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Lee Harvey Os-WHAT?

 Throughout Libra, Lee Harvey Oswald left me with certain questions about who he truly was. In his novel, DeLillo is trying to highlight the mystery surrounding Oswald and Kennedy's assassination.  When attempting to understand Oswald and the murder, it is easy to lose sense of what is coherent in the timeline of events. Both Lee Oswald and Kennedy's assassination are surrounded by ambiguity and confusion, that are keeping historians and writers from reaching a solid conclusion about what unfolded on November 22, 1963. In Libra, DeLillo includes many factors that could influence Oswald's decision. His marriage, his ties to the Soviet Union and Cuba, organized crime, the list goes on. DeLillo does not pave a straight path from Lee to Lee Harvey Oswald.  It's known that Lee wasn't always Lee Harvey Oswald, as is shown by his decision to go by different names for different affiliations. The general public did not know about Oswald until the murder, and many did not wan

Putting the Kin in Kindred

 In Kindred, we see Dana go through a transformative experience. Notably, Dana endures this experience in both of her lives. During her time on the Weylin Plantation, Dana grows in various ways, learning more about the past and the present.  On the plantation, Dana learns about the difficult choices slaves have to make to stay alive and together. When Sarah refuses to run away from the Weylin plantation, Dana thinks of it as a silly decision. It turns out that this decision is vital for Carrie's survival. Towards the end of the novel, Carrie manages to escape despite her disability. Adjusting to the ways of life on the Weylin plantation was one of the challenges Dana faced in her constant switching between two worlds.  As the novel progressed, we began to see the connections formed between Dana and the inhabitants of the Weylin plantation. Specifically, we notice a different relationship between Dana and Rufus. Their relationship is complicated, and Dana devotes herself to keeping

What is Jes Grew?

 Throughout the novel, I found myself asking the same question over and over: "What is Jes Grew?" At first, I interpreted Jes Grew as a way of life inspired by the long-lost text that everyone is searching for. People suddenly began to groove to the jazz music that swept New York City and New Orleans. I thought these people started to just groove uncontrollably and that this new wave called Jes Grew was the mentality of "forget everything and just groove to the music." I later discovered that Jes Grew symbolizes grooving to the upbeat tempo of jazz but also describes this movement.  In 1974, Ishmael Reed spoke at the Brockport Writers Forum in Brockport, New York. He discussed some of his works, including Mumbo Jumbo. During the discussion, Reed alluded to the meaning behind Jes Grew. He made a connection to the ragtime era of American history, which I found especially interesting. Reed speaks of ragtime as something that had no fabricated origin; it simply "ju

Forrest Gump x Ragtime

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In the popular film  Forrest Gump,  a fictional young man named Forrest travels through the world, bumping into various historical events along the way. Whilst reading  Ragtime,  I noticed Doctorow inserting fictional characters into real historical situations.  The most interesting example of this was towards the end of the book in part four. Doctorow has seemingly ended the plot of the book with Coalhouse's death, yet he continues with the narrative of Mother's Younger Brother. After he is gifted Coalhouse's newly restored Model T, he embarks on a road trip that lands him in the middle of the Mexican Revolution. MYB uses his knowledge of explosives to aid Pancho Villa and later Emiliano Zapata in their revolutionary endeavors.  Similarly, in the movie  Forest Gump,  Forrest, who is a fictional character, also embarks on a journey that lands him in the middle of several important historical events like the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement.  In class, the point was