Skip to main content

Reading Notes W15: Daniel Orozco, Part A


            The story of Daniel Orozco “Orientation” is a short story which focuses on the idea of the orientation of a person on his first day at work. Orozco does not introduce the narrator of the story, also, as the story continues it shows the life of the employees and how they interact became the important part of the story. The story is told in the first person voice. The narrator is talking to one particular person; He refers to this character in the second person voice. “This is your phone.” The narrator is talking directly to the new employee, the main character.
The main character never speaks. It is implied that dialogue exists. “That was a good question. Feel free to ask questions.” The narrator has acknowledged that the listener has asked a question. The reader never actually sees the question that the listener asks, though. Instead, the narrator rephrases the listener’s question and repeats it back to him. By having the narrator do this, Orozco makes the listener less important. His/her dialogue is not even important enough to include in the text and must be repeated by the narrator in order to be included in the story. However, contradictory to the listener’s seemed unimportance, the narrator urges the listener to ask more questions.
The description is the only important part of the story. Orozco uses both a professional tone and a dark, uncomfortable-feeling description to create a highly contrasting reality between the work setting and each character’s personal life.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Reading Notes W15 : Moten, Part B

Fred Moten Born in 1962 and raised in Las Vegas Focuses on black studies, poetry, and critical theory The Salve Trade The poem of Fred Moten is hard to understand, the reader should look at it in a different way. This poem is about the idea of the slave trade and Fred Moten just rearrange the letters and come up with slave trade. The poem also uses the technique it which it jumps from thoughts to thoughts which makes it interesting to read because it does not really show what the real issue it discusses. There are also a lot of things that occur in the poem which makes it really hard to understand the poem. It mostly shows the idea of black people which was not directly quoted but   Moten uses the phrase “I started reading my paper and ash flew from their big ol’” which describe the skin color of the black people.

Week 4 Analysis: The Hunt for Revenge

Samuel McDuffie Literary Analysis The Hunt for Revenge John Rollin Ridge (Yellow Bird) was born in 1827 into a distinguished Cherokee family in Georgia.  His father, John Ridge and grandfather Major Ridge were prosperous farmer and slaveholders.  Both grandfather and father were influential leaders in the dispute over how to respond to pressure from the United States to give up Cherokee Lands and move west.  He was the first Indian to publish a novel. In his work  The Life and Adventures of Joaquin Murieta, the Celebrated California Bandit  is a  contemporary account of California as it was settling. In the reading assigned, the reader is introduced to lawless men in California, known as bandits, and Joaquin Murieta. Joaquin Murieta is a Mexican-American bandit, who leaves behind a legacy of morals and bravery.  The Life and Adventures of Joaquin Murieta, tells the story of the Joaquin in the Gold-rush era, wanting to find fortune and happiness;...

Project 1

Samuel McDuffie English 205 Professor Joellen Hiltbrand March 3, 2010 Two Different Views on Love “The Luck of Roaring Camp” and Self Reliance” tell the story of different times and context. The short story of “The Luck of Roaring Camp” by Francis Bret Harte and “Self-Reliance” By James Whitfield are different themes and context but each tells a story of a certain things you need to make the most out of. Although they are two different genres and speak of two different telling’s, they both identify the meaning of love, hope and purity through harsh times.  Francis Bret Harte was an American short-story writer and poet who wrote short fiction featuring miners, gamblers and other figures during the California Gold Rush. He wrote the short story “The Luck of Roaring Camp”. The short story speaks of a woman named Cherokee Sal who is the only woman in the camp. She has gone into a difficult labor and once the child is born, Sal dies after, leaving the boy in the hands of the mi...