If on a winter’s night a traveler
Quotation Response Journal
AP Literature & Composition F Block
| SELECTION | RESPONSES | 
| “‘Reading,’ he says, ‘is always   this: there is a thing that is there, a thing made of writing, a solid,   material object, which cannot be changed, and through this thing we measure   ourselves against something else that is not present, something else that   belongs to immaterial, invisible world, because it can only thought, imagined,   or because it was once and is no longer, past, lost, unattainable, in the   land of the dead…’ ‘Or that is not present because   it does not yet exist, something desired, feared, possible or impossible,’   Ludmilla says. ‘ | Throughout the novel, the act   of reading is interpreted and analyzed in various forms through the novels in   the novel and through the Reader and the Other Reader. In this instance, Professor   Uzzi-Tuzzii believes that reading is way of measuring ourselves, or putting   ourselves up against something for comparison and from the text one can draw   things that are not “made of writing” and are not “solid, material   object[s]”.  By referencing the dead, the   act of reading is put into the past tense, as something that has already   happened that we may compare ourselves to. For Ludmilla, her viewpoint   contrasts Uzzi-Tuzzii’s because she puts the idea of comparing oneself to   something that has not happened and only through exploration in and outside   of the text can one go “toward something that is about to be”.  | 
| “The story must also work hard   to keep up with us, to report a dialogue constructed on the void, speech by   speech. For the story, the bridge is not finished: beneath every word there   is nothingness.” (Calvino 83) | In the fourth story introduced   in the novel, through the narrator of Without   fear of wind or vertigo Calvino introduces the idea of “the void”, which   is the nothingness that is underlying in a story, what is said without ever   being said.  Though this is a story in the   novel, there is a presence that it tags along with the Reader because the   narrator gives is the sense that author is not writing the story, but the   characters are writing the story and the author, whether the author in the   void or the author constructed on the void, must follow the characters   regardless of the endeavors. Also, the through the fourth   narrator, the idea of the unfinished story concretely comes into play. The   unfinished bridge, so to speak, lies in coherence with the motif of the void.    | 
| “’The novel I would like most   to read at this moment,’ Ludmilla explains, ‘should have as its driving force   only the desire to narrate, to pile stories upon stories, without trying to   impose a philosophy of life on you, simply allowing you to observe its own   growth, like a tree, an entangling, as if of branches and leaves…’ On this point you are in   immediate agreement with her; putting behind you pages lacerated by   intellectual analyses, you dream of rediscovering a condition of natural   reading, innocent, primitive…” (Calvino 92) | Ludmilla, the Other Reader, is   a driving force in what it means to truly and naturally indulge in a book,   simply for the enjoyment of watching it develop. It is the idea that the   novel is not trying to press certain ideals on you, but is merely   satisfactory because you can track the development, which should be as   natural as the growth of tree. The novel itself largely surrounds a similar   principle, reading is a natural process, one which should be interpreted as   desired, but Calvino wants to inhibit a response throughout the novel, which   makes Ludmilla, at times, a contradictory character, thus providing further   reasons why she is the Other Reader and not the Reader. The idea of “natural reading”   introverted earlier in the novel acts as a guiding light and a foreshadowing   for the frustration of those incapable of producing this natural state amongst   their readers. Ludmilla’s natural and “innocent” idealistic views of reading   provide an untainted view of idea of reading itself in relation to the   reader.  | 
| “’There’s a boundary line: on   one side are those who make books, on the other those who read them. I want   to remain one of those who read them, so I take care always to remain on my   side of the line. Otherwise, the unsullied pleasure of reading ends, or at   least is transformed into something else, which is not what I want.’”   (Calvino 93) | Ludmilla clarifies the   so-called dangers of crossing the boundary between the publishing world and   the reader world. Through Ludmilla, Calvino clarifies why she is the Other   Reader and why the Reader is the Reader. The Reader, later on, decides to   interfere and further investigate the link from novel to novel by entering a   publishing house to further his research, thus putting him on the opposite   side of the “boundary line”. Since Ludmilla won’t cross this line, it puts   her on the other side of the fence.  There is also an element of the   artificial world versus the natural world that is used as an indirect   analogy. Calvino establishes his own void through Ludmilla, the Reader, and   unsaid actions of the two.  Ludmilla states that she enjoys   the natural aspects of reading, the book on the shelf, like leaf on a tree. A   publishing house is machine, a machine that destroys, shreds, presses, and   changes the words of the book, thus standing against the idea of leaving the   book, in its natural state. Through the analogy of the boundary line,   Ludmilla’s views and reading ethics are established and thus further the   artifice that is the publishing world.  | 
| “In fact, looking in   perspective at everything I am leaving out of the main narration, I see   something like a forest that extends in all directions and is so thick that   it doesn’t allow light  to pass: a   material, in other words, much richer than what I have chosen to put in the   foreground this time, so it is not impossible that the person who follows my   story may feel himself a bit cheated, seeing that the stream is dispersed   into so many trickles, and that of  the   essential events only the last echoes and reverberations arrive at him; but   it is not impossible that this is the very effect I aimed at when I started   narrating, or let’s say it’s a trick of the narrative art that I am trying to   employ, a rule of discretion that consists in maintaining my position   slightly below the narrative possibilities at my disposal.” (Calvino 109) | Throughout the novel, Calvino   interjects his views of reading, writing, and the various thought processes   that go into both. In the fifth novel introduced, Looks down in the gathering shadow, Calvino employs the idea of   the void further but also uses one of the novels within the novel to solidify   the motif of the forest that classifies the natural realm of reading that can   allow the reader to gain insight beyond the text. The narrator of Looks down in the gathering shadow   also creates a void stating that one must gain perspective through the things   that are left “out of the main narration,” or are unsaid altogether. Calvino almost means to   apologize for the various directions his novel has gone in from the beginning   and will continue to go in because the Reader “may feel a bit cheated, seeing   that the stream is dispersed into so many trickles”.  | 
| “Lovers’   reading of each other’s bodies (of that concentrate of mind and body which   lovers use to go to bed together) differs from the reading of written pages   in that it is not linear. It starts at any point, skips, repeats itself, goes   back ward, insists, ramifies in simultaneous and divergent messages,   converges again, has moments of irritation, turns the page, finds its place,   gets lost. A direction can be recognized in it, a route to an end, since it   tends toward a climax, and with this end in view it arranges rhythmic phases,   metrical scansions, recurrence of motives. But is the climax really the end?   Or is the race toward that end opposed by another drive that works in the   opposite direction, swimming against the moments, recovering time?” (Calvino   156) | Calvino   seeks to focus on the interpretation of one human to another and what they   make of it. The “lover’s reading of each other’s bodies” holds values of   existentialism through the idea that there are two juxtaposing forces in an   intimate fair. One is pulling away from the idea of developing feels for the   other. The other force is doing just the opposite of that, “swimming against   the moments”, and trying to pull one another close into a closer analysis of the   other.  An affair can be what you make of it; it can end gloriously or go up in flames and “get lost” so to speak. Existentialism exists in the realm of affection and the skewing of it that can take place through the analogy of two lovers. Also,   the affair between the two readers thus enacts the motif of sex in the novel.   Sex, being a natural act, sides with Ludmilla and her natural views of realm   of reading.  | 
| “At other times, on the   contrary, I seem to understand that between the book to be written and things   that already exist there can be only a kind of complementary relationship:   the book should be the written counterpart of the unwritten world; its   subject should be what does not exist and cannot exist except when written,   but whose absence is obscurely felt that which exists, in its own   incompleteness.” (Calvino 172)  | Chapter 8 is pivotal in the   recognition of the cognitive processes of an author. Silas Flannery, the   author of In a network of lines that   enlace, introduces the struggles of writing a novel. Flannery has a   different view of the literary void and the realm of “the book to be written   and things that already exist”. He believes that they must work in stride to   create “counterpart[s]” or foils of each other. Thus in attempts to balance each   other while working simultaneously to create a world that does not exist   through a world that does. Calvino emphasizes existence   through nonexistence with Flannery’s thought processes. As a conflicted   author, Flannery struggles to find the realm of existence that he can   transfer into the realm of nonexistent. He seeks to create through the   written, a world that does not exist, and which is felt when reading. Through   Flannery’s contradictory thought processes, Calvino establishes the idea that   through incompleteness, or nonexistence, completeness and existence can be   gained and understood.  | 
| “I see that one way or another   I keep circling around the idea of an interdependence between the unwritten   world and the book I should write. This is why writing presents itself to me   as an operation of such weight that I remain crushed by it. I put my eye to   the spyglass and train it on the reader. Between her eyes and the page a   white butterfly flutters. Whatever she may have been reading, now it is   certainly the butterfly that has captured her attention. The unwritten world   has its climax in that butterfly. The result at which I must aim is something   specific, intimate, light.” (Calvino 172) | While Flannery is on a retreat,   trying to write a novel, he observes through his spyglass, Lotaria,   Ludmilla’s sister, and observes the tranquility she maintains when she reads.   Flannery envies the serenity of the reader and so she becomes his muse in his   writing ventures.  It is referenced that Flannery   wants to be that butterfly that holds the reader’s attention. As he   “circl[es] around the idea” like a butterfly between the written and   unwritten world, Flannery relates himself to the butterfly. Also by aiming to   be the thing that captures her attention, there is a sense of intimacy that   is established not only between Flannery and Lotaria, but between author and   the reader.  The use of nature in the realm   of reading is once again used through the white butterfly. The butterfly   catches Lotaria’s attention and through that unwritten exchange, specific and   natural feeling is produced. Through the lithe idea of thinking and state of   being is relished through the use of the white butterfly further justifying   that reading should be a process that is naturally enjoyed.   | 
| “’Something must always remain   that eludes us… For power to have object on which to be exercised, a space in   which to stretch out its arms… As long as I know there exists in the world   someone who does tricks only for the love of the trick, as long as I know   there is a woman who loves reading for reading’s sake, I can convince myself   that the world continues…And every evening I, too, abandon myself to reading,   like that distant unknown woman…’” (Calvino 240) | Arkadian Porphyrich, a  character that furthers the insanity of apocrypha,   also shares the idealism that exists in the natural indulgence of the women   who was the inspiration for Flannery.  There is now a sense of   abandonment and loneliness that are implied through love for “love of the   trick” through Porphyrich’s perspective.  Also, there is sense of   sensuality and power that govern that natural feeling that Lotaria and   Ludmilla indulge in when reading. Every time a jealously for this feeling is   expressed, it is almost sensual in description and in jealously. The sense of   abandoning is not just a depressing use of diction, but is also sensual in   the sense that these men are losing themselves in the idea of another, just   as the Reader loses himself with Ludmilla and Flannery with Lotaria. Sex is   used as metaphor for a state of being as well as physiological state that one   can lose oneself in through divulging in reading.  | 
| The seventh reader interrupts you: ‘Do you believe that   every story must have a beginning and an end? In ancient times a story could   end in two ways: having passed all the tests, the hero and the heroine   married, or else they died. The ultimate meaning to which all stories refer   has two faces: the continuity of life, the inevitability of death.’ You stop for a moment to reflect on those words. Then, in   a flash, you decide you want to marry Ludmilla.” | As the Reader is at the library trying to get the last ten   books that he was not able to finish, he lands himself in a philosophical   conversation on the meaning of reading, and the continuation of a story. Though the seventh reader aims to make the point that a   story can end in more than two ways, ironically enough, the reader’s story   had both of the outcomes the seventh reader noted. The Reader passed all the   tests. Throughout the novel chase he was persistent, and when traveling to   other countries he succeeded in all that he was tried against in the world of   banned literature and fake literature. Also, the Reader and Other Reader, or   the Reader and Ludmilla, are the hero and heroine of the book, and impulsively   minutes after the seventh reader concludes to the Reader, the Reader decides   to marry Ludmilla.  Through marrying Ludmilla, the Reader succeeds in   establishing “the continuity of life”. And through the end of story, in which   the Reader does finish If on a winter’s   night a traveler, the inevitability of the death of literary wild goose   chase has ended.  The continuity of life can also be interpreted as the   continuity of existence, which is a recurring theme in the novel. The   inevitability of death exists more so in the ten stories within the novel   that occur. After a while, you catch on that no story of the ten that is told   will be completed in the duration of the novel, thus the story itself dies,   and the novel as a whole continues. Thus the novel suffices for its own   criteria as a story.  | 
Quotation Response Journal for The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
| “' He is not well' said   the mother to the head clerk while the father was still speaking through the   door, 'he's not well sir, believe me. Why else would Gregor miss a train! All   that boy thinks about is work. What makes me most mad is how he never goes   out in the evening; he's been in the city eight days now , but he's been at   home every night. He sits with us at the table quietly reading the newspaper   or studying the train schedules. His only amusement is busying himself with   his fretsaw'” (13, Barnes and Noble Classics) | I think that this passage   is interesting because it serves two purposes, firstly it is indirect   characterization of Gregor and secondly it could been seen as a connection to   the current working class. The mother describes Gregor as a hardworking young   man who lives a much less than idealistic life. Although it seems as though   Gregor might view his lifestyle as exemplary (he is completely focused on his   main duty, that of providing for his family) it is clear that the mother is   speaking for the readers as well in expressing her concern for Gregor's   happiness. However, we might apply this description of Gregor's life to a   larger picture, perhaps that of the whole society at that time? It might be   the bleak book cover that conjures up images of a depressing middle class,   but the images are in my head and associated with the tale nonetheless. It   seems as though Kafka might be pointing a finger at the communist regime in   the Austro-Hungarian Empire at that time, where men were disconnected from   family and friends and worked tirelessly just to get by.  | 
| “With the aid of the   chair, Gregor slowly pushed himself to the door, then let go and threw   himself against it and held himself upright-the pads of his legs were   slightly sticky- and rested there for a moment from his exertions.” (16) | This passage clearly   exemplifies the weirdness of Kafka's writing. He is describing in great   detail and verisimilitude and event which is simply absurd for readers to   imagine, and yet we do thanks to his description. If we just take a moment   and look back- we are reading about the struggles of a giant cockroach   attempting to open a bedroom door, from the insect's point of view. However   odd this may be for any other writer, this style is what Kafka is all about.   Passage's like these seem to be why so many critics raise the question of   categorizing Kafka's work- is it modernism or post modernism? In a way I   think that it is both. The language Kafka uses in Metamorphosis is modernist,   he is relatively straight forward and analytical but the subject matter is   anything but. This is where it becomes more postmodernist. The plot is   abstract and surreal and Kafka does not adhere to any truths or traditions.   Through more analyzing of passages I'm hoping to define this transition and   difference a little more clearly, my thoughts are slightly hazy on the   subject.  | 
| “ In the end however,   there remained no other choice, for Gregor observed to his horror that he   could not control his direction when moving backward, and so he began as   quickly as possible, which was actually very slowly, to turn himself around.   Perhaps the father recognized his good intentions because he did not   interfere; instead he occasionally even directed the movement from a distance   with the tip of his stick. If only the father would stop that infernal   hissing!” (20) | I think it's interesting   how despite his bodily transformation, Gregor still says the same mentally.   He keeps the same outlook on everything, and even thinks about how he can get   to work and do his chores. Instead it is the mindsets of his family that   change. Although they never seem particularly loving or appreciative towards   Gregor in the beginning, we get the sense that he is accepted as a member of   the family. As the novel progresses however, they slowly start to see him as   an unwelcome guest imposing on their happiness despite all that he did for   them before. It is his father whose mind changes the most. We can see that he   is still trying to accept Gregor in the passage above “perhaps his father   recognized his good intentions” but the father is still becoming more and   more hostile towards Gregor “if only his father would stop that infernal   hissing!”. Perhaps the true metamorphosis is not that of Gregor, but of his   family. His change only catalyzes this, and it is his family's reactions that   we should pay the most attention to.  | 
| “Those had been happy   times and they had never returned, at least not with the same brilliance,   even though Gregor later earned enough to meet the expenses of the entire   family and did so. They had simply grown used to it, both the family and   Gregor; the money was gratefully accepted, and gladly given but it no longer   brought and particular warmth.” (26) | This does not seem like   such an unusual occurrence. Often times we become used to things we   previously cherished, and begin to disregard their significance. The   difference here is that the money has been given with such sacrifice on the   part of Gregor. He gave up his happiness to provide for his family which is   not something that everyone would do. But still, his contributions become   common place until he is no longer able to provide at which point his place   in the family shifts.  | 
| “Incidentally,   the mother wanted to visit Gregor relatively soon but the father and the   sister put her off with logical arguments that Gregor listened to very   attentively and approved of wholeheartedly. But later when she had to be held   back by force, and when she cried out ; “let me go to Gregor, he's my   unfortunate son! Can't you understand that I must go to him?”Gregor then   thought that it would perhaps be beneficial if the mother did come in...”   (29) | This   seems to be one of the first signs that show that one of Gregor's parents   still care about it. It isn't surprising that it is Gregor's mother. Although   she was clearly scared by Gregor's transformation it seems as though she is   struggling with how to act towards him. He is still her son no matter what   form he takes. I think by the end of the story she loses this attitude or   maybe just allows herself to be pushed over by the father when they all   decide that it is best that Gregor leaves the house. For the short time in   between however she struggles with how she must act towards him and in the   passage above she takes the role of ever-loving mother. | 
| “Upon   hearing his mother's words, Gregor realized that the lack of any direct human   exchange, coupled with the monotony of the family's life, must have confused   his mind; he could not otherwise explain to himself how he could have   seriously wished to have his room cleared out. Did he really wish his warm   room, comfortably furnished with old family heirlooms, to be transformed into   a lair which he would certainly be able to crawl freely in any direction, but   at the price of rapidly and completely forgetting his human past?” (31).  | In   a previous quotation I think I mentioned how Gregor's mind stays relatively   the same-- I partially take that back now. I think that Gregor seems to be   struggling with maintaining his human mind and letting himself revert to the   mind of a beetle. He subconsciously wants to embrace his physical form and   allow himself to be comfortable “certainly be able to crawl freely in any   direction” but I think he is afraid of losing more of himself if he does. His   number one priority stays the same throughout the beginning of the book, that   of caring for his family.  | 
| “Then   other times he could not be bothered to worry about his family, he was filled   with rage at their miserable treament of him, and even though he could not   imagine anything that mike spark his appetite he still devised plans to raid   the pantry and, even if he was not hungry, get the food due him.” (39) | This   reaction seems more realistic, this is perhaps the feeling I would have if I   were turned into a giant dung beetle and my family began to ignore me (knock   on wood). Tired of putting up with the less than satisfactory treatment   Gregor becomes upset, as an normal person would. He no longer is playing the   role of selfless caretaker, instead the roles seemed to have switched. It is   up to his family to take care of him and they end up doing a rotten job.   Whether he realizes this consciously or not their inability to care for   Gregor like he cared for them infuriates him to the point of wanting to steal   what he feels is rightfully his.  | 
| “And   yet the sister played so beautifully. Her face was tilted to one side and she   followed the notes with soulful and probing eyes. Gregor advanced a little,   keeping his eyes low so that they might possibly meet hers. Was he a beast if   the music could move him so?” (44) | I   thought that the juxtaposition of the sisters beautiful music and Gregor's   beastliness was really interesting, especially since in the next few   paragraphs Gregor goes on to explain how he would like to shut Grete up in   his room and never let her leave. This kind of contradiction seems to be   driving the whole book, the struggle about how to accept this new form of   Gregor appears to be one of the main themes. In this particular passage Kafka   is playing up Gregor's change by describing the sounds of Grete's music beforehand.   This reminds the readers of just how un-human Gregor is becoming, something   that is foreshadowed in the next few paragraphs.  | 
| “And   it was like a confirmation of their new dreams and good intentions that at   their journey's end their daughter jumped to her feet and stretched her young   body.” (52). | Reading   the last line of the book out of context, it almost seems like it could be   plucked out of an entirely different story. It seems like a breath of fresh   air and installs a sense of hope in the reader- but placed in the context of   Metamorphosis it is a kind of hope that we do not want to willingly accept.   Yes the daughter and the family holds new prospects and new ideals but at the   price of what? They had to be finally rid of Gregor before gaining this new   outlook and after being told much of the story from Gregor's perspective I   cannot help but be reluctant to accept these new prospects.  | 
| “Many   modernist works try to uphold the idea that works of art can provide the   unity, coherence, and meaning which has been lost in most of modern life; art   will do what other human institutions fail to do. Postmodernism, in contrast,   doesn't lament the idea of fragmentation, provisionality, or incoherence, but   rather celebrates that. The world is meaningless? Let's not pretend that art   can make meaning then, let's just play with nonsense.” (http://www.colorado.edu)** | This   is a quote from one of our background sources**, an English course at the  | 
** This assignment called for students to reserve on of their ten (10) responses for an outside source that illuminate some aspect of the work they had chosen to read. 
