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Sunday, March 30, 2008

Fieldsite

There are man people entering and exiting out of the club. Performers and magazines editors are talking and networking with each other. The members of this subculture interact with each other in a non serious manner. Everyone pretty much knows each other and are cool. You see the promoters and the friends of the promoters that everyone knows. The atmosphere is real chill and laid ed back. The language that is used at the field site I am familiar with because I have a few friends who are promoters. As well as the fact that I am a young adult I use most of the terminology any way. I did have a question about why some people have to pay and others don't they just have to leave a tip in the tip jar, after the set time for everyone to pay has passed? I was told that the people who have to tip are pretty girls and the regulars at the club. Another question I had was how can you drink on the job? They said because one person does the mingling and gives away drinks, while thee other is counting the money and watching the door.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Criminal Culture

1. Why is this a good field site?
This is a good field site because the author can do his observations and have good visual aid, lots of surroundings and can see prisoners as they prepare for Hamlet. It allows him to see how the prisoners act while preparing for the play and in just everyday life as a prisoner.
2. What are good observations about this subculture that give us a better understanding of the subculture?
The author goods very in depth about the prisoners' personalities. The author is very descriptive about the whole jail from the moment he walks he walks in until the moment that he meets the prisoners. He even goes into detail about the prisoners and how they relate to the characters in the play Hamlet. The author was soon reminded that he was still in a jail when gazed a big black button that would send in the guards to protect him and the directors if any thing went wrong.
3. What interview techniques works for us to better understand the subculture?
The author asks questions that require the prisoner to give a long answer and not just a yes or no answer. This allows for the prisoner to give the audience insight on how they view they life, injunction to the play. These interviews were very informative to me because they allow to see how prisoners get information.
4. What are the norms and values of this subculture?
Most of the prisoners have little or no education. You must be strong in order to not be a weak link. There is a hierarchy system (whales and minnows). Just because the of the prisoners are actors doesn't mean that they receive special privileges.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Subculture

Topic: Party Promoters
Sources:
Darlin, Damion. "Your Money; Consumers have Allies on the Web".New York Times. 2007

Larocca, Amy. "Glenn Staley and Kyle Mingo, Party Promoters".New York; 5/1/2006, Vol. 39 Issue 15, p100-101

John, Warren. "And Some Must Party On". New York Times. 2005

St.John, Warren. "Parties where an IDs are the least you show". New York Times; 1/11/2004, Vol. 153 Issue 52725, Section 9 p1-6

Dagostino, Mark and Gardner, Chris. "Insider".People; 6/27/2005, Vol. 63 Issue 25, p51-51

Reflection: The "Glenn Staley and Kyle Mingo, Party Promoters" will help me have a better understanding of what excatly party promters do. Having understanding behind this field of promoting will allow me to be able to give my audience background information as well as insight into this secret world. This source will help clarify what promoting is all about. There are certain rules and regulations that you must follow in order to be succesful. This source is useful because it allows for direction and guidiance into the paper. After reading the background information in this book it will allow me to be able to a coherent paper with lots of factual data as well as experience which gives the author creditbility.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Lolita

In class we learn how to navigate around the university research database system. This tool would be needed for the assignment due at the end of the week. Lolita was a novel written in about how a man would suduce young adolescent girl. The name of a novel (1958) and its main character by Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977) about a precocious schoolgirl seduced by a middle-aged man, used to designate people and situations resembling those in the book(Oxford English Dictionary). In the 1950's, the book was rejected by various publishers in the U.S. because of the moral censorship to which the novel has been subjected. Although the book was full of controversy, eventually it was published in 1955 by Olympia Press ( Willams, Gerald). The article argues that the contemporary American view of human nature is immature. Similarities between Nabokov's novel "Lolita" and Amy Fisher, who was convicted of shooting the wife of her lover, Joey Buttafuoco, are discussed in detail. Nabokov's view of his pedophilic protagonist, Humbert, is presented as a mature view of the weakness of mankind (Derbyshire,John).According to Ellendea Proffer, the first author to write about Nabokov's Russian readership, anyone with a serious interest in literature had read at least two of Nabokov's novels, and "Lolita," was always one of them. But the older generation found Nabokov's books disgusting and called the plot of "Lolita," revolting( Shekhovtsova,O.).Her title, she insists, "is meant to conjure up an image of the author of writings viewed as obscene as a child playing with his excrement and calling it art." Despite the tremendous amount of historical information and original literary criticism included on each author and on the films made from the titles, to consider Ulysses or Lolita still as "dirt" is either too old-fashioned or too postmodern for this reviewer (Cox,Shelley). The novel has transformed into a book that is read nation wide to help others know about adultery and how it is wrong.