For Thursday we have both a couple of poems by Khaled Mattawa and his short story "First Snow."
One of his poems, "Growing Up in Bengazi with a Sears Catalog," is somewhat narrative; the other an essay on the ethnic history of Arabs.
I'll be curious to see how you apply the terms for analyzing narrative that we discussed in class yesterday--exposition, problem/complication, crisis, climax, resolution--as well as our terms for analyzing point of view (narrator) and character (major/minor, round/flat).
You don't have to elaborate on all of the terms, but anything you can say about any of the terms that contribute to moving from the story to its theme and arriving at what the story means and how it's meant to affect the reader.
Alternatively, you can comment on the theme as you relate to it personally.
As a second alternative, you can try analyzing "Growing up in Bengazi" as narrative.
Alternatively, you can comment on the theme as you relate to it personally.
Strict conservative religious lifestyles and college life many times conflict with one another. I relate to Ali's struggle as a practicing Muslim trying to adjust to college through my boyfriend. He underwent many of the same conflicts when he came to UT. He also lost himself in a social environment where partying, drinking and sex were exposed to him on a more regular surreal basis than just what he witnessed on television. Slowly, he felt more and more pressure to fall into a lifestyle that his parents had warned him to resist, one that he himself knew deep down in his heart was not the right one for him. Slowly, he found himself slacking in his prayers, finally to the point where he quit his religious practice altogether. He had undertaken a lifestyle that he had tried so hard to fight. Due to this unfamiliar almost unbearable peer pressure, combined with the lack of guidance to put himself back on the right path, he found it a true struggle to motivate himself to pray and even to practice the fundamentals of his own religion.