Monday, April 30, 2012

Reflection on Superheroes

I would definitely have to say Wonder Woman. Batman and Superman are the two superheroes that everyone knows about. You'd have to be living under a rock to not know them and their origin stories. I had absolutely no idea about anything that had to do with Wonder Woman and I was really intrigued by her origin story. The influence of the Greeks on the creators of Wonder Woman are part of what inspired my superhero alter-ego for my portfolio. I feel like I could hold a conversation with a superhero enthusiast now, about Wonder Woman's powers, her origin story, and what she stands for.

I think my views on Batman changed a little. I've always considered him my favorite superhero, but I never realized how much of a dark side there really is to him. I knew that he had a dark past and that his life had been hard and scarred him to the point of him prowling the streets of Gotham looking for crime, but I never knew how much of a twisted approach some comic authors took to his story. It was slightly surprising, but it didn't really change my opinion of him. He's still a total badass.

After reading the short story about Moisture Man, it really solidified for me how I see myself. I would never give up something I believe to be right, just to become better at something I'm not meant to be good at. I firmly believe that there are some things certain people just aren't meant for. I took ballet forever growing up and only stopped my freshman year of high school. I enjoyed it and I wasn't terrible, but I was obviously not cut out to be a ballerina. As much as I enjoyed ballet though, I would never trade in another quality of myself to be the perfect dancer. There are other aspects of my personality and things I'm good at that make me happy to be me. Moisture Man was not happy with himself and was willing to trade anything, at any cost to make himself a better superhero. He made the wrong choice. He should have been content with himself and the fact that he was a reasonably good person. That should be enough.

I was really intrigued by our discussions of the representation of women in comics and we spent a good deal of time on that, so I think I was happy with that. Comics just remind me a lot of movie stars. Graphic novels portray men and women with impossible bodies and people idolize celebrities for their unattainable muscles and fitness. We spent two, maybe even three (I can't remember anymore, my brain is mush) days on The Watchmen, but I would have been content to discuss them for half the semester. The novel just had so much going on and there were so many themes that we could have gotten into farther if we had more time.

This class is called Reflections, and it has made me reflect a lot on the person I am and the person I want to be. I think superheroes as a Reflections course topic is the best way to make people reflect on themselves because we've been presented with beings who are godly and supposedly perfect and have compared ourselves to them. Just because I don't have superpowers and I can't fly doesn't mean I can't accomplish as many good things as Superman. I can. As far as the superhero who makes the best citizen, I would have to say Captain America. After learning about him and seeing the movie, he is an all around good person, which is why he is chosen to be Captain America in the first place. He is a model for everyone else and he just happens to have nice muscles and super strength. He always does the right thing and he is perfect example of how Americans expect our soldiers to act. He is a model citizen.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Life's Winding Path

In the novel Hero, Thom's basketball coach tells him that he is no longer allowed to be on the team because of his medical problem with seizures. The real reason behind Thom's exclusion from the team though is the fact that he's gay and this frightens his coach for whatever reason. I would have handled it a lot less diplomatically than Thom because in situations like that I tend to be a hot-head. I may or may not have thrown something. If I had to go home and tell my parents about that, they would probably be flabbergasted. They would understand that my coach was looking out for my medical well being (supposedly), but they would expect him to allow me to still be on the team and just ride the bench and support my teammates. Everyone in my family is an athlete and my parents coached sports as well and that's what they would do, so they would expect that fairness of every other coach.

When Ruth gives her speech to Thom, she's saying that maybe this is all there is. Maybe life doesn't get better and maybe it will always be mediocre. She's telling him to live in the moment and appreciate everything he has because that may be all he will get in life. There's no use wishing for things that you don't have and may never happen. Sometimes you just need to be happy with what you currently have. If I had been asked a year ago if I was waiting for something to make me happy, I would have said yes. But now I'm not. Everything that I have been able to do and experience in the last year has made me realize how lucky I am and I have been consistently happy since that realization. I love where I am in my life and what I'm doing with it and I just take everything day by day. I am in charge of my own happiness because I decided to be and I decided that I wasn't going to let anyone else control it.

I think in one way or another most people get cheered on and are the center of attention in some way during their life. It doesn't have to be because you saved the day or something, it can be from getting a well deserved promotion at work. I love my major (history) and I think the best way that this could happen for me is if I was recognized for some really great research I did or some fabulous ground-breaking historical paper I wrote. What I would mostly gain from it is pride in myself and the things I can accomplish.

I think the perfect first kiss would be one when you're least expecting it, from someone you would never expect to get a kiss from. I don't know if the perfect first kiss is attainable or achievable. If I could re-do my first kiss with the last guy I dated, I would because it was so impersonal! Nothing in life is ever perfect, so who's to say that you can have a "perfect" first kiss? I don't think I've ever had a true crush on a famous figure. Thom's crush on Uberman was ridiculous. I think that famous actors, singers, what have you are attractive constantly, but I've never really had a crush on them because I know how incredibly unrealistic it is. I think people have crushes on celebrities because we need to have some element of fantasy in our lives. People think that celebrities are utterly glamorous, so if you have a crush on one, you can think about how amazing your life would be and how you wouldn't be relegated to a cubicle anymore. Sometimes it's good to fantasize about what it would be like to date certain people, but fantasizing about dating a celebrity is boring. I would rather dream about dating someone I know because it has a distinct possibility of happening.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Watchmen

So far I have enjoyed all the readings and everything about this class, but there was something about The Watchmen that I just really loved. While I was reading the novel, I never wanted to put it down and I would find myself reading it over Easter Break, starting at 11pm and then look up and all of the sudden it would be 3am! I lost myself completely in the reading and felt like I really entered the world of The Watchmen. I had that whole feeling when I put the book down that I was in their world and then it would take me a second to snap back to reality and realize I was sitting in my living room in Monmouth, reading a comic book. It was kind of a letdown. Just like it was a letdown when I finished the novel. The nice thing though, was that unlike when you really get into a book that you're reading and then you finish and have no one to talk about it with, this was for class, so I got to talk about it all last week! That really made my life. I was so jazzed whenever I got to Reflections last week because I was so excited about The Watchmen and liked reading it so much.

I'm not even really sure what it was about the book that I liked so much. Yeah, the art was good, but I think it was the writing that captivated me. It wasn't a mindless read, you had to think while you were reading it and look for what the authors had included, but had not made blatantly obvious. The parallel story with the pirate comic was really interesting and their use of imagery at the beginning of every chapter with time and the blood was great. The characters made me like it as well because they weren't one dimensional as characters in books, movies, etc. can be. They had multiple problems, they changed as they aged, they had real emotions, and they struggled with inner demons and issues like they were real people and not characters on a page. Everything about The Watchmen was AWESOME. I saw the movie last semester and I had no idea what was going on and kind of hated it, so I didn't think I would like the book at all. Now that I've read it though, and liked it so much, I think I'll re-watch that movie and see what I think.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

The Costume Says It All

If I was going to become a costumed vigilante, I would most obviously choose the material they make swimsuit with to construct my costume. It is form-fitting and would be the material that is easiest to move in. Plus, I'm pretty sure they sell it in bulk at Jo-Ann's. I would definitely wear a mask, most likely a full face one. Those silly ones that cover your eyes only do absolutely nothing. I'm not quite sure what else I would use...I would probably carry a pocketknife and a length of rope. It would probably also be worthwhile to have a some sort of hook that I could shoot out, possibly try to swing from building to building. It sounds completely ridiculous, but you never know. It's realistically possible.

In my hometown, I think the biggest problems are gangs. So if I picked up being a masked vigilante, it would be to fight the influence of gangs. I saw what it did to people when I was in high school and it totally ruined some people's lives. From the documentary, I think I most identified with was Master Legend because although he was excessively eccentric and an alcoholic, he was in it for the right reasons. Maybe from him, we can all learn to ride around in vans and carry air conditioners around for the less fortunate. He was working from his heart and doing it because he was a good person. And that's why I would do it as well.

Mutants

The difference in experiences between the internal and external mutants is that the internal mutant is accepted into society because they can blend in and the external mutant is not accepted and is ridiculed and even made a spectacle of. Really the only similarity that I see is that they are both mutants. The X-Men movie we watched did a very good job of highlighting how seperate external mutants like Rogue felt from internal mutants like Iceman or Wolverine. Groups in society that I can think of that might identify with this are homosexuals and nerds. Homosexuals, not so much anymore, but in the twentieth century, they were treated like mutants, like they had an illness and something was wrong with them that had to be fixed (which is not the case at all). Nerds probably always will identify with the stigma of the mutants because the things they are interested in are considered to be things that the rest of society isn't interested in. They don't live what is considered to be the "normal" social life. Here on campus we have examples of that. While all the "normal" people party on the weekends and go out to the bars, nerds stay in and play video games or socialize with each other, setting themselves apart from everyone else and putting themselves in that mutant category. And when they do try and socialize with other "normal" people, they are often made fun of and ridiculed because they're not interested in sports or whatever is popular that hour. X-Men films and comics might help these groups understand that even if they don't fit into "normal" society that they're still an integral part of it. Because they are.

I think the X-Men I identify the most with is Wolverine and it's not just because Hugh Jackman is sexy. I think I identify with Wolverine because he does the right thing, but he does it the way he thinks it needs to be done. He is a part of the X-Men, but he is still an individual and his own person, with his own thoughts, who takes responsiblity for his own actions if others don't agree with them.