there is only enough cultural love for one female literary figure at any given time.
Some analysts have wondered if the Brontes are built for economic downturn — that difficult times draw us to difficult stories. The Bronte heroes find happiness, but not without losing a hand or their eyesight, or having their manor burned down. It’s a bruised happiness, one that might appeal to the foreclosed modern viewer.
 
The new version of “Jane Eyre” hits most of the pleasure centers required of any good “Jane” adaptation. It has the horrible Red Room, the “left rib” speech, the muddy moors. It also handles gracefully the last third of the book, in which Jane lives with a minister and his sisters — which other versions have either ignored or totally mucked up.
It is likely to please the Charlottans.
Indeed, it is likely to please the Janeites, and anyone else who has ever loved the sight of a beautiful man begging for the love of a working-class woman.
Meanwhile, do you know what is long overdue for a big-screen adaptation?
Middlemarch.”
hessem@washpost.com

Questions Chapters 12-14

Hi guys,

On the link below you will find the questions for the chapters we read today, 12 to 14.  If there are any problems, please let me know a.s.a.p. (as soon as possible so that I can solve it)! Have a good weekend!



JANE EYRE QUEST AND VOCAB CHAPTERS 12 - 14


T. Romina

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Discussing Chapters 12-14

The assignment is the same as the first three times! :)  Comment your ideas, feelings, likes, dislikes on the chapters we read on Saturday.  Whatever opinion you have is completely valid as long as you can support it, explain it, back it up with clear explanations and examples. 

Don't forget to also comment on at least one other person's ideas.  This, like last week's writing, is worth 10 points.

The deadline is Friday, April 8 at 8:00 pm.

Note: Many of you are not commenting on some other person's ideas... it's very important that you do this or you won't get the full 10 points!

Tip: Remember, in a good piece of writing you must put your soul there, you have to be courageous to write your true thoughts, otherwise what you wrote can seem uninteresting... the more thruthful you are, the more interesting it is for others to read and know you as a person.  Bear this in mind when you put your ideas on paper. 

Summarizing Chapters 12-14

You know what to do Clara! :)  You're the chosen one this week so you're responsible for writing the complete summary of the three chapters.  I know you'll do a great job!  Happy writing!

T. Romina

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Jane Eyre according to critic Roger Ebert

Ok guys, I colored in red what the errors were...

Hello, Everyone!
Here's what the well-known and respected movie critic, Roger Ebert, has to say about Jane Eyre 2011.  For five extra class partipation points, tell me what small detail he got wrong concerning our story... The first person who answers correctly gets the points!!

                                                                   Jane Eyre   


BY ROGER EBERT / March 16, 2011



Gothic romance attracts us with a deep tidal force. Part of its appeal is the sense of ungovernable eroticism squirming to escape from just beneath the surface. Its chaste heroines and dark brooding heroes prowl the gloomy shadows of crepuscular castles, and doomy secrets stir in the corners. Charlotte's Bronte's Jane Eyre is among the greatest of gothic novels, a page turner of such startling power, it leaves its pale latter-day imitators like Twilight flopping for air like a stranded fish.
To be sure, the dark hero of the story, Rochester, is not a vampire, but that's only a technicality. The tension in the genre is often generated by a virginal girl's attraction to a dangerous man. The more pitiful and helpless the heroine the better, but she must also be proud and virtuous, brave and idealistic. Her attraction to the ominous hero must be based on pity, not fear; he must deserve her idealism.

This atmospheric new “Jane Eyre,” the latest of many adaptations, understands those qualities, and also the very architecture and landscape that embody the gothic notion. The film opens with Jane Eyre fearfully fleeing across the bleak moors, where even nature conspires against her. This is not the opening we expect, with Jane already fully grown, but later in flashbacks, we'll be reminded of her Dickensian girlhood, her cruel aunt, her sadistic boarding school, and her need as a girl without means to earn her own way as a governess.

Jane is described in the novel as a plain girl; is that where the phrase “plain Jane” comes from? Here she's played by Mia Wasikowska (of
Tim Burton's “Alice in Wonderland”), who is far from plain but transforms herself into a pale, severe creature who needs to be watered with love. She is employed by the intimidating Rochester (Michael Fassbender) to supervise the care of his “ward,” Adele Varens (Romy Settbon Moore), who is being raised in his isolated manor, Thornfield. How he came into the possession of a young girl as his “ward” is an excellent question, one among many that could probably be answered by Thornfield's dedicated housekeeper, Mrs. Fairfax (Judi Dench).

The classic “Jane Eyre” is the 1944 version with
Joan Fontaine and Orson Welles. Fontaine was 27, Welles was 29. Mia Wasikowska is 21 and Michael Fassbender is 34. In the novel, Jane is scarily 20 and Rochester is … older. Whether in any version he is old enough to accomplish what he has done in life is a good question, but this film is correct in making their age difference obvious; Jane in every sense must be intimidated by her fierce employer. No version I know of has ever made Rochester as unattractive as he is described in the book.

Rochester is absent a good deal of the time, although represented by the foreboding atmosphere of Thornhill, the enigmatic loyalty of Mrs. Fairfax, and the sense that something is amiss in the enormous manor. Here
Judi Dench's contribution is significant; the tone of her voice conveys so much more about Rochester than her words.

Either you know the plot or not. Its secret is a red herring with all the significance of “Rosebud.” It functions only to provide Rochester with an honorable reason to propose a dishonorable thing, and thus preserve the moral standards of the time. The novel is actually about forbidden sexual attraction on both sides, and its interest is in the tension of Jane and Rochester as they desire sex but deny themselves. Much of the power comes from repressed emotions, and perhaps Charlotte Bronte was writing in code about the feelings nice women of her time were not supposed to feel.

The director here is Cary Fukunaga, whose “Sin Nombre” was one of the best films of 2009. Its story, based on fearsome Mexican gangs, scarcely resembles “Jane Eyre,” but it showed an emotional intensity between characters who live mostly locked within themselves. He's a director with a sure visual sense, here expressed in voluptuous visuals and ambitious art direction.

Michael Fassbender is an Irish actor who can have a threatening charm; did you see him in “Fish Tank” (2010), a quite different film about a seductive man who takes advantage of a teenage girl? Mia Wasikowska, from Australia, is a relative newcomer who must essentially carry “Jane Eyre,” and succeeds with restraint, expressing a strong moral compass.
Judi Dench is firm, as a housekeeper must be firm, and observes everything, as a housekeeper must. All of the rest is decoration. Without the costumes, sets, locations, sound design and the wind and rain, gothic romance cannot exist.

Taken from: rogerebert.suntimes.com