Saturday, February 19, 2011

Today … we


In progress, comparison study of presidential inaugural addresses.

What is our common ground? 

Today…we.


Letterpress


Newspaper Hierarchy


In “Newspaper Hierarchy” I track popular culture and current methods for dissemination of information as culprits in the demise of the newspaper as a printed entity. I interrogates this downfall beginning with the appropriation of the text, discovered on multiple blogs by completing an internet search for “newspaper hierarchy.” This ubiquitous, yet unimportant text about newspapers found on the internet, provides a way to open a discourse about the take-over from print to digital media, and reminds the reader of this loss.

Letterpress


Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Raveling



Raveling is a poem about the promise of marriage and the reality of domesticity. I end the writing with an epigraph to Sylvia Plath, The Jailor, “All day—gluing my church of burnt matchsticks—” chosen for its association with domestic tension. Plath’s poetry and my own are parallel in their expression of domesticity told through the narrative voice of the protagonist, female. Moments in her poetry are identifiable aspects of the traditional female role of housewife in conflict with the reality of this role and its demands. Her tension lies between two points, social integration (marriage) versus narcissism (her career as a writer), which are irreconcilable—one must be shed for the other—it is this disillusionment with the tradition of marriage I unveil in Raveling