Shadowdude
Cult of Personality
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2009
- Messages
- 12,145
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2010
I have five books that I have in my librarium, yes, I call it that - but a few of them are for my EX2 work and a few of them are also for belonging.
I found the Catcher in the Rye to be good for belonging, but my teacher said it was good - and therefore, urged me not to choose it as he'll have a required standard for it. So I want something more obscure, something safe.
I have...
Last Exit to Brooklyn by Hubert Selby, Jr.
Probably I can do something related to it, I heard from somewhere the characters yearn to get out of such a horrible place. The language and sheer violence and images in the scene will chuck the majority off choosing it - but that's exactly the reason I might choose it.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Ken Kesey
Chosen for its potential help in my EX2 work, apparently it is Belonging as well. I think this to be a lesser known text than Catcher, however I'm wondering if it's mainstream enough that I should not bother.
A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess
The pros are that it's short, and the movie is rated R - a friend of mine is doing it, but he's in Standard and I'm sure I can out-analyse him =P However he's doing the movie. I'm doing the book, and I think just like Selby's book, this may be so gruesome that perhaps the majority are thrown off.
1984, George Orwell
Ohh yeah getting into the super pro texts now aren't we? =P Well, I read it last year, didn't understand it fully - but I'll be very happy to do it again and this time actually read it for a purpose instead of for leisure.
So uhh... what should I pick? I'm thinking 1984 or Last Exit to Brooklyn - as they haven't been picked too much, in my knowledge, in the past years. Hopefully it's because I'm so inventive to pick them, instead of them being discarded for their non-relation to belonging...
I found the Catcher in the Rye to be good for belonging, but my teacher said it was good - and therefore, urged me not to choose it as he'll have a required standard for it. So I want something more obscure, something safe.
I have...
Last Exit to Brooklyn by Hubert Selby, Jr.
Probably I can do something related to it, I heard from somewhere the characters yearn to get out of such a horrible place. The language and sheer violence and images in the scene will chuck the majority off choosing it - but that's exactly the reason I might choose it.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Ken Kesey
Chosen for its potential help in my EX2 work, apparently it is Belonging as well. I think this to be a lesser known text than Catcher, however I'm wondering if it's mainstream enough that I should not bother.
A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess
The pros are that it's short, and the movie is rated R - a friend of mine is doing it, but he's in Standard and I'm sure I can out-analyse him =P However he's doing the movie. I'm doing the book, and I think just like Selby's book, this may be so gruesome that perhaps the majority are thrown off.
1984, George Orwell
Ohh yeah getting into the super pro texts now aren't we? =P Well, I read it last year, didn't understand it fully - but I'll be very happy to do it again and this time actually read it for a purpose instead of for leisure.
So uhh... what should I pick? I'm thinking 1984 or Last Exit to Brooklyn - as they haven't been picked too much, in my knowledge, in the past years. Hopefully it's because I'm so inventive to pick them, instead of them being discarded for their non-relation to belonging...