Friday, December 7, 2012

What Would Jack Do? His Reaction to Today's Current Events


            Jack London was a man who has been said to have many different passions and opinions.  Though in today’s world, I think he would be mentally blown away by all of the opinions and objections that are voices all over America currently.
            The issues of same-sex marriage and gay rights that is openly debated and protested today would be a shocking subject for Jack to gain an opinion on.  He, being a man of revolution and supporting his ideas with whatever plans of action was necessary, might view the street demonstrations and diligence of the LGBT community in “fighting for the cause” as commendable. Though the fact that his world was empty of these issues and realities of today’s LBGT communities make it difficult to speak of his thoughts on the subject.
            I do think that he would take a very large amount of time to study the subject so that he could form his own opinions on the topic.  He might even go as far as to live among or interact with LBGT community so that he could gain an insiders view of their daily lives and learn of their issues and struggles that they are fighting so hard to change.  This unique type of journalism would not be a foreign concept to him because of his experience with living amongst the homeless in the streets of East London, which founded this type of social documentation. 
            Ultimately, I think that Jack would have a higher chance of understanding the goals of the LGBT community and the fairness that they are attempting to bring to the American people. 
            Though, I can describe myself as an over all optimist.  There is a large chance that through all of his studying and observations over the concepts that the LBGT communities are trying to create and change, his moral standards of the normalcy of marriage could stunt his imagination on the subject.  I choose to think that he wouldn’t be able to hold himself back from the chance to make the world a more accepting and equal place.

Literary Analysis of Jack London's "To Build A Fire"


            Jack London’s short story titled, “To Build A Fire” is one of the most symbolically brilliant stories that has contributed to the development of our American literature.  It is too easy to go on and on about the hidden teachings that Jack wanted his readers to learn from and ponder over.  So, get ready to read.
            Over all, the story is narrating the journey of an experienced explorer of the wild who has decided to take his need for adventure to the next level.  The hiker is said to be alone as he sets out on the trail tracing the Yukon River to meet up with “the boys,” many miles away with only a heavy coated dog at his side.  Even at the bare beginning of the story there is a hint of foreshadowing of the darkness that is to come when the storyteller mentions, “It was a clear day, and yet there seemed an intangible pall over the face of things, a subtle gloom that made the day dark.”  Directly following this statement, a glimpse of the demeanor of the hiker is shown when, “This fact did not worry the man. He was used to the lack of sun.”  This does not seem like he is being at all ignorant to nature’s subtle signs, but this attitude towards his hostile surroundings becomes severely consequential soon enough. 
            The author further described the man to be “without imagination.”  He had received advice from an “old-timer,” native to this harsh weather who warned him about the dangers of hiking alone in such chilling weather.  The man told the hiker to never be outside alone when the temperature is 50 degrees below zero.  Later in the story the hiker mocks the old-timer when he says that old-timers around here are “quite womanish” for taking such unnecessary precautions.  The hiker throughout the story thinks to himself that it “definitely was cold,” hinting at the fact that consciously, he knew that his situation was a cause for concern, but time and time again he justified not worrying about the red flags and thought of “other things.”
            As the hiker begins to feel his face becoming numb, along with his fingers and toes, he does everything he can to reestablish circulation and continue on.  The narrator highlights the man’s ignorance for one of the first times in the story when he illustrates that the man regrets not having a nose strap to protect his face from the cold.  The small amount of concern that the man shows about this potentially life threatening issue is to think, “… it didn’t matter much, after all.  What were frosted cheeks? A bit painful, that was all; they were never serious.”  Imbecile..
            The hiker had an “empty” mind while staying “keenly observant,” when he surveyed the snow in search of thin layers of ice or bubbling springs that could be hidden under a thin layer of snow.  He is so confident that he has total control over his safely that he follows up his careful observations by forcing the dog to walk on suspicious areas before him.  The dog hesitated to cross the patch of snow.  The dog’s strong “instinct” is brought up many times in their travels to depict a contrast between its seriousness and the hikers nonchalant attitude.  Not only was the dog spoken of as a instinctual creature, but it was given a mental voice at times, as in to say, “The dog was disappointed and yearned back towards the fire. This man did not know cold.”  The intuitive dog did not have the ability to blind itself through the mechanics of conscious thought, as the man could and preceded to do countless times.  It is statements like this that show just how much we as humans can lie to ourselves to suppress unwanted emotions such as the fear of the inevitable. 
            This type of clouding of the human senses is what ended up dunking the hiker into an unseen thin patch of ice “wet[ing] himself halfway to the knees.”  Though he understands that he is now in mortal danger, his immediate mental response to this accident is to “curse his luck aloud,” and then obsess over the fact that this little mishap would “delay him an hour.” 
Seriously, by this point, I stopped pitying and started doing some serious eye rolling. 
            After the pouty hiker gets himself together enough to try to make a fire to dry up his shoes, socks and feet, his ignorance causes his bad luck streak continue to snowball (pun intended).  His attempts at making a sustainable fire do nothing but “fail” again and again.  He remembers that the old-timer who he had mocked for being a girly-man earlier in the day, told him to never build a fire under a tree for the danger of the wind or snow falling onto the fire and put it out.  Only because I enjoyed the rhythmic nature of this man’s mistakes, I will spite him by saying, the old-timer told you so.  The wind, which the author tells had noticeably been absent for weeks, caused snow to fall from the tree right onto his wimpy fire and “blotted it out.”  Just before this dramatic situation occurred, when the hiker finally got the lifesaving fire burning, the narrator said, “He (the hiker) was safe.”  The goal for this short yet potent statement was for two very important reasons.  One, after the hiker fell into the water he expressed a good deal of dread and alarming thoughts that raised the blood pressure’s of the reader so, this phrase was meant to bring their bodily fluid balances back down into normal ranges, though only for a moment.  The second and more important reason for this sentiment was to put the reader’s mind’s at ease so that when the hiker fails to relight the essential fire, fails keep his extremities from losing feeling, and ultimately fails to keeping his wits about him and starts running around like a lunatic fleeing from his snowy grave, they would be on the brink of a figurative heart attack.  The hikers disillusions block him from seeing that nature will never play by the rules, even if he decides to. 
            At the closing of the story, after the hiker has resolved his quarrels with the “treacherous tree,” he developed a “new-found peace of mind” with the though to “sleep off to death,” and came out of his “panic”, he laid in the snow and decided to die.  In his last moments, he says, “ you were right, old hoss; you were right.”  Only when there were no more options left open to him for survival did he see that he had brought his own death upon him.  Even after this point is made, the narrator gives the stage back to the dog that is sitting, confused as to why the man is not producing a fire.  To the dog, the man was only useful for survival.  After the dog gets a whiff of “the scent of death” off of the man, he turns around to trot towards where he knew the “other food-providers and fire-providers” were staying.  The dog, as basic of a creature the man thinks of it, survives.
            It is chilling to think that as humans, we have the ability to mask certain situations or obvious clues of our fate with such skill that we could potentially find ourselves in a situation such as the hiker.  Though this is a dramatic demonstration with the “life or death” scenario, doesn’t it suck to kick yourself later when you end up late for work, in serious debt, or even paying a speeding ticket that you could have avoided? Or worse?

Literary Movement of Jack London


            Jack London was one of the primary participants of those who called themselves naturalist writers during the nineteenth century.  The era of Naturalism was about producing seriously scientific writings that allowed the reader to see a more realistic and life-like side of story telling. 
            Derived from the scientific method, the ideals and symbols that accompany naturalistic stories are realistic in their outcomes, though to entertain the masses the story endings were usually bleak.  Man versus nature or man versus himself was the main struggle that haunts naturalistic stories, to demonstrate a more real and alarming picture. The goal was to express to the reader that nature is an unbiased entity, and allows for no fabrication in the reality of the story.
            The naturalistic era, from the 1890’s to the 1920’s, followed the era of romanticized stories that gave the reader their desired beginning, middle, and the end in order to please and comfort them.  Naturalism cunningly devised a new and darker way to entertain the same crowd. 
            One of the primary contributors to the writings of Naturalism was Jack London.  His harsh and desolate upbringing fueled the fire for him to produce some of the most memorable naturalist writings of all time.  His stories are genuinely entertaining and make readers pour into his gloomy and unpredictable tales.  Along with such writers as Stephen Crane (The Open Boat) and Edith Wharton (The House of Mirth), Jack created a library of examples of Naturalism, which paved the way for the Modernism movement of the 1900’s. 
            Jack London’s contribution to the laws of Naturalism cannot be mistaken on behalf of his pioneering stories and life lessons.  Those lessons are so basic and true, that they teach and inspire readers today and into the future.

                                        Work Cited


Campbell, Donna M. “Naturalism in America Literature.” Literary Movements. Dept. of English, Washington Staty University. 07/28/10. Web. 11/11/12.



Matterson, Stephen. “1890s-1920s Naturalism.” The American Novel. Thirteen/WNET New York. March 2007. Web. 11/11/12.


Merriman, C. D. “Jack London.” The Literature Network.  Jalic Inc. 2008. Web. 11/11/12.

Author Biography & Contribution of Jack London


            Jack London led a life beginning and ending with suffering and tragedy.  His writing career encases an array of stories and concepts that were both entertaining and controversial to the reading public in the early 1900’s.  Those readers were influenced so greatly by his writings that he is now known as one of the most extraordinary contributors to the world of American Literature. 
            His life started in a most cursed way, from the hells of abuse, rejection, and suicide.  His run away teen mother became pregnant with Jack as a result of rape by a religious cult leader who beat her and demanded that she abort Jack.  After attempting suicide by a drug overdose and a jammed pistol that refused to spill her blood, Jack was born into the slums of San Francisco in 1876.  His mother wanted nothing to do with Jack, and handed him over to a black wet nurse who he called Mammy.  His life starts with dead end jobs but after he hits rock bottom, he began to give political speeches on street corners that eventually became his claim to fame.  His socialistic opinions and radical attitude had him locked up more than once, but through his writing, he was able to express all of his racist and dramatic thoughts and concerns about the status of his world.
            His vile and extreme stories were a shock to the public.  He was wrapped up in all of the politics and darkness that our country is made up of, he wound say.  Eventually, the reality of the position he had put him in hit him, and before long he was a 40 year old drunk.  His failing body drove him into drug and alcohol abuse, and that concoction is what drove the bullet that had waited 40 years to hit, when Jack died from a planned and recorded drug overdose.
           Jack's ideals have expanded countless minds in America, then and now.  His naturalistic writing style was received by thousands of people who thought he was either a sad and lonely racist, or was a brilliant literary artist.  Never the less, his stories that influenced so many to write like him or to think like him were stepping-stones into a world of literary expression.  Was it not for Jack, would other American writers have the courage to go out on a limb and reach for their success?   

                                                                        

                                                             Work Cited


Hartzell, David. “The World of Jack London.” A Short Jack London Biography. Apr. 2008. Web. Nov. 4, 2012. <http://www.jacklondons.net/shortbio.html>




Hari, Johann. “Jack London’s Dark Side.” Slate. Aug. 15, 2010. Web.



Stasz, Clarice. “Jack [John Griffith] London.” Jack London.  Aug. 19, 2001. Web. Nov. 4, 2012. <http://london.sonoma.edu/jackbio.html>