Friday, January 25, 2008

Themes

The Last Summer of Reason

In Tahar Djaout’s Novel The Last Summer of Reason Conveys that when a society forces people to conform to the standardized person it strips away people’s dreams, ruining people’s lives through Boualem Yekker’s struggles in a religious extremist country.

This Novel takes place in a country that is ruled by Muslim extremists. Over time they start to have more and more power and control over the country, slowly limiting people’s freedom, forcing people to be more and more like alike. They ban art in almost all forms.

Boualem Yekker is a man that follows his personally convictions. One of those convictions is that he doesn’t believe strongly in the Muslim religion.

So when stricter restrictions come he doesn’t follow them. And this causes stress in his relationship with his family. His wife and kids want to follow the societal pressure and become religious extremists. He ends up losing his family.

This greatly decreases his quality of life. His dreams of living a happy life are ruined. He ends up alone, with no one to love him and no one to love.

And so without a family he dives deeper into his passion for books. Books become his life.

And then the Government takes away his bookstore because they don’t like the free thinking that reading books can cause.

So now he has nothing. His life has no meaning, no purpose and nothing is driving it. This is all because society forced people to conform to their lifestyle.

But this religious extremist country doesn’t only affect those that oppose it. It also affect everybody that is brainwashed by it.

People that use to be friends, neighbors, and even family now hate the ones that they loved most if they don’t conform to their religion. Boualem’s Family went from loving him, to hating him because of the lack of freedom.

A life full of hate can never be as great as one filled with love and joy.

The children in the country are brainwashed into attacking people. They throw rocks at those who have different beliefs then themselves.

Children should not be attacking and trying to kill people because they are different. They should be kids, living a fairly care free life having fun hanging out with friends.

Religion
Although religion in a society can have positive effects on life, if it is taken too far it can drastically reduce the quality of life, which is shown through Boualem’s struggle in The Last Summer of Reason.

Art
In a society without art, including all forms of it, as is the case with the country in The Last Summer of Reason, life is not as good because without art there is no imagination, creativity or self expression.

Philosophy
A person must look at their personal principles and the consequences of following the crowd before they make a decision like Boualem did when he chose not to follow the Islam religion.


Metamorphosis

When examining Franz Kafka’s short story Metamorphosis through the literary lens of Marxist criticism the tragedies caused by financial struggles is conveyed through Gregor’s, a traveling salesman stuck in a terrible job paying off family debt, metaphorical transformation into a bug.

The transformation into a bug represents low quality of life that some people trapped in the work force have to deal with.

When he first wakes up a bug he is in a lot of pain. This pain represents the emotional pain that he endures when he first starts a job.

As a bug he is trapped in his room, a small cramped space. He can only dream about the outside world by looking out his window. If he tries to leave, he is forced back into his room. This represents the low quality of life because he is trapped in his job. He can dream of better jobs that would led to a happier life, but if he would try he would be unable to leave because his family needs the money to survive.

As a bug Gregor is powerless. He has no rights, and gets no respect. His family even stops treating him like a part of the family. In his Job he is treated with no respect. He isn’t a person to them, only a resource that makes them money.

His life as a bug has no excitement. He is trapped in a room and does the same thing over and over again. His job in the real world is the same old thing day after day. And like the bug trapped in the room his job isn’t exciting.

But eventually he gets used to being a bug. Much like he got used to being in a terrible job.

But eventually the pain that being a bug caused to both his family and himself became too much and he died. Much like the stress and the emotional pain from being in a bad job can eventually break people’s spirits.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Poetry and Music

Although neither poetry nor music are allowed by the vigilant brothers becauses they are not the creation of god, the two are exactly what the community are missing. The vigilant brothers would rather the people look down at the ground then look outward and create music or poetry. "song flees into exile". (144) They are afraid that the music or poetry may repersent the truth and start a stir in their otherwise stable community. "the world now belongs to the therapists of the spirit; the city resounds with thier sermons and their rythmich steps."

philosophy

Now that Boualem's country is ruled by religous fundamentalists everything that Boualem once knew his country for has been turned on its head. "Beauty is a decapitated flower. Love is a recumbant effigy, a dead tree."(144). After all rationality and free thinking is done away with Boualem finds out what he values most, freedom. Weather forecasts are banned because God choses the weather on his own. Imagination is completely dulled. Boualem's book offer him the temporary freedom he is seeking from his bleak world but ironically enough they are also his largest vulnerability.

Setting

The setting of The Last Summer of reason closely resembles that of Tahar Djaut's hometown of Algeria where a one time republic has turned into an opressive "community of faith" patrolled strictly by vigilant brothers. The main character, Boualem Yekker, spends the majority of his time in his recently unpopular bookstore. Boualem ventures outside of the bookstore to give small anecdotes and also leaves when he is dreaming. Boualem fondly remembers a time where he and his family vacaationed care free to a beautiful beach. Those times have since passed. Also in a dream, he ventures to a mangy prison cell only to kill his son in front of a massive and rowdy crowd as he is takes his chances in front of an unsimpathetic judge. Wherever Boualem is he feels uncomfertable and apprehensive. "As another V.B. passes by, Boualem suddenly feels small and vulnerable, almost pathetic."(14).

Science

Here is how Science is viewed in the world that Boualem is living in:
"1. Science has the right to pay attention only to those questions not settled in the Book.
2. Any scientific result and any scientific discovery must be challenged by the Text in order to find justification from them there.
3. Our religion is the source of all knowledge: any scientific or moral law, any legislation decreed in the time preceding this religion, when humanity was steeped in darkness, lies and barbarism, is null and void"(94).

This quote pretty much sums up the feelings of the society Boualem is living in towards science.

Book Comparison

Book Comparison map:

Poem

Haikus

Boualem:
Literary Lord
Besieged by fanaticism
Slaughtered by slander

Setting:
City Vitality
Soon Silenced and Sedated
Never to awake

By Matthew Davidson

Brief Plot Summary

LSOR:
-main character Boualem Yekker
-he enters a city ruled by a religious doctorine
-he experiences severe lonliness because he doesn't share the same beliefs as his fellow countrymen
-Throughout the story there are flashbacks as well as dream sequences that go on
- the first is a flashback to when Boualem and his family are out on a camping trip and how tranquil and relaxed they are
-next comes the dream sequences in which Boualem kills his corrupted son
-The next portion of the story is Boualem's perspective on how society has changed under religious rule (i.e hotels being shut down, music and art being destroyed, separating genders in all aspects of life)
-Boualem is attacked by children and this really disturbs him
-Boualem is still a pacifist but in his mind he believes himself to be a coward
-his daughter is ashamed of him because he is a non-believer
-there is mass hysteria in the streets
-the religious society goes on to mock and belittle all scientists and philosophers
-Boualem reflects back on some pictures of family and how that was the only time in which they were truly human or happy
-Boualem recieves a letter telling him he's booted from this society
-His book store is shut down
-Boualem talks about his childhood and how he had had a life outside of books even though they were his fortress and prison
-He then reflects on all that has happened in his life and in this city and how he hopes and wishes that another spring or age of reason will come to this city

Metamorphosis:
-Gregor wakes up
-He turns into a Cockroach
-He is ashamed of what he has become but is proud that he has provided so well for his family
-He tries to be as polite and appeasing to his family in order to show that he truly does care for them
-he is isolated because he is unable to communicate with them effectively
-The family becomes ragged with the passing of time and hardship of finances
-Greggor is shooed away and an apple is lodged into his back after his father threw it at him in a bout of rage
-Gregor becomes depressed
-he dies
-the family forgets about him and moves on

by Matthew Davidson

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Religion

Religion:
LSOR Boualem enters the city:
"No one is above the Faith. God exterminates usurers. Woe to a people who let things be run by a woman. he will annihilate our enemies. If you are sick, He alone can heal you"(Last Summer of Reason, 10)
Boualem picks up the hitchhiker:
"Those things are too personal and shouldn't be discussed in public.'So, then, in your congregation everything essential bears the stamp of shame?"(46).
Boualem cries out against the attrocities of the world:
"The first obsessions of the leaers, in a hurry to realie God's will on earth, were rorbidding alcohol, fighting coeducation, separating men and women in the workplace and closeing a great many classy hotels..."(77).

Matt Davidson

Art

Art plays a pivotal role in The Last Summer of Reason. All creative thinking and individualistic ideas are banned because of the governmental policies in place for the society. Art, books, poems, and other skilled artistic things are outlawed becuase they are not from God. This is the baises for the main character's, Boualem, exile and deviance. All art is considered evil and it produces a counterpart to the highly religious thinking of the society.

Posted By John Evans

Character development

The main character in The Last Summer of Reason is Boualem Yekker. He is a bookstore owner who stays to himself and doesnt do anything out of the ordinary. Due to the new religious and governmental policies of the land he lives in, he is constantly bothered and ridiculed due to his books which provoke thought and independence. This clashes with the society because everyone in the community relies heavily on God and religion. Everything that happens in life is God's will and that is the way he wants it. Books inspire free thought and independence which is banned. Boualem gets rocks thrown at him by little children, receives letters from anonymous senders, gets his store closed for no reason, and looses the love of his family. However, through all of this, he sticks to his love for books and does not conform to society, no matter what the cost. In the end, Boualem Yekker looses everything he loves because of religion and government, and becomes and outcast. There is no room for deviance.

Posted By John Evans

Bridge Maps



Posted By John Evans

Double Bubble




Posted by John Evans

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Biographical information

Biographical Information

Tahar Djaout
- 1954, born in Azeffoun
- died in 1993
- he was a poet, journalist and author
- Algerian
- He was assassinated because of his work
by the Armed Islamic Group
- He was revolutionary in his writing and was a
prolific fictional writer

citation:

Hargreaves, Alec. "Tahar Djaout." Answers. 8 Jan. 2008 http://www.answers.com/topic/tahar-djaout.

by Matthew Davidson