Wednesday, April 28, 2010



Finding Nemo is the very antithesis of Luce Irigaray's Feminist theories. In her mind, the mother-daugther is the most important in the successful (or in some cases unsuccessful) development of an individual. Pixar's Finding Nemo puts so much important on a healthy father-son relationship, it completly ignores any mother-daugther relationships, a very sexiest and unequal potrayal of reality in Irigaray's eyes.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Schoolhouse Rock Foucaultian Style



Ahh Schoolhouse Rock, my childhood friend how you deceive me. According to Foucault Schoolhouse Rock is right. Knowledge is power. "Power-knowledge" is Foucault's term which shows the close correlation between power and knowledge. This definition implies serious consequences. Knowledge can never be neutral, it is determined by those in power. So this simple Schoolhouse Rock clip isn't as simple as meets the eye.

My Part



Last Wednesday, I had the honor and the privilege to be able to present Marx's main ideas to our Critical Theories class. It was nice to see the activities, slides, and clip work out very nicely. It seemed as though the students were engaged in our presentation throughout.

For our presentation to be success we had hoped for, we broke down Marxism into sections that each one of our group members took as their own. Each member than became an expert on their section and created powerpoint slides off of it. My section mainly dealt with the sell of labor and the Capitalist class. In order to connect my information with my audience, I made a hypothetical scenario which showed exactly how we sell ourselves to the Capitalist class on a daily basis. I feel this went over well with the class. Next I showed examples of who compose the Capitalist class (i.e. Dell, Apple, Von's, Staples, etc.) Again, I felt this connected well with the students.

Though I was nervous going into the presentation, once it started, I was happy to introduce the class to Marxism. Looking forward to the next group's presentation.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Drum Corp International (DCI): A Musical Captialist System



The Drum Corp International is the serious, worldwide musical extension to high school marching bands. DCI is "Marching Music's Major League" (DCI). Every dedicated musician who commits their time, energy and dedication to one of the many DCI drum corps (composed of brass instrumentalist, percussionists, and color guard members)is enlisting themselves into a capitalist machine. This system is neither good nor bad, it simply is what it is. According to a Marxist perspective, each musician is capital to the non-profit DCI corporation. But here comes the irony of this capitalist system. The individual musicians are not paid any wages, in fact, they must pay thousands to even take part. In Marx's "Wage Labor and Capital" section of Political Critism a capitalist system looks at any employee as simply a part of the production process, another raw material if you will (Marx 660). In the case of DCI, each musician is the ultimate raw material, as they not only contribute to creating the unique and entertaining field shows DCI runs on, they buy into DCI while aiding in the creation of more capitalist products (DVDs, shirts, bumperstickers, etc.)
If DCI ran according to Marxist ideals, each member of every drum corp in the DCI would receive an equal share of the overall profits created by all of their combined labor (559). Instead of paying thousands of dollars each to march, the musicians would receive a small amount of money, equalizing them with the staff who run DCI in Indianapolis, Indiana. However, this is not how DCI runs, nor will it ever run in this fashion. Through and through, DCI is a prime example of how effective exploiting a labor force can be to a large capitalist corporation.

Works Cited

"DCI Info". Drum Corp International. 2010. 10 April 2010. Web.

"Wage Labor and Capital". Literary Theory: An Anthology. Ed. Rivkin, Julie and Ryan, Micheal. Blackwell Publishing 2004: (559-664). Print.