Thursday, March 24, 2011

Symbol

Symbol
: What do the "dead walls" and Bartleby's "dead wall reveries" represent?
What's the significance of the setting? Why is it a story
of "Wall Street"?
Why do Turkey and Nipper have nicknames, but the Boss is never named, and we never learn Bartleby's first name?
What's in a name?

The dead walls represent Bartleby's mental entrapment. The setting of wallstreet is a center of commerce and money but also it is not a heartfelt job and it is very cold and straight to the point. The other clerks have nicknames to represent stereotypes or just a difference from the norm while the boss represents power and the leader which a name is not needed to replace his title as leader. Bartleby is alost soul and a first name reflects a person much deeper while a last name carries on. a name is an identity which in essence Bartleby has lost.

Ambiguity

Ambiguity: 
Exactly why does Bartleby always "prefer not to"? Why can't he make friends, or communicate? What's at the heart of his
rebellion? Why doesn't he quit and get a different job?
Why does the Boss have sympathy for Bartleby?
What else in the story seems open
to individual readers' interpretation?

Bartleby is very hurt in his mental state he is dead inside, he can't communicate because in a way he has lost hope in himself and humanity.Bartleby wont quit because this job because he doesn't have to talk much with others and this is good for him because he is lost himself. The boss has sympathy for Bartleby because he sees a young man who is conflicting with himself and has issues that even time couldn't mend. The reader sees that even though he is annoying with his preferences and mood there is a deeper meaning and problem behind his sorrow.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Ambiguity

Ambiguity: 
Exactly why does Bartleby always "prefer not to"? Why can't he make friends, or communicate? What's at the heart of his
rebellion? Why doesn't he quit and get a different job?
Why does the Boss have sympathy for Bartleby?
What else in the story seems open ?

Bartleby prefers not to do anything that includes social activities he cant communicate because his spirit is dead inside of him. He is sick of sorrow and the sadness in life . Bartleby likes the job because he wants to avoid contact. The boss feels Bartleby has no existence and feels bad about his lost soul but the story also explores the boss' problems and how he becomes defensive toward these actions.

Paradox

Paradox
: Bartleby is stubborn, self-absorbed, rebellious, and insubordinate, yet many readers, and even the narrator, the Boss himself,
have a deep sympathy for him. Why?
Others?

The sympathy for Bartleby comes from his loss of life. That this character is completely lost and destroyed from a cruel and sad world that he has lost his humanity. readers may feel that he has died inside which is very sad that a person's life was dominated by sorrow and remorse

Irony

Irony
: The Boss doesn't recognize that his own passiveness is as persistent and frustrating as Bartleby's. Or that his genteel, self-
interested interest in Bartleby is leading to no good.
Can you think of other ironies?

Other ironies is that Bartleby is full of sorrow that he loses interest in his work and this causes the boss to feel sorry for someone who doesnt care about anyone or anything and eventually this isolation that Bartleby has created ends up to be the death of him.

Meaning (Theme)

Meaning (Theme) : 
Does the story leave you thinking anything? Feeling anything? What do you make out of it all?
Passive aggressive
people are difficult to accommodate, difficult to ignore.
Passive resistance is a radical form of rebellion. 
Offices, where Americans spend
the greater part of their lives, are not democracies.
Have a life outside work! Don't expect your occupation to bear the burden of your
existence.
What other ideas does the story suggest to you?

The story made me see that the word can be a depressing place and this sadness can destroy a person and make him less than human and in essence destroy his soul. The story tells us that in a world of sadness a person can lose their humanity and like bartleby function like a soulless machine with no emotion just cold and mechanical functionality. The ideal of isolation of the mind is widely expressed.

Plot Exposition

Plot
Exposition:-what background information does the narrator relate that gives us a greater understanding of the events unfolding?
Why does the information about Bartleby's previous employment come at the end of the story rather than at the beginning?
Complication-
how does the Boss react when Bartleby repeatedly refuses to perform his duties? How does his reaction intensify? What is the Boss's
dilemma?
Climax-Where do you feel the events reach their pinnacle? Where is the conflict most intense, the clash most "explosive"?

Resolution-What's the outcome of the explosion? 
Epiphany-who has gained insight in this story, Bartleby or the Boss, or anybody?

We find that Bartleby worked in a dead letters office in a post office sorting mail that cannot be sent.
the ending information is placed there because that is the mystery behind the story that kept the readers wondering why he is twisted. The boss became agitated with Bartleby and tried to fire him but could not succeed so when things failed he moved to evade Bartleby. the Boss cannot escape Bartleby. The story becomes most explosive when the boss leaves the office and Bartleby is stuck behind and slowly starts to wither away and die. The boss becomes enlightned by Bartleby and the misery that surrounded him.

Point of view

Point of view
: Who tells the story? - the first person narrator, who is flawed but human…He's reliable, we trust him. His actions
definitely support what he tells us about himself; especially the part about being a man who likes to take the "easy" way. What else is
gained by telling this story from the Boss's perspective? Why not Bartleby's perspective? Why not one of the other clerks?


The boss is telling the story. the boss' perspective is a good way to portray the story because he sees the change of Bartleby through his eyes and he explains the aftermath of the story and the actions to come. Bartlby would not have a perspective because he is a loner. The other clerks dont play an important role in the story and seem simpleminded and would not be any perspectives.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Character Protagonist/Antagonist

what is the Boss up against in the person of Bartleby? Does Bartleby represent a force beyond
himself as an individual?
Major / Minor (Who are the major players in the story? What do we know about them? Are they likable?
Sympathetic? Realistic? What's the function of the story's minor characters?)
Dynamic / Static-Who changes? Who stays the same? Is
the story about growth or change? 
Round / Flat-Who is the round character? Who are the flat characters?


The story of Bartelby The Scrivener includes characters of the Boss, Nippers, Turkey Gingernut and Bartelby. The boss is firm but somewhat insecure. Nippers is hotheaded and has a bit of an attitude that shows his energetic charisma. Turkey is senior and follows orders and becomes aggitated with Bartleby's passive and firm attitude. Gingernut is the office boy who is a child that works to run around for the men of the office. Bartleby has a very dense attitude in which he "prefers not to" carry out actions that the boss instructs him to. Bartleby becomes extremely stubborn and refuses to leave when prompted to. He was fired and would noty leave the office in which he worked. Then the boss moves his bussiness to another location and Bartleby stays which causes Boss major stress in his life. the characters all have flaws that make them distinct in the story but Bartelby quickly becomes an agitation to the other characters. The boss begins to sympathize Bartleby due to the condition of him in the story. The boss changes through the story but Bartleby stays exactly the same through the story and all that changes is is humanity. the story changes around Bartleby.