Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Fatelessness writing task

1.-
   Fatelessness has a very important message, but did the author thought in the real message he was transmiting when he was writing the novel?
We may think that when Imre Kertesz wrote fatelessness he never considered the real message that the book has, because the vision of the holocaust we have today, is very different compared with the one we had in the times the novel was written. But in the interview we saw, the author said that when he wrote the story, he knew what he was writing.
    The message in the novel is the defense of the human rights, seriously violated in fatelessnes; and the idea of not repeting the mistakes the humanity did in the past, like the idea of the ideal race of Hitler. Different perople around the world may get message in a different way, but is the same and the author knew what he was transmiting when he wrote the novel.

2.- We see the novel fatelessness as very explicit, and as easy to get the main idea, and although the are a little bit hidden, we think we can get them easily and this can be percieved as an advantage because it is easier to get. But the story involves global cultural issues we rarely percieve, so did we understand the real thing Imre Kertesz wanted us to get.
     That is why we could see this as a disadvantage, everybody wants to be informed of what is happening around us, but when we can not get that because the real message is to hard to understand, it becomes a disadvantage for us. It is also a disadvantage that the novel presents itself as another Holocaust story, because it makes us think that we get the message and point of view expressed in the novel, when maybe it is not true.

3.-   In the novel fatelessness the narratives techniques used force us to put in the main characters place, and the point of view of gyuri changes in the story keeps going on. At the beggining is very naive and full of hope, and it ends in a completely fateless and the difference between the beggining of the story of the end is a very useful technique to make us realize the real effect the Holocaust had in the kid. 
  In this sense the author is very creative to seduce the readers and make the story easier to get. Emotionally speaking, the way it affects our minds, is the result of the creativity of the author and the contrast of the beggining and the end of the story and the new way the main character stars seeing life.

4.- The main theme in fatelessness is the Holocaust, so to unserstant the ideas, it is almost necessary to know what all this is about. We may understand the story in general, but just like in a lot of novels, having context is very important. Without history knowledge of the Second World War, a lot of things that are directly related with this in the story could not be understood by most of the readers. Names, cultures, places that we need to get order to understand what the author wants us to get.
    Of course it is possible to understand the story without the Holocaust and its atrocities, but in that case the reader is not getting the real message of the novel Fatelessness.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Fatelessness trailer link



http://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=05rCtEJgVls&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D05rCtEJgVls%26feature%3Dyoutu.be

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Gyuri`s mind

1) At this point, Gyuri stills thinking  like an innocent child. He sees things in a very positive way.

2) 13 years old chilren focus in things they are interested in, like videogames. This is because they usually focus thing that can provide fan, so they in general see things they have fan with.

3) He mixes his feeling with language, so he focus things in a more positive way than he shouls, in a naive way.

4) It is not reliable at all, he shows everything with a lot of hope, while the theme of the book is fatelessness.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Imre Kertész interview

1) Those 2000 giant stone blocks, recreate the feeling of total vulnerability that the Jews felt in the concentration camps, because you are sorrounded by giants structures and they block you from seeing what is next to you.

2) He is now living in Germany, the place that wantes to kill him once, and he felt safer there than in his own country.

3) The antisemitism before Auschwitz wanted to eliminate the Jews. The antisemitism after it, wants another Auschwitz

4) It makes us much richer because it helps us to avoid making the mistakes humanity did in the past.

5) The metaphor he uses compares our souls locked in with the trapped feeling of remembering the Holocaust the book gives to us when we read it.

Fatelessness Language Analysis

Pages 90-91
Theme: innocence
"And just like us, free persons, he had a full head of..."
"We made the right choice back in the brickyard"
"I could see they were already set to recieve us, happily explaining..."

Pages 180->185
Theme: hopelessness
"Invariably gray sky"
"I could not help but notice that all the other sick people...before me"
"we were also taken off to the doctor less frequently"
"having maited in vain for it to subside"
"never before had I sensed a more hopeless struggle or a more stubborn"
"I gave up and just watched the gluttony,...the unconcealed happiness"
"I no longer engaged in combat with them, no longer disturbed them"

Pages 138-139
Theme: Language as a mean of interaction"
"Are known in the concentration caps as "Musulmäner", I was told"
"Among one another...business, of course

Letter analysis

http://letelierblog.blogspot.com

   The language my classmate used in his letter is very strong and effective, because of the vocabulary he uses. Words as feels like hell, awful soups, undrinkable water, harassing, etc. Thanks to this, the letter is very moving and vey shocking, so I would say my classmate's style is effective.

   In terms of context and time, he mentions the horrible conditions in the concentration camps, and he said the father have been there for one year so Gyuri can understand his situation in context.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Writing task

Dear father,

       It have been 45 days since I am in the camp. I am writing to you to let you know how much I love you and how much I want to see you again. I am not sure if that would be possible given the circumstances. I can barely survive, the food I recieve is not suficient and I have to trade with another interns to get some extra food. I feel dirty, I am hungry, I don't know what is going to happen to me. They force us to work hard every day and they don't care about my recent wound in my knee. I can barely walk and I feel they are doing this just for punishing us, but I do not have an idea of why are they doing this. They treat us like animal, yesterday one of the german guards punch me on the face without any reason.
   I met another prisoner(yes, we are prisoner) who is from Budapest, and he miss home just as much as I do. He helps me a lot dealing with this and carrying on, making me think in something different than sorviving, because that is my priority right now. But with the time I am getting tired of this and I am thinking on giving up...I feel hopeless.
   What do you think father, will they kill me like they do in another camps? Will they release some day? Please answer me back and tell me you are ok.
   Yours faithfully,
   Gyuri.