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American Literature: Wallflower 1022 Views
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Transcript
- 00:02
Perks of being a wallflower....
- 00:20
Welcome folks I'm a Wallflower in case you can't tell I've [Wallflower talking]
- 00:26
been charged with introducing you to the world of contemporary literature and in
- 00:30
particular Stephen Chbosky 1999 novel The Perks of Being a
- 00:35
Wallflower I am an expert on Shakespeare but no of course the Wallflower has to
Full Transcript
- 00:41
teach about the Wallflower book typical human discrimination personal complaints [Wallflower discussing novel]
- 00:46
aside Perks of Being a Wallflower is an epic example of contemporary literature
- 00:50
despite its name contemporary Lit doesn't refer to books that came out
- 00:54
recently but it is a distinct genre with a unique perspective style and subject
- 00:59
matter to understand contemporary lit we have to first understand postmodern [Postmodern literature definition appears]
- 01:04
literature post-modernism can be described simply it's weird, like really
- 01:09
weird it's like that kid in school who acts all wild all the time just to freak
- 01:14
out the normies postmodern writers love to experiment and challenge our [Boy and girl experimenting and explosion occurs]
- 01:19
assumptions about literature both in terms of its forms the way it's written
- 01:22
and its content the stuff its talking about in particular postmodern
- 01:26
literature critiques society's view of identity truth and even reality itself
- 01:30
all been focusing instead on internal reflection major authors we consider
- 01:35
post modernists include William Faulkner famous for his novels the sound and the [Novels by William Faulkner appear]
- 01:39
fury, As I Lay Dying and a short story, A Rose for emily
- 01:43
Vladimir Nabokov the ravishing Russian - wrote Lolita, Pale Fire and speak,
- 01:48
memory and Kurt Vonnegut the legendary author of slaughterhouse-five, breakfast
- 01:53
of champions and cat's cradle all of these guys are very different authors
- 01:57
which shows you how diverse the genre is... contemporary Lit is diverse too but times
- 02:02
a billion think about it this way before post-modernism deliberate establishment [Man climbs down a ladder]
- 02:07
had built a wall around their idea of real literature it had to be coherent
- 02:11
fit their cultural expectation and feature easy-to-digest moral values
- 02:16
postmodernist demolished these standards with their wild literary experimentalism [Standards explodes]
- 02:22
not only smashing the literary establishment but also launching a
- 02:26
scathing critique of society at large now that the post modernist had broken
- 02:31
the rules and gotten away with it a wider range of people could now enter [People entering literary world park]
- 02:35
the literary world and it's these folks who championed contemporary literature
- 02:39
some writers whose work has been described as contemporary lit include
- 02:43
Jack Kerouac of on the road and the Dharma bums fame, Philip Roth who wrote
- 02:47
goodbye Columbus, port noise complaint and American pastoral and Margaret
- 02:52
Atwood the brilliant writer of the edible woman, The Handmaid's Tale and
- 02:56
cat's eye..As far as defining traits goes, contemporary lit shares post-modernism [Two guys riding a rollercoaster]
- 03:01
critique of society and is generally ironic taking it basically the hipster
- 03:06
of literary genres and it is here in this lawless world of contemporary lit
- 03:11
that perks of being a wallflower enters the scene the first thing you need to
- 03:15
know is that Perks is an epistolary novel which means that it's written in [Epistolary novel definition appears]
- 03:19
the form of letters our writer is a 15 year old kid named Charlie struggling to
- 03:23
come to grips with a recent suicide of a close friend and the recipient of those
- 03:27
letters well we're not sure and neither does Charlie he's never met his pen pal but
- 03:32
heard from the grapevine that he or she is a nice person in an alternate [Mail van drives away]
- 03:36
universe this is the beginning of a horror movie but not so in this case
- 03:40
Charlie is a sweet shy kid so he's having trouble adapting to high school [Guys bullying Charlie at school]
- 03:43
things get better when he befriends his English teacher bill as well as a nice
- 03:47
classmate of his named Patrick - Patrick's sister, Sam who's Charlie sort of
- 03:51
falls in love with hey a fifteen-year-old going to do what a
- 03:54
fifteen-year-old is going to do these friendships open up Charlie's world in a
- 03:58
big way over the course of school year Charlie has a first kiss with Sam, but in [Sam kisses Charlie]
- 04:03
a totally platonic way of course he also deals with bullies experiments with
- 04:07
drugs and drinking and becomes a die-hard devotee of Rocky Horror Picture
- 04:10
Show a cult 70s musical film known for its rabid fan base Charlie also learns
- 04:16
that Patrick is gay and having a secret relationship with Brad the star of the
- 04:19
football team but Sam's a senior which means that [Sam graduating from school]
- 04:22
she's graduating at the end of the year that deserves a thousand sad emoticons
- 04:26
well Charlie helps her pack up for college they start talking about his
- 04:30
feelings for her which are insanely obvious to everyone involved so they [Sam pushes Charlie down]
- 04:34
start to get frisky which should be the greatest moment of Charlie's life thus
- 04:38
far but instead causes him to freak out though he takes a nap to clear his mind
- 04:43
and has a strange unsettling dream of his aunt Helen touching him like Sam did
- 04:48
in an awful revelation he realizes that she had molested him when he was younger [Sam wakes up from a nap]
- 04:52
after this awkward encounter Charlie goes into a catatonic state which
- 04:57
despite his name cannot be cured by that sweet sweet tonic known as cats when [Boy stroking a cat]
- 05:02
Charlie doesn't snap out of it his dad brings him to a hospital where he stays
- 05:05
for two months he remains friends with Sam and Patrick and manages to forgive
- 05:09
aunt Helen who knowing that she too was abused as a child she was caught up in a
- 05:14
cycle of abuse and then for the last time he signs off with love always [Charlie signs off on piece of paper]
- 05:19
Charlie one of the first things you'll notice about is how many
- 05:22
pop-culture references there are in this thing which we can relate to the genre
- 05:26
of contemporary literature although not all contemporary Lit references pop
- 05:30
culture it's a fairly common technique in the genre probably the most prominent
- 05:33
piece of pop culture in the novel is the Rocky Horror Picture Show you young uns [Wallflower discussing RockyHorror picture show]
- 05:37
might not know about this musical masterpiece that is unless you caught
- 05:40
the 2016 TV remake but it was legit cult phenomenon an underground hit..The film is
- 05:47
known for its sexually charged humor glorious dance numbers and intense
- 05:51
audience movement during the public screenings of this movie audience members
- 05:55
both dressed up like the film's characters which is usually quite
- 05:58
revealing and acting out scenes as they happen on-screen in many ways Rocky [People acting in Rocky Horror picture show]
- 06:02
Horror fans created their own little community one that accepts everybody no
- 06:06
matter how weird they are actually the weirder the better so you can understand
- 06:09
why Rocky Horror become such a big part of Charlie's life over the course of the
- 06:13
school year it's a place where he feels like he belongs it's a place where he [Bullies laughing at Charlie]
- 06:17
knows that he won't be judged places like that are hard to find when you're
- 06:20
in high school I can tell you that much another pop cultural touchstone and
- 06:24
perks is the mixtape Charlie makes for Patrick a mixtape by the way is how
- 06:27
people used to share music before Spotify and SoundCloud you crazy kids...
- 06:31
anyway the tape is filled to the brim with [Person holding a mix tape]
- 06:33
moody dark and sad music exactly what you'd expect from a hormone adult teen
- 06:38
once again however we're shown how art can bring people together whether it's a
- 06:43
musical film that celebrates individual weirdness and sexual expression or some
- 06:47
sad song by the Smiths pop culture can bring us together and help build [People sitting on chairs watching a concert]
- 06:51
communities which is no small task indeed the novel is also dense with
- 06:55
juicy themes, friendship is a big one of course as we've already mentioned the
- 07:00
novel uses pop culture emphasizes the theme of friendship especially
- 07:03
because Charlie uses pop culture to bond with Patrick and Sam one of the books
- 07:07
most iconic quotes about friendship comes as the trio is riding through a [Charlie, Patrick and Sam riding in a car]
- 07:11
tunnel in a pickup truck when Charlie says in that moment I swear we were
- 07:16
infinite we think this is a way of expressing how open Charlie has become
- 07:20
since meeting Patrick and Sam and how he feels connected to a humanity that's
- 07:24
larger than himself related to this theme of passivity which definitely
- 07:30
applies to Charlie dude is less active than a rock because he's a shy kid [Charlie laying on a sofa]
- 07:34
Charlie often buries himself in pop culture living vicariously through his
- 07:39
favorite musicians and literary protagonist which shows the dark side of
- 07:43
loving pop culture it can prevent you from experiencing the world but that's
- 07:47
where friendship comes in even if Charlie is still the kid who stands at [Charlie in a corner at a school dance]
- 07:50
the corner at school dances, he's found a group of friends who can make him
- 07:53
comfortable Charlie seems to have a harder time with that where his family
- 07:57
is concerned his parents aren't mean or anything, just sort of detached the same
- 08:02
goes for his older sister Mary Elizabeth she's often so busy with her own teenage [Mary taking selfie pics]
- 08:06
drama to help Charlie out with his in fact when Sam gives Charlie a hug he
- 08:11
notes that his family never hugs each other the only one who did was aunt
- 08:15
Helen which takes on an ominous connotations once we learned that she
- 08:19
molested Charlie this revelation about aunt Helen is constantly foreshadowed
- 08:24
throughout the story Charlie often gets flashing memories of
- 08:28
her when he gets sexually excited obviously this is one of the most [Charlie kisses Sam and Aunt Helen appears]
- 08:32
horrible things we can imagine yet Charlie somehow manages to forgive Helen
- 08:36
but how? well part of it is that Charlie knows that aunt Helen too was molested
- 08:41
when she was younger by a family friend that's the cycle of abuse thing we were
- 08:45
talking about before take hope with her trauma
- 08:47
Helen drank did drugs and like Charlie she ended up in the hospital but she [Helen laying on a hospital bed]
- 08:51
also abused Charlie in the same way she was abused to us this is unforgivable
- 08:57
but that Charlie find some way to actually forgive Helen shows his immense
- 09:01
capacity for love and gives us hope that this particular cycle of abuse has been [Hammer smashes a clock]
- 09:06
broken Charlie's repressed trauma causes him to
- 09:09
feel a lot of sadness that he doesn't understand which isn't unusual for a
- 09:13
teenager but is a bit extreme in this case ultimately charlie is unable to
- 09:18
fully deal with his sadness until he makes peace with his memories of aunt [Charlie in a hospital bed and Aunt Helen's ghost appears]
- 09:21
Helen and that requires him to re-experience them again in all their
- 09:26
pain and terror as hard as it is however Charlie is making some very big very
- 09:31
important first steps to a better life as much as it hurts now he'll be happy
- 09:35
with his decision in the future so what did we learn from this journey into the
- 09:39
land of wallflowers well we learned about contemporary literature a
- 09:42
distinctly modern form of writing that's the little brother of post
- 09:46
modernism, a genre that developed around the same time which places a stronger
- 09:50
focus on straight-up weirdness the perk of being a wallflower is a classic [Re-record needed message appears]
- 09:54
example of contemporary Lit with its use of irony references to pop culture and
- 09:59
general critiques of society on top of that it's also deeply personal and
- 10:03
deeply real account of the painful parts of growing up, of which there are plenty
- 10:07
so now I've got to split there's a big Wallflower party coming up and Wallflower
- 10:12
parties tend to get crazy hey don't believe everything you read we [Wallflower with plate of brownies and monster energy drink]
- 10:16
wallflowers can party just as hard as the rest of them
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