Dear Doomies,
This is a reminder that Monday, December 24th, 2012, is not an in-class day. It is your research day for the third Omelas prompt. You will have the morning off to research, watch, read (or sleep!) the creative work (short story, opera, ballet, film, tv show, song, poem, book, etc) that you feel relates to "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas."
By now, you should also have written about what you would do about the child in the cellar as a resident of or visitor to Omelas and what in your own observations or experiences reminds you of the story.
When we come back on December 26th, we will check our work and prepare for our Thursday field trip to MFAH. Please start planning to arrive there instead of the classroom in the morning.
Should you have any comments, questions or concerns, feel free to comment here or email me at the address on your syllabus.
Enjoy your (extended) weekend!
Monday, December 24, 2012
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Food for Thought
Saturday, January 23, 2010
A Meal With Haiti in Mind
Often people from less wealthy countries are in a situation where the only meal they get is based on beans and rice. Looking into the nutritional value of those economic meals, we find that they are very well balanced and, as I said before: Balance is everything!
Last night, while thinking about the famine that the people of Haiti must be going through, I cooked a meal that was super economical, easy to prepare and rendidor, a source of bounty. I cooked one bag of black beans, boiled 2 cups of long grain brown rice, fried 2 sweet potatoes cut in the shape of long french fries in an inexpensive blend of soy and olive oil, and fried two thin-sliced plantains. I topped the black beans and brown rice with queso fresco and wedges of avocado and had an island dinner for 4 while Mafusser read to us "Please, Malese", a Haitian trickster folk tale. The leftover beans were used for breakfast the next day.
It is unfortunate that, as I'm typing, thousands of Haitians do not have this economic meal in their stomachs, but we can manage our personal economy by preparing meals like this. Instead of splurging on a fancy dinner, we can help by sending financial support to Haitian relief funds and by praying for their spiritual and material rebuilding. Remain curious my friends!
As you plan your post-apocalyptic potluck, read this blog entry about economic meals. What would you prepare? Why? How far can you make a few items go? How appealing can you make them? What in your own experience or observation do you bring to the reading of this or the watching of the Preppers episode? What do you think of this entry or those vignettes? Share your thoughts in a short journal response. Citations are informal for this assignment and do not have to be perfect. What I want to hear most is what you think and how you feel.
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