lunes, 27 de abril de 2015

Presentations of Literature Contest Winners


On Wednesday April 22, the University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras celebrated the success of students that participated in the Literature Contest that took place about four weeks ago. The contest categories were: Short Story, Essay and Poem. The contestant had to choose one category and write a piece of literature with their own creativeness and ideas.
All students in the INGL3135 course, also known as Journey on Literature, had to participate in order to earn credit. Some students saw this as an obligation and submitted whatever piece of old literature or blog they could find from other literature courses. However, there are always students that are willing to give the extra miles in every little aspect of their life and in every opportunity, as random as it might be. From the INGL3135-001 course section was two winners. A third place essay winner, Ana V. Pérez and a first place essay winner, Marilú Crespo. These two young women gave their extra mile in the contest despite the very last minute notification that we had to participate.

The essay of Marilú Crespo, a young and astute accounting student aspiring to become a lawyer, was called “Do Witches Get Financial Aid?” They essay is about how some people (mostly students) get favored in obtaining financial aid over others. She establishes that maybe by being a witch and having mystical power she might land a scholarship of some sort by getting a high score on the LSAT, which might ease her law school debt. She also wrote about how law school aspiring students, have to earn a “useless” bachelor’s degree before being able to apply to law school, instead of being allowed to pursue their dreams from the first instance and focusing in passing the impossible LSAT with a score of 170-180 so they could get a chance at the so “mystical scholarship” that very few people are able to obtain through questioning means. With no doubt this was an essay winner, not only was she able to establish a situation most aspiring law students go through, but she also brought it forth with creativity and a sarcastic tone that one can easily find amusing. 

domingo, 19 de abril de 2015

Perspective Conference: An External View



Last Wednesday on April 15, I went to the Perspective of Puerto Rico Conference at the Amphitheater of the University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras. For the past four weeks the Journey On Literature course has been working on presentations regarding perspective of Puerto Rico from virtual sources such as Twitter.com, forums and travel sites. The presentations were focused on positive and negative opinions and reviews of the island from Americans and Spaniards regarding their experiences here on Puerto Rico.

On the presentation, students discussed the social, cultural, economic and political point of views and perceptions from the websites. Other groups focused on how tourists criticized the island not because of the sites and places they visited, but because of the puertoricans and their ways. Through some of the reviews, they found that some Americans do not read and get informed before commenting. For example, some comments showed that some people do not know puertorico is located in the Americas, others did not know we are a Commonwealth of the United States or that our currency is the same as theirs. Other comments criticized highly intellectuals citizens like Sonia Sotomayor and accused them of not being United States citizens, when it is the opposite. As a Commonwealth we are citizens of the United States and as such we are not immigrants when we move from the island to the states.

Reading the comments perspective and reviews of  Puerto Rico during the presentation made me a bit restless. As a non presenting participant, I got the chance of seeing all the presentations all over again. The first time it managed to make me angry. I wondered "How could there be so much ignorance still?". The second time it was easier but very disappointing. Watching all the presentations from the public was interesting because I could listen to people commenting and expressing their thoughts to their friends and colleagues. A person sitting behind me said "And we want to be part of the US, they don't even know who we are". Another comment from what seem to be a professor, said "so much hatred". I could not agree more. Together with ignorance, there seem to be projections of anger and hatred towards a whole population. This could easily be categorized as racism, the word no one in classroom dared to use.

While I did feel angry and overwhelmed by some of the negative comments presented, I refuse to speak badly of a nation and address them disrespectfully because of a few negative perspectives. I will also reserve the right to judge the people who wrote the comments as racists and I believe the number of negative point of views of Puerto Rico in the internet are as much, if not less than the number of good ones.


jueves, 9 de abril de 2015

The Journey Journal Experience


      For the past two months I have been writing daily about the things in my mind in a ten minutes period. This was a project for my literature class that we call the Journey Journal. Let me say, it has been a journey indeed. At first you think we just write anything down until time is up and that is it. This is not the case. We had to write down our thoughts, anything that would come to mind. Good luck trying to keep up writing with your thoughts coming and going at the speed of light. Is not an easy task but like with any task, it gets better with practice & time. At first my hand would hurt because I would try to keep up with my thoughts, however there is so much you can push your hand to write faster. If you write first thing in the morning you will most likely write about your dreams because is the only thing fresh in your mind. This allowed me to remember my dreams for quite a while now and to be honest; I still remember them as clear as a day. The Journey Journal was a means of canalization for my immediate feelings. If I felt an overwhelming feeling I just grabbed my journal and write for ten minutes every thought, good or bad. What I liked the most about this project is that I was able to write about the most intimate things about myself and others without the fear they will ever find out because is a secret or private journal that only you are allowed to read. Be careful not to drop it! You might end up being either loved or hated if you wrote about other people. The journal has become a part of me in the past two months. It is now a habit to sit down and write. Words come out as fluently as water, you feel relaxed after writting and your hand is more efficient at writing speed. 

Dare to take the Journey Journal Challenge!


sábado, 14 de marzo de 2015

A Small Place - Antigua Identity



A Small Place is a novel written by Jamaica Kincaid, a writer from Antigua. The novel was published in 1988 and the work is an indictment of the Antiguan government, the tourist industry and Antigua's British colonial legacy. The novel starts off with the author describing what a tourist would see on their way from the airport to the hotel. It describes the streets, houses, government structure, rich people's houses and the beach site from a hotel room.


The novel starts to become a bit aggressive towards the tourist or the community of tourists in general. It begins to address the tourist as a distasteful and hated person by every Antigua inhabitant. It explains this is due to the fact that the tourist is able to escape the misery they might be living in the place they come from because they have money and the means of doing so. However, Antiguans are not able to do this because they along with most people from other country are poor and live under a government that do not allow them to get out of the country easily. For this reason they are jealous of tourists and mock them behind their backs by criticizing the way tourists express themselves and how ridiculous they look when they try to blend in with people from the island by eating with their hands. While this behavior should not be supported can you really blame them? 


You see, the author expresses how the Antigua from then differs from the Antigua of now due to the colonization of the British. The island along with its people lost their identity as a country and as individuals. Their pride and culture was hurt. She indicates England people missed their country so much they turned everywhere they went to into England and turned to British every person they met. When a country takes over another country alot of the regional culture is lost because there is a mix of two cultures where one is being imposed over the other for the comfort of the colonist. Languages are also affected by colonization. What better example than Puerto Rico being colonized by the United States? While we still speak Spanish most of the time, English has now become very common and much more than a second language. Our culture has also being affected, according to my grandmother and few ancestors. Some people go as far as saying we no longer have an identity as a country. I differ from the last remark but that is for another blog.

miércoles, 11 de marzo de 2015

Down On The Island - The Bilingual People




Down on the Island is a novel written by Jim Cooper about the academic behavior of puertorican students in Mayaguez in the 1950s. During the 1950’s a young professor went to visit and teach English class in the University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez. To his surprise he encountered the problem that students barely knew English language and in consequence the students would cheat on exams and homework. Even worse, the students would do this in front of him and with no shame at all. The students did not see this behavior as dishonest and unethical. It seemed it was an academical behavior supported and accepted in the school system of the island.

It is surprising the number of Americans who still believe puertoricans do not speak English. Indeed some older people never managed to even learn a healthy Spanish language, due to the late development of schools throughout the island in the before the 1950s. However this is not entirely true today. Many puertoricans, especially the younger population, are bilingual. Even the few that “do not know” English do in fact know but have never been able to practice it or have trouble in either writing or speaking but rarely is both.

I learned my English in middle school. It was the time I hit puberty and would listen to rock music all day long to brink of driving my mother crazy. My friends and I had one particular hobby which was watching music videos and American TV. We also enjoyed going to the movies and would challenge one another to not read the Spanish subtitles. This is the way many of the young bilingual population learned their English, and really good English. Combining the American media influences with the English courses we are required to take every year since kindergarten through college, we have been able to learn proper English and become a bilingual island.

Being a bilingual island has opened many doors for us as a country and as individuals. It makes tourists feel more comfortable because they can travel to the island without the constant worry of how they will communicate. It makes us more appealing to jobs and participation on entities because we able to communicate with a wider population than those who speak a single language. Moreover, we are easily able to learn a third language. Because both, English and Spanish is everywhere, it comes naturally to us without the need to study harder for it giving us a sense of two mastered languages. This in turn allow us to start learning a third language and making the process even easier. For example, English and French are alike languages, just like Spanish and Italian are also alike, still you will find Spanish words in the French and words similar to English on Italian. This is because Italian, Spanish and French are romance languages and English is derived from them. So, not only it is easier for us to learn a third language but it also broadens the spectrum of languages we are able to learn at a faster rate.

I wish Jim Cooper would visit the island at a present time. He would see that our English has improved and spread across the island, along with the unaccepted no-copy academic behavior.  

lunes, 9 de marzo de 2015

A Room With A View - Marriage Is Not Freedom


 Women in the past did not have the choice to choose who they were to marry. Since they were young their parents chose who they were to marry and many times these men were a lot older than the women. Some of these women would learn to love their husband with time but many never did. They were seen as fit wives to procreate and maintain the household in order but not to have freedom, choice and vote. The also had no right for education and expressing their feelings openly. The role of the men was to provide for the wife and children but they had freedom to go out with their friends and be around and about with no one to question them.


In the movie “A Room With A View” Lucy Honeychurch was setup for marriage which she willingly and blindly accepted because it seemed a good choice since he was a wealthy man. She was in love with another man. She was in love with the man that stole her first kiss and saved her from an accident in Italy. Lucy’s family did not approve of George Emerson because he was not a man of money and did not seem to be aware of the upper class manners of the Victorian times. Despite this, Lucy was able to overcome her fear and broke her engagement with Cecil Vyse. She ran back to the arms of her new neighbor…Guess who? Yes, George. He had moved back to England with his father Mr. Emerson and to the same village Lucy lived in. This was of course after being convinced by Mr. Emerson and Mr. Beebe that what matters is what she felt in heart and not what people approved or disapproved of. After a hot sex session with her truly beloved one they both realized they were where they wanted to be regardless what anybody thought. Like many English men in the Edwardian era, George died at what seems to be World War I, which started in the 1914, leaving behind a broken hearted Lucy.

The movie takes place in the transition from the Victorian Era to the Edwardian Era, an era characterized by peace and economic prosperity. Not until the late 20th century did women obtain the right to omit the promise of wedding vows. Marriage for women was a lifetime commitment. Very rarely were women allowed to have a divorce and even until 1891 if a woman attempted to escape from an unhappy marriage, she could be captured and punished by the law. This is to say that Lucy’s actions were indeed risky ones and she was lucky to have ended her engagement before getting married. Once she had been married, there was no going back.

Many women in the 21st century have not yet realized how broad their opportunity to triumph in life is, because of the degree of freedom we now have and the rights to assume and develop our own identity through education, commitment and vote. While this is mostly true for women in America and most Europe and Asia, there are still countries that are underdeveloped and lack the opportunity America and Europe can give to women. There are also few religions where women do not have the right to education, choose who to marry and even what to wear. These are the women we have to fight for.

How powerful do you think the world would be if women kept away from education by economics and religious means were given the opportunity to study and work?


Comment down below! J

                                                                                     A Room With A View Trailer!

domingo, 1 de marzo de 2015

IDENTITY

IDENTITY is a lecture written by Peter Roberts. It establishes the way people identify themselves through, culture, nationality and language. In the lecture it is discussed what is home to different people. Some call home the place where their family and loved ones reside. Others call home the place they were born in and some people call home the place where their first language is spoken.

To me home is the place where my family is. I have lived alone in San Juan for the past five years while studying in the UPRRP and I have never been able to call it home even when I like it there. This is because no matter how many friends and distractions I have in San Juan when I'm alone my mind drifts off to my family in Arecibo. Surely some would say that feeling does not go away even when you move on, get marry and make your own family. I agree with them. One of the reasons I am trying to become a professional it's so that I can get a good job while staying close to my family and loved ones.

Strangely sometimes people call home or identify to people who speak their same language. When we travel to other countries that speak a different language and we hear someone talking in Spanish or English they almost immediately make us feel safer and they become our friends. Last year I went to an internship in New Mexico. I thought I was the only puertorican there until one day when I was waiting in a bus stop and a couple of interns that seemed to be older than me started speaking Spanish but with a particular accent. Puertorican accent. I remember at that moment my mom called me and they heard me talking with her. When I hung up on her they introduced themselves and said it was nice to meet another puertorican there. From that moment on the three of us became good friends.

My father used to be in the US NAVY. I told him about this reading and what he thought about it. He said, more than the language, was the nationality. He never suffered racism from other militants but he said that militants from the same country did get along better. They became almost instantly identified with one another. "Being away from home the next best thing you have close to home is a person from the same country and culture", he said.  

Identity is part of all human beings. 
We do it by nature and by need, whether it's by a language, a religion or a nationality. Identity creates new bonds with new people and break bonds with others, sometime for the better, sometimes for no good reason at all.