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vamp234201 has joined the conference.

stichure: hey now

mac33cam has joined the conference.

leslied639: Hello, how is everyone this evening?

stichure: still loading

stichure: 

mac33cam: hey now

mac33cam: good. how about you

leslied639: I was fine until I picked up the test and paper 2

mac33cam: Go UNC

vamp234201: Test are ready?

mac33cam: how did you do?

stichure: Not yet... I just picked them up

stichure: For those who took the test early ... last week they are graded

stichure: But the rest I just got today

stichure: There will be a makeup test... it will allow you to replace the lowest of your 
first to test grades

stichure: two

stichure: It will be on gilman's yellow wallpaper

leslied639: The makeup?

stichure: Show me at least two critical perspectives

stichure: Show me that you understand them

stichure: You must use the primary source

stichure: You must use a secondary source

stichure: You must specifically declare when you are using a particular critical 
perspective

stichure: Likewise, I want you to revise your second paper

stichure: It is your last chance to improve a paper grade

stichure: Also, it is practice for what the final paper is going to look like

inazone50 has joined the conference.

stichure: Has anyone decided what their final paper is going to be on

mac33cam: chaucer

stichure: I need to know in advance so I can help you and also set aside time to discuss 
the papers with you

stichure: I need a list of the stories you're going to cover, 33

leslied639: I have a question....if we understand the particular critial perspective, why 
must we cite a secondary sourse so many times throughout the paper?

stichure: You need 3-5

inazone50: just found out about it

mac33cam: by when

vamp234201: I would like to use Anne Sexton poetry. Would this be ok?

stichure: Because the purpose of a class like this is also to illustrate your ability to 
do research, Leslie

stichure: Yes, vamp

stichure: At least five poems

stichure: Zone, has morris announced her final paper as well?

stichure: As soon as possible, 33

mac33cam: cool

inazone50: just this week

stichure: Excellent

stichure: Essentially, you have five or six weeks to get this done

stichure: But obviously you have other courses and other assignments as well so the 
earlier you get started the more help ful we will be in getting your paper as developed 
as possible before it is due for a grade

stichure: Remember that if you choose poetry, you need to do a series of works or do an 
overview of the authors material but you are still going to have a series of poems as 
examples

stichure: For material that is literature based, the number of works required depends on 
the length.  Obviously, a novel will stand alone

stichure: But short stories will require several short stories

stichure: If that makes any sense

stichure: Any questions so far about the final paper

mac33cam: nay

vamp234201: The exact due date?

stichure: Keep in mind that we are expecting you to show not only that you can use the primary source to support your analysis, but also secondary sources to show that you are 
doing research.

stichure: No later than the last day of class, but I believe it is going to be early in 
the second week of May

stichure: For my papers, I expect you to use the primary source and a secondary source in 
every paragraph of the body... minimum

leslied639: On the short stories, such as the Martian Chronicles, we need to show how all 
the stories tie together?

stichure: Leslie, I would suggest strongly for your own sanity that you choose 3-5 
stories that are thematically linked so that your discussion is a continuous idea, rather 
than individual analysis of these different works

leslied639: ok

stichure: Certainly in the Martian Chronicles specifically there are specific themes that 
the author consistently run through his work, including imperialism, ecology, and other 
elements of futurism

stichure: Remember, the author did put the stories together for a reason

leslied639: ok

stichure: In fact, from the list on the final paper list you will note that the lyrical 
material I am offering are generally concept albums but I will accept a list that you 
come up with his long as you can explain what theme draws them together

stichure: As long as

stichure: Same with poetry and short stories

stichure: Any other questions or problems

stichure: We are now in the homestretch

stichure: This is the final section of material

stichure: This is literary fiction

stichure: Fiction differs from a drama and poetry in the sense that we not only have 
characters, as we do in drama, but we also have narrative

stichure: Narrative directs the flow and the organization of the story

stichure: Does anyone remember the narrative perspectives... the narrative points of view

mac33cam: yes

inazone50: yes

stichure: Feel free to list them for me

mac33cam: first person

stichure: The narrative perspective chosen by the author has a profound effect on the way 
it the story is read and how the author wants us to perceive the narrator or other 
characters

stichure: Define, 33

inazone50: participant, third person

stichure: Actually zone, the other way around

mac33cam: person telling the story is same writing it

stichure: Not exactly, 33

stichure: But that does bring up the good point

mac33cam: how so?

stichure: You must distinguish between the author and the narrator

mac33cam: oh

inazone50: I was just listing two types

stichure: Certainly anyone who has read anything by Edgar Allan Poe knows that he loved 
writing first-person narratives that told of murder and other mayhem

stichure: I understand zone

stichure: And certainly poe was never accused or certainly convicted of killing anyone

mac33cam: true

stichure: The first-person narrator differs from a third person narrator in the sense 
that a first-person narrator is a character

stichure: And therefore cannot be trusted to entirely tell the truth or to give objective 
information

stichure: Furthermore, just as in rap and heavy-metal music, as well as other forms of 
music, the author creates a persona... a personality or character... that is going to 
embody certain aspects of human behavior in order to examine those aspects of the human 
behavior

stichure: In other words, a first-person narrative is designed to examine the narrator

stichure: That is why that particular narrative perspective is chosen

mac33cam: cool

stichure: Likewise, a third person narrative has relative levels of revelation

stichure: Third person narrative's can be either limited omniscient or omniscient or 
objective

stichure: In omniscient narrative reveals the thoughts, feelings and intentions of all 
characters involved, and that's usually are only applied to stories involving very few 
characters, especially if there's only one character, such as the story "to build a fire"

stichure: With omniscient narrative we are shown what people are thinking as well as what 
they're saying and therefore can determine whether or not the character is being 
deceitful

stichure: Limited omniscient narrative is usually chosen for several specific reasons

stichure: The first is the cumbersome nature of omniscient narration

stichure: If you have more than four characters, honestly reporting that thoughts and 
feelings of every single character is worky and can be boring for the reader

stichure: More over, limited omniscient perspective is often used to focus on a 
particular character in order to make the reader focus on that character and indeed, even 
decide to like that character.

stichure: In other words, the protagonist or HERO of the story will be revealed fully 
while others will only be revealed limited fashion or not at all

stichure: In escapist fiction, usually only the protagonist or perhaps the protagonist 
and the primary antagonist or foil are revealed and the rest of the characters merely 
walk-through and are only shown in terms of their actions and their words

stichure: A third person narrative with a limited omniscient perspective is the most 
common type of literary fiction narrative perspective

stichure: It allows the author to control how the reader feels about Tigger characters

stichure: It allows the author to reveal selectively what they wish to

stichure: About particular characters

stichure: It allows the author to control how the reader feels about particular 
characters

stichure: And also allows the author to selectively hide information that would otherwise 
give away a surprise endings

stichure: Like the old Batman television series... at the end of the first half-hour, our 
heroes are suspended over a shark tank or a vat of boiling liquid and seemingly are 
doomed

stichure: But at the beginning of the next half-hour, after the cliffhanger, it is 
revealed that Batman had some kind of antidote in his utility belt all the time

stichure: If we knew that in advance, there would be no suspense

stichure: In fact, in traditional drama and in traditional literature, the limited 
omniscient narrative was linked to something called deus ex machina

stichure: Literally, God from the machine

stichure: In ancient drama, the hero would be doomed, as far as the audience was 
concerned, because all hope was lost and it was clear there was no reasonable way by 
which the hero could extricate him or herself... himself... from whatever peril he found 
himself in

stichure: And then suddenly

stichure: An elevator would lower down actors dressed as gods who would literally lift 
the hero character out of that dangerous situation and up to heaven.... or at least to 
safety

stichure: After a while, this contrivance begin to bother audiences who began to thirst 
for more than merely a stereotypical and predictable happy ending

stichure: This also made its way into literary fiction when the readership and grew from 
the limited number of college-educated students of the world prior to the 1700s and the 
new middle class basically educated society began reading for entertainment

stichure: These audiences were not sophisticated enough to look for a real meaning in 
their work... they just wanted entertainment

stichure: Much like the mass audiences of the Greek plays

stichure: But since people didn't believe that the gods flew down to save people 
anymore... at least not regularly... the hidden information... the hidden contrivance 
became the way to save the hero from an apparent impending doom

stichure: Use of the third person narrative with limited omniscience allowed the author 
to omit certain information that was only revealed to the reader when it was convenient 
for the plot development

stichure: Evaluating how an author manipulates the work and presents it to the reader is 
essential part of this class

stichure: As part of the critical perspectives, especially in terms of reader response or 
Marxist criticism, which views work as propaganda and material written specifically to 
please an audience, this kind of plot device becomes more obvious and less enjoyable

stichure: And certainly, anyone who has been to an action movie will almost expect that 
very same kind of "last minute save" in order to guarantee a happy ending

stichure: Obviously, children's material is rife with this type of manipulation, as that 
particular audience wants happy endings, as does their parents

stichure: However, by the early to mid-1900s, the greater sophistication was required of 
what was considered commercial fiction

stichure: And writers like Ernest Hemingway began writing material as if it were a 
reflection of real-life

stichure: As part of that, the doomed hero perished

stichure: If that's what the plot seemed to indicate

stichure: There was less manipulation

stichure: Moreover, in order to avoid over Kabul kidding a story by

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stichure: In order to avoid complicating a story by having total omniscience, the author 
went the other way

stichure: Objective point of view

glaugh58 has joined the conference.

stichure: The objective point of view offers no information concerning the thoughts or 
intentions of the characters

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: hi

stichure: ey Melissa

stichure: A laugh

stichure: We're discussing literary fiction

glaugh58: greetings

glaugh58: greetings

stichure: The objective point of view only gives information as to what the character 
says and does

stichure: But does not indicate thought process, in tension or anything else that might 
reveal whether or not the characters being honest

stichure: This is a third person device that is clearly designed to force the audience to 
evaluate characters in terms of goodness and badness the same way that one must do that 
in life

stichure: In other words, do you trust that character

stichure: This also allowed for surprise endings but these surprise endings did not feel 
as manipulated because a character being duplicitous seemed more like human nature rather 
then the author hiding something that should have been revealed

stichure: Furthermore, there was less likelihood that the limited omniscient narrative 
would reveal who the protagonist or so-called "Hero" was of a work

stichure: And therefore the use of more evenly flawed character's created more complex 
and compelling work

stichure: In other words, there was no absolute good guy

stichure: no absolutely bad guy

stichure: The so-called hero might have particular character flaws

stichure: The alcoholic private detective

stichure: The prostitute with a heart of gold

stichure: The jewel thief who has a sick mother

stichure: The junkie who tries to keep children away from drugs

stichure: By adding complexity to the characters, the author not only reflects the 
complexities of the human existence, but also makes the stories a lot less predictable

stichure: And therefore more interesting

stichure: What then occurred was that authors began using these flawed characters but 
also with first or third person narratives, especially the first-person narrative. noir 
fiction of the 1940s fifties and sixties is a reflection of this type of development in 
literature

stichure: The character or that you want to light but clearly may have problems with 
because of personal habits, believes or what have you

stichure: That you want to like

stichure: We are going to read a series of stories, several of which have first-person 
narratives.



stichure: I'll use yellow wallpaper for the makeup test

stichure: Oddly enough

mac33cam: no

vamp234201: k

stichure: But we still have a first-person narrative



stichure: When was cask of amontilldao written

leslied639: 1846

glaugh58: 1846

glaugh58: 1846

mac33cam: 1846

stichure: Who was the narrator

mac33cam: montresor

stichure: Formalistically, what is the plot of the story

stichure: From a formalist perspective, literary fiction is essentially plot reduction

vamp234201: Revenge

stichure: Who does what to whom

inazone50: Montresor is taking revenge 

stichure: For what purpose zone

mac33cam: jealous guy kills friend

stichure: Why is he jealous 33

inazone50: because he feels that Fortunato has wrong him a 1000 times

mac33cam: mon is poor unlike for

mac33cam: for insulted him

stichure: 33... reevaluate your answer and put it within context

stichure: 33, your second answer is a better answer then zones answer

stichure: So which one is it...

stichure: Is that the 1000 times or a single incident that set off Montresor

mac33cam: insult

mac33cam: 1000

stichure: According to the first line of story

mac33cam: yes

stichure: Pick 1, 33

stichure: In which one is it...

mac33cam: a series of insults cause mon to kill for

stichure: Because this has to do with setting the basic stage and the rules for the story

vamp234201: 1000

glaugh58: I say one insult

glaugh58: I say one insult

stichure: Why laugh

mac33cam: wrong first line

glaugh58: becaus he says he had borne the thousand injuries as best he could, but the 
insult caused him to vow revenge.

glaugh58: becaus he says he had borne the thousand injuries as best he could, but the 
insult caused him to vow revenge.

mac33cam: the thousand injuries of fortunato i had borne as best i could

mac33cam: injuries=insults

stichure: Because of the amount of verbiage and literature, there is a common 
misconception that the details do not count.  Instead, one must keep in mind that authors 
do not waste words and that especially prior to the 1900s, literature was specifically 
written for a very advanced and selective audience

stichure: 33 no

stichure: The narrator makes it very clear that those are different

mac33cam: verbal injuries

glaugh58: an insult is much worse

glaugh58: an insult is much worse

stichure: 33, we can keep going around this but the author makes it very clear their 
different

stichure: In what way, laugh

stichure: And therefore, what would injuries be

glaugh58: it emasulates a man
glaugh58: it emasulates a man

stichure: put this within the context of the 1800s

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glaugh58: emasculates a man - it makes him to look bad in society

glaugh58: emasculates a man - it makes him to look bad in society

stichure: What is the most important thing in this society according to that idea

glaugh58: his good name

glaugh58: his good name

mac33cam: family pride

stichure: Yes laugh

stichure: Very good 33

stichure: What kind of injuries would he have borne the best he could

stichure: In other words, what kinds of things could he let slide

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inazone50: financial dealings?

stichure: Exactly sound

stichure: zone

stichure: Is there any indication in the story that that has happened to Montresor

stichure: That he has had financial injuries

stichure: By the way... in what class is Fortunato

mac33cam: yes

stichure: Example 33

mac33cam: at the end the condition of his house

inazone50: he makes it a point to list Fortunato's expensive tastes

stichure: Specifically

stichure: Very good zone

stichure: Anything else that he says specifically that indicates that Montresor is 
suffering injuries

mac33cam: dusty, pile of bones

mac33cam: ?

stichure: 33, that actually has a very specific purpose

stichure: What does the narrator used the dusty pile of bones for

stichure: (By the way, this is one of those examples of the difference between author and 
narrator)

mac33cam: ?

stichure: Where do we see the dusty piles of bones

mac33cam: in his crypt

glaugh58: In the catacombs

glaugh58: In the catacombs

stichure: Put that within context... translate how that indicates financial injury

inazone50: Montresor tells Fortunato that he was once rich and that now no one wouldmiss 
him(Mon)

stichure: Interesting zone... the first half of your comment is exactly correct

stichure: But the second-half is actually not stated directly

stichure: It is stated in the inverse

stichure: In other words, he doesn't say that Montresor would not be missed

stichure: He says Fortunato would

inazone50: True, Fortunato will be missed, but Mon is no matter

stichure: In fact, I want you to give me the exact words he uses, because there are some 
rich ironies involve their

stichure: But for me it is no matter

stichure: Exactly

stichure: The word choice here is important because it has to do with the comedic aspect 
of this dark tale

stichure: Some basic things:

stichure: In what social classes Fortunato

stichure: Is Fortunato

mac33cam: well off

stichure: What would this person do for a living?

inazone50: Upper

stichure: As far as we know

stichure: Yes yes

inazone50: Politician, banker, something prestigious

stichure: Possibly...

mac33cam: sold wine

stichure: Would he work with his hands?

glaugh58: doctor

glaugh58: doctor

inazone50: no

stichure: Action, laugh, being a doctor was not a prestigious job back then

glaugh58: interesting!

glaugh58: interesting!

stichure: A surgeon and a barber often were the same people

stichure: That's why the barber pole looks the way it does

stichure: It is a reflection of hanging red bloody rags out to dry

stichure: In what particular social class is Montresor

stichure: And how do you know

mac33cam: ?

stichure: Is he upperclass or lower class

mac33cam: low

stichure: What makes you think so

inazone50: lower, he claims to have been better off at one time...he has skills like 
laying mortar

mac33cam: no servants

stichure: 33, why specifically are the servants not there?

stichure: This is explained in the narrative and is actually supposed to be comedic

mac33cam: he told them to leave

stichure: True, zone, but I need you to put that within the context of what he has

stichure: Know 33

stichure: -33

stichure: heheh

stichure: no, 33

stichure: He told the servants to do what specifically

stichure: We are jumping into Marxist criticism already...

mac33cam: how?

glaugh58: he had told them not to leave, knowing that they would leave immediately, to 
join in with the revelers at carnivale.

glaugh58: he had told them not to leave, knowing that they would leave immediately, to 
join in with the revelers at carnivale.

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: he told them he would not be home so they left

stichure: Very good laugh

stichure: What is poe's joke here

stichure: And at whose expense

mac33cam: the servants were at the festival

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: that servants dont do what they are told if nobody is 
watching

stichure: Very good Melissa

mac33cam: and not to return until morning

stichure: This is a reflection of his time.

stichure: This is a reflection of his upbringing

stichure: How was Poe raised and by whom

inazone50: son of traveling actors

stichure: 33, he told them that HE would be at the festival and he would not return until 
morning, knowing that the service would immediately split because they would not get in 
trouble

stichure: Zone, what happened to the actors

inazone50: left and died.  adopted by well off folks

stichure: Very good

stichure: What would he have learned... what would be his perspective about service

stichure: Servants

stichure: Especially based on that comment

mac33cam: fortunato is lucky

stichure: Were not there yet 33

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: they are sneaky?

stichure: biographically, Poe is revealing his own biases about the help

stichure: Yes Melissa

stichure: From which class do servants come from

stichure: Upper or lower

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: poor

mac33cam: lower

stichure: Are they trustworthy

mac33cam: no

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: ?

stichure: In some ways, are they predictable

mac33cam: yes

stichure: Absolutely

inazone50: yes

stichure: The narrator counts on their duplicity in order to guarantee that he will have 
no witnesses for his crime

stichure: Furthermore, the author is revealing an attitude about servants that would 
likely be shared by its audience... in the 1850s, who would likely be reading something 
like this

glaugh58: right...

glaugh58: right...

stichure: Who are Edgar Allan Poe's contemporaries

stichure: Who is he writing for

mac33cam: middle class

glaugh58: middle class

glaugh58: middle class

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: educated

stichure: Melissa, that is a better answer

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: 

stichure: Although the middle class was becoming more and more prevalent, the idea of 
sitting down and reading something was still an upperclass endeavor

glaugh58: Go MT

glaugh58: Go MT
stichure: Because the middle class was generally still not educated beyond the skill

stichure: Specifically, something like being a mason

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: you got my back GL!

mac33cam: right

stichure: Small m

stichure: Those people have very specific, well-developed skills that they learned 
through apprenticeship

stichure: But they are unlikely to sit around reading in the evening because they have 
work to do

stichure: Furthermore, most people who had higher education of any kind had a completely 
advanced education

stichure: College

glaugh58: and they were probably physically exhausted

glaugh58: and they were probably physically exhausted

stichure: Which was usually entered to in the early teens

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: And therefore his readership is going to be his contemporaries

stichure: The same people that he would have analyzed in his critical analysis as an 
editor

stichure: Herman Melville

stichure: Nathaniel Hawthorne

stichure: And therefore as they are likely to be upperclass, they would probably share 
the inside joke about the help

stichure: That is not to say that there wasn't a readership of the lower class as well, 
but who is going to respond in writing publicly to poe's work

mac33cam: sweet

stichure: In other words,

stichure: Who is he trying to impress

mac33cam: his teachers

stichure: As part of the information that you gave us, zone, about his parents, how did 
his mother die

stichure: Partly 33

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: his peers, other writers

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: Therefore the material is which begins in symbolism and irony and context

inazone50: lack of medical care

stichure: The material is going to be dense in symbolism and irony in context
stichure: Specific disease, zone

stichure: It makes a difference

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: cough?

stichure: In your close

stichure: Your close, Melissa

inazone50: plague? nuemonia

stichure: Oddly enough, zone, he wrote about both of those,

stichure: But it was not the plague nor pneumonia

inazone50: small pox

inazone50: scarlet fever

stichure: This is important because it permeates a Edgar Allan Poe's work

stichure: heheh

glaugh58: It doesn't say, but I'm guessing--tuberculosis?
glaugh58: It doesn't say, but I'm guessing--tuberculosis?

stichure: Tuberculosis

stichure: Very good laugh

stichure: She indeed died coughing

inazone50: outstanding laugh

stichure: Drowned in her own blood

stichure: She essentially suffocated

stichure: Do you see this reflected in the bigger story

stichure: In this particular story



glaugh58: Oh that's spooky

glaugh58: Oh that's spooky

stichure: If you really want to see the bigger picture here, find out what his wife died 
from

stichure: His wife was his cousin, Virginia Clemm

stichure: They married when she was very young

vamp234201: Did he bury her in a wall? (joking) 

stichure: 13 I believe

stichure: Actually, vamp, we have a bit of historical criticism here
mac33cam: sweet

vamp234201: That's scary

stichure: What did poe's adopted father do to try to get Edgar a place in society

mac33cam: ?

stichure: The biographical and historical information concerning this particular author 
have profound effect on both psychoanalytical and other particular aspects of analysis 
because the authors experiences are reflected repeatedly in his works

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: she dies of TB too

stichure: Which gets me back to another issue that we discussed before... if Montresor 
has servants to be dismissed, in what class does he belong

stichure: Very good Melissa

mac33cam: upper

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: upper class

stichure: And what did poe do as part of his education

stichure: That is correct

inazone50: west point military academy

stichure: But what has happened to Montresor... and what does that reveal about 
upperclass life... what can happen to those born

stichure: Very good zone

stichure: He was not their very long

stichure: But he did hear a story

stichure: About a popular cadet who was tricked and deceived by an unlikable superior 
officer

stichure: The disgrace of the popular cadet so affected his comrades

stichure: That the comrades got together

stichure: Intoxicated the unlikable superior officer

glaugh58: and ...

glaugh58: and ...

stichure: And entombed him in the corner of the basement of West Point

stichure: What would be the obvious and more subtle results of this action

glaugh58: Oh man, I was afraid that was coming!!!!

glaugh58: Oh man, I was afraid that was coming!!!!

stichure: In terms of the unlikable superior officer

inazone50: suffocation

stichure: Yes

stichure: What else

stichure: Why did they do it

vamp234201: Tired of the ridicule

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: revenge

stichure: Essentially

stichure: Yes

stichure: What is the effect on the superior officer besides death

glaugh58: See, truth is stranger than fiction

glaugh58: See, truth is stranger than fiction

stichure: Something much more important

vamp234201: guilt?

stichure: The superior officers Dead... he feels no guilt

mac33cam: embarassment

stichure: Explain 33

vamp234201: meant the guys sorry

stichure: No, vamp

stichure: It was seen as a justifiable revenge as far as they were concerned

mac33cam: he can dish it out but cant take it

glaugh58: Power corrupts

glaugh58: Power corrupts

stichure: Give you a hint... the superior officers in the military

glaugh58: Died a hero?

glaugh58: Died a hero?

stichure: Hardly

mac33cam: ?

glaugh58: Whew!

glaugh58: Whew!

stichure: Remember, he would never be found

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: AWOL

stichure: Exactly Melissa

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: disgrace?

stichure: Exactly

inazone50: awol

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: WOOHOO

stichure: Exactly

stichure: Not only do they kill him
stichure: They ruined his reputation

stichure: A double fold revenge

stichure: And of course

stichure: Which won

mac33cam: nice

stichure: which one, especially in the context of military mentality, is worse

stichure: Death or disgrace

mac33cam: disgrace
inazone50: disgrace

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: Look at the context of the story

stichure: What are the parallels here

stichure: Who has more power between the cadets and the officer

mac33cam: cadets reflect officer

inazone50: the officer usually like fortunato

stichure: Who has more power between Fortunato and Montresor

stichure: Very good zone... how

stichure: And look at the description that Montresor tells us about Fortunato and you can 
apply generally to a situation like that found at West Point

inazone50: The officer has power due to rank.  Fortunato has power due to status

stichure: Very good, zone

inazone50: those in power establish their superiority by demeaning those below them

stichure: And what does Montresor have to do in order to lure Fortunato in to the trap

stichure: Very good

stichure: Look at the way that Montresor handles Fortunato

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: trick him

glaugh58: use Fortunato's weakness

glaugh58: use Fortunato's weakness

stichure: What does he do to get Fortunato to follow him

inazone50: appeal to his vanity

stichure: what is what laughed

stichure: Exactly zone

glaugh58: The wine

glaugh58: The wine

stichure: In fact,

stichure: Does Montresor ask Fortunato directly to accompany him to the vaults



melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: no he trick him



stichure: Explained Melissa

stichure: I will fix it in editing zone

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: telling him he seeks the advise of another

stichure: Very good... but he adds other information

stichure: He adds another aspect

stichure: To make sure that Fortunato bites

mac33cam: prasies him?

stichure: Very dead 33

stichure: heheeh

stichure: Very good 33

stichure: Example

mac33cam: calling him an expert
stichure: Yes...

stichure: More

stichure: Because this has to do with the ironies throughout the story

vamp234201: vaules his opinion

stichure: Yes

inazone50: something to do with the pipe



stichure: According to Montresor in his conversation with Fortunato, why did he not ask 
Fortunato directly

stichure: What is a pipe in this case, zone

mac33cam: uses someone for does not think highly of

stichure: Another factor to consider when reading any literature of any kind is the time. 
 And the terminology that is likely to be used

inazone50: a message I think

stichure: That is true 33

stichure: no, zone

stichure: A pipe of amontillado

stichure: I've come across a pipe of amontillado

stichure: It's a small cask

vamp234201: it a bottle

inazone50: wine cask

stichure: Exactly

stichure: Not only does he flatter Fortunato

stichure: He does something else

stichure: How does he present himself to Fortunato

stichure: What does he say about himself

vamp234201: He calls him a friend

stichure: Certainly the paragraph that you referred to earlier, zone, it is important but 
it is a consistent tone throughout the work... it leased until he gets Fortunato chained 
to the wall

stichure: Yes

stichure: More than that though

stichure: Because

inazone50: he doesn't have the knowledge that fortunato has about wine

stichure: Yes zone... is that what Montresor really think?

inazone50: no, it's a trick

stichure: What is Montresor really think about Fortunato's abilities with wines compared 
to his own

inazone50: he's a quack

stichure: Read carefully

stichure: Read that sentence carefully

glaugh58: That he's sincere

glaugh58: That he's sincere

stichure: Yes laugh

stichure: Here we have another Marxist or cultural critical perspective

mac33cam: how marxist

inazone50: Actually, he says he is equal

stichure: In that sentence, Poe, through his character, is making commentary about entire 
group of people

stichure: That is true zone

stichure: Well, 33... do we see a cultural clash in the commentary about the service?

stichure: About the servants

stichure: Do we see class warfare

stichure: One class is better than the other...?

mac33cam: yes

stichure: Of course

stichure: In the comment that involves the word "quack"

stichure: Give me the entire sentence

inazone50: In painting and gemmary Fortunato, like his countrymen, is a quack.

stichure: Who are Fortunato's COUNTRYMEN

mac33cam: itilians

stichure: And what would be the roots of Montresor?

inazone50: Italians

vamp234201: He says scottish?

stichure: From a Marxist perspective, when he be likely to be talking about himself as a 
quack

stichure: Well, what does Fortunato mean

stichure: What is the Word Fortunato mean

mac33cam: fortunate

stichure: Very good

stichure: Is he?

stichure: It leased up to this point

mac33cam: yes

stichure: At least up to this point

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: What does Montresor main

stichure: Mean

stichure: mon tresor

mac33cam: mt treasure

mac33cam: my

stichure: Not mount

stichure: Yes my treasure

inazone50: he is fortunate, not fortunato

stichure: What language

stichure: Is that

vamp234201: french

inazone50: Mon is fortunate that fortunato came along

stichure: There you go

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: My dear Fortunato

stichure: You are luckily met

stichure: Why it is Montresor Lucky

stichure: Why is Montresor Lucky

stichure: Two reasons

inazone50: that fortunato is there and that he is drunk

stichure: It was near dusk when I encountered my friend

stichure: The second part is correct

stichure: The first part of course is correct... but there is another factor

stichure: It is linked very closely to the servant comment
vamp234201: No one is around?

stichure: Fortunato is drunk

stichure: And Fortunato is alone

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: nobody knows where they went

stichure: Very good

stichure: Very good

stichure: Psychoanalytical criticism is used often in literary fiction to reveal two 
things... the first is that the author intentionally uses psychoanalytical perspectives 
to reveal the characters true nature, despite what they say.  This is especially 
important and prevalent in first-person narratives

stichure: According to what D. character says, Desmond Dresser feel good about his 
intention and his actions concerning Fortunato and the murder

stichure: Let me try that again

stichure: According to what the character says, does Montresor feel good about his 
intentions and his actions concerning Fortunato and the murder

stichure: Does he think he is justified in his actions

vamp234201: He's feels free

stichure: Yes
inazone50: yes

glaugh58: yest

glaugh58: yest

stichure: In fact, that first sentence essentially says

stichure: He insulted me

stichure: Was that enough for killing back then

mac33cam: yep

stichure: Heck... is it enough for killing now

stichure: How would two gentlemen settle the issue, 33

stichure: Remember, this is the 1800s

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: duel?

stichure: Very good Melissa

stichure: What would likely happen if Fortunato and Montresor got into a duel, as far as 
Montresor's concern

vamp234201: Mont would win

vamp234201: Fort. is ill

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: 50 50 chance

stichure: Well, Fortunato would not likely duel while he's sick... he would wait till he 
was well

stichure: That is correct Melissa

glaugh58: Fortunato drinks a lot

glaugh58: Fortunato drinks a lot

stichure: This is a special time

stichure: What time of year is this happening

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: carnival

stichure: Explain Melissa

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: umm yearly celebration

stichure: Explain Melissa

stichure: hhehe

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: probably before easter

stichure: This is very specific because this has to do with historical context

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: c'mon

stichure: That is correct\

stichure: This is this is right before lent  

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: lent!

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: duh i blanked

stichure: Where is this story taking place

stichure: Considering the countryman context

mac33cam: italy

stichure: 33... to get back to your earlier question... how to the French feel about 
Italians

stichure: How do the French feel about times

stichure: Feel about Italians

stichure: fix that later

vamp234201: French don't like anyone

vamp234201: 

stichure: Very good

stichure: Not exactly vamp, but there is a perceived arrogance

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: Marxist

stichure: One class against another

stichure: Or... cultural criticism...

stichure: One altar against another

stichure: When culture against the other

stichure: Anyway

stichure: What is the predominant social link between people in Italy

glaugh58: Catholicism

glaugh58: Catholicism

vamp234201: Religion?

stichure: Very good

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: catholisism?

stichure: Specifically vamp

stichure: Yes

stichure: As part of that, our protagonist has a problem

stichure: How would Catholics view his actions

stichure: This is reader response and cultural criticism

mac33cam: sin

stichure: What kind 33

stichure: venial or mortal

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: mortal

stichure: Which means what Melissa

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: 10 worst

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: against god

stichure: What must this character do in order to save himself

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: repent

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: confess

stichure: If you commit a mortal sin in Catholicism, can you be saved

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: yes

stichure: Are you sure

vamp234201: Suicide no? maybe others

stichure: One of the differences between Catholicism and Protestant Christianity is the 
notion of being "saved"

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: well at the time before vatacin two i dont know

stichure: According to what the nuns told me, there are certain things that once done, 
cannot be undone

stichure: That is correct Melissa

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: now you can be forgiven

stichure: In that context, what must Montresor due to save himself

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: but then i dont know

stichure: Well, since this was written in the 1850s, Montresor is likely in trouble 
unless he can do something

stichure: Who is he talking two

stichure: Who is the telling the story to

stichure: And how you know

stichure: You who know my soul so well

vamp234201: God?

stichure: For nearly half a century the bones have remained undisturbed

stichure: By proxy, vamp

stichure: Who is he talking two and why

stichure: To whom is the talking and why

inazone50: is he confessing to a prist

stichure: For what purpose, zone

inazone50: priest

inazone50: forgiveness

stichure: Or

stichure: If this is a mortal sin

inazone50: i think so

stichure: hmmmmm
stichure: Legal question

stichure: Is every killing murder

mac33cam: no

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: no

stichure: What does Montresor need to do

inazone50: no, could be self-defense

stichure: 50 years later

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: prove it was justifiable

stichure: or

stichure: Very good Melissa

stichure: Let's look at his narrative
stichure: What is his reason for killing Fortunato

mac33cam: revenge

stichure: For what specifically

inazone50: being insulted, disrespected

stichure: Who is he doing this murder for then

stichure: Try to look at this from his perspective

mac33cam: family

stichure: And therefore

inazone50: his family name

stichure: And therefore

inazone50: it might be justified

stichure: Are their people today who would justify murder in the name of their families 
reputation

mac33cam: yes

inazone50: yes, or religion

mac33cam: is he the last of his family

stichure: Absolutely... whether you are talking the Mafia or religion or gangs

stichure: A lot of this is about respect and insult

stichure: It seems so, 33

stichure: From a cultural critical perspective, as well as reader response, a person 
reading this who feels that family name or reputation is more important than anything 
else might find Montresor's argument to be completely understandable

stichure: What he's doing is praiseworthy rather than murder

stichure: And in fact, he points out that he withstood many many injuries first

stichure: He has been patient

stichure: He has put up with a great deal

stichure: But you can only push a man so far

stichure: Am I right people?

mac33cam: yes

stichure: But I digress

glaugh58: But

glaugh58: But

stichure: Psychoanalytical criticism, like I said, says that the author will have the 
character revealed her true nature

stichure: Yes laugh

stichure: ...

stichure: Does the character ever revealed that this particular incident did not go as he 
planned\

glaugh58: ...he really doesn't go into much detail about any of that cause.

glaugh58: ...he really doesn't go into much detail about any of that cause.

stichure: In other words, is there a Freudian slip

stichure: Actually, laugh, the insult itself would be evident to the audience

glaugh58: So it's hard to support his side

glaugh58: So it's hard to support his side

stichure: Insult is self-explanatory in that context

glaugh58: I guess

glaugh58: I guess

stichure: It's the injuries he does not explain

stichure: But since that is not his motivation, that doesn't matter either

stichure: If you said to me... she insulted me... the only other information that you 
would need to add was what specifically they said to you or about you

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: is there a Freudian slip???!!!

stichure: But we already get the gist of the idea

stichure: There is indeed

glaugh58: I guess in today's lit we are used to hearing more about the motivation

glaugh58: I guess in today's lit we are used to hearing more about the motivation

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: tel 

stichure: In fact, Poe is very clear in articulating that
stichure: Laugh, that is because the readership expects more literal and obvious 
storytelling

glaugh58: True

glaugh58: True

stichure: But remember, his readership would be quite sophisticated and would expect a 
bit more subtlety

stichure: And complexity

mac33cam: it does not go as planned

stichure: They would understand immediately the ideas behind the Mason references for 
example

stichure: Explain 33

stichure: What are the three things that the character tells us must be fulfilled in 
order for a revenge to be successful

mac33cam: his screams scare him

stichure: Show me that it scared him, 33

mac33cam: he pulls out his rapier

mac33cam: or sword

mac33cam: to quiet the screams, defeating his whole plan

stichure: Are you implying that he kills Fortunato that way?

mac33cam: no, almost

mac33cam: ?

stichure: Okay... read carefully

stichure: What are the three things he tells us at the beginning of his tail that he must 
do

stichure: In order for this to be successful

stichure: It starts out... a wrong is unredressed

mac33cam: he calls his name and no answer so he must be dead

stichure: Not really, 33
stichure: Somebody already mentioned what really kills Fortunato... what really is 
Fortunato's downfall

stichure: And in this particular case, we have a replication or support of that same idea

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: OMG someone tell me

stichure: See... poe is suspenseful

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: i know!

stichure: Unfortunately, this work was written in 1850s and some of the language is going 
to be a bit murky for those of us who are not well-versed in archaic terminology

inazone50: greed

stichure: He gives us a paragraph... actually two or three sentences in which he explains 
specifically what he must do if this is going to be successful

stichure: What three things must he do

mac33cam: i'm sorry...what is the question?

stichure: hhheh

inazone50: he must make fortunato know why

stichure: Very good sound

stichure: zone

stichure: Does he ever tell Fortunato why he's killing them

stichure: A wrong those unredressed when he who has been wrong fails to make himself felt 
as such

stichure: ...

stichure: Goes unredressed

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: " A wrong is unredressed when retribution overtakes its 
redresser. It is equally unredressed when the avenger fails to make himself felt as such 
to him who has done the wrong"



melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: sorry

stichure: When retribution overtake its redressor

stichure: What does that mean

glaugh58: I do not know

glaugh58: I do not know

stichure: Like I said, some of this old stuff requires research of old terms

stichure: Retribution is what

stichure: Because this goes immediately back to what 33 said about the screams

stichure: And what follows

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: revenge

vamp234201: Fees due?

stichure: Very good

inazone50: silence

stichure: He can't let it get to him... he must maintain control the situation

stichure: Does Montresor ever lose control

stichure: Does he ever let it get to him

mac33cam: yes

stichure: Where

stichure: There's one more, Melissa

vamp234201: When he again is insulted about his family name

stichure: You gave us the other two

vamp234201: ?

stichure: Vamp... explain your answer

mac33cam: mason?

stichure: no... that's a joke... that's verbal irony... he's mocking Fortunato

mac33cam: oh

stichure: Unless you all are talking about when he was actually putting the bricks in

vamp234201: When he's explaining the serpent on the scottish arms?

stichure: There is certainly irony there...

stichure: What happens when Fortunato realizes he's been chained to a wall

stichure: What does he do

stichure: In this goes back to the servant comment

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: I must not only punish but punish with impunity.

stichure: And how well Montresor plan this

stichure: Which means what Melissa

stichure: What does impunity mean

vamp234201: His plan has worked

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: it means i dont have a large vocabulary

stichure: heheh

stichure: Impunity comes from the same route as the word punish

stichure: root

stichure: It means he has to get away with it

stichure: Find the part where it says

stichure: My heart grew sick

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: oh 

inazone50: a lack of punishment or investigation or justice

stichure: Very goodzone

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: he will face the LORD!

stichure: He says the bones have not been discovered for 50 years

stichure: Did he get away with it legally

mac33cam: yes

stichure: That is one aspect Melissa, unless he can get the priest to intervene on his part

stichure: Which of course is why he would be telling the story

mac33cam: with age it got tot him

stichure: How does he feel about it

stichure: Inside

stichure: Well, if that's what he's talking about 50 years later, obviously it bothers 
them

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: sick

stichure: In fact,

stichure: He says

stichure: My heart grew sick... on account of the dampness of the catacombs

stichure: What is the break that Poe puts in their

stichure: What is demeaning

stichure: What is the meaning

stichure: Do we believe the excuse

stichure: Or has the narrator revealed its true feelings about the situation

stichure: Look at his description of putting in the last brick

stichure: The last few bricks

stichure: Is he enjoying this anymore

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: no , but he cant turn back

stichure: Exactly

stichure: Even though Fortunato said... a very good jest indeed

stichure: We will have a laugh over it at my palazzo

stichure: He was offering

stichure: What

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: he's trying to give him a way out

stichure: Yes
stichure: He's offering him social status

stichure: Respect

stichure: Equality

stichure: The very things that Montresor would find so important

stichure: Did Montresor ever tell Fortunato why he was killing him

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: no

stichure: Did Montresor maintain complete controlled situation or did he let it get to 
him

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: but he seems to figure it out

stichure: And is he getting away with it

mac33cam: no

stichure: Melissa, there's a difference

stichure: Part of a revenge is making sure the person is absolutely clear as two why they 
are now no longer in control

stichure: Another interesting spin on the psychologically would be the following

stichure: And obviously were running out of time

stichure: Are we have run out of time

stichure: If you'd like to continue this next week, there's plenty to cover

stichure: Honest digger story

mac33cam: yes

mac33cam: yes

stichure: On this particular story

mac33cam: yes

glaugh58: yes, that would be great

glaugh58: yes, that would be great

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: i love it!

stichure: But I want you to look at the history of Poe and his stepfather

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: haha

stichure: I want you to find out what John Allen was like

glaugh58: okay

glaugh58: okay

stichure: And whether or not Poe is burying somebody else besides Fortunato

mac33cam: wow

stichure: Other critics have also said psychoanalytically that this is a battle between 
Poe and his own demons

stichure: And we haven't even touched gender criticism yet

glaugh58: Isn't that true for most of Poe's works

glaugh58: Isn't that true for most of Poe's works

stichure: Or deconstruction

mac33cam: this is too much

vamp234201: I read the same thing especially with other writers

stichure: Yes

glaugh58: ...battling his demons'

glaugh58: ...battling his demons'

stichure: Absolutely

stichure: The more trouble the writer,

stichure: The better the work

stichure: 

stichure: Hemingway Sexton

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: why do you think?

stichure: poe

stichure: They have some say

stichure: That something to say

glaugh58: In the Sexton research I did,

glaugh58: In the Sexton research I did,

stichure: They have something to say

glaugh58: there was a quote I read that said

glaugh58: there was a quote I read that said

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: do you think its critical for a great writer to be 
troubled?

stichure: no Melissa, but it helps

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: hmm

mac33cam: laugh, whats with everything twice?

stichure: Hemingway once said that he hated getting into a good relationship because he 
left all his inspiration in his bed

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: yea laugh?

stichure: In other words, when he was happy he had no reason to write

stichure: Its when everything was bleak that he was inspired

glaugh58: poet is one of the deadliest jobs -=- they all end up dead

glaugh58: poet is one of the deadliest jobs -=- they all end up dead

stichure: Sexton and Sylvia Plath made a compact that they would not kill themselves

vamp234201: Don't we all eventually

stichure: They were both suicidal

inazone50: i think that could be said of all jobs

glaugh58: YOu're seeing two of me, because I got invited to this conf twice.

glaugh58: YOu're seeing two of me, because I got invited to this conf twice.

stichure: When one did it, the other now had permission to do so

mac33cam: oh

stichure: I will have your tests graded by the end of the weekend and I will send a message when they are back... we will do the makeup test on yellow wallpaper

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: do you think that writers need a muse ... or new passions 
to bring out new inpiration?

glaugh58: YOu're funny zone

glaugh58: YOu're funny zone

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: inspiration

stichure: We will have more fun with Edgar Allan Poe next week... do a little research on 
the author and you will find a treasure trove of weirdness

inazone50: good night y'all

mac33cam: cool

stichure: Something Melissa

glaugh58: wasn't he also a heroin addict?

glaugh58: wasn't he also a heroin addict?

stichure: Take care, zone

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net: fine!

vamp234201: night

stichure: Back then, laugh, they had all kinds of stuff that was legal

inazone50 has left the conference.



vamp234201 has left the conference.



stichure: By Leslie

stichure: By 33

stichure: By Melissa

stichure: By vamp

glaugh58: Bye bye Everyone!
glaugh58: Bye bye Everyone!

melissa_taggart@sbcglobal.net has left the conference.

mac33cam: thank you i had fun

stichure: By laugh

stichure: I did to 33

glaugh58: ttfn

glaugh58: ttfn

glaugh58 has left the conference.

stichure: bb

stichure: bb

stichure: hhehe

mac33cam: bye

stichure: poof