Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Love of Nature in Shelley's Frankenstein


The Love of Nature in Shelley’s Frankenstein
            Mary Shelley’s 1818 edition of Frankenstein is a remarkable work of art and juxtaposes Victor Frankenstein and his Creature as one who tries to manipulate nature and one who tries to live in harmony with it, respectively. The Creature loves nature and the beauty of the natural world. William Wordsworth’s poem “Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey” is greatly about the love of nature (Wu 407-411). One famous line from the poem: “Nature never did betray the heart that loved her” speaks about a lover of nature being safe is his surroundings, however, the Creature, even being a lover of nature, is never safe in the world.
            While reading Mary Shelley’s 1818 edition of Frankenstein, several things stood out. One interesting thing to note is that Frankenstein’s monster (as he was referred to by Victor Frankenstein) was vegetarian. When the Creature firsts gets outside and feels hunger, he eats berries instead of trying to kill anything for meat (V2 Ch.3 P1). It is also apparent that he loves nature in the way he describes birds and their songs (V2 Ch.3 P4). If we took Wordsworth’s line as definite truth, the Creature should be safe and sound in the forest and countryside living out his days in peace. This is not how the Creature survives, however. According to Laura Quinney in her article titled “ ‘Tintern Abbey,’ Sensibility, and the Self-Disenchanted Self” Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey” is largely concerned with disappointment (131). Disappointment is all that the Creature will know. The world will not accept him, and he cannot live in harmony with a nature that rejects him.
Works Cited
Quinney, Laura. ""Tintern Abbey," Sensibility, and the Self-Disenchanted Self." ELH 64.1 (1997): pp. 131-156. Web.
Shelley, Mary. "Frankenstein: 1818 Edition."Romantic Circles Electronic Editions n. pag. Web. 1 May 2011. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/editions/frankenstein/>.
Wu, Duncan. Romanticism: An Anthology. Third. Malden, USA: Blackwell Publishing, 2006. 407-411. Print.

Coleridge's Drug Addiction


Exploring Samuel Coleridge’s use of opium or laudanum, I found some interesting things about his addiction. According to Earl Leslie Griggs in his article “Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Opium,” Coleridge took opium for numerous health remedies growing up but it wasn’t until the autumn and winter of 1800-1801 that opium really took hold (357). According to a letter written by Coleridge, he was suffering from swelling joints when he read in a medical journal that rubbing in laudanum and taking some internally would alleviate his distress (357). After applying the remedy, Coleridge writes that he “recovered the use of [his] limbs, of [his] appetite, of [his] spirits” until the remedy wore off and the pain returned (357).
            Coleridge also wrote “The Pains of Sleep” about the withdrawals from opium use. Griggs quotes a letter from Coleridge in which he quotes some lines from “The Pains of Sleep” that he says were “an exact and most faithful portraiture of the state of my mind under influences of incipient bodily derangement from the use of Opium” (358). Clearly Coleridge was so addicted at the time that not continuing the use of opium caused withdrawal symptoms. In 1808, Coleridge tried to quit opium cold turkey, but was met with such symptoms that he and physicians decided that quitting opium at that point would cause his death rather than save his life (359). Coleridge tried cutting his doses, but nevertheless returned to his full indulgence (359).
            It is sad that such a brilliant life was cut short by a drug problem, but Griggs writes that it shows Coleridge’s strength of character that he could produce such memorable works under the influences of such a debilitating addiction (364).
Works Cited
Griggs, Earl Leslie, and Seymour Teulon Porter. "Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Opium." Huntington Library Quarterly 17.4 (1954): pp. 357-378. Web. 

Mary Wollstonecraft


Looking again at “Wollstonecraft’s Philosophical Impact on Nineteenth-Century American Women’s Rights Advocates,” the authors study several women’s rights leaders. Two such leaders are Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. According to the authors, “Stanton used the example of the pilloried Wollstonecraft, first and foremost, to demonstrate the need for rethinking the notion of the feminine virtue of purity, just as Wollstonecraft had critiqued the notion of the feminine virtue of modesty in chapter seven of Rights of Woman” (Botting & Carey, 2004).  Stanton also speaks out against the treatment of Wollstonecraft and other “radicals.” She believes that their flawed lives did not hinder them from sharing their valuable knowledge with the world (Botting & Carey, 2004).
            Susan B. Anthony dedicated her 1792 Boston edition of Rights of Woman to the Library of Congress in 1904 with a dedicatory note written on the inside cover uplifting Wollstonecraft as the “founding mother and philosopher of the women’s rights movement” (Botting & Carey, 2004). Anthony also mentioned Wollstonecraft in her last speech to a women’s suffrage convention in 1906 calling her a “great woman” with “eloquent and unanswerable arguments in behalf of the liberty of womankind” (Botting & Carey, 2004).
            It is clear to see that the women that we Americans look up to for our political freedoms themselves looked up to Mary Wollstonecraft. Despite Wollstonecraft’s posthumous fall from grace, her ideas and views made their way across the pond to influence our leaders.

References
Botting, E. H., & Carey, C. (2004). Wollstonecraft's philosophical impact on nineteenth-century american women's rights advocates. American Journal of Political Science, 48(4), pp. 707-722. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org.lib-ezproxy.tamu.edu:2048/stable/1519929

Public Deception Paper Senior Yr


Public deception can defined as the media or a public figure deceiving, or lying to, the public about an issue or event, by either telling a non-truth or omitting some or all of the facts about said issue. There are many scholars who feel that deception of any kind is wrong, however it can also be argued that deception is necessary or even preferred when dealing with the public. The important thing to note is that there are times when both views are correct. Sometimes the whole truth should be told to the public, and other times things need to be kept from the public.
            Public deception is entirely justified when the consequences are to protect the public that is being deceived. By this I mean keeping the public from actual physical harm. This point can be illustrated further by the example of telling a large crowd that there is no emergency when there actually is one. This is to ensure that there isn’t a mass panic and people injure themselves in a rush to run away from whatever it is that may scare them. To illustrate, imagine a crowded mall with few public accessible exits and an armed gunman in one of the stores. It would not be a good idea to rush into the food court and tell everyone in the mall that a gunman was on the loose especially since he was only in one store. This could cause mass hysteria and a rush toward the exits which in turn could result in trampling-related deaths. A safer alternative would be to have officers standing outside the store the gunman is in to direct shoppers away from that store while more officers go in the store to take down the criminal. To direct shoppers away from the store, officers would have to employ more public deception by using a white lie to deter them from entering the store. Such a lie could be that there was a shoplifter in the store, or a fight, or some such lie that doesn’t harm anyone, and instead saves them from potential harm.
Protecting the public from physical harm could also mean not allowing the media to publish certain things that in the wrong hands could be used against the people. By this I am referring to the media coverage of the weakness of our southern border touted constantly in the mid 2000s. This kind of information should have been kept quiet. If everyone, like those extremists who want the destruction of America, knows how weak our border with Mexico is, it makes sense that that’s how they would try to get into our country (“New York Times”). The media should have realized this and not played up the weakness of our borders. Understanding that public opinion sways the government’s agenda, it could be argued that a great deal of media coverage about the border weakness could in fact lead to stronger borders thus eliminating the threat of entry of terrorist groups from the south. However, I would argue that the government gets plenty of reports on those kind of issues, and have so much more intelligence on terrorist cells, that they do not need the media nor in turn the public’s aid in knowing when to create stronger border security. 
While I do believe in deception to protect the public from physical harm, I think it is wrong to try to protect it from emotional harm by lying or exaggerating certain claims or events. It is entirely unjustified to use deception to boost public morale. It is also wrong to use deception to sway public opinion on an issue or to garner favor for a cause. For example, in the case of Private First Class Jessica Lynch, during the initial Iraqi invasion, the media and the Pentagon grossly exaggerated her story of capture, torture, and rescue (MacAskill). Lynch’s convoy had been ambushed due to its having taken a wrong turn. Her vehicle crashed, and she was taken to an Iraqi hospital from which she rescued by US Navy SEALs and Army Rangers after 8 days. The media claimed that Lynch had gone down shooting and had sustained bullet wounds and stab wounds during the ambush, and had suffered brutal beatings at the hands of the Iraqi soldiers in the hospital, all which turned out to be lies (MacAskill). The truth was that her gun jammed and she fell unconscious during the ambush having only a broken arm and leg due to crashing in the vehicle and was taken to the hospital where she was nursed back to relative health by doctors who kept her presence secret from the hostile forces around the hospital and a private nurse who sang to her (“BBC News”). While this story was meant to boost morale in Americans, some would say a noble cause, it is wrong to do gross exaggerations such as this because someone does end up being harmed. The real soldier who fought to the death and received multiple gunshot wounds and bayonet stabbings as he fired until his ammo ran out was Sergeant Donald Walters, a cook serving in the same company as Lynch. Walters may have received several awards for bravery posthumously, but he never received the same fan fare as Lynch. This deception is unfair to that brave soldier and to his family in a way that, I believe, harms them and his memory. It is an injustice and indeed ends with a black mark on our media and our armed forces. 
It is certainly not bad to boost our country’s morale. It’s perfectly fine and probably needed to have the media boost the public’s spirit, but the mistake lies in how and why this boost is brought about. Boosting morale at the expense of another upstanding American is actually detrimental to the initial cause, especially when deception is involved, as we can see in the case of Jessica Lynch and Donald Walters. Another way boosting morale of the people would be wrong is if the boost is based around a complete falsehood. Jessica Lynch never even fired her weapon, but we were made to believe that she fired on her attackers until she ran out of bullets. If this story were true (about Lynch) then it would certainly show the bravery and dedication of our armed forces, however because this story is a lie, public opinion falls concerning the military and, in fact, the media too.
The media should instead boost morale using true stories, like the one of Donald Walters, because there wouldn’t be any negative backlash. He died serving his country and fought tooth and nail to the very end. His is a true story of bravery and would certainly make the public have positive thoughts toward the military and “our American values” like sacrificing for your country.
In the case of public deceptions such as the myth of Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny, etc, I do not think these stories are wrong. First of all, I do not think that these stories boost morale in the people/children who believe them. They exist merely to make holidays a little more fun for children and parents alike. Also, even if some morale was boosted, say by making children happier about the holidays, then that boost is not at the expense of anyone else. No one is hurt by these myths, and no damage is done in the revealing of the truth behind these myths, so the deception is justified.
The bottom line is that deception, when discovered, can have negative consequences if it is not being used to protect anyone. Deception used to keep people from physical harm is always permissible because in reality it is helping more than it could possibly hurt anyone involved. Keeping Americans safe, even from the media, like in the case of the US-Mexico border, is not wrong because what matters most is our safety, not if we the people are hearing the whole story. Deception is a tool that should only be used to keep people from physical harm and should not be used to sway public opinion or to garner favor for any cause. The truth should be used for boosting morale because there wouldn’t be any negative backlash. Boosting morale can be done with true stories so deception is not even needed. In conclusion, public deception can be good or bad depending on the context in which it is used and the reasons behind it.
For a more specific example of a public deception, we can look at the case of Christopher Columbus “discovering” America. The first written history of Christopher Columbus was published in London by William Robertson, a Scottish clergyman, in 1777, and Robertson’s historical portrayal of Columbus as the perfect American hero with the perfect American values has persisted throughout our nation’s history (Phillips & Phillips, 1992).  In 1828 writer Washington Irving gave Americans another account of Columbus’s voyage and landing in the “New World” that supplanted Robertson’s rendition and had become the leading influence for Columbian history in textbooks across the United States for the next several decades (Phillips & Phillips, 1992).  Irving’s portrayal of Columbus is that of a pious, courageous, noble, prudent, and experienced navigator who could do no wrong (Phillips & Phillips, 1992).  However, much we as Americans want to believe these accounts of Christopher Columbus as a great mariner, commander, and good-hearted Christian, these kinds of portrayals are not accurate.
When Columbus set out on his journey that ended with his landing in the Caribbean, he was not the first person or even the first European to sail to the Americas.  Indeed, the Norse had “discovered” Canada centuries earlier, and Europeans had been fishing off the coast of Newfoundland since the 1480s (Loewen, 2007).  The fact is that American history cannot accurately credit Christopher Columbus with the discovery of the Americas.  The people of Siberia had sailed to various parts of North America even thousands of years before the birth of Christ (Loewen, 2007).  Moreover, the Norse Vikings had even started to colonize the north eastern part of what would be the United States in the centuries leading up to Columbus’s voyage, but after conflicts with Native Americans decided to give up and go home (Loewen, 2007).  This fact leads to another important reason as to why Columbus should not be credited as a discoverer of a new land; his “New World” was already populated.  Some hundreds of years, if not millennia, before Columbus landed in the Americas, tribes of Natives had already discovered it and started to colonize it themselves with settlements and trade markets all their own (Loewen, 2007).
Columbus’s expedition resulted in an expanding world trade market with new goods, while other previous expeditions (such as those European fishermen) had not.  The reason that Europe was now ready to make use of the Americas lies in new military technology, including better ships that prompted an arms race as well as the new ideology that dominion over other peoples was positively valued as the key to esteem on earth and even in the afterlife (Loewen, 2007).  When Columbus landed in 1492, he saw a land of resources and people not yet put to use in European markets.  It was the idea of controlling a new trade market, and the wealth the accompanied it, that prompted Columbus’s subsequent voyages to the Americas (Loewen, 2007). 
While the pageantry and spectacles presented in memorandum to Columbus might be enjoyable and amusing, there is no evidence to support that Columbus had good relations with the Natives that he saw when he landed and numerous accounts to the contrary.  Loewen points out that Columbus began claiming everything he saw as soon as he stepped off the boat (2007).  It’s obvious that Columbus never planned on cohabitating peacefully with the Natives he met, for on his first voyage he kidnapped about twenty-five natives and took them back to Spain (Loewen, 2007).   This is a far cry from the accounts of Columbus giving thanks to God for a safe journey, and a cruel conqueror does not hold with American values.  A slave trader is not someone we want as our American founder.  Therefore history books and the biographies those texts rely on create a pious, good, friendly hero in Christopher Columbus that is not even close to historically accurate.  History textbooks disagree on the exact numbers of Native Americans living in the “new world” at the time of Columbus’s first expedition, but historians put the number around fourteen million (Loewen, 2007).  That means history textbooks illegitimize millions of people already living in America, and their rich cultures, by using the term “Pre-Columbian” to refer the historical time before Columbus’s first landing on the shores of the Caribbean.  This phrasing also creates an ethnocentric view of Europe for history textbook readers since it instills in them a sense that nothing before European domination mattered.
Given the intense marginalization of the Native Americans by the Columbus discovery myth, this public deception is completely unjustified. The Native American people suffer because of this deception. That means that the morale boost given to the Anglo-Saxon descendants of the Europeans that populated America after the landing of Columbus comes at the expense of another group’s morale making the traditional story of Columbus’s voyage a most definite unjustified deception.
            Boosting morale at the expense of others is never justified. Since these deceptions do not directly protect the public from physical harm, they are not justified for that reason either. Even though some public deceptions are hard to combat, such as the Columbus myth, due to their overwhelming reception, it is only fair to stop public deceptions like this with the truth so that groups such as the Native Americans and heroes like Donald Walters are not harmed and get their just rewards to the deeds they have done.












Works Cited
Barker, Barbara. "Imre Kiralfy's Patriotic Spectacles: "Columbus, and the Discovery of America" (1892-1893) and "America" (1893)." Dance Chronicle 17.2 (1994): pp. 149-178. Web.
“Jessica Lynch Condemns Pentagon” BBC News 7 November 2003: n. pag. Web. 25 March 2011
Loewen, James W. Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong. 2nd ed. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2007. Print.
MacAskill, Ewen. “Rambo image was based on lie, says US war hero Jessica Lynch.” Guardian 25 April 2007: n. pag. Web. 25 March 2011
“Our Terrorist-Friendly Borders” New York Times 21 March 2005: n. pag. Web. 25 March 2011
Phillips, Carla Rahn, and William D. Phillips. "Christopher Columbus in United States Historiography: Biography as Projection." The History Teacher 25.2 (1992): pp. 119-135. Web.
Speroni, Charles. "The Development of the Columbus Day Pageant of San Francisco." Western Folklore 7.4 (1948): pp. 325-335. Web.
 “Then and Now: Shoshana Johnson.” CNN.com CNN, 19 June 2005. Web. 26 March 2011

Gaiatpalooza '12 Press Release


Gaitapalooza Raises Funds, Lifts Spirits
McKinney, Texas – November 14, 2012 – It was a bright, cool day at ManeGait Therapeutic Horsemanship during the 3rd annual Gaitapalooza on October 28th. This fundraising fall festival hosts bounce houses, carnival games, and even a petting zoo. What many would say is the best part of this event, however, would be the trail rides for the ManeGait riders. The riders who come to ManeGait for therapy for their disabilities  usually ride their horses through the High Five arena, but on this special day, they get to ride through the surrounding pastures for an experience they’ll never forget.
Gaitapalooza raised over $55,000 for ManeGait, a feat that was made possible by the generosity of donors such as: the Eubanks family, Baylor Medical Center in McKinney, Bob and Joy Darling, Patti Tejes with Keller Williams Realty – The Jan Richey Team, Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers, Chandler Cabinets, and Stereo Home East Theater.
To accommodate the over 700 guests and participants of Gaitapalooza, ManeGait was graciously awarded donations from Sam’s Club in McKinney, Costco in Plano, Costco in Frisco, Starbucks and the event sponsor: Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers. With face painting, miniature pony rides, barbecue sandwiches, Raising Cane’s sweet tea and more, the attendees had plenty of fun and food throughout the day. The riders were given goodie bags with coupons, candy, and more. When the riders ended their trail ride, they were also given a trophy to take home.
Other children win trophies through sports or academics. For our riders, the trophy they win is through Gaitapalooza. While everyone is awarded a trophy for riding in the Gaitapalooza trail ride, there is a grand prize trophy awarded to the rider who raises the most funds for ManeGait and Gaitapalooza. Every rider in Gaitapalooza is listed on ManeGait’s website for people to make donations on his or her behalf. Companies and individuals can also sign up to be on a Rider Team as a way to raise funds for a particular rider. Being part of a Rider Team is a way help ManeGait and a Gaitapalooza rider to raise funds and even win that Grand Prize trophy.


                            
About ManeGait: 
A dynamic 501c-3 non-profit therapeutic horsemanship center, ManeGait is located on a beautiful, rolling 14-acre site in Collin County and serves all of North Texas.  ManeGait delivers the best in therapeutic equestrian activities and therapy in a caring, high-integrity environment for children and adults with special needs.  ManeGait is a warm and welcoming community hub, improving the lives of the people it serves while providing rich and numerous opportunities for area volunteers and equine professionals. ManeGait was founded by Bill and Pris Darling as a calling for their need to serve others.  Bill is also the founder of Darling Homes.  For additional information about ManeGait, visit www.manegait.org