Thursday, May 6, 2010

The Monkey Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey

"They marched back the way they'd come, past the quiet, spayed, medicated machinery. Those doomed dinosaurs of iron, waiting patiently through the remainder of the night for buggering morning's rosy-fingered denouement. The agony of cylinder rings, jammed by a swollen piston, may be like other modes of sodomya crime against nature in the eyes of deux ex machina; who can say?" pg. 95
The detail in this passage gives a sense of how the author feels about machines. Refering to machines as a God, is very ironic. Abbey refers to the machine as spayed and medicated. Almost like a sleeping dog you don't want to wake. The machine seems to be resting and waiting for the mornings work. The words Abbey uses to describe this is very nasty and groteque. It's like the machine is this disgusting thing that is involved in disgusting acts.

American Adhan October 2001 by Maria Melendez



"Watch night spalling to the western edge


of invisible, its cool surrender


to the peach-colored breccia


of sunrise clouds (just water


that has lately collapsed


into form)....
The shattered world's particulates
fall everywhere around us;
the call to prayer means bowing
and facing them all."


This is an excerpt taken from Maria Melendez's poem American Adhan. The poem was written a month after America was attacked by the most devastating terrorists attack. This poem seems to be speaking of the fact that the towers are no longer visible and how sad and dull the sky seems. The clouds are now visible where before the towers would have been hiding them. The sky seems to be peaceful and so normal considering the recent damage. You can still see scattered ash and smog that has fallen everywhere in the city. It is time to pray and face our enemy. I also feel the title has a strong significance to this poem. An American Adhan. A struggle between two cultures.



"There are two spiritual dangers in not owning a farm. One is the danger of supposing that breakfast comes from the grocery, and the other that heat comes from the furnace." -Aldo Leopold

What I find amusing about this quote is how much truth there is in it. The society we live in today has too many commodities handed to them. We(society) have began to take all for granted. Most of us do not bother to grow our own crops and spend our days laboring in the field; instead we pay someone else to do all the hard work for us, and we just learn to take and take. When do we ever actually take time to realize that all of our possessions, from our food on the table to the roof over our heads, took hard work to build and make. It can be assumed that this is why our country is in such a health crisis with obesity Plenty of older folks and generations had to work their land to eat, build their own homes, and walk to the nearest store. Now, there is not one person who is willing to do all of that. And if there is, society tends to look down upon them and frown, wondering why he just doesn't use the easy button.

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