LE 300 Week 7 Discussion 2 | Park University | Assignment Help
- Park University / LE 300
- 21 May 2021
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LE 300 Week 7 Discussion 2 | Park University | Assignment Help
Unit
7: Discussion - Natural Born Celebrities Reading
Instructions
Please choose one of
the following questions to answer for this unit by. You
should also respond to two of your classmates' .
Before answering this unit's questions,
you should read Schmid's Natural Born Celebrities, "The
Victorian Killer as Media Star: Jack the Ripper and H.H. Holmes, p. 31.
Keep in mind, as you read the text, a few of the
questions posted below.
Directions
Full-bodied entries—of at least ten sentences of writing
from you (in addition to quotations from the text)—are more likely to receive
full credit. Lesser credit will be assigned to work that is missing, brief, or
clearly disengaged or sloppily produced such that miscues interfere with
readability.
Your responses to other students’ work are also assessed.
Students often resist commenting on each others’ work in substantial ways;
instead choosing to post simply “good job” or “looks okay to me.” This kind of
peer response doesn’t help your own—or your peers’—development as a writer and
thinker.
Acceptable peer responses will, among other things:
·
Explicitly identify what
was learned from someone else’s work.
·
Ask a follow-up question.
·
Offer an alternative
interpretation.
·
Offer concrete strategies
for improvement.
Questions
(Reading)
Choose one questions to answer:
1.
At first glance there is
little to connect Joe Goldberg (in our novel this week) and Jack the Ripper,
but Schmid portrays the panic and fascination with the Ripper as something that
the media created. On p. 33, Schmid describes the public panic in 1888
when Jack the Ripper stalked and killed his victims as motivated by the
media. Is our fear of Joe the same as a Victorian Londonite's fear of the
Ripper? Or is our fascination with serial killers dramatically different
in the 21st century? Give specific media examples or points from our
novel this week to detail why or why not.
2.
Schmid details the fact
that much of our own knowledge of the Ripper is taken from "dime
novels" written just after the murders. These books were excessive,
romantic, Gothic depictions of a monster. Using specific examples from
our text this week, show me whether or not You is a
"dime novel" reveling in gratuitous description of a murderer or in
real life danger.
3.
Much of Schmid's chapter
discusses the ties between Jack the Ripper and nationality, specifically his
"Englishness" or his foreignness, depending upon the choice of
suspects. Take a note from Schmid and describe the ways You is an
American serial killer novel. What aspects of our society or national
identity appear to be tied with serial killer media in the 21st century or with
the consumption of violence overall?