Social Constraints Breaking social constraints, Carnival - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Social Constraints Breaking social constraints, Carnival

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People often dress up or masquerade during the celebrations. Popular Carnivals today Carnival at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Mardi Gras in New Orleans. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social Constraints Breaking social constraints, Carnival


1
Social Constraints Breaking social constraints,
Carnival
2
Jabberwocky
  • Lewis Carrols nonsense poem found in Through the
    Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871)
    is generally considered to be one of the greatest
    nonsense poems written in the English language.
  • The word jabberwocky is also occasionally used
    as a synonym of nonsense.

3
Jabberwocky
  • 'Twas brillig, and the slithy tovesDid gyre and
    gimble in the wabeAll mimsy were the
    borogoves,And the mome raths outgrabe."Beware
    the Jabberwock, my son!The jaws that bite, the
    claws that catch!Beware the Jubjub bird, and
    shunThe frumious Bandersnatch!"He took his
    vorpal sword in handLong time the manxome foe
    he soughtSo rested he by the Tumtum tree,And
    stood awhile in thought.And as in uffish
    thought he stood,The Jabberwock, with eyes of
    flame,Came whiffling through the tulgey
    wood,And burbled as it came!One, two! One,
    two! and through and throughThe vorpal blade
    went snicker-snack!He left it dead, and with its
    headHe went galumphing back.

"And hast thou slain the Jabberwock?Come to my
arms, my beamish boy!O frabjous day! Callooh!
Callay!"He chortled in his joy.'Twas brillig,
and the slithy tovesDid gyre and gimble in the
wabeAll mimsy were the borogoves,And the mome
raths outgrabe.
4
Social Constraints
  • What is a good child like? Name some of his/her
    characteristics?
  • How free are children to do whatever they wish?
  • What are some things that children should not do?
  • Who makes the rules that children are supposed to
    follow?
  • Who decides what is good and bad for a child to
    do?
  • How do they make these decisions?

5
Social Constraints
  • Rules from parents
  • Rules at school
  • Religious guidelines
  • Peer pressure
  • Laws of propriety (socially acceptable behavior)
  • Fashion
  • language/behavior
  • Selfishness/selflessness
  • Behavior toward opposite sex

6
Breaking social constraints in literature
  • gives a feeling of power when readers identify
    with characters who break the rules.
  • challenges the norms and conventions of society
    by testing them.
  • provides a site for humor.

7
The Carnival Tradition
  • Carnival is a festive season when the normal
    rules of society dont apply. It occurs
    immediately before Lent usually during February
    or March. (Lent is a time on the Christian
    calendar when followers give up eating meat
    and/or give up something they really like in
    order to prepare for the passion of Christ.) It
    typically involves a public celebration or parade
    combining some elements of a circus and public
    street party. People often dress up or masquerade
    during the celebrations.
  • Popular Carnivals today
  • Carnival at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • Mardi Gras in New Orleans. USA
  • Carnival in Venice, Italy

8
Carnival Venice
9
Carnival at Rio
10
Mardi Gras
11
Carnival
  • Carnival is a time or space in which the normal
    rules of society dont apply.
  • Carnivalesque literature highlights this kind of
    atmosphere.
  • Nonsense is one way of rejecting the formal rules
    of society. This makes it empowering.
  • The grotesque is an aspect of carnival that
    celebrates the physical body and the lower bodily
    functions.

12
Carnival
  • Its joyous, anti-authoritarian, riotous, carnal
    and liberatory celebration, to escape the
    pressures of life.
  • Participants may deliberately violate what appear
    to be standards of sense and decency (which are
    really methods of social and imaginative
    control).
  • Carnivals can be a means of social control
    because the carnival exists within a certain
    space and time. When it ends, then one more
    willingly follows the rules of society once
    again.
  • Carnival can also bring freedom and a sense of
    power because people are able to do what they
    want to do.
  • A classic scene of a Renaissance carnival
    appears in the opening chapters of The Hunchback
    of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo. Quasimodo, the
    hunchback, becomes the King of Fools and is
    paraded like a hero through the streets.

13
Carnivalesque
  • Russian theorist Mikhail Bakhtin studied
    Renaissance carnivals and used the ideas he found
    to explain much of what happens in contemporary
    society and literature.
  • Something is carnivalesque when the themes of the
    carnival twist, mutate, and invert standard
    themes of societal makeup.
  • When the standards of society are twisted,
    parodied, and inverted in a playful, crazy kind
    of way in stories, we can often see this as
    carnivalesque.
  • In carnivalesque literature, as in a carnival, we
    may see mixing and confrontations of the high and
    low, upper-class and lower-class, spiritual and
    material, young and old, male and female, daily
    identities and festive masks, seriousness and the
    comical.

14
Carnivalesque in childrens literature
  • Peter Pan
  • Neverland is a place where normal rules dont
    make sense.
  • Wendy still pays attention to the rules of
    society. She performs the duty of a mother and is
    the one that brings everyone back to reality.
  • Peter follows rules of fair play.

15
Nonsense in Peter Pan
  • What other examples can you find of nonsense in
    this novel?

16
The Adventures of Captain Underpants
  • Dav Pilkey

17
Captain Underpants
  • Think about these questions as we read.
  • Where do you see nonsense? How do you react to
    it?
  • Do you like George and Harold? Why or why not?
  • Why do you think it has become immensely popular?
  • How are the rules of society inverted? (In what
    ways is it carnivalesque?)

18
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19
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20
Now answer these questions
  • Where do you see nonsense? How do you react to
    it?
  • Do you like George and Harold? Why or why not?
  • Why do you think it has become immensely popular?
  • How are the rules of society inverted? (In what
    ways is it carnivalesque?)
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