Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Future Tense?!

This is going to be my big long post about the future of my lifetime and beyond; who knows where this is going to go.

When it comes to the future of my current lifetime, I want to be hopeful. I want to hope that people will start caring about things that are affecting the planet, and that we can all work together to try and expand humanity's reach into the stars and beyond. I have a huge hope for expanding into the universe, at least just a little bit more beyond the moon in my lifetime, or even establishing some sort of contact or visual conformation of another living species in the universe. The thought of having that sort of thing happen in my lifetime is so thrilling, and it's something I desperately want to see! I can only hope that our world won't be horrifically torn apart by more strife and idiotic dealings between overgrown toddlers that don't want to play nice or bother to help one another through issues that are affecting both parties. In my own lifetime, I would also like people to be accepting of one another without resorting to violence or hurting one another, but I think that's probably a pipe dream.

With the future far beyond my lifetime, I can only hope that at that point we've established some sort of peaceful society that has a nice, reasonable form of living without being horribly destructive to both the planet and various cultures, and that we've extended our reach beyond just Earth, and even our own galaxy, and that we've embedded ourselves into other life-form's cultures, or even evolved to a point of having different types of humans for other planets. This is all just hypothetical, though, as I know that that would take hundreds, even thousands, of years before something like that would happen. The best I can hope for is that strife is dealt with in a less destructive manner, and that people can help settle their differences without killing one another or having hate marches-- I just want people to be able to exist and be who they are without fear of being killed out of the fear of someone being different.

Satire and Sci-Fi -- Hitch Hiker's Guide To The Galaxy

So for this week I listened to the original radio broadcast of Hitch Hiker's Guide To The Galaxy. I had never listened to it before, but I've heard lots of things from it (which, i learned from listening to it!) that were used in popular culture, and the infamous movie that came out (which I never saw..). I remember being really confused when playing the game Spore when the center of the universe told me that the answer to everything was 42, but now I understand.

When it comes to applying things that happen in the radio show that can be applied to our current future, it's very interesting. We've always had this one theory about how we're living in a simulation, or how our lives are run by a computer, but the notion of the Earth itself being a computer is a relatively interesting theory to think about! Also the theory of some big, super intelligent race of animal origin secretly running everything while humans scuttle about is also a hilarious side-note to a lot of these sorts of theories, which just sort of 'happen' while listening to the HHGTTG.

The other interesting thing to note about HHGTTG is the concept of a small little computer that can basically tell you anything and everything, because that's essentially what we have now! Smartphones and tablets are about the size of the theoretical Guide inside the radio series, and can virtually tell us anything we need to know, depending on our internet connection or access to 4G, that is. The other interesting thing is the concept of a race being boggled by wanting to know the answers of the universe and the reasons for life! Many a normal human has these sorts of thoughts after a while, I find.

There's a lot of interesting introspective things that sort of occur in this radio series, but the pure comedic humor is the best part about it, I think, and when it's paired with deep, introspective thoughts that sometimes get spoken about (I think of the analogy of people being not happy because of little green squares of paper!), it makes it a really invigorating and interesting set of stories to listen to!


Literary Speculation ~ Response (The Distance of The Moon)

This week I read The Distance of The Moon by Italo Calvino. When it comes to trying to distinguish the genre of this story, it's very difficult. The first time I read through it, I figured it was mostly an exaggerated, somewhat realistic story, but as I read more, it quickly moved into full fantasy, to even being sci-fi in some spots, and then turning into a romantic tragedy at the end. I think this story in particular really gets the blurred genres down very, very well.

When it comes to the question if having a distinct difference between genres is important or not, I think it's relatively important, but shouldn't be a strict rule that applies to all writing. Sometimes stories are better when different genres are blurred together to make a mash of something cool and weird, so you get a nice new piece to experience. The experience of this text is affecting my answer, because I think this story wouldn't have been as good if it was just pure fantasy or pure sci-fi, or pure romance. Having a good blend between all of these helps it develop a more reasonable and appealing shell.

Overall, I would recommend this story to a friend, because nothing is more appealing than describing a fetid, fermented, garbage-ridden spoon full of moon cheese.

Thursday, April 5, 2018

Assessment of: Bloodchild!

Here's the Questions!

1. What is your reaction to the text you just read? 

A very interesting story, to be honest. I wasn't really able to get a clear mind picture on what the main creatures, like T'Gatoi, were supposed to look like. Later on I sort of imagined them like centipedes, but I'm still not entirely sure that's what it was. It was also interesting the take on how this species reproduces, and how the Terrans even arrived in this place, as I believed the planet to be just an invaded Earth earlier on in the story. The process of making more of the species for T'Gatoi was also very interesting, even though the description of what was happening was pretty graphic and hectic. It was also interesting how much T'Gatoi and her species "cares" for their property-- the Tarrens-- and the lengths they go to to try and protect what are essentially their incubators.

2. What connections did you make with the story that you read? Discuss the elements of the work with which you were able to connect.

The connections that I made with this story is that it's similar to the "preserves" that Native Americans are often corralled into. The whole preserve is sort of referred to as a cage by two of the characters, Gan and Qui. The other connection is the fact that the Terrans are refugees from what I assume to have been Earth. It was interesting, the elements of the preserve and the refugee aspect. I can't really emotionally connect with any of these two things, however, because I'm neither a refugee or Native American. The only thing I can really connect to on a mental level is the butchering of the achti midway through the story.

3. What changes would you make to adapt this story into another medium. What medium would you use? What changes would you make? 

I think the best medium I could do for a story like this would be a graphic novel. The changes I would make to this story is something to nail down how the Tlic look, and more backstory on the conflict between the Tlic and the Terrans when they first interacted with one another, as well as backstory on whatever conflict happened in the first place to cause the Terran to flee their original homeworld, which I'm still assuming was Earth. Other than that, I don't feel like the story needs much more changing or adjustments, especially when moving to a graphic novel format.
The medium would be ink pen and paper, with very washed out colors but bold, thick, black lines. Something along the lines of Mike Mignola would be the artistic effect I would want for this.