Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Ways of Seeing: Art Perception

Ways of Seeing: Art Perception
By Shaynin Jade Richardson

John Berger's "Ways of Seeing"
book cover. 



This book was very fascinating to read, but it actually proved quite difficult for me to interpret it's main focus. Ways of seeing by primarily John Berger consists of four essays that attempt to interpret hidden ideologies in popular visual images like these. Through a collection of art work, John Berger takes his readers through a discussion and interpretation of the images. 




English art critic, novelist,
painter and poet, Mr. John Berger.
I began reading this book while enrolled in an introductory art history course a couple of semesters ago and really enjoyed the images along with the discussions of the different ways of viewing and interpreting certain works of art. The discussion of the depiction of women in advertisements and oil paintings is the most interesting to me, because it gives a detailed description and interpretation of the depiction of women in pieces all throughout the history of our imagery world. I really enjoyed looking at works from different times in history that portrayed women in similar ways.

While researching a bit more about the book, I recently learned that there was a television series covering the same material and that the books are actually the shows script and I was actually able to find some of those episodes on YouTube! If you’re into interpreting different aspects of art, this book will guide you through a great discussion of interpretations and ways of seeing art, along with providing the images to view while reading.

Monday, October 27, 2014

Stern Belief in ZERO*




Stern Belief in ZERO*
By Shaynin Jade Richardson


Caryl M. Stern's book cover
I Believe in Zero by Caryl M.Stern, is an enthralling story about the experiences that the president and CEO of the U.S. Fund of UNICEF, Caryl M. Stern,  has while traveling with the UNICEF mission. She tells about the places she goes all around the world and captivates the stories of the people she meets along the way

            I enjoyed most aspects of the book and appreciate the emotional appeal that Stern presents to her reader. I believe that Stern’s prestigious ranking gave the book more credentials and even though the book was not a direct product of UNICEF, they will benefit from it tremendously. She mentions that all proceeds of the book go to UNICEF but UNICEF had nothing to do with its publication. I felt that occasionally Stern would drift away from her main focus of defining the UNICEF mission, but since the book is not a direct product of UNICEF, Stern has not reason for justifying her interpersonal experience that may have only applied to her. When she expresses those incidents, I believe it introduced a more intimate discussion of UNICEF’s operation. 

            I liked Stern’s approach and execution of this book. It simply and emotionally attaches the reader to the UNICEF mission giving it some kind of importance. Stern’s involvement with the mission gives me a deeper appreciation for UNICEF as a whole.

 Check out this inspirational video about UNICEF's ZERO mission:




The World Outside My World



Source: unicef.ie

By: Vivian Salamanca  

I Believe in Zero

Caryl. M. Stern

254 pages

McMillan Publishers

“If she could give birth with so little and fight so hard to ensure that her child is free from AIDS, then there had to be more I could do to help. I wanted to travel to other new places that would challenge me and shift my perspective.” 



    With a fresh outlook, Caryl M. Stern described her determination after encountering Rosa, a new mother who was infected with the AIDS virus, but was forced to go through lengths to prevent her newborn to be cursed with the same fate. This excerpt from the novel appropriately provides light into the process of coming to terms with the reality of the cruel world we live in and the hope one finds when joining the good fight.
Source: unicefusa.org

















Stern was raised, as some would describe, as privileged growing up in Westchester, NY. Not knowing true hardships, her world came to a screeching halt after she quickly took over a position she had little background in within UNICEF. This position quickly opened her eyes to the brutal realities of the world outside, but also the possibilities where one can relate. Throughout her novel, she carefully uses a healthy balance of empathy and inspiration to describe real stories she embarked on, helping the reader relate to this injustice within real families. This particular injustice is just that—an injustice due to a lack of attention. The issue of disease and poverty in these malnourished countries can be prevented with proper attention, if attention is brought to it, and Stern does just that. 

Source: unicef.ie

These powerful messages convicted with a fight for justice and freedom are laced within stories of hope and passion. Stern beautifully provides the light in this deep, troubled tunnel. Among the convicting stories, Stern also challenges the public to step out of the comfort zone, much like she did many years ago, and react to this global tragedy. This public challenge can be countered with a simple donation or intentional action. Take your pick and respond to the world challenges we live in.






One man's place...

by Eva Vaitanaki


One man’s place
Annie Ernaux
96 pages
Seven Stories Press
Paperback: $11.79 (Amazon)

Source : http://chantalserriere.blog.lemonde.fr
                One interesting fact about this book is the way Annie Ernaux writes about her life with a neutral and distant tone, even when she broaches the saddest moments in her life such as her father’s death.
Annie Ernaux is a French writer and Professor of Literature. Most of her writings are autobiographical and usually deal with sociology. Born in 1940, Annie Ernaux belongs to the middle-class. Her parents who were laborers became storekeepers by owning a coffee-grocery store. Mrs. Ernaux had been rewarded for many of her writings, which even resulted in the creation of the Aninie-Ernaux Prize.

One of her book that was really interesting to me is One man’s place (1983), for which she received the Renaudot Prize. In this book, the author describes her life from her birth to the death of her father, which is both the beginning and the end of One man’s place. All along the book, Annie Ernaux tells the reader in which environment she used to grow up, an environment she hated, an environment that was not always stable, where her parents argued a lot too much concerned by insecurity-related issues. This environment differs a lot from her high school, where she spends time with people from the upper middle class.
Source : Amazon.com
The book is written differently compared to autobiographical books we can read nowadays. The tone is always cold and distant which gives the readers a diverse approach to her story. In other words, the cold and distant tone used in her book does not make the reader feel some pity towards her, even in the worst moments.
With this autobiography, Mrs. Ernaux comes back to several events that marked her life. She seems to do an analysis of her life, what made her do what she does now, and especially the peculiar relationship she had with her father who passed away. I would recommend this book simply because the story is interesting as well as the way it is written in both formal and familiar language.

You can either buy this book on Amazon or on Google Books (E-version).

Saying is one thing, acting is another.

by Eva Vaitanaki


I Believe in Zero.

Carly M. Stern
254 pages
St. Martin’s Press
Hardcover: $19.19 (Amazon)


Source: Cindy Ord/Getty Images North America.
                One episode that was really striking to me is when Carly M. Stern goes to Darfur. This chapter let the reader know why she is so concerned by humanitarian action, how much she cares about it, how people survive after horrible things happened to them.
Carly M. Stern is the current President and CEO of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF. For most of her life, Carly M. Stern has served as the Chief Operating Officer and Senior Associate National Director of the Anti-Defamation League; the founding Director of ADL’s A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE Institute; and the Dean of Students at Polytechnic University. Really involved in humanitarian projects, Ms. Stern also wrote books to share her experience with the world, revealing some aspects of some countries that some people are not always aware of.

Photos courtesy of Bryan Kasm/HSN

Her last book I Believe in ZERO deals with her new position as a CEO of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF, the bad conditions in which people live and are exposed to everyday in some disadvantaged countries. The book is written in such a way that you can easily identify to the author, as if we were here when the scenes she describes, happened. Very easy to read and to understand, Ms. Stern broaches many aspects of people’s lives, from the good to the bad sometimes comparing our lives to theirs.

Through her writing, Carly M. Stern makes us, as readers and individuals, aware of the situation in those countries as well as realize how lucky we are. I would strongly recommend that book.

If you want to help those people in need, please feel free to go on their website and donate. Or if you want to get involved in UNICEF Missions, you can follow them on Twitter, Facebook.


How does a slave Be loved?


The novel "Beloved" written by
Toni Morrison and published by
Vintage in 2004
“Sethe," he says, "me and you, we got more yesterday than anybody. 

We need some kind of tomorrow.” 

This quote by one of the characters in Beloved holds a haunting reality any reader cannot ignore. In this scene, the language of the character is important because it gives the reader a picture of his environment. The character, Paul D, was a slave, and slaves were given no form of education.  Also, while the word choices made by the author are simplistic, they hold a deep meaning behind them that is far from simplistic.  This simple line shows the pasts of these characters are constantly haunting them.  These former slaves have enslaved themselves through an obsession with their pasts, almost destroying their identities completely.  Author Toni Morrison shows how a writer's choice of words and ability to tell stories are keys to bringing them in to the realities of the characters.  

"Her face is polished in places and fissured in others, like the weathered stone of Mount Rushmore: the first black woman Nobelist, who’s lived long enough to speak to the first black president. Born only two years after Martin Luther King Jr., she’s a great-grandmother of assimilation—and she looks the part." -Boris Kachka, New York Times  
Author Toni Morrison has her photograph taken during
an interview for the New York Times on April 29, 2012.

Morrison was born on February 18, 1931 in Lorain, Ohio.  She attended Howard University in Washington, D.C. and received her bachelor's degree in English. She went on to receive her master's degree in English at Cornell University and afterwards started teaching English at a university. She was married to Harold Morrison, but the couple got a divorce in 1964, sending Morrison on with her two sons to New York City, where she was an editor for Random House Publishing. She has published ten novels which all capture life for a black living in America, but hold universal truth and application for all readers. On October 7, 1993 Morrison became the eighth woman and the first black woman to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. In 1996, the National Endowment for the Humanities granted Morrison the Jefferson Lecture, the U.S. government's highest honor for the humanities. She also received the National Book Foundation's Medal of Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. Her novel, Beloved, was written in 1987 and captured a reality of life for many black Americans.

Slavery. Racism. 

Looking at those two words as I write causes me to shudder. Those two words are the primary reasons for the novel's existence, as Morrison tells a story about an 18th century slave woman who decides to kill her own child rather than allow the girl to live in the reality of slavery that she would be constricted to. I think the terms "slavery" and "racism" are viewed obliviously by many people, for while they may know the definitions of these words, they have no idea what a devastating reality of life these words created.  Morrison uses personal narrative, story telling, symbolism, motif, and facts to bring the meaning of those words to life through the characters of her novel.

The main character Sethe gives a look of painful horror at the slaveowner during a scene in the movie 'Beloved' directed by Johathan Demme.


I believe Morrison creatively captured a difficult subject to understand for many people.  The black people who were thrown into slavery experienced torture and ridicule beyond comprehension.  However, when you look through the eyes of a little girl, one who watched men torture her mother and take milk from her mother's breasts, you can't help but feel the pain rise up inside you, and the anger that wants to stop this injustice.  Morrison tells stories and takes the reader through thoughts of the characters, where you get to glance into the way the characters thought.  The novel has this vulnerability about it and raw truth that makes you feel so personally connected to it.  I think Morrison wanted the reader to walk through the life of the main character, Sethe, the slave woman who killed her own daughter to keep her daughter from being confined to slavery for her lifetime. You immediately find yourself asking the question, "was she justified in killing her own daughter?" By the end of the novel, however, you have grown to love that woman, a woman so completely broken, physically and emotionally, and you no longer want to answer that question.  You want her to experience healing and forgiveness, because the treatment she experienced was evil and no one would desire to bring a child to live in evil.  Through other characters who are aged older than Sethe, or male enslaved men, we are taken back into memories of slavery as a reality for those individuals.  The memories are different but equally haunting. I have no critique for Morrison's novel, as I, a reader, journeyed with the characters that all gave me a vision of what the words "slavery" and "racism" mean, words I will fight against for the entirety of my life. 

Read Beloved.  
To be haunted by reality is to be haunted by truth, not so that we stay in that state but so that we create passion to see a world where all people are loved.   Morrison's novel will find you immersed in the literary images, as well as the symbolism behind color and trees and names.  She tells stories you will be pained to hear, but forever inspired by. She will redefine those two terrible words, "slavery" and "racism" so that you know the souls that lived through them.

Tina: Feminist, Actress, Comedian, and Also an Average Person



Source: Little, Brown and Company

by Vivian Salamanca  



Bossypants

Tina Fey

275 pages



o

Little, Brown and Company


       “So, my unsolicited advice to women in the workplace is this. When faced with sexism, or ageism, or lookism, or even really aggressive Buddhism, ask yourself the following question: “Is this person in between me and what I want to do?” If the answer is no, ignore it and move on. Your energy is better used doing your work and outpacing people that way. Then, when you’re in charge, don’t hire the people who were jerky to you.” 
                                     –Tina Fey



o
 A conversation with anyone has never felt as relaxed as having a “conversation” while reading her autobiography  with Tina Fey, herself. This very useful and appropriate piece of advice holds a hint of all things Tina: respect, humor, intellectual advice, and professionalism that goes a long way. But after the fact that there is weight behind her words, it’s how she says it that the public finds charm and wit.







Personally, I have always been a fan of Fey. She has taken the weight behind her words, and turned her words into comedy, novels, satire, and multiple award-winning television shows. Exhibiting few limits, Fey embarks on finding humor in reality. She is capable of relating to her public on a very personable level, with everyday frustrations and problems. Throughout her success, Fey has not hindered in her work and continues to share laughable moments of her personal life and pop culture itself in her genius work, Bossypants


Although an autobiography might not be your common "go-to" read, this insightful work grasps the reality that is women rising in power and fame, tied with the humor Fey never lacks. With 5/5 stars, I highly recommend this lighthearted read to anyone looking for facts, encouragement, or simply a good laugh.



Sunday, October 26, 2014

Poverty Has a Face


"I have a picture in my mind that stays with me wherever I go,” writes author Caryl M. Stern in her first sentence of the second chapter of her novel.
 Stern follows with a story about her mother and her uncle as Jewish children, being sent to the United States on a ship to escape the horrors of the Nazi regime in Austria. Her deep faith is something Stern draws from to inspire her throughout her novel, and after I read this scene in the book I felt connect to her for the first time even though I don’t share her religion. She tells a story that pains your soul a little bit, seeing these children all alone having to leave everything behind because of the evil racism that destroyed everyone they loved.

All the had was each other, yet they create this image of freedom as they sail away. It’s a freedom you find even yourself wanting to fight for as you read where Stern drives her motivations from.

Caryl M. Stern gives a speech at the first annual UNICEF Women of Compassion Luncheon on February 11,  2011 at a private residence in Los Angeles, California 

Caryl M. Stern is not only an author, but the current President and CEO of the U.S. fund for UNICEF as well as a wife and mother of three sons. She graduated from the State University of New York at Oneonta with a Bachelor’s degree in Studio Art and spent 27 years serving in nonprofit and education work. 
The subject of her book, I Believe in Zero, is a book about putting passion into reality. Every chapter tells individual stories, which, together, give a human face to the reality that world hunger, poverty and disease exist. This book beautifully compels the reader to see his or her role in ending these global issues. It encourages the reader by describing the actions that have been and will continue to decrease the number of people affected by these global issues.

I believe Stern’s eloquently combines the use of ethos, pathos, and logos in her writing to cover a topic that is widely known but often overlooked. She gives a human face to global issues, allowing the reader to connect with the people who are experiencing hunger, poverty or disease. Her personal stories compel people to take actions. Moreover, she describes activities that organizations such as UNICEF have allowed her to be a part of to end these global issues. She gives logical steps people can take in response to this book, and she also has ethical and logical proof that specific actions are being accomplished. The only weakness I discovered through her writing was a religious bias she described that usually motivated everything she did. I think she sometimes crossed the line of respect for all other religions or lack of religion that, universally, people fall fall under.
Overall Stern has excellent writing techniques and personal experience to draw from that motivate readers to take up their role in international aid. She connects with the business leaders, mothers, college and even high school students. Her stories show a broad range of activities she and others have been involved in, and they come from a normal person who developed a passion to change the world.

Team UNICEF student volunteers pose for a photo at third annual Campus Initiative Summit in New York City, New York in October 2011.

I would strongly encourage others to read this book, because you won’t put it down and you won’t be ignorant of the reality of life for people all over the world.
What will you do to believe in Zero? 

ACTION. LOVE. BETRAYAL. Who needs more?

Divergent
Cover of Diverent
Veronica Roth
487 pages
HarperCollins


Action. Love. betrayal. Who needs more?


Veronica Roth
source:http://www.people.com/people/
article/0,,20798669,00.html
Everyone enjoys a good love story now and then, Divergent by Veronica Roth, had just enough of everything to make this an enjoyable read for all audiences. You could say that Roth has a rich future ahead of her seeming that her first novel took off tremendously. Divergent is the first book in a palm sweating and heart-crunching trilogy.
Macintosh HD:private:var:folders:wz:kz5mg78x0lvd209rp8q90m_nlybwpj:T:TemporaryItems:divergent_hq.jpgMacintosh HD:private:var:folders:wz:kz5mg78x0lvd209rp8q90m_nlybwpj:T:TemporaryItems:veronica-roth-300.jpg

 When diving into this book I was instantly obsessed with the main character, Beatrice “Tris” Prior because who doesn’t love an insecure and awkward teenage girl. Growing up, the main character was apart of the faction whose morals were selflessness and helping others called Abnegation. The population has a huge gathering to  choose their factions for those who come of age. Tris intentionally separating from her family into a different faction is just the beginning of this drama filled thriller. Throughout the book Tris is trying to figure out whom exactly she is, especially after finding out she does not belong to just one faction. The inner struggle ways heavy on Tris who now is crushing on her gorgeous trainer, Tobias aka Four. Just as Tris is getting comfortable in her new home with new friends and is finally a member of dauntless, disaster hits.


Brimming with plot twists and drama there’s no question why Divergent was made into a movie. The book is so vivid with imagery and detail it’s not hard to see what exactly Roth was trying to portray.

To find out what happens to Tris, Tobias and the future of their city you can buy the trilogy here

To learn more about author, Veronica Roth check out her blog

Want to find out which one of the five factions you belong in? Take this quiz


I Believe in ZERO - Caryl M. Stern

I Believe in ZERO: Learning from the Worlds Children
Caryl M. Stern
272 pages
St. Martin’s Press


Waiting on the world to change
By Kirsten Pagnotta

Carly M. Stern grew up in New York a go-getter. She was always pushing the limit and achieving things she put her mind to. In 2006 she joined the U.S. Fund for UNICEF and shortly after became one of the top dogs in the company. Stern wanted to help raise money and awareness for impoverished countries but what she got out of this job was so much more. Stern traveled to the countries and found the people she met inspirational and the places she visited unacceptable.
 

Macintosh HD:private:var:folders:wz:kz5mg78x0lvd209rp8q90m_nlybwpj:T:TemporaryItems:I_Believe_In_ZERO_cover_207.jpgI Believe in ZERO shares many of Stern’s stories about the journeys she took and the individuals she met that touched her throughout her visits. The first story, which grabs your attention off the bat, is Stern’s first trip to Mozambique. This is when Stern finds out what poverty really is. She tells the stories with so much detail that I can imagine myself there walking the streets with her. This story is what projects the whole book and starts off with in your face details and imagery that gets the reader wanting to learn more about her findings.


This book is an awesome PR tool for UNICEF, due to it’s gutting stories that stab you right in the heart. Stern talks about children who are sick and don’t even have clean water, orphanages in Haiti that are overflowing because of the Earth Quake, along with comparing the life of these children to the life of her own.



Picking up this book will take you straight to the communities where Stern traveled as well as straight to your checkbook to help these children.


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 To buy I Believe in ZERO click here

To learn more information about UNICEF and their mission click here


The Lie

The Lie

Appalling, Yet Intriguing

By: Brianna Hopkins

 

Source: www.amazon.com
Source: www.dallastexasrealstateblog.com
The novel, The Lie, written by Chad Kultgen, is a very interesting story to say the least. Taking place in Dallas, Texas on the Southern Methodist University campus, Kultgen was very blunt to say the least when he described the materialistic and selfish qualities the people of Highland Park and students of this university withheld. 

Kultgen wrote the book with three different narrators, which I found fascinating. It gave me a chance to see three different sides of the social scene at SMU. One side came from a snobby sorority girl who wanted to be engaged to a man with a wealthy family before she even received her degree. The other side was from a young man who got into SMU, not because of how much money his parents had, but because of how smart and driven he was. Finally, the third side was told by the son of the richest man in the Dallas area whom everyone knew about. All three sides gave the audience and me a chance to get the real insight to what was going on within the university’s social scene. 

This novel is filled with a lot of inappropriate humor, which quite frankly, sometimes left me speechless and even sometimes appalled.  Kultgen is a very direct author who is most widely known for his controversial novel, The Average American Male. Even though for many, Kultgen’s books can be very offensive and include humor that may be misleading or hard to understand, but The Lie left me questioning my own values of myself as a woman, and what I can do to personally prevent myself from falling into the category of only wanting certain men for their money. This novel taught me many things that I would have never known before reading.

  

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

"Leviathan Wakes" - Review

by Andrew McDonald
Photo Credit: Orbit Books
            Are you a fan of hard-boiled detectives, fast-paced action, and space zombies? Well, then do I have the book for you.
            Leviathan Wakes is the first in The Expanse trilogy by James S.A. Corey, a pseudonym for the writing team of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck. For those of you interested, this book will soon be a TV series on SyFy, a network known more for their creative spelling than quality original programming, but I have my fingers crossed.
            As for the book itself, it’s an incredibly thrilling ride. Told through the alternating perspectives of Jim Holden, an XO of a mining vessel, and Detective Miller, who is searching for a missing woman, we learn that not all is what it seems in this universe and the two parallel stories begin to converge as they both discover various aspects of a dark conspiracy.
            I have to be honest and say I much preferred Miller’s sections of the book compared to Holden’s, mostly because I thought Miller was simply a more interesting character. It felt as though I was reading an old-school style noir, a la The Maltese Falcon, when reading Miller’s chapters. Which is, like, literary heaven for me – a hard-boiled noir detective in space? It’s hard to make me happier than that.
"I'll knock ya to the moon, see? They got a nice colony up there, I think you'll like it."
Photo Credit: Dr. Macro's High Quality Movie Scans
            But even though I didn’t find Holden nearly as interesting, his chapters get all of the big, blockbuster action sequences, which are intense, thrilling, and extremely fun.
            Overall, I would definitely recommend Leviathan Wakes if you’re a fan of space opera science fiction with smarts to go along with the explosions.

"I Believe in Zero" Review by Brianna Hopkins

I Believe In Zero

By: Brianna Hopkins

Source: www.unicefusa.org
Source: www.internationalwatersafetyday.org
The novel, I Believe in Zero, written by Carolyn M. Stern, is a story that I highly recommend to anyone.  From mission trips to fundraisers, Stern left me completely inspired and wanting to be apart of this great cause.  We live in a world that does not allow certain people to be as fortunate as others and this book really opened my eyes to that.

The author of this novel, Carolyn M. Stern, is the President and CEO of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF. UNICEF is a non-profit organization that strives to help make the world a better place for young children. They strive to help prevent violence and trafficking, promote a better educational system and provide support for young children with disabilities.  

I Believe in Zero gave me an opportunity to get complete insight to these situations going on across the world. Stern is an unbelievable writer and her actions have inspired me so incredibly much. Living in the greatest country in the world and going to such a great university to receive an amazing education makes me feel so incredibly fortunate after reading this novel.  The whole point of this story is to achieve the goal of leaving zero children hungry, alone, neglected, or ill. Through Stern’s stories of all her travels and experiences, she is ultimately saving thousands of lives… one novel at a time.


"I Believe in Zero" - Review

by Andrew McDonald

            The opening of Caryl M. Stern’s I Believe in Zero feels like the opening of a TV show you’d find on AMC during their peak Breaking Bad-era. She recounts her experience of meeting Rosa, a new mother in Mozambique, who informs Stern that this child is the “first one that survived.”
            And with that, the book begins.
I Believe in Zero by Caryl M. Stern
Photo Credit: UNICEF
            Stern’s recounting of her time with UNICEF is a powerful, emotional journey that will leave you feeling both cathartic and exhausted by the end of each chapter, which, essentially, function as episodes (going back to my TV show analogy). Stern’s writing is clear and deliberate. She tells her story with relative ease and grace, skimming over details that aren’t as impactful and really drawing the action and emotion when the moment calls for it.
            I keep brining up the similarities between her writing and good TV, because, well, her writing is incredibly cinematic. When she describes a new environment, I not only pictured it in my mind, but I could smell the air, feel the weather and environment. I choked up several times, but none so much as the initial encounter with Rosa, whose story only gets more harrowing the more you read.
"But does she cook meth?...Didn't think so."
Photo Credit: AMC

            Overall, I would definitely recommend I Believe in Zero to anyone who enjoys a cinematic storytelling style of nonfiction. I would never have considered myself a fan of this kind of book before reading it, but, if it’s good, it’s good, and I Believe in Zero has made me a believer.