Friday, March 30, 2012

Saucer of Loneliness Question

3. What does the "saucer" symbolize in Sturgeon's story? What is this symbolic significance suggesting about the human condition in the modern world?

The saucer ties quite succinctly with the idea of reaching out to someone unknown. This is what the female character in the story was also trying to achieve with her message bottles. In touching the life of someone completely foreign to the lifeform who sent the saucer out, the lifeform is able to make a connection across galaxies despite never seeing the receiver face to face.

When applying this kind of thought to the modern world, one can see the appeal of reaching out and helping others that one has never had a connection to before. Although the female character was distraught because no one understood her dilemma, the act of reaching out from one human being to another can bring a sense of togetherness to a widening community. In truth, even though she had been trying to commit suicide at first, the female character finds a sense of understanding when a stranger reaches out to her.

(Saucer of Loneliness can be read here.)

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed

I just have a couple thoughts on this that I want to jot down.

Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed (downloadable here) is a story by Ray Bradbury. It takes place on Mars while war rages on Earth. A refugee colony does its best to live on the dusty red surface, and only Harry Bittering notices the changes among his companions as the world changes them into people of its own.

My most present thought after reading the text was this fear of accidental assimilation. While trying to live by someone else's (or somewhere else's) terms, it is possible to change behavior, thoughts, principles to adapt to the current situation, aware of it or not. While everyone around Bittering was happy to live day by day slipping into the needs of the planet, Bittering himself desperately tried to hang on to what might keep him human and thereby unique to Mars. He fought being pulled into assimilation until the moment that everyone else was already changed. He relinquished his uniqueness only when it was no longer valuable to his state of mind.

Another thing that came to mind was that Mars was trying to defend itself. In its own way, Mars is a character in the story, using its influence to develop these outsiders and their resources to its own needs. The people are strange and unfamiliar? It works them into something immediately known to it. Their plants may destroy the ecosystems around them? Mars makes them into plants that are suitable for its surface. The planet protects its own, and the only way to survive is to become a part of what it considers its own.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

New Blog, New Beginnings

Although this blog has been started to satisfy class requirements, after my spring quarter is over I will continue to use it to share my opinions on anything and everything from literature to movies to restaurants.

For the present, however, prepare to be bombarded with ramblings and soliloquies on science fiction works created by African American authors. Enjoy!