= Jennifer =
Active Member
what do u meanKomaticom said:You should check out my "IMPORTANT: Paradigm offering". Might be of more use.
what do u meanKomaticom said:You should check out my "IMPORTANT: Paradigm offering". Might be of more use.
Komaticom said:You WILL need 2 additionals.
In ALL previous EngExt1 HSC exams, they've asked for "related text(s)". The "(s)" is indicative of more than one, and two related texts is good enough and fills the criteria.
I think, The Castle, being a film, would be easier to annotate than say, a novel, because the metalanguage is simpler.
katie_tully said:I did these in relation to The Castle.
I took the philosophers, their philosophies and related them to themes in the Castle on a local/global scale.
Marx - Class Struggle.
Represented in the film: Kerrigans are battlers, even though they "own" their own house/caravan. Locally they are lower class because of their jobs, their location, etc. Globally they're battlers for the same reasons.
Fukuyama - End of History/Global acceptance of liberal capitalism and dominance of USA
Represented in the film: A rejection of this philosophy is in the development of an Australian film, for an Australian audience, satirzing an Australian culture. This rejection of the philosophy in the film is when the Kerrigans challenge the multinational in court.
An example of the global acceptance of liberal capitalism and dominance of the USA is that when America says or does something, most Western country leaders follow it unquestionably. Another example is the dominance of American movies at cinemas, compared to Australian/British/Foreign films.
Wittgenstein - Language games
Represented in the film: The use of the Australian language in this film means that only Australians are going to fully understand and appreciate it. It is represented in the film as a contrast of court language to the language of the Kerrigans during the appeal. Power is shown/imposed by the use of legal jargon over the Kerrigans every day language.
glitterfairy said:paradigms are just ways of thinking right? I could be wrong though, "paradigms" is not one of 'my' words, but anyway...
Look at it this way. Typical Global and Local Paradigms:
LOCAL: Look at that mackeral. I wonder how many more of them there are.
GLOBAL: Look at that mackeral. I wonder how many more of them there are.
LOCAL: I can remember seeing these mackeral shoals when I was a child...
GLOBAL: Did I see some shoals earlier? I could make a profit out of this...!
LOCAL: My grandfather used to bring me down here, and we'd fish for hours...
GLOBAL: I gotta call Larry. Is he still trawler-fishing near Antarctica or something?!
LOCAL: It's a pity the numbers are dwindling, I have to preserve this somehow so my grandchildren will still have something to fish
GLOBAL: Oh man, I gotta clean these fish up before someone else gets them! LARRY!!! *Into phone* WHERE THE HELL ARE YOU?!?!
You can see the obvious economic and philosophical elements here - to the typicalised local, the fish are a part of history and culture, not a career. To the global, it's an opportunity to commodify and gain material wealth.
did that help? Someone correct me if the context was completely wrong.
Yes, true.bazman88 said:If you state that the difference between paradigms is merely a way of thinking, u will get poor marks. You need to be thinking on a higher level, on issues such as how the local and global become hybridised or synchretic, how this process is happening and relate it to specific paradigms/paradigm shifts in your texts and contexts. hope this helps
lol!Komaticom said:Yeah I got scolded by a moderator by starting new threads for every paradigm question I had.glitterfairy said:I can recall multiple paradigm-related threads going on at the one time.
hey,raspb3rry said:How do we point out paradigms? Do we actually say "the economic paradigm is evident.." or make it more subtle? I don't know how to include it in my essay >.<. Help?
sorry but are they gone?Komaticom said:I posted up two zip files, containing photographed notes regarding this module. It's titled "Paradigm Offering, and RFTG too if you want it". It should be somewhere near the top of the "Module B: Texts and Ways of Thinking" subfolder.
The photos are from a EE1 Study Guide, so it might be useful in your study.