Josie

"I have no special talent. I am only passionately curious" - Albert Einstein

Tag: Teacher-Mrs. Long

The Bloody battle of Freedom at the Hands of the Monarchy

Our video tells the story of the people of France struggling to get to a better place in their lives. There were many lives lost and the reward was not very different from how the Radicals started out their lives. In the very beginning before the revolution, there were three estates. The first two didn’t have to pay taxes. This was because before feudalism was abolished the first two estates which were nobles and high church officials or priests, believed that how one was born was how one was supposed to stay. This was much like before the Renaissance in Italy, where religious people thought that god made you who you are and you can’t change that. However, the Radicals, third estate, or revolutionaries wanted a change in their lives.  Fast forward to 1789 when the revolution starts to kick off. This is when the Radicals really start to see change. People like Maximilien Robespierre and Napoleon Bonaparte really shaped France into what it is today. Without these key figures, France would most certainly not have the colorful history it has today. Sadly the Radicals fought many battles and started many fires igniting change in the people of France who wanted a difference to be made. Bitterly this only brought them enemies. There were many ups, but too many downs for this revolution to really make a change for all of France. This constant battle was not worth it, all the executions, the killing of animals, and people suspected of wrongdoing didn’t benefit the outcome the Radicals were hoping for.  Not only that but they were brought back to the exact same place they started. The battle to end Monarchy.

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Speak your mind, explore the world, be a Humanist.

Brown Scrapbook Museum of History Infographic by Josie

Razor Sharp Thoughts

 

The page I used to write my found poem was page four of Lather and Nothing Else, Written by Hernando Tellez. 

The conflict in Lather and Nothing Else is that the barber who is a rebel is shaving the executioner who brings in the rebels to hang them. The barber gets very convinced he wants to kill the head executioner Captain Torres, especially when the barber gets to the hairs on Torre’s neck. He has a mental talk with himself discussing all the good and bad that could come from this. If he did kill Torres then he could flee, but they would catch up with him in the end. The blood would also flow into the street and people would know something was wrong anyway. This story displays an internal conflict because the barber is having a tough time thinking of what to do and keeps going back and forth thinking of all the consequences. My poem shows this concept because my poem shows the barber itching to sink the razor into Captain Torre’s neck, but in the end decides against it. My art also supports my poem because I draw the razor and lather (used to sharpen the razor) dripping in blood, because I am showing (or trying to explain) what the barber is thinking. 

 

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