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LESSON FIVE Say Yes A Profile : Tobias Wolff (1945---- ) Tobias Wolff was born in Alabama in 1945. His parents divorced when he was a boy. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Say Yes


1
LESSON FIVE
  • Say Yes

2
A Profile Tobias Wolff (1945---- )
  • Tobias Wolff was born in Alabama in 1945. His
    parents divorced when he was a boy. Wolffs
    mother retained custody of him, while his brother
    Geoffrey who also became a writer who lived with
    their father. As a child, Wolff traveled with his
    mother, Rosemary, to the Pacific Northwest, where
    she remarried. Growing up in the Pacific
    Northwest, young Tobias soon was forced to endure
    life under his strict and cruel stepfather. His
    efforts to get away from his stepfather led to
    his self-transformation. That period of Wolffs
    life is recounted in This Boys Life A Memoir,
    which was later made into a film.
  • He lives with his family in upstate New York
    and teaches writing at Syracuse University.

3
  • From 1964 through 1968, Wolff served as a
    lieutenant with the U.S. Army Special Forces
    (Green Berets) in Vietnam. He later recounted his
    wartime experiences in the memoir In the
    Pharaohs Army Memoirs of the Lost War. In
    1972 Wolff earned his B.A. and then his M.A. from
    Oxford University with First Class Honors in
    English three years later. That year, his first
    book, Ugly Rumours, was published in London. Also
    that year, he won a prestigious Stegner
    Fellowship from Stanford University.

4
  • He is the author of the short novel The Barracks
    Thief, which won the 1985 PEN/Faulkner Award
  • two collections of short stories, Back in the
    World (collecting Say Yes) and In the Garden of
    the North American Martyrs, which received the
    Saint Lawrence Award for fiction in 1982
  • Mr. Wolff's work appears frequently in Esquire,
    Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, and other magazines
    and reviews.

5
Old School
Works
  • The Night In Question Stories

This Boys Life (autobiography)
6
  • BACK IN THE WORLD

BARRACKS THIEF/SELE/
In Pharaoh's Army Memories of the Lost War
In The Garden Of The North American Martyrs
The Vintage Book of Contemporary American Short
Stories
7
Theme of the text
  • The idea of racism is a theme in the story, for
    the implication of the husbands racism is what
    causes the couple to quarrel. The wife dislikes
    her husbands beliefs that African Americans are
    different from whites. He maintains that it is
    not that he is prejudiced against African
    Americans, but that they come from a different
    culture than white people
  • they even have their own language.

8
  • His protestation that I like hearing them talk
  • because it makes him feel happy reveals much
    about his personality his belief that African
    Americans are inherently foreign to whites, and
    his condescending(????????)attitude. He needs
    something completely unlike himself to bring him
    pleasure.
  • The husbands negative response to Anns question
    of whether he would marry her were she African
    American indicates the pervasive and destructive
    nature of his racism.

9
Husband
  • The husband in the story is generally an
    unsympathetic character. He appears to have
    racist feelings and seems to be dishonest with
    himself. He claims to appreciate the stability of
    his life with Ann, yet he makes efforts to
    undermine it. He refuses to take responsibility
    for his actions. Throughout the evening, he is
    seen to be less than a genuine person he does
    things for effect rather than out of a genuine,
    sincere desire. In the story, his most
    significant trait is his rejection of his wife,
    which she takes quite seriously, much to his
    surprise. By the end of the story, the husband
    demonstrates yet another shift in mood
    excitement as he realizes that, in certain ways,
    his wife is unknowable to him. The final scene
    has him awaiting his wife in their darkened
    bedroom, imagining that she is a stranger that he
    seems to embrace, as demonstrated by the excited
    pounding of his heart.

10
  • Introduction Wolff has often been likened to
    other writers of his generation such as Raymond
    Carver and Richard Ford. In his short stories,
    Wolff practices a direct, even nondramatic, style
    of writing. This is certainly the case in his
    story Say Yes which takes as its backdrop an
    average evening in the life of a married couple.
    When the conversation delves into an issue on
    which the couple do not agree, the relationship
    experiences a newfound rockiness. The husbands
    reaction to this argument demonstrates the secret
    undercurrents that run through relationships.

11
  • Comments
  • Tobias Wolff is perhaps best known by the
    American reading public for his memoir This Boy?
    Life, which was later made into an acclaimed
    movie, but his literary reputation was first
    established on the merit of his short stories. He
    is still primarily known for these short stories,
    in which he depicts many characters voices and a
    wide range of emotions. Since the early 1980s,
    Wolff has produced several collections of short
    stories. These fictions focus on the important
    relationships and the moral choices in everyday
    peoples lives men and women, husbands and
    wives, parents and children. As scholar Marilyn
    C. Wesley writes in the Dictionary of Literary
    Biography, Wolff writes about the basic needs of
    Everyman, written with a respect that Everyman
    deserves.

12
Historical Context The Republican Years
  • The 1980s was a decade led by Republican policy.
  • Ronald Reagan took office as president of the
    United States in 1980, and served two terms,
    after which his vice president, George Bush, was
    elected to the nations top office.

13
  • Reagan held conservative political beliefs, both
    on the domestic front and when it came to foreign
    policy. Although his economic programs brought
    the national inflation rate down, they also
    seemed to favor the wealthy. During the Reagan
    era, many middle-class Americans saw their
    personal income shrinking, while the richest of
    Americans increased their wealth.

14
  • By the 1980s, as the United States and the Soviet
    Union built up a stockpile of nuclear weapons,
    the cold war had been ongoing for almost forty
    years. led by the two superpowers. Reagan, an
    ardent opponent of communism, encouraged his
    administration to greatly increase military
    spending.

15
Topics for Further Study
  • 1. How do you think the husband and wife will
    resolve their situation?
  • Do you think they will resolve it?
  • Write a scene that takes place the following
    day.
  • 2. Analyze the husband in terms of whether or not
    he is a racist character.

16
Topics
  • 3. Write a counterargument to the husbands
    statement that African Americans dont come from
    the same culture as whites.

17
Information background
  • 1980s At the beginning of the 1980s, nine
    percent of all United States households are made
    up solely of a married couple. There are over
    forty-eight million married couples in the United
    States. 1990s At the end of the 1990s, only
    three percent of all United States households are
    made up solely of a married couple. There are
    close to fifty-five million married couples in
    the United States. 1980s In 1980, 67.2 percent
    of the white American population is married, and
    51.4 percent of the African-American population
    is married. 1990s While more than half of the
    American population continues to marry, the
    percentages for both whites and African Americans
    has decreased in the past ten years. In 1997,
    62.1 percent of the white American population is
    married, and 42.4 percent of the African-American
    population is married. 1980s In 1980, there
    are 651,0000 interracial couples in the United
    States....

18
a look at the new integrated Literatures
  • Units on Toni Morrison's Beloved,
  • Alice Walker's The Color Purple,
  • Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun,
  • Mildred Taylor's Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry.
  • Johnnie Lee Gray was an African-American painter
    whose themes focused around the Jim Crow era. His
    paintings bring to life the experience of African
    Americans in the South of his youth and the South
    of today.

19
Band-Aid
  • A trademark for a piece of thin material that is
    stuck to the skin to cover cuts and other small
    wounds.

20
  • hypo- prefix meaning below, under
  • 1) in words denoting an organ or location below a
    given body part ?-- ??
  • hypoderm ????
  • 2) in terms denoting a body condition in which
    substances or functions are at below-normal
    levels ??
  • hypotension ???? hypothermia ????
  • 3) used in the names of chemical compounds that
    are in a lower state of oxidation(??) than a
    given compound ?
  • 4) counterpart to a word formed with
    hyper(?--??,??, ??,??)
  • hypotension ???? ---- hypertension ????

21
  • hyper- excessive??, ??, ??,??
  • hypersensitive
  • hyperphysical???? ????
  • hyperoxide ????
  • hypercritic ????,?????
  • hyperbole ???
  • hyperacid????

22
  • consider v.
  • E.g. All things considered, the reform is a
    success.
  • considerate a. showing kind regard for the
    feelings,
  • thoughtful, careful not to hurt or cause
    inconvenience
  • to others
  • E.g. It is considerate of you not to play
  • the piano while I was having a sleep.
  • considerable a. rather large or great , as in
  • size , distance, or
    extent
  • E.g. He bought a house at a considerable expense.
  • considering prep. in view of, having regard to
  • E.g. Shes very active, considering her age.

23
  • break up divide/ split, (a couple, relationship)
    come to
  • an end
  • break down collapse, failure in machinery
    useless,
  • suffer physical or mental
    weakening
  • break in (to) enter a building by force
  • break away go away suddenly, give up (idea,
    belief)
  • break through make a way through
  • break off stop, pause

His health has broken ____ from overwork. A.
down B. in C. off D. away
24
  • ashamed feeling shame?????,???
  • E.g. You should feel ashamed of what you have
    done.
  • shameful???,?????
  • E.g. shameful conduct
  • shameless without shame, immodest?????
  • E.g. shameless exploiter

25
  • Ku Klux Klan
  • a secret white supremacist organization at
    various times in American
  • history terrorized blacks and white sympathizers
    with violent acts of
  • lynching, shootings, and whippings.
  • pronunciation kOO klucks klan also Known As kKK

  • KKK
    Symbol
  • Founder Confederate Civil War veterans Captain
    John C. Lester, Major James R. Crowe, John D.
    Kennedy, Calvin Jones, Richard R. Reed, Frank O.
    McCord
  • Founded 1866
  • Headquarters
  • Imperial Klans of America is headquartered in
    Powderly, Kentucky
  • American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in
    Butler, Indiana
  • Knights of the White Kamelia in Jasper,
    Texas.
  • Background The Klan has fragmented into scores
    of competing factions. Most of these are
    nominally independent, while a few remain
    affiliated with one of the umbrella groups listed
    above.

26
KKK
  • Estimated size No more than a few thousand,
    organized into slightly more than 100 units.
  • Media Mass mailings, leafletting and the
    Internet
  • Strategy Public rallies and protests,
    "Adopt-A-Highway" programs, Internet
  • Ideology Some Christian fundamentalist beliefs,
    Christian Identity, white supremacy
  • Connections Militias, Aryans Nations, National
    Alliance
  • Financial support Little. Even Imperial Wizards
    have to hold day jobs. Most funding comes from
    membership dues and sales of Klan paraphernalia.

27
Birth of the Klan
  • Six college students founded the Ku Klux Klan
    between December 1865 and the summer of 1866 in
    the town of Pulaski, Tennessee. Former
    Confederate officers, the six young men organized
    as a social club or fraternity and spent their
    time in horseplay of various types, including
    wearing disguises and galloping about town after
    dark. They were surprised to learn that their
    nightly appearances were causing fear,
    particularly among farmer slaves in the area.
    They quickly took advantage of this effect and
    the group began a rapid expansion. Various
    factions formed in different towns, which led to
    a meeting in April 1867 to codify rules and
    organizational structure.

28
  • Targeting those set free after the American Civil
    War - the African Americans, KKK designed to
    spread fear throughout the Black population that
    still lived in the southern states. This was the
    KKK. Only WASPs could belong to it   White
    Anglo-Saxon Protestants. It is common that the
    KKK targeted only the Blacks - also the Jews,
    Catholics, liberals etc but most hatred was
    directed against the poor black families in the
    south who were very vulnerable to attack.

29
Reconstruction era kkk
  • In 1867, General Nathan Bedford Forrest, the
    Grand Wizard of the Empire, converted the Klan
    into a paramilitary force that served to directly
    oppose the formation of Republican governments
    set up by Congressional Reconstruction acts.
    Klansmen dressed in white robes and covered
    hoods, rode on horses, and dragged black people
    and some white republicans from their homes,
    assaulting them by whipping or lynching them.
    Such assaults were successful in keeping black
    men from the polls, and thus altering election
    results.
  • To stop the reconstruction era Klan, federal
    intervention was necessary. With the enactment of
    Congressional legislation and enforcement of the
    law by the federal government, the Klan was
    extinguished in 1871 1872.

30
The World War I Era Klan
  • In 1915, the second Klan era began. As World War
    I was underway, a strong patriotism developed and
    anti-Catholic sentiments emerged. Along with
    these new ideas, white supremacist attitudes, the
    publication of Thomas Dixons novel, The Clansman
    (1905), and the 1915 movie, Birth of a Nation, by
    D.W. Griffith, a new Klan emerged.
  • It was at this time that cross burning became a
    popular form of intimidation.

31
Periods
  • The leader of the KKK in the 1920s was a dentist
    called Hiram Wesley Evans whose name in the KKK
    was Imperial Wizard. The KKK were a violent
    organization. The white KKK burnt churches of the
    black population, murdered, raped, castrated etc
    and they were rarely caught as most senior law
    officers in the South were high ranking KKK men
    or sympathetic with their aims - which was a
    white protestant south. Even white people who had
    contacts with the blacks had reason to fear the
    KKK.

32
  • The Black Americans tried to fight back using
    non-violent methods. The NAACP (National
    Association for the Advancement of Colored
    People) asked Washington for new laws to help
    combat the KKK violence but received very little,
    if any, help.
  • In the 1920s Black Americans started to turn to
    the Back to Africa movement which told blacks
    that they should return to their native America.
    This was started by Marcus Garvey but the whole
    movement faltered when he was arrested for fraud
    and sent to prison.

33
The Civil Rights Era Klan
  • By the 1960s, as the civil rights movement was
    emerging, the Klans membership reached almost
    twenty thousand. Like the former Klan
    organization, there was not a central leadership.
  • While the Klan still exists today, its membership
    is in the low thousands. The Klan has ties to
    other white supremacist organizations such as the
    Aryan Nations and the Skinheads.

34
Creation of the Jim Crow South
  • In the South, during the 1870s and 1880s, it was
    not uncommon for blacks and whites to use the
    same public facilities. However, Supreme Court
    decisions began to strip away the gains of
    Reconstruction, which led the way to the creation
    of Jim Crow laws.

35
Jim Crow Laws
  •  
  • After 1877, and the election of Republican
    Rutherford B. Hayes, the South quickly replaced
    Reconstruction laws with new ones that restricted
    the rights of blacks. These laws allowed the
    South's new upper class of planters, merchants
    and industrialists to prosper, while most blacks
    sank deeper into poverty. Between 1880 and 1900,
    the per capita income of the Deep South showed no
    increase at all, and the average black farmer's
    decreased. Racial segregation, called "Jim Crow,"
    excluded blacks from public transport and
    facilities, jobs, juries, and neighborhoods.
    Blacks had separate hospitals, prisons,
    orphanages, parks and pools. The 19th century
    ended with the races firmly segregated --
    culturally and legally.

36
  • The End
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