EpicFailGuy
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2007
- Messages
- 170
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
So a little warning, I am a mathematics and science person, not an English person, so therefore I take no blame if the following doesn't make any sense, but it was a stream of conciousness thing. I wrote these thoughts on a piece of paper, and I would like my thesis along the lines of these thoughts, but I cant really pull it all together into one wammo statement (the thesis).
My thoughts on Coleridge
Journey- An act of going from one place to another (Australian Oxford)
However I need to "explore the concept of the journey by looking at all the possible meanings for the word journey". The above definition deals with the physical journey, however there are many facets to the concept of the journey. In advanced english we focus on the imaginative journey which is defined as the "mental faculty forming images or concepts of external objects not present to the senses". Then I realised, that a common misconception made by people about the imaginative journey is that it is all happy or positive. However this is proven wrong by the mere fact that people have nightmares? So basically the imaginative journey is uncontrollable when the subconcious mind is prominent, i.e. when your asleep. (I am getting lost in my own thoughts now sweet jesus I hope you guys can follow this). So basically getting to the crux of my thoughts, I was thinking that if many of the great writers (namely coleridge hey hey, relating it back to prescribed text) must have been able to balance their subconcious and concious minds, to such an extent that they could trancsced the physical barriers, and therefore undertake these amazing journeys, and yet still record them. I could also relate this sort of trance/balance of minds thingo back to when coleridge was writing the Ancient mariner and he got interrupted, then lost the plot, i.e. lost the balance and couldnt finish the epic poem.
Thoughts anyone? I'll understand if no one can be fucked reading all that! But hey worth a try.
ty
My thoughts on Coleridge
Journey- An act of going from one place to another (Australian Oxford)
However I need to "explore the concept of the journey by looking at all the possible meanings for the word journey". The above definition deals with the physical journey, however there are many facets to the concept of the journey. In advanced english we focus on the imaginative journey which is defined as the "mental faculty forming images or concepts of external objects not present to the senses". Then I realised, that a common misconception made by people about the imaginative journey is that it is all happy or positive. However this is proven wrong by the mere fact that people have nightmares? So basically the imaginative journey is uncontrollable when the subconcious mind is prominent, i.e. when your asleep. (I am getting lost in my own thoughts now sweet jesus I hope you guys can follow this). So basically getting to the crux of my thoughts, I was thinking that if many of the great writers (namely coleridge hey hey, relating it back to prescribed text) must have been able to balance their subconcious and concious minds, to such an extent that they could trancsced the physical barriers, and therefore undertake these amazing journeys, and yet still record them. I could also relate this sort of trance/balance of minds thingo back to when coleridge was writing the Ancient mariner and he got interrupted, then lost the plot, i.e. lost the balance and couldnt finish the epic poem.
Thoughts anyone? I'll understand if no one can be fucked reading all that! But hey worth a try.
ty