Saturday, September 14, 2013

Group blog

Tanaera Green, Sarina Rizzo, Danielle BaraKat, Carolina Vasquez

Shaggy Dog Story #2
·         has French words
·         gives a setting
·         less formal language
·         punch line is meant to be read literally
·         use common language in the joke
·         the reader has to know the culture of NYC and how strange things happen
·         bizarre character/theme – talking murderous panda
·         joke inside a joke
·         there was a lot of emotion in a short span of time (maitre d' was horrified)
·         the punch line is created in the dialogue between the two identified characters
·         homonyms are used in the punch line:
·         weird/curiosity about the specificity of teh dictionary used to look up the meaning of "Giant Panda"- there were not many other specific elements of the story, so why was the source of the punch line so specific?

Shaggy dog story #3
·         informal language used
·         setting and attitude of characters are known
·         rule of 3's: seen in the repeated question and answer from the string and the bartenders
·         overly personified the string
·         the punch line can mean more than one thing
" Nope, I'm a frayed knot." -- "Nope, I'm afraid not."
·         has a lot of emotions in the words (like the panda)
·         the punch line broke the rule of 3’s- you expect the string to get the same response, and the humor is seen when the punchline is delivered unexpectedly.

Shaggy dog story #4
·         you have to know the cultural aspect of TGIF- common phrase
·         shorter than other jokes
·         you’re supposed to know who/about  Robert Crusoe (is a book)
·         it’s a joke for people who may read a lot
·          the joke comes from the dialogue in the characters
·         the words in joke are rearranged but you can still make the connection
·         involves religion
·         somewhat literal punch line
·         not modern setting or theme – who lives in a tent/ has server or helper?

Shaggy Dog story #5
·         informal language is used
·         no character is identified
·         setting and time is identifies
·         background about lawyer, his wealth, his assets
·         seems like a fairytale story when the bears “appear”
·         lawyer seems selfish and is labeled- “stereotype”
·         fictional aspects -swallowing the male whole
·         lawyers car shows wealth (again, contributing to the idea or "stereotype" that all lawyers are wealthy)
·         Lawyer immediately thought of lawsuit –again selfishness
·         the sheriff is doubtful of the lawyer-stereotype of Two sneaky lawyers can be
·         Punch line is a pun to legal terms if “the check in in the mail”

Features that all stories had in common:
- These all used informal language
- There was a setting, or a time or place identified.
- The punch lines were all literal, or actual things that would require background cultural knowledge to know.
- These all had dialogue between characters in them
- The characters were vague and not really identified too much; there were no names
- all three were fictional and created stories and had elements in them that would never happen in real life.

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