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London Diary


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London Diary

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by

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Carl Rollyson

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Wednesday, January 11

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End of my second full day in London. Yesterday spent at the British Library looking at the Ted Hughes Papers. Today as well, and then a trip to Hampstead to see Al Alvarez about his memories of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes.

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Oct 30
Zelene Pineda Suchilt Zelene Pineda Suchilt (Oct 30 2014 7:53PM) : the exact date and recounting of the days activities.
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Oct 31
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:20AM) : More like a summary.
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Aug 25
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:48AM) : What is there about the language that makes this a diary?
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Oct 28
Julia Howe Julia Howe (Oct 28 2014 11:12AM) : The use of first person and the listing of the days activities. It's written reflectively, like a diary entry.
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Oct 29
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 29 2014 7:30AM) : Anything else about the style?
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Oct 30
Jason Javaherian Jason Javaherian (Oct 30 2014 9:26PM) : A positive tone is being established.
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Oct 31
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:20AM) : Why do you say positive?
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Nov 2
Jason Javaherian Jason Javaherian (Nov 02 2014 11:04PM) : The use of "his," and the pronouns, makes it personal, being that we are being introduced to these people. Gives the impression of a positive tone.
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Nov 3
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 03 2014 6:34AM) : too many beings. Also never use being that. The correct usage is since
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Dec 16
Mr. Kishan Singh Mr. Kishan Singh (Dec 16 2014 12:34AM) : Fast paced. Getting directly to the point.
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Dec 16
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 7:54AM) : What is fast-paced?
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Mar 12
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 12 2015 2:43PM) : I think that in terms of positivity, the word "trip" gives off an image of a lovely new adventure to discover something new.
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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:41AM) : I don't believe positivity is a word.
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Mar 18
Julissa Soriano Julissa Soriano (Mar 18 2015 7:32PM) : Is his tone actually positive? more

I would not necessarily say the entire journal entry has a positive tone. I think the beginning is uplifting, the way you describe the difference between Americans and British. I would not say the tone is cheerful or positive, it seems to be more like eager. Towards the end of the entry you become anxious or worried, especially during the catalog number situation at the front desk, or when you used a pen instead of a pencil.

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Mar 19
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 19 2015 11:07AM) : Not worried so much as annoyed.
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Oct 31
Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:27AM) : The use of first person is definitely a major factor. more

Also, the direction the piece goes in tells of how the writers thought process was. For example, when you are standing outside waiting in line, and you recall NYC, you can instantly think of Plath, which leads to information for the reader.

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Nov 1
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:04AM) : A double focus.
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Oct 31
Thomas Moy Thomas Moy (Oct 31 2014 12:59PM) : It reads as an itineary more

It reads as an itinerary of things that happen in the coming paragraphs

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:04AM) : Preview of coming attractoins.
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Dec 19
Student Michelle Gontar Student Michelle Gontar (Dec 19 2014 8:29PM) : The tone is brief and a recounting of events, which gives it a feel that it was written as a reflection of the day, in such a way a diary entry would.
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Dec 20
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 20 2014 11:25AM) : right
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Feb 17
Alicea Ulmer Alicea Ulmer (Feb 17 2015 12:14AM) : The use of first person gives it a personal feel suggesting it is a diary. Also the way the author reflects on their events from the past few days. There is no real order, just kind of jotting down the thoughts as they come.
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Feb 17
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 17 2015 9:40AM) : More order than perhaps is apparent. Also, his, not their.
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Feb 19
Aaron Ferrer Aaron Ferrer (Feb 19 2015 8:06PM) : Usually in a Journal you use it to almost record your activities or movements that day. The use of yesterday and today are what gives it that Journal/Diary feel to it along with the recounts of places visited.
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Feb 20
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:19AM) : Also recording thoughts and impressions.
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 10:58PM) : The tone is short and an outline of events during that time. It is like when writing your thoughts in a journal
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:19AM) : Right
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Feb 19
Chanelle Perrin Chanelle Perrin (Feb 19 2015 11:23PM) : how relaxed and personal the tone of the writing is
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Feb 20
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:20AM) : A diary and journal can be less formal than other kinds of writing.
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Feb 20
M. Hiraiwa M. Hiraiwa (Feb 20 2015 8:49PM) : The language conveys his relaxed mood since his second day in the foreign land was over. The use of first person gives an informal impression. [Edited]
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Feb 21
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:08PM) : right
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Feb 20
Anthony Califano Anthony Califano (Feb 20 2015 9:43PM) : The use of chronology in the first paragraph makes this like a diary entry. Words like: yesterday, today, and then, are all words that express the passing of time and give the reader a sense of direction through the writer's day.
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Feb 21
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:09PM) : narrative is determined by time
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Mar 5
Julissa Soriano Julissa Soriano (Mar 05 2015 11:11PM) : Diary or not? more

The language is reflective, it’s like your talking to the reader and yourself at the same time. It especially sounds like a diary when you say things like “NOOOOOO!” or “I hold my tongue” or even at the very end when you say “go figure.” Also including the time makes it really feel like a diary. You also almost always start off each paragraph with your location which makes it a diary too.

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Mar 6
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 06 2015 7:31AM) : Could a diary suggests greater intimacy, suggesting to the reader that something very private is being revealed? Compare to a memoir or autobiography.
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Mar 18
Julissa Soriano Julissa Soriano (Mar 18 2015 7:12PM) : Could a diary suggest greater intimacy? more

A diary suggest “come into my world and get a glimpse of my life, or a moment that I want to share with you.” London Diary includes your thoughts, and do not necessarily have to be shared with anyone but yourself. A memoir and autobiography has a more narrative feel. In my opinion autobiographies are and memoirs have different mechanics. For example rising action, falling action, and climax. A diary does not have to have any of those aspects. Anything goes.

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Mar 19
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 19 2015 11:04AM) : Yes, anything goes, although some diaries are as carefully crafted as memoirs and autobiographies.
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Mar 10
Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 10 2015 9:55PM) : Response more

Generally, diary entries are written in first person. They are also usually narratives, that tell a sequence of events over a short period of time (like a day).

In this work, I think those exact aspects I listed above makes this a diary. It is written in first person and it details a sequence of events.

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Mar 11
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 11 2015 8:29AM) : Diaries are usally NOT narratives.
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Mar 12
Yasmin Noor Yasmin Noor (Mar 12 2015 12:03PM) : Sentence structure. more

The sentences are shorter and more abrupt, more like a list of some sorts. Of course, there is also specific times mentioned, as well as the use of what day it is (yesterday or today) and a first person view.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:42AM) : More of a focus on the day, yes.
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Mar 12
Arif Bacchus Arif Bacchus (Mar 12 2015 12:47PM) : Personal and Less Grammatical [Edited] more

Its not exactly grammatically correct, especially that beginning sentence, it is brief, and a collection of thoughts.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:43AM) : Grammar may get less attention in a diary.
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Mar 12
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 12 2015 2:42PM) : It is a listing of events. Introducing the importance of your activity as well as the necessary information for you to remember when you look back at it later.
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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:43AM) : Yes, more of a list than a narrative.
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Mar 12
Stephen Herman Stephen Herman (Mar 12 2015 6:36PM) : 1. It's spoken via a 1st person POV. 2. It recounts the writer's activities with timestamps and dates. 3. It recounts random memories from the past and 4. We get the real emotion of the writer that almost read like confessions.
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Mar 12
Stephen Herman Stephen Herman (Mar 12 2015 6:39PM) : And upon a second reading I noticed what Yasmin said about some sentences being short and abrupt. Unedited or un-novelized.
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Mar 13
Gil Vazquez Gil Vazquez (Mar 13 2015 12:40AM) : Yes more

Yes I don’t think most people spend time editing, making rough drafts, spell checking and doing all the things you would in an actual memoir, autobiography or narrative piece.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:46AM) : Diaries are like notes or first drafts, although this diary was edited.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:45AM) : What does un-novelized mean?
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Mar 17
Stephen Herman Stephen Herman (Mar 17 2015 12:20AM) : I made "Novelized" up, sorry. Just a term meaning something in novel form.
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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:45AM) : A diary is a day by day account, not an account of the past. Diaries are immediate; memoirs are retrospective.
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Mar 13
Gil Vazquez Gil Vazquez (Mar 13 2015 12:36AM) : What makes it like a diary more

What makes this a diary is the way the events are listed. You also include dates to document when they took place.

It is different than narrative writing because you can be more loose with your writing.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:47AM) : I'm not sure what you mean by loose.
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Mar 19
Gil Vazquez Gil Vazquez (Mar 19 2015 3:56PM) : as in more

I meant loose as in you don’t have to follow a particular narrative.

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Mar 20
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 20 2015 11:12AM) : ok
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Mar 13
Vony Andriamanantena Vony Andriamanantena (Mar 13 2015 1:16PM) : Candid [Edited] more

The writer is documenting what he found interesting, important, worth noting during his trip to London, just as you would in a journal entry. It’s also personal, unpolished in a sense because you get to see the writer’s candid thought process.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:48AM) : True, although this diary was for publication, so it was edited.
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Mar 18
Julissa Soriano Julissa Soriano (Mar 18 2015 7:19PM) : Unpolished [Edited] more

I think the beauty of this journal entry is that although it was edited, it does not seem like it was because of the way it was written. I think what Vony meant by “unpolished” is it is not arranged to accommodate the reader, rather it is genuine and calls things how it sees it with no fluff.

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Mar 19
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 19 2015 11:06AM) : Yes.
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Mar 13
Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:00PM) : Flow of Conciousness more

The sentences are choppy and the information is factual, as if recalling what had happened through the course of a day.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:49AM) : Factual, yes, but there is also commentary
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Mar 14
Sophia Williams Sophia Williams (Mar 14 2015 12:20AM) : Language of Diary more

The use of first person. Informal language. Date entries. The incorporation of the author’s personal stories.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:49AM) : The idea of an entry or note is key.
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Mar 23
Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath (Mar 23 2015 10:38AM) : first person more

This is a diary because the author uses first person account. It’s also listing what the author did throughout the day.

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Mar 24
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 24 2015 8:27AM) : First person is not enough to define a diary. The second sentence is more accurate, although listing is not an adequate word.
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Nov 3
MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 6:41PM) : The language is shown in an order. The person who writing is telling the actions there went through over the course of a day.
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Nov 3
MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 6:45PM) : The language is shown in an first person aspect. The writer details the actions they made throughout the day.
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Dec 16
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 7:55AM) : he, not they

This morning I arrived at the BL at 9:25. A long queue had formed awaiting the building’s opening. I remarked to a friendly looking chap that if we had been in front of the New York Public Library waiting for it to open, everyone would have been crowded around the entrance in no discernible order. He laughed and said, yes, he had been to New York City. How orderly of the British, I said. In New York it is a free for all, with taxis stopping to pick up fares even if it means holding up traffic and incurring the wrath of drivers quick to get on the horn.

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Aug 25
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:48AM) : What does this paragraph establish about the author?
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Oct 28
Julia Howe Julia Howe (Oct 28 2014 11:14AM) : The author is from New York and perhaps is enjoying the time spent in London a bit more.
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Oct 29
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 29 2014 7:30AM) : Or just curious at the difference between the two cities.
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Dec 16
Mr. Kishan Singh Mr. Kishan Singh (Dec 16 2014 12:39AM) : Although from NYC, a bit eurocentric, and prefers a more orderly setting over a chaotic NYC.
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Dec 16
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 7:55AM) : Why would it be eurocentric to point out the differences between New York and London?
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Oct 31
Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:29AM) : "How orderly of the British." more

The author doesn’t take a side on which he likes better. He is simply just noting the difference.

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Nov 1
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:05AM) : Although some readers might possibly see the reference to New York as a putdown.
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Dec 19
Student Michelle Gontar Student Michelle Gontar (Dec 19 2014 8:34PM) : A bit of juxtaposition between two different "worlds", insight into the writers own frame of reference in terms of city living
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Dec 20
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 20 2014 11:25AM) : Several levels at once in a personal essay is more attractive than just personal reflections.
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Feb 17
Alicea Ulmer Alicea Ulmer (Feb 17 2015 12:18AM) : The author is observant and immediately sees the difference between the two places. The author is used to the crazy frenzy of New York but seemed a little refreshed and maybe taken aback by the order of the British.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 17 2015 9:41AM) : Taken aback or amused. Taken aback is not likely since I've been to London about 40 times, but that may not be clear in this excerpt.
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:03PM) : His expression and experience in living two worlds. The British and New York.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:21AM) : Perhaps a different person depending on place.
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Mar 13
Gil Vazquez Gil Vazquez (Mar 13 2015 12:46AM) : . more

This is true. You can be more laid back in some places while in New York City you have to be more alert and aggressive at times.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:50AM) : Place matters. Hence the title.
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Feb 20
M. Hiraiwa M. Hiraiwa (Feb 20 2015 8:57PM) : He is American since he talks with strangers casually, which is not the case in the UK. He is also curious to know the differences between New York City and London.
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Feb 20
Anthony Califano Anthony Califano (Feb 20 2015 9:48PM) : This paragraph tells us that the author is taken back to memories of New York, particularly referencing NYPL and taxis picking up people on the street. more

I liked how there was contrast noticed by the author between London’s order and New York’s lack of order, otherwise stated as a “free for all”.

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Feb 21
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:10PM) : Order is good but it can be stultifying. [Edited]
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Mar 10
Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 10 2015 10:01PM) : Reply more

In this paragraph, we are able to discern that the author is American, or at least from America. More specifically, the author is familiar with NY and not so familiar with the streets of Britain, since he makes remarks about what NY taxi drivers would do compared to what he is currently seeing in Britain.

In addition, I also think the author is an outgoing fellow since he decided to speak to a stranger.

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Mar 11
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 11 2015 8:32AM) : Actually I'm just as familiar with London since i've been there 40 times. So something else must be operating here.
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Mar 12
Yasmin Noor Yasmin Noor (Mar 12 2015 12:09PM) : Not from his current location. more

This paragraph establishes that the author is not from his current location. He is from New York, but whether he is a native or not is what we don’t know. He’s used to disorganization and a “survival of the fittest” thought process, such as the “free for all” that he mentions.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:51AM) : Right
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Mar 12
Arif Bacchus Arif Bacchus (Mar 12 2015 12:50PM) : Origins and Comparisons more

It establishes where the author is from (New York!) It also offers a comparison between BL and the NY Public Library. It also offers the social commentary on how the author views NY, as they think it is a “feee for all” kind of city

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:51AM) : he, not they.
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Mar 12
Philip Segal Philip Segal (Mar 12 2015 1:14PM) : Philip Segal more

I think the writer is trying to put themselves in Plath’s shoes when she first arrived in London. What might have captivated her? What was profoundly different about the people? People crowding around an entrance as opposed to waiting patiently and neatly says a lot about the culture.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:52AM) : himself,not themselves.
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Mar 12
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 12 2015 2:49PM) : Mixes nostalgia with pride without putting down this new place more

Being from New York makes someone not only very proud of their home, but also makes it much easier to notice the difference between that and other cities. The acknowledgement also shows the author getting a bit nostalgic for his very idiosyncratic home

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:52AM) : Not very proud? I don't understand
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Mar 12
Jailain Hollon Jailain Hollon (Mar 12 2015 5:25PM) : A New York and London contrast. more

The author has established that he is a native from New York and that he has noticed a contrast between the two cities. The contrast the author makes is the difference between the people of London by describing them as orderly, and describing the people of New York as a “free for all”. The author is amused by his observation and the contrast between the two cities.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:53AM) : Not a native.
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Mar 12
Stephen Herman Stephen Herman (Mar 12 2015 6:45PM) : You learn they are a new yorker and is surprised by the civilized manner of people in London. Also with phrases like "holding up traffic" & "wrath of drivers" you get the sense that they do not like the hustle and bustle of NYC & rather the ways of Brits
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:53AM) : Not surprised but curious.
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Mar 13
Gil Vazquez Gil Vazquez (Mar 13 2015 12:45AM) : Comparison more

this paragraph shows his reflection of his home city while in London and depicts how different people act in both cities.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:54AM) : Not a home city exactly.
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Mar 13
Vony Andriamanantena Vony Andriamanantena (Mar 13 2015 1:44PM) : Slight Culture Shock.. more

The writer is having a minor culture shock. It’s typical for New Yorkers to form loose to no lines at all, in England everything is seemingly less hectic and more orderly.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:55AM) : Culture shock is too strong of a word.
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Mar 13
Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:04PM) : Characters in his universe consider him braggy. The reader considers him poetically descriptive. more

The reaction that “a friendly looking chap” had is understandable. It’s like being in the school yard in high school after summer vacation, and someone turns to you and says how much “better/worse” it was in Insert Exotic Country here. But to the reader, the vivid picture is welcomed, especially after the first paragraph which was so sparse and choppy.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:56AM) : sparse like a diary entry.
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Mar 23
Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath (Mar 23 2015 10:41AM) : Traveled from NY more

Establishes that the author has traveled from NY and he sees a vast distinction between London and NYC.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 24 2015 8:28AM) : Vast is an overstatement.
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Oct 30
Zelene Pineda Suchilt Zelene Pineda Suchilt (Oct 30 2014 7:56PM) : he's a new yorker but admires british formality
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:21AM) : Two cultures as they impinge on one sensibility.
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Nov 3
MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 6:53PM) : This paragraph says she is a native New Yorker. She has a full understanding of new york and how it operates.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 7:57AM) : She? Who is she? I wrote the piece, and I am not a native New Yorker.
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I’ve been thinking about what it was like for Sylvia Plath to settle in London in 1959 and die there four years later. It was a different country, then, in some respects. It was still recovering from the war—as I could see when I first visited London in the summer of 1963, about six months after Plath’s death. I had not heard of Plath then and indeed, most Americans had not heard of her and would not until the early 1970s, when Alvarez, more than anyone else, made her known through The Savage God. Alvarez had championed her work even earlier when, as poetry editor of The Observer, he printed poems that almost no one else would touch—certainly not the New Yorker, Plath’s favored venue. Even British literary lights like Karl Miller deemed her work “too extreme” when, in his capacity as an editor at theNew Statesman, he had rejected poems like “Daddy” and “Lady Lazarus.” Alvarez learned about these rejections during a chance meeting with Miller on a London street.

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MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 6:59PM) : The author is defining himself through the understanding of Sylvia Plath's life and work. He compares living in London during the time she lived in London.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 7:57AM) : Right
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Mar 12
Arif Bacchus Arif Bacchus (Mar 12 2015 12:55PM) : Interesting more

I think it is interesting how actual biographical facts about Sylvia Plath get weaved into the entry. Usually diaries are more personal, but here you can see the author giving the reader facts through this entry as well.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:56AM) : Using the diary to accomplish more than one purpose.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:50AM) : How is the author defining himself?
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Oct 31
Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:31AM) : The author is telling the reader that he was alive and knowledgeable about things that could have effected Plath's livelihood, but in no way knew that they had as he didn't even know who Plath was yet.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:05AM) : Connections between biographer and subject that come to light only years later.
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Mar 12
Philip Segal Philip Segal (Mar 12 2015 1:20PM) : reply more

I think this is very interesting, because when the reader think back to London, 1963 when Sylvia Plath passed, the biographer might have thought, “well I was in London just six months after that, I know exactly what it was like back then.”

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:57AM) : A diary can use flashback.
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Dec 19
Student Michelle Gontar Student Michelle Gontar (Dec 19 2014 8:37PM) : The author is finding himself stuck in the present and reminiscing about a different time, trying to see if he can mentally relive the subjet of his fascination as he stands where Plath had been in her own sense finding her writings
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 20 2014 11:26AM) : Finding a way to empathize
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:15PM) : The author is discovering himself in the current and reminiscing over an alternate time, attempting to check whether Plath's life have been affected
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:21AM) : Correct
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Mar 12
Yasmin Noor Yasmin Noor (Mar 12 2015 12:24PM) : Putting himself in her shoes. more

The author is most likely trying to understand what it was like to be Plath at this specific time in her own life, while also discovering his current location on his own. I think this helps the reader understand that this author isn’t only writing about Plath, but really attempts to connect to her surroundings.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:58AM) : To understand the world in which Plath functioned
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Mar 12
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 12 2015 2:57PM) : By wondering what it was like during the time of Plath and noting the recovery, he is humbling himself more

The author is recognizing the courage of Alvarez to publish Plath’s poetry despite how little anyone knew of her back then, including himself.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:59AM) : yes
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Mar 12
Jailain Hollon Jailain Hollon (Mar 12 2015 6:22PM) : The author is defining himself by looking back retrospectively and analyzing his experience walking in Sylvia Plath's shoes. By reminiscing about the past he's giving his original journey in Plath's shoes another look.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 8:59AM) : Right
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Mar 13
Vony Andriamanantena Vony Andriamanantena (Mar 13 2015 1:53PM) : Researcher, Expert... more

He’s introducing himself as a researcher and if not an expert on Sylvia Plath, a fan of hers or both. He does this by building a connection between the London Plath knew (1959), the London he’s seen (1963) and the present-day London.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:00AM) : Fan is not the right word.
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Mar 13
Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:18PM) : He feels superior in intellect more

Referring back to the previous paragraph where the other person’s sarcastic remark about “also being in New York” was lost to the reader, the author is also lost to how perhaps his peers cannot relate or have a healthy discussion regarding people like Sylvia Plath or living/dying in London in 1959. The only place he can have a healthy or fulfilling discussion is in his diar.

I would say the author is defining himself as lonely. Intelligent, but alone in his intelligence.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:00AM) : Lonely? Not 1959.
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Mar 23
Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath (Mar 23 2015 10:45AM) : Well acquainted to the literary world. more

The author well acquainted to the literary world but in his first travel he did not know Plath because she was still in the dim-lights a few years after her death.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 24 2015 8:29AM) : acquainted with
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Plath was the poet Alvarez had dreamed of, since she fulfilled his call for poetry written in Britain to jettison its all-too-genteel gloss and get down to the ground, so to speak. Plath had jumped the queue, and she broke the way the poetic line should flow on to the page. This departure was especially apparent to Alvarez, because she read the poems aloud as performances. I wonder if, in fact, she needed that stately, if shabby, Old World propriety to stage her breakout. Perhaps not, but the cold English climate certainly stimulated her to generate her own heat.

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MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 7:02PM) : This is a setup, it's showing that even in the middle of Winter heat can be made.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:51AM) : Remember the cold English climate. It is a setup for something. What? more

Find the paragraph that connects to this one.

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Oct 30
Jason Javaherian Jason Javaherian (Oct 30 2014 10:00PM) : The cultural differences between Americans and Brits. When describing Alvarez in paragraph 13, he greeted you with "warmth." You establish this line between Plath and England in your own traffic experience.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:31AM) : Yes, as I'm studying my subject, I'm also reflecting on what it is in my own experience that helps me to understand the subject.
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 3:22PM) : In the same way Plath was bearing through the cold months, she also bearing through the standards of poetry, creating her own. more

Plath always loved the warmth and she also killed herself on one of the coldest days. Perhaps this is a metaphor; as she breaks through the confines of what poetry was, she also broke through her comfort zone to adjust.

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Mar 13
Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:21PM) : I agree with this! more

I don’t think I could have said it better myself.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:01AM) : Good analogy.
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Mar 23
Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath (Mar 23 2015 10:48AM) : Cold climate more

I completely agree with this!

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The British publishing house, Heinemann, had—like Alvarez—been quicker to accept Plath’s first book,The Colossus, than any American concern, although Knopf eventually followed suit. There had to be, in other words, rude awakenings at home and in the mother country—as indeed there were, although they were called Beats and “angry young men.” The angry young women would show up a decade later, although they were not so named. When women started “bitching,” as Marion Meade put it in her book bearing that title, and wrote chapters about the fascism of family life that made women merely the props and the servants of the male ego, they discovered the prophetic Plath of “Daddy,” who declared that every woman adores a fascist.

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Plath arrived in London as Mrs. Hughes, since her husband was the first one of this couple to win major literary prizes and fellowships. The city held out some kind of stimulation, I supposed, that Sylvia could not obtain back home. This train of thought led me to look for ways in which the English do jump queues—or at least define places where order and high courtesy do not prevail. When walking in London, I’ve always noticed that as a pedestrian approaches a side street, vehicles do not yield but rush right past. You would think someone in command of a couple thousand pounds of steel would be wary of knocking down a human obstacle. But it is customary, not offensive, for vehicles to command the right of way in these instances. Perhaps this custom arose because there are so many marked crosswalks where vehicles must defer to pedestrians. Any street crossing not so marked is virtually a signal to go ahead without braking. What looks like aggressive driving to me is just normal behavior to the Brit, who has his or her own way of remaining on the go. In other words, each culture, however different, has its own dynamic and idea of what constitutes good behavior and its insulting opposite. The trouble is, we (that is, both sides of the transatlantic cultural coin) don’t always appreciate how our respective cultures encourage as well as retard our initiative.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:52AM) : What implicit comparison is being made between the author's and Plath's arrivals in London?
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Feb 20
Anthony Califano Anthony Califano (Feb 20 2015 9:56PM) : It was noticed that the city "held out some kind of stimulation" that Plath could not obtain from back home. For the author, it was kind of the same thing. more

Unlike New York, the author noted the cultural difference of the right of way in NYC and the opposite in London. Drivers would not yield when pedestrians approached the street, but rushed right past. The author is very observant of the differences and is open minded about them as well.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:12PM) : observing differences that are also part of the book being researched.
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Mar 12
Stephen Herman Stephen Herman (Mar 12 2015 7:00PM) : It implies all cultures have their own way of individuals getting ahead. NYC seems more cut throat; physical. While the Brits way seems more sophisticated. You move up by some sort of status whereas Ny is whoever gets there 1st or cuts you off in line
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:02AM) : Different patterns of behavior.
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Nov 3
MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 7:13PM) : The author wants to get a head start in London at a place where order does not prevail. When this author got to London he understood the differences in culture Plath not so much.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 7:58AM) : This is confusing.
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Ted Hughes’s friends—almost to a man and woman—disliked Sylvia Plath, whom they saw as a pushy, spoiled, self-absorbed American. And she had that side to her, no doubt. She was a go-ahead American, and when Ted married her, that is what he wanted. He didn’t have a clue how to make a life, or a living, as a poet, and Sylvia did. Ted’s friends could not believe how oblivious Sylvia could be of what they considered common courtesy.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:53AM) : Keep in mind the definition of American for what happens later in this diary. What is this paragraph a setup for?
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Oct 28
Julia Howe Julia Howe (Oct 28 2014 11:22AM) : I think the paragraph is used as a setup for what the author, also American, is going to experience while in London.
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Oct 29
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 29 2014 7:32AM) : What is he going to experience and how is it related to Sylvia?
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Oct 30
Jason Javaherian Jason Javaherian (Oct 30 2014 10:02PM) : A culture clash. Like Plath he finds it difficult to be understood.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:32AM) : What is the nature of the culture clash?
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Feb 19
Chanelle Perrin Chanelle Perrin (Feb 19 2015 11:34PM) : The things they we may take for granted, like chewing gum for instance, does not come across as rude to us, however, it was clearly taboo in London.
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Feb 20
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:23AM) : Not necessarily taboo in London per se but in the library. I have since learn chewing gum is not permitted in the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences library in Hollywood.
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Feb 20
M. Hiraiwa M. Hiraiwa (Feb 20 2015 9:29PM) : The norms you take for granted in your own culture don't apply in other cultures. For example, Americans' openness to other people might be perceived as superficial in the UK, since they prefer a much more reserved way of communicating with people.
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Feb 21
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:12PM) : True
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Dec 19
Student Michelle Gontar Student Michelle Gontar (Dec 19 2014 8:45PM) : The dinition of American was chaotic, disorganized and only working out of self interest which was a setup definition of how Ted's friends have perceived Sylvia.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 20 2014 11:27AM) : What was that second word?
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Student Michelle Gontar Student Michelle Gontar (Dec 21 2014 11:51AM) : definition
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Dec 22
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 22 2014 7:48AM) : Ok
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:25PM) : This setup describes why Ted abandon Sylvia. Sylvia did not to understand Ted's Friends. Ted's friends did not understand her
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:23AM) : did not try?
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Chanelle Perrin Chanelle Perrin (Feb 19 2015 11:32PM) : the paragraph is clearly a setup for the writer's personal anecdote about his experiences as an american in London.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:23AM) : There are several setups.
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Feb 20
Anthony Califano Anthony Califano (Feb 20 2015 10:00PM) : There are several set ups provided by this paragraph. The main one revolves around how other cultures may view cultures different from their own. more

So even though Ted liked that Sylvia was the complete opposite of him, a go-ahead American, his friends didn’t understand and couldn’t relate to her personality. What the author is trying to set up here is a connection to his own personal experience in another culture and how people view him differently.

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Feb 21
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:13PM) : Exactly
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Yasmin Noor Yasmin Noor (Mar 12 2015 12:47PM) : "American" more

I think this is set up this way to later describe “American” and how it is viewed by those who are not American. Maybe the words used to describe her are what defines an American for these UK folks.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:02AM) : Yes.
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Mar 12
ry gotterbarn ry gotterbarn (Mar 12 2015 5:29PM) : Why the librarian and the author don't get along. more

One of the setups of this paragraph is to give the reader a better understanding for why the traditional British librarian gave the author such a hard time. The author has already compared himself to Plath with their arrivals, so it’s fair to assume that the author is also “pushy” at times, and a “go-ahead American.” The author, like Plath, is also initially unaware of the cultural divides aforementioned (the queuing, and the crosswalks, explicitly), and as such, wouldn’t be aware that chewing gum in the reading room would not be kosher.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:03AM) : aware, but not aware enough.
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Mar 12
Jailain Hollon Jailain Hollon (Mar 12 2015 8:06PM) : Setting up the perspective of an American foreigner. more

There are a few setups in this paragraph, one is setting up the authors personal experience in dealing with the way people in a foreign country view him as an American. The other is a general setup to how people in native countries view foreigners that are vastly different from them.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:04AM) : Yes, a double focus.
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Mar 13
Vony Andriamanantena Vony Andriamanantena (Mar 13 2015 2:34PM) : No culture is better than the other. more

This paragraph shows the cultural differences between Sylvia and Ted, and how the writer, who’s also an American, can relate to her. To a Brit their cars have the right of way as opposed to Americans, where pedestrians have the right of way. Neither culture is more right or wrong than the other but Ted’s friends seem to judge her according to the standards of their own culture.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:04AM) : Good points
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 3:37PM) : It sort of reminds the reader that many Europeans have a predetermined opinion about Americans, but also that it gets in the way when trying to acclimate to a new city. more

It sets the readers up for what they may already know, but on a more personal scale. If any reader has traveled out of the country, they will relate to any culture clash between themselves and the locals of the new city.
In this case, I would say that Hughes’ friends were pretty stuck up not to realize that Plath came from a different place where the standards are different, and the author differentiates by recognizing the different perspectives when he goes.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:05AM) : Stuck up and resentful.
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Nov 3
MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 7:17PM) : This is the setup that explains why Ted left Sylvia. His friends would not try to understand her and she would not try to understand them.
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Dec 16
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 8:00AM) : Righ
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I know how Sylvia felt, having lived in a British home and spent something like an entire year in the country in the course of taking more than forty trips to the UK since 1963. You would think after that much exposure I would know how to comport myself. And yet like Plath, I can entirely forget my place (as the British might say) and defy the decorum of the occasion or the venue. So there I was on my first day, fresh (well not so fresh) off the plane, rushing to the British Library acutely aware—as Sylvia always was—that time is a-wasting. I didn’t stop to eat, but decided in my bleary-eyed state to subsist on eyedrops and chewing gum until closing time. Fiercely focusing on the file in front of me and heading toward the counter to pick up yet another folder, I was suddenly taken aback by the librarian’s BIG FROWN. As I opened my mouth to make my request, she interrupted: “No chewing in the reading room.” I thought she was going to ask me to stand in the corner. I can easily imagine that Sylvia had the same impact, in countless ways, on the inhabitants of Albion. Actually, I don’t have to imagine how Sylvia offended. All I have to do is read Dido Merwin’s rant against Plath in an appendix to Anne Stevenson’s Plath biography.

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Nov 3
MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 7:19PM) : The use of the word "you" here is talking directly to the reader.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 8:00AM) : Yes
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Mar 12
Yasmin Noor Yasmin Noor (Mar 12 2015 12:55PM) : You. more

“You” is the connection between author and reader, creating a bond over the subject.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:06AM) : It is all about connection.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:53AM) : Why the use of "you"?
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Oct 28
Julia Howe Julia Howe (Oct 28 2014 11:24AM) : Since it is a diary entry the use of "you" may be directed toward himself.
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Oct 29
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 29 2014 7:32AM) : There is another reasons for the use of you.
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Oct 30
Jason Javaherian Jason Javaherian (Oct 30 2014 10:07PM) : Engage the audience, by pointing out his own shortcomings. Gives a chance for the reader to have a laugh at the writers expense.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:32AM) : Quite true.
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Feb 19
Aaron Ferrer Aaron Ferrer (Feb 19 2015 8:17PM) : It is almost as if after he wrote the sentence before "you", he thought to himself that it was almost impossible not to have learned how to behave after all those trips. A sort of comic relief as a previous student mentioned.
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Feb 20
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:24AM) : Yes, comc relief.
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:26PM) : Talking to the readers to engage more in his writings
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:24AM) : Yes, talking directly to readers.
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Mar 10
Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 10 2015 10:10PM) : Reply more

A few thoughts come to mind:

1) Using ‘you’ when speaking is something a lot of people do. I find myself using it without realizing. It is possible that when the author first formed the sentence in his mind, that was most natural.

2) ‘You’ could be referring to himself. It sounds like a mental note. He recalls past incidents and realizes too late he should have acted a different way, given his experiences.

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Mar 11
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 11 2015 8:34AM) : Yes, and there are still more possibilities.
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Mar 12
Jailain Hollon Jailain Hollon (Mar 12 2015 8:16PM) : The author's use of the word "you" is to engage with the reader and provide some comedic entertainment for them. It also severs as a method of bonding with the reader over the authors experience and the subject, Sylvia Plath.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:07AM) : putting the reader in the writer's place
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 3:41PM) : No matter how much he goes, he's still vulnerable to changes in societal standards more

While writing this, the writer may have been on a roll and using “you” felt most natural to him. He is talking about a particular experience with himself where Plath is not directly involved, therefore he allows himself the room for comic relief.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:07AM) : True
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If Al Alvarez became Sylvia's steadfast friend toward the end of her life, it is because he is so thoroughly English and yet so utterly comfortable with America and Americans. Unlike Ted Hughes, who disliked what he called cellophane-wrapped America when he arrived there in 1957, Alvarez reveled in his American interludes. He greeted me with extraordinary warmth and a feeling of instant camaraderie—exactly the sort of openness that Ted Hughes scorned in the Americans he met, since he could not believe it was anything more than a habit of superficial agreeability. I imagine Sylvia found it restful to be in Alvarez’s company. He was such a receptive listener and an astute critic. I can’t tell the whole story here, but by the end of my three hours with him, he was reading to me from his diary, which recounted a shocking event that will have its place in the last chapter of my Plath biography.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:54AM) : Comparing our experience to another's is a way of telling your story. How does that work here?
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Oct 30
Jason Javaherian Jason Javaherian (Oct 30 2014 10:19PM) : They mirror one another. Both being in similar professions, Americans who have spent significant time in England. Gives the entry credibility.
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Oct 31
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:33AM) : Yes, it is one way to establish authority and the reader's consent, so to speak.
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Oct 31
Sebastian Lema Sebastian Lema (Oct 31 2014 4:44PM) : It's a way of getting two different perspectives to have a more constructed story. It also works as a way to put yourself in a persons shoes helping to be more objective since similar experiences are shared or can be related. [Edited]
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:06AM) : More objective but maybe also more subjective.
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:35PM) : The similarities of one another. Both being Americans who have time in England and same path.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:25AM) : Yes, certain parallels are established.
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 3:58PM) : If Al Alvarez became Sylvia's steadfast friend toward the end of her life, it is because he is so thoroughly English and yet so utterly comfortable with America and Americans more

Because the author had a good experience with Al Alvarez, he makes it much easier for us to understand what made Plath close to him. Because we are reading what the writer is writing, it is important for the writer to include his own experiences so that he can also have a better understanding of his subject.
“He greeted me with extraordinary warmth and a feeling of instant camaraderie” This also allows the reader to trust the writer more because we can see that the writer trusts this source based on this warming sentence.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:09AM) : The biographer experiences what Plath experienced in Alvarez's company.
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Nov 3
MR. Darrell Morrison MR. Darrell Morrison (Nov 03 2014 7:23PM) : It works well because it allows the author to dispaly his and Sylvia thoughts at the same time.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Dec 16 2014 8:01AM) : I hope so.
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Thursday, January 12

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9:15: Off for another day at the British Library. No gum this time. I rather feel like my daughter when she was about six or seven, visiting me after her mother and I had divorced. Amelia had to adjust to the new regime, so to speak. Her Daddy had a new wife quite different from Mom. This was, I seem to recall, my daughter’s second trip to Detroit, where I was living then. She had flown from New Jersey, escorted by a flight attendant down the ramp into my awaiting arms. When we arrived at my apartment, Amelia looked around and sat down on the couch. How was she feeling? I asked. “Fine,” she said. She always said “fine” when I asked her that question. But this time, she sighed happily and said, “And I know all the rules.” I laughed and didn’t inquire further. This is rather a long-winded of saying, as I finish this sentence, that I feel like announcing to the librarian of the BIG FROWN, “I know all the rules.”

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Aug 25
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:55AM) : In what ways is this diary about "knowing all the rules."
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:38PM) : The library has rules. Sometimes it is annoying when a librarian has to remind you. As he recalls asking his daugther if she is fine. She gets annoyed. How gets the idea
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Feb 20
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:25AM) : I don't understand the last sentence.
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Mar 12
Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 11:02PM) : Reply more

To write well, one needs to understand the rules of writing. Not just understand them, but also know how to use the rules in writing. I think this diary is about “knowing all the rules” because it is written well.

Usually, a diary is informal. One’s thoughts do not follow a set of rules; instead, diaries are used to capture thoughts and feelings as one recalls a memory or an event. This is a narrative written in a diary-form. And to write a narrative well, let alone one in diary-form, one must know the writing rules.

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Mar 14
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:10AM) : Good point: a diary in narrative form for publication.
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:05PM) : Knowing all the rules of being a good biographer and writer more

In terms of following the rules of writing a biography, the writer must know them all to stay credible and accurate.
A biography, I would imagine, is a difficult thing to write because you must be very careful about perspective, voice, and accuracy. Because the author has done this many times, it’s easy for him to feel like a child when he is told to do something like follow a small rule, although any small rule broken and create a domino effect into larger rules broke. But he knows this already.

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10:05: “You haven’t tied it properly.” So says you know who. I give her a look (use your imagination). She gives me a look (ditto). Silently she re-ties the collection of files (drafts of Ted Hughes self-exculpatory Birthday Letters). I then carry back to my desk the next folder, which must be placed inside a large box (maybe 2 feet by 18 inches). It would be more convenient if I could put it all flat next to my iPod Touch and keyboard. “BUT NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!” as John Belushi used to say.

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Aug 25
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:56AM) : Why is the reader asked to "use your imagination."
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Oct 31
Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:37AM) : The reader can draw on this experience and compare it to a similar dynamic they have with their own family member.
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Nov 1
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:07AM) : Right.
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Oct 31
Thomas Moy Thomas Moy (Oct 31 2014 1:06PM) : connect more

It gives a chance for the reader to connect with the author as one would imagine the face the author would portray from how he portrays his feelings from the whole article till this paragraph

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:07AM) : right.
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:42PM) : It gives the reader to experience to link with the author. To see the author emotions
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:26AM) : I think you need to proofread your responses. They sometimes come out a litle garbled.
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ry gotterbarn ry gotterbarn (Mar 12 2015 5:35PM) : Connection to the author. more

The author uses it to bring the reader closer in; by asking the reader to “imagine” two looks of indignation, the author is putting the reader into his shoes, as the reader is recollecting a past experience. The request by the author enriches the connection the reader can make to him, as the reader has undoubtedly had a similar experience.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:11AM) : Just as the biographer is putting himself in Plath's shoes.
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Mar 12
Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:58PM) : Reply more

It allows the reader to know exactly how the author feels, because the reader can picture herself giving someone that look. The “use your imagination” thing also goes along with the author’s humorous/sarcastic tone.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:11AM) : Showing, not just telling.
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Yasmin Noor Yasmin Noor (Mar 13 2015 2:32AM) : Comical. more

The phrase is not only comical, but down to earth and gives the reader a chance to pause and understand the images being shaped in their own minds. They get a moment to experience the description being formulated by the writer.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:12AM) : Correct
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Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:09PM) : The author here is giving permission for the readers imagination to run wild. more

It is more comic relief set up to enhance the personality of the writer.
When people talk about a certain look given to other certain people who have a reputation, there is an existing assumption of what that look is. The author here is giving permission for the readers imagination to run wild.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:12AM) : Yes!
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Sean Reeder Sean Reeder (Mar 13 2015 5:43PM) : Asking the reader to "use their imagination" allows one to draw their own conclusions and personalize the imagery versus having everything described. In a sense, it allows the imagery to almost be more vivid.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:13AM) : The writer wants the reader to do some work and not remain passive.
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Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:23PM) : Shared Experience more

The author is allowing the reader to empathize by giving them the opportunity to bring in their own experiences into the narrative.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:13AM) : I agree.
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Feb 20
Meghan Farrell Meghan Farrell (Feb 20 2015 11:59PM) : It allows the reader to re-live the authors words and make observations through their own eyes. Imagination offers a visual angle to the conclusion. This makes the reader feel more engaged and more connected with the text.
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Feb 21
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:14PM) : ok
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3:00: I’ve run out of my quota of requests for the day. No more file folders for me! No one told me I could make only ten requests. That may seem a lot, but sometimes I’m fishing—that is, I can’t tell from the catalogue description whether the folder I request will have anything pertaining to my concerns. So some folders I dispatch in a minute; others need a half hour or more. And to request a folder is a nightmare entailing a multi-step process, with nearly every step requiring me to re-enter my library pass number. And since I can only request four items at a time, I’m at the mercy of the librarians who don’t always remember to enter in the system that I’ve already returned a folder. So I keep getting messages that I have reached the limit of my requests, even after I’ve returned several folders.

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3:10: After sitting in dejection for a few minutes, I return to the front desk to see if I am really out of requests and learn that I could apply to get one more precious folder. The librarian asks me to write down the catalog number on a slip he hands me. Now, mind you, I have NO documents on my desk, and I write the number on the slip he gives me. When I turn it in, he scrutinizes the slip and then says, “Is that a pen?” At first, I don’t take in what he’s asking. I think he means I’ve left something out in the arcane number codes. BUT NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! He’s telling me that only pencils can be used in the Reading Room. Okay, I know that, but I’m not using the pen to take notes. I just absentmindedly used what was available. Crikey. I want to tell him to bugger off. But I hold my tongue. Did these guys by any chance read my rant a few columns ago about how I hate the way modern day archives are run? After I wrote that column, a friend said to me, “Aren't you worried about burning your bridges?” All I can say now is show me some more bridges to burn.

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Aug 25
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:57AM) : What comic actor was famous for using this phrase?
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Oct 28
Stephanie Kotsikonas Stephanie Kotsikonas (Oct 28 2014 8:42PM) : John Belushi
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Oct 29
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 29 2014 7:33AM) : Correct.
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:44PM) : Saturday night live John Belushi
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Feb 20
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:26AM) : Correct
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ry gotterbarn ry gotterbarn (Mar 12 2015 5:47PM) : Specifically Belushi would use this phrase in the SNL sketches where something nonsensical is reality (i.e. "You'd think it'd be Australia, BUT NO!!!!"). The reader here is showing a relatable exasperation to the situation at hand.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:14AM) : Quite so.
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Mar 12
Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:01PM) : Question more

Although I’m not familiar with the actor you are referring to (I now know said man is Belushi from the comments), did you write that line in the diary while thinking of the actor? Or was that a realization after going back and re-reading what you had written?

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:14AM) : I was imitating Belush.
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Yasmin Noor Yasmin Noor (Mar 13 2015 2:34AM) : Belushi! more

John Belushi! Not only does this add to the comical sense, but I think it also adds an American edge to the author, who originally mentions NYC in the beginning of the diary.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:15AM) : Right. Belushi humor with an American edge.
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Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:24PM) : Belushi!!
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:57AM) : What does Crikey mean? And why is it used here?
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Oct 28
Stephanie Kotsikonas Stephanie Kotsikonas (Oct 28 2014 8:46PM) : "Crikey" is an expression of surprise. Here, it is being used in annoyance. Its use in this article is similar to the way we use "geez" if we are being pressed by others.
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Oct 29
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 29 2014 7:33AM) : No more specific meaning to crikey?
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Oct 30
Stephanie Kotsikonas Stephanie Kotsikonas (Oct 30 2014 3:34PM) : It may be a euphemism of "Christ"
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Oct 31
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:33AM) : yes.
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Thomas Moy Thomas Moy (Oct 31 2014 1:06PM) : Christ more

JESUS CHRIST!

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:07AM) : yes
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Sebastian Lema Sebastian Lema (Oct 31 2014 4:50PM) : Probably an equivalent to jeez or Christ.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:07AM) : Right.
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Alicea Ulmer Alicea Ulmer (Feb 17 2015 12:25AM) : It's an expression of surprise but here it's more of annoyance like "oh my god" the author was annoyed about being bugged for something so small.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 17 2015 9:42AM) : Right
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Chanelle Perrin Chanelle Perrin (Feb 19 2015 11:39PM) : It's basically like a 'come on!' moment. The author clearly feels the practices of the library are tedious and unnecessary
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Feb 20
Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:27AM) : An annoyance, maybe even an effort to exert a sort of supperiority and control.
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Feb 19
Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:46PM) : Oh my god! annoyed
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:27AM) : yes.
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M. Hiraiwa M. Hiraiwa (Feb 20 2015 9:59PM) : It is an informal expression of surprise used in the UK. It is used to show his annoyance.
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Feb 21
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:14PM) : yes
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Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:05PM) : Response more

In my mind, I see Crikey as “WTF” or “jeez.” Or really any other word people say when caught off guard or when surprised.

I don’t hear this term used now, but I remember hearing Steve Irwin (The Crocodile Hunter) use this word this a lot.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:16AM) : That's right
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:14PM) : Equal or approximate value to "Blimey!" Adjusting to the slang language of the country
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:16AM) : Correc.
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Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:26PM) : "Jesus" or "God" as a frustrated utterance.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:16AM) : or exasperated.
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One more folder, and then I’m going to get a drink!

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At least the last folder is a find: Sylvia’s description of the folk around Court Green. She took more of an interest in the locals than Ted did. She describes the birth of her son, a big boy weighing almost ten pounds. Giving birth to him had made her feel like her insides were being torn out, and yet the midwife announced that Plath had not suffered a scratch.

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The free wifi is nice, except that anytime I put my iPod to sleep, I have to log back in and promise not to do anything obscene. How did they know I had been tempted to cock a snook at the staff.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:58AM) : What does cock a snook mean? Why is it used here?
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Oct 29
Hmayak (Mike) Aghajanov Hmayak (Mike) Aghajanov (Oct 29 2014 4:54PM) : When you put your thumb on the tip of your nose and waggle with fingers. A gesture that means kind of intentional disrespect in England. [Edited]
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 30 2014 8:33AM) : That's it
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Mar 12
Philip Segal Philip Segal (Mar 12 2015 1:34PM) : it means a gesture using your hands and face more

Obviously you were getting annoyed by all the Library’s rules that you seemed to find obstructive. By ‘cocking a snook at the staff’ you are showing your feelings towards the records office, staff and rules.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:17AM) : with a very specific gesture.
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ry gotterbarn ry gotterbarn (Mar 12 2015 6:02PM) : An expression to show you're fed up with the rules. more

While not obscene, the childish gesture would be used by the author to mock how stuck-up the British librarians are, as well as the library’s archaic rules and traditions. Using the phrase “to cock a snook” at the staff is also important because it is a traditionally British form of insult, rather, than say the middle-finger. Using a outdated British insult at an outdated British person/institue is a use of irony by the author to further show the reader the extent of his contempt.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:17AM) : Yes
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Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:09PM) : Reply more

It means to gesture disrespectfully with your hands.

I think it’s used somewhat ironically here, in order to show the author’s tone. When people agree to use the internet in public spaces, the rules say that you should not be using the internet for an obscene or inappropriate business. Instead of noting that, the author goes and comments on how he wants to make obscene gestures at the people working in the library.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:18AM) : Not exactly obscene, but rude
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:16PM) : This author has been through quite a few minor predicaments with the staff at this library, he is using this childish and disrespectful hand gesture to express his exasperation
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:18AM) : Yes
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Here’s a nice little bit I read in one of Sylvia’s descriptions of a Devon home interior: “The typical British wallpaper—a pale beige embossed with faintly sheened white roses, the effect of cream scum patterns on weak tea.” Thus is your habitat immortalized, Rose and Percy Key!

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:59AM) : What is Sylvia Plath doing that the author of the dairy is also doing?
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Mar 12
Philip Segal Philip Segal (Mar 12 2015 1:36PM) : Observing the British more

The writer reads a little bit of Slyvia Plath’s writing he has found where she is making an observation of a British household. The writer in this diary entry has been making observations and passing judgments about English folk all along.

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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:19AM) : Right
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ry gotterbarn ry gotterbarn (Mar 12 2015 6:08PM) : Remarking how bland the British seem to be. more

Both the American author and Sylvia Platt remark at how boring the British can be—“pale beige embossed with faintly sheened white roses,” does not a vibrant environment make. However, going back to the author’s earlier notes in paragraph 10, “The trouble is, we (that is both sides of the transatlantic cultural coin) don’t always appreciate how our respective cultures encourage as well as retard our initiative.” While a British person may see a modest and homely looking room as normal, an American person will see as boring and antiquated.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:19AM) : True
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Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:19PM) : Both are recognizing the bland typicality of British décor as opposed to that of American. The author is sort of bonding with it.
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Professor Carl Rollyson

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:20AM) : Bonding, yes.
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4:45: I can’t take it anymore. I’m out of here.

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5:30: Spent the evening with an old friend complaining about the British Library. She is an American working for a banking firm in London. She supplied me with many more examples of the overcomplicated British way of doing things. It’s built into the language, I observe: “Why say pressured when you can say pressurized?” I tell her, picking a word I’ve often heard on British newscasts. And have you ever noticed the way British historians use the passive voice? Deadly.

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And yet Sylvia Plath chose London over New York or Boston or any other American homeground. I’ve come here often for holidays, but also to research the lives of Martha Gellhorn, Rebecca West, Jill Craigie, and now Sylvia Plath. What is it that attracted them—and me?

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Friday, January 13

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11:15: I’m in Hampstead, in a Starbucks, enjoying the free wifi. I’ve just returned an article I borrowed from Al Alvarez, and I’m writing this diary and also waiting for Keats House to open. Amy Lowell, the subject of one of my long-term biographical projects, wrote a biography of Keats and was instrumental in making sure his Hampstead house remained a national treasure. In doing so, she not only spent her own money for its refurbishment, but also enlisted a legion of American contributors to do so. Call it a literary foreign aid program.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 10:59AM) : What does Alvarez represent in this diary about an American in London?
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Mar 13
Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:23PM) : He is likeable and reinforces a reason for Plath's loyalty. more

The salvation in a way, he kind of represents the saving grace. The stuck up attitude that an American would experience in London would be diluted with a character like Alvarez. He is likeable and reinforces a reason for Plath’s loyalty.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:20AM) : Good phrase: saving grace.
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1:00: On the way to Keats’s house, I walk down Pilgrim’s Lane and stop at #66, which used to be Michael Foot’s home. Sold after he died a few years ago, it is being rehabbed, gutted, which does not surprise me since during my three years of visiting Michael (2000–03) I saw the home deteriorating. Michael did not see the disrepair. He was in his mid-ninties and just happy to remain in the home that his wife, Jill Craigie, picked out in 1963 and then refurbished. Jill had a wonderful sense of decor and design, but Michael did not have her eye or her interests. I wanted to say to the workman at Pilgrim’s Lane, “Do you know you are demolishing a bit of history: the home of the Labour Party leader who ran against Margaret Thatcher in 1983?”

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 11:01AM) : Actually, the owner of the house wrote to me after reading this article and invited me to visit. What does that tell you about the power of words?
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Oct 31
Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:41AM) : You weren't exactly saying the house was in the best of shape, but you did view it with a sense of respect and admiration, which I'm sure the owner agreed and enjoyed.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:09AM) : At this point the house was refurbished and was ultra modern and in immaculate shape. [Edited]
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Mar 12
Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:21PM) : Reply more

That words transcend people, places and time. Before reading this, the owner had a certain view of the house. After reading this, the owner’s view began to change since you comment on the previous owner and his quirks and attachments.

The author writes that he wants to say “Do you know you are demolishing a bit of history: the home of the Labour Party leader who ran against Margaret Thatcher in 1983?” to the workman. The owner also gave the author the opportunity to speak those words, and if he did, also get an answer.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:21AM) : right
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Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:26PM) : The power of words is great. more

The power of words is great. It can make people change their views about substantial topics. In this case, the author touched someone who owned a home that had such a greater meaning than they possibly knew. Just by reading this article, a series of events were able to happen afterwards.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:22AM) : An example of how writing can make a connection.

Keats House is just a few streets down. It looks more imposing than it was in Keats’s day. A later owner put an addition on the house, but inside the scale of the rooms, the furnishings, are pretty close to what Keats had known. Although the brochure mentions the house was redone in the 1920s, I’m aggrieved to see that Lowell is not mentioned. Without her funds and her magnificent organizing efforts, the house might well have been lost to posterity.

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Saturday, January 14

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At the train station on the way to Cornwall. I notice a sign saying that if you are drunk and disorderly, you can enjoy the walk home. In other words, the rail management reserves the right to refuse rowdy passengers. I recall my friend last night noting how much her British fellow employees drink just as soon as the workday is over.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 11:01AM) : How does this paragraph fit into the theme of the diary?
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Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:43AM) : It furthers the point that this is an American in England, and they handle things differently.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:10AM) : Handle things differently means what? Why aren't there such signs in American train stations?
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Arif Bacchus Arif Bacchus (Mar 12 2015 1:01PM) : To answer this Q more

Perhaps it is because of the values of English society? It shows the difference in culture. The English respect their train system so they do not want drunkards riding it. Or maybe it is just a cultural thing? Too many drunks riding the trains, so there must be a rule against it?

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:23AM) : There is more public drunkenness in London than in NYC.
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Anthony Califano Anthony Califano (Feb 20 2015 10:11PM) : This paragraph fits in the theme of the diary because it supports the overall theme that two cultures can be completely different on how they govern their societies. more

For example, there is no such sign in American train stations, because the culture is different and maybe this “rule” is more self explanatory for the American people that they don’t need a reminder. This sentence: “I recall my friend last night noting how much her British fellow employees drink just as soon as the workday is over” … goes to show that the British people like to drink after a long day of work and for that reason, there are signs in train stations that prohibit drunk behavior.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:15PM) : Actually there seems to be more public drunknness in London than in New York.
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ry gotterbarn ry gotterbarn (Mar 12 2015 6:15PM) : Shows the dismissive British nature. more

I agree with the others who said that this paragraphs furthers the idea of a cultural divide between England and America, however it’s dismissive message also furthers the idea of judgmental Brits the author encounters. “Enjoy the walk home,” is a sarcastic statement that insults the disorderly drunk more than it needs to. The sign would suffice with the author’s paraphrasing (“The rail management reserves the right to refuse rowdy passengers”).

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:24AM) : Maybe
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Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:32PM) : It's just another way that the author brings us in to his head and what goes through it during his journeys. more

The overall theme is very casual, easy going and personal. This fits in because it is also personal, the author notices something different and new in London and it brings him back to a moment in the past that relates to it somehow.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:25AM) : Connecting past and present through experiences in other cultures.
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Sean Reeder Sean Reeder (Mar 13 2015 5:47PM) : This really exemplifies the tongue-in-cheek, dry humor the British are famous for and the Americans do not always understand.
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Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:54PM) : Sassy! more

Yes I agree, and I think its great!

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:25AM) : Understatement.
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12:30: A splendid time in Cornwall with Elizabeth Sigmund, one of Sylvia’s friends, who has wonderful memories and papers to share. One startling moment: Her recollection of Ted’s reaction to Sylvia’s death about a month later, when Elizabeth visited him: “It’s not given to every man to murder a genius.” “You didn’t murder her,” Elizabeth replied. “I might as well have done,” he concluded.

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5:30: Elizabeth’s husband drives me to the Weary Friar Inn, near the small village of Pillaton.

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6:30: Down from my cozy top floor room for dinner, I enter the pub-like dining room, order a Guinness, and scrutinize the menu. The locals give me a friendly, curious look, and I decide to do a Sylvia Plath—that is, take part in the badinage in the vicinity of my table. As the waitress approaches, I am primed, waiting to take the pitch. “It says here,” I speak up, as though I am about to express a community concern about the dinner menu, “you have award-winning local sausages. But I’m partial to the liver and bacon. However, it does not appear to have won any awards.” Debate at the bar ensues—one patron advancing the motion that the links may be too sweet. But he fails to attract a second, and after a respectful silence I announce my vote for the porkers. Tactful smiles all round in deference to the one dissenter. For the nonce, I’m included in the conversation, and though I don’t have much to say, everyone is pleased by the way I polish off my sausages, capping off the meal with local blackberry ice cream.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 11:02AM) : Compare with the scene in the British library.
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ry gotterbarn ry gotterbarn (Mar 12 2015 6:18PM) : Shows that the Library is the problem, not the British people. more

In the more local and less stuffy pub, the British people are more likely to accommodate the American. This is probably due to the library and it’s employees being more old-fashioned and conservative than a typical London environment/citizen.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:26AM) : Institutional behavior.
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Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:29PM) : Reply more

The library is an orderly, serious place, and the dining room is open and friendly. At the library, the author holds his tongue; at the restaurant, he doesn’t and makes a comment about the sausages.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:27AM) : Different places, different behaviors
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Sunday, January 15

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A breakfast of perfectly prepared poached eggs on toast. I memorialize the event in the inn’s guestbook. Then a marvelous morning walk overlooking beautiful felt-green valleys. Returning to the inn, I notice a wall that notes this building dates back to the twelfth century. It’s the kind of historic site that excited Sylvia. She had a tumulus on her Devon property and loved to think of it as a Roman remnant.

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Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:47PM) : Author becomes Sylvia more

I’ve heard that when some actors take on a role, they practice the part by literally becoming that character by talking, acting and thinking by said character.

Throughout the excerpt, I’ve noticed that the author is doing the same thing – he is, in ways, becoming Sylvia Plath. He is quick to note what she enjoyed or would have noticed. He is adopting her character in order to be able to write about her.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:27AM) : Biography can be like acting.
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12:30: Actually it has been recently discovered that the mound is a Norman site, Elizabeth tells me during another afternoon of talk. When I compliment her husband William on his fine onion tart, which I am devouring, Elizabeth reminds me that Sylvia was a lusty eater. Then she recalls eating a meal with Sylvia balancing her baby boy Nicholas on her lap. “Watch his eyes,” she told Elizabeth. “See that greedy look? He’s making sure he gets his share.”

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7:00: On the train back to London, the conductor is asking for tickets. I produce mine with alacrity and am rewarded with, “Smashing.” Yes indeed, the pilgrimage to Pillaton has been . . . well, smashing.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 11:03AM) : Can you imagine a train conductor saying such a thing in the U.S.? Why not?
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Jason Javaherian Jason Javaherian (Oct 30 2014 10:13PM) : Maybe on a train somewhere in North Carolina, but in NY I would bet the mortgage that this would never happen. Too busy, too fast paced, too crude.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Oct 31 2014 8:34AM) : Maybe even considered unprofessional.
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Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:44AM) : I think its even interesting that the conductor was the one asking for the tickets, let alone commenting on where you are going. Not something that I have ever experienced in my travels.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:11AM) : It is not that unusual for a conductor to take tickets on American trains.
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M. Hiraiwa M. Hiraiwa (Feb 20 2015 10:15PM) : I take NJ transit to commute every day, and it is normal for conductors to start up conversations with passengers. So, for me, the scene the author described is normal.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 21 2015 6:15PM) : Good point.
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Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:46PM) : I agree with this. I take the long island rail road and the conductors there do the same. Besides the word "smashing" being replaced by a simple "you're good" or an "alright thanks", this is not foreign to me.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:29AM) : The compliments tend to be more exaggerated on British trains. Smashing means a lot more than "you're good."
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Arif Bacchus Arif Bacchus (Mar 12 2015 1:03PM) : Nope more

Again, difference in culture. This sort of language is not professional and has been dead in America for a long time now. The Conductor in America would probably just say “Good Day” or “Safe Travels” or something else.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:30AM) : yes
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Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:53PM) : Reply more

I think it depends on the person and the place. While 9 times out of 10, someone wouldn’t say that, people do.

Earlier this year, I was on a train going home to NJ with two friends. One friend had a donut and the worker collecting tickets had asked if she planned on sharing, since we (another friend & I) didn’t have a donut either.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:31AM) : More likely to happen on a British train.
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Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 13 2015 11:57PM) : Sure more

Conductors are human, and when I take the LIRR they’re pretty friendly. I think we tend to forget that when we take the MTA and the only thing that makes us aware of the conductor is the garble from the PA system.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:32AM) : More than friendliness is the issue.
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It’s rather wonderful the way the British brighten up mundane transactions. Martha Gellhorn once explained why she loved riding London buses, recalling the time a ticket taker accepted her offering with a cheerful sally, “Thank you, my blossom.”

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Monday, January 6

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An uneventful return to Philadelphia airport. Customs man asks me what I’ve been doing abroad. “Researching a writer,” I reply. And to my surprise he launches into how much he loves the writing of Somerset Maugham.

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Go figure.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Aug 25 2014 11:03AM) : Why is this an appropriate ending to the diary?
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Mr. Douglas Cosgriff Mr. Douglas Cosgriff (Oct 31 2014 11:45AM) : Because it is a diary, the author's conclusion is almost for himself alone, and "go figure" follows the same pattern of engaging the audience in something they can relate to.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:12AM) : More is intended here than you suggest.
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Thomas Moy Thomas Moy (Oct 31 2014 1:07PM) : it says more

It says “I can’t tell you anything more, I think you can get it with all the information I gave you”

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Nov 01 2014 8:12AM) : The ending means other things as well.
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Chanelle Perrin Chanelle Perrin (Feb 19 2015 11:55PM) : I think it was important to the author to put an american Euphemism at the end of the diary. It ties his current emotion with coming back to America. more

The entire time in London he was consistently missing the mark with how to adapt to the British customs, going along with a sort of “when in Rome” attitude. However, he is home, and although he expected probably a short conversation with the customs guy, he clearly still got more out of the interaction than he expected, the irony, “Go figure.”

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:28AM) : Right.
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Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) Junior Martinez (JRN 3900) (Feb 19 2015 11:58PM) : Many read good writers works but don't know about their life.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Feb 20 2015 7:28AM) : Very true.
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Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:37PM) : Reply more

Since it is a diary, the author can end it the way he seems fit.

But personally, I think it is a good ending. In the beginning of this excerpt, the author focuses on people’s actions and responses around him. But the author is American and he notes British people. At the end of the diary, he’s back in the states and comments on an American’s response. This not only ends the diary with the author’s sarcastic tone, but also in a way, is the beginning of a new observation.

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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:33AM) : This diary has a shape. Not all diaries do.
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Annie Paul Annie Paul (Mar 13 2015 4:49PM) : It not only leaves the piece ending on a good note, but it ties in with the whole tone of the piece. Very casual and witty. more

Not to mention the irony of coming back home to the states and the first interaction there was the conversation about Maugham.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:34AM) : Yes, irony.
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Carl Rollyson is Professor of Journalism at Baruch College, The City University of New York. He reviews biographies regularly for The Wall Street Journal, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, and other newspapers and periodicals. Carl is the author of a dozen biographies, including Marilyn Monroe: A Life of the Actress, Rebecca West: A Modern Sibyl, and with his wife, Lisa Paddock, Susan Sontag: The Making of an Icon. His studies of biography include: A Higher Form of Cannibalism: Adventures in the Art and Politics of Biography and Biography: A User's Guide. More about Carl and his work can be found at his website. His Hollywood Enigma: Dana Andrews will appear this fall and American Isis: The Life and Death of Sylvia Plath in the spring of 2013. When not writing, he is playing with his two Scotties.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Jan 21 2015 9:06AM) : What are the advantages of taking a diary-like approach to narrative? What are the disadvantages?
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Hayley Bifulco Hayley Bifulco Hayley Bifulco Hayley Bifulco (Mar 05 2015 12:53PM) : A diary-like approach puts the reader directly into the narrator's head. Diaries are written to express feelings and recall experiences. The successes and failures of the writer become personal to the reader. Diaries also limit perspective for the reader. more

A disadvantage of diary-style narrative is a limited first person perspective. What the reader learns is through the retelling of the writer. If you read two separate diary entries from two different writers about the same event, the entries are going to be different. One of them may have remembered a detail completely different than the other and then the reader is unsure of which detail is true.

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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 06 2015 7:29AM) : And what would be the difference between a diary first person and first narrative in a novel, short story, or memoir?
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Hayley Bifulco Hayley Bifulco Hayley Bifulco Hayley Bifulco (Mar 06 2015 8:23AM) : A diary is mainly about the writer's full participation in events. A first person narrative to a novel or short story could be more of an observation. It could be full participation also. I guess a diary has more room to tangent from the main story.
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 07 2015 8:31AM) : Your last point is most important. With a diary you can go off in tangents. The narrative, if there is one, is looser.
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Stephen Herman Stephen Herman (Mar 12 2015 7:05PM) : It's more engaging. More personal. It connects with readers because it reads like their own thoughts and makes the story more real. It seems like a glimpse into the writers head and not just show of their writing talents.
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Mar 14
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:35AM) : Diaries can capture thought patterns.
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Stephen Herman Stephen Herman (Mar 12 2015 7:09PM) : On the other hand, it can be a disadvantage because being so personal may turn some readers away. If you're telling your story in real time accounts, it can easily become boring or mundane. It's hard to spice up things when they are straight to the point
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Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:36AM) : Yes, there is risk.
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Alison Ng Alison Ng (Mar 12 2015 10:44PM) : Reply more

With a diary-like approach, it is easier to tell a story in parts, since diaries are formed by focusing on different aspects/times of day in different passages.

At the same time, I think telling a story in parts like that makes it more difficult to tell a story well. It’s one thing to write in diary-form; it is another thing to connect the dots and create a well-constructed narrative from it.

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A University of Toronto Ph.D, Rollyson has published more … (more)

Mar 14
Professor Carl Rollyson

A University of Toronto Ph.D, Rollyson has published more … (more)

Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:37AM) : Diaries can be fragmentary.
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Mar 14
Katherine Pangilinan Katherine Pangilinan (Mar 14 2015 12:00AM) : Personable but Too Personable more

I love diary format pieces because I find that they are quite compelling. The narrator is completely candid, allowing readers to really get to know what’s going on inside their head. At the same time, much of what is in their head doesn’t make sense without context, which is sparsely given. After all, why would someone recount the context of a situation explicitly when they can call it “THAT” event and know exactly what it is the diary passage is referring to.

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A University of Toronto Ph.D, Rollyson has published more … (more)

Mar 14
Professor Carl Rollyson

A University of Toronto Ph.D, Rollyson has published more … (more)

Professor Carl Rollyson (Mar 14 2015 9:39AM) : Diaries can seem more authentic if they do not seem worked over.
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