cutting the rope p.212. goal: to understand why leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope”...

15
Cutting the Rope p.212

Upload: marcella-clack

Post on 31-Mar-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Cutting the Ropep.212

Page 2: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Goal:To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free.

Page 3: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

What is cutting the rope?

Ignoring societal expectations. To stop being influenced by other’s perceptions of reality.

Connects to ideal:

In order to be free, we must define reality in our own terms

Page 4: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Rehabilitation- ‘to restore to normal health.’The ‘rehab’ centres that pop stars like Britney get sent

to are not what Leunig would consider places of rehabilitation.

They in fact only pressure people to conform into the

social norms of our society:

“her minders seem just as determined to get a new rope around Britney’s neck and lead her into ‘rehab’.”

Page 5: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Crazy or winning?Is he crazy? Or is it

the society that we view as normal that has pushed him to this place?

Page 6: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Madness – a way to cut the rope“Zorba the Greek wisely said, ‘A man

needs a little madness, or else he never dares cut the rope and be free’.”

“we need at least a sweet little tincture of madness…if we don’t…it will certainly be provided by fate in due course, in a size that may be far too big for us”

(if we don’t allow ourselves to be our natural, peculiar selves, we will go too crazy trying to be “normal”)

Page 7: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

“a man needs a little gang-gang cockatoo or he will never dare cut the rope and be free”

Leunig views nature as the real place for rehabilitation. His home, a small place out in the country; ngurra (aboriginal for country), is where he finds peace and his true self.

People may view him as being “out of touch with the human condition” here p.216 but he maintains that he’s not in fantasy, he’s in rehab.

And he believes “the entire world is longing for respite and healing”

Nature – a way to cut the rope

Page 8: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Our obsession with being ‘attractive’ has led to our world becoming extremely materialistic. This is why Leunig values nature as a way of escaping from this insanity, and as a reminder to value what we have around us: the land, other people and our true selves.

Page 9: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Welcome to our Drought... P.1-6

How a drought can alter our reality:

- “a kind of letting-go and a brokenness. You let go of many things: garden plants, various hopes about life itself, and most of all, your remnant and

pathetically human notions of normality and perfection”

Page 10: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

The reality we are faced with in the media is that of a “brutal and crazy world” so to relieve us off this harsh fact instead we read celebrity gossip and failed boob jobs.

This is to prevent us from being “troubled... negative or unhappy” which would make us not very “fun at a party”.

This would be unattractive.

Page 11: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Leunig seems to be suggesting that this acceptance of the world as it is (cruel, unforgiving, inequitable) is in fact the insane thing.

Even a Buddhist once said to him that ‘“it’s just what is”- the general point that to rage against a brutal, crazy world would be futile.’

Page 12: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

What do you think?

It is pointless to try to improve the world

It is morally wrong to simply accept cruelty and injustices in this world

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Wherever you move, be prepared to justify where you are standing.

Page 13: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Questions:Do you think we have a moral responsibility

to try and improve our world, even if the majority seem to see it as a futile pursuit?

Is it okay to change channels or to stop listening when the news is too confronting?

(How could we connect this to Leunig’s ideas in ‘Blood, Guts, Violence and Death’?)

Page 14: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Concept MapDraw a diagram that shows how the ideas in

these essays are connected:

Hello, Welcome to our DroughtThou Shalt be AttractiveBlood, Guts, Violence and DeathMania Posing as PassionCutting the Rope

Page 15: Cutting the Rope p.212. Goal: To understand why Leunig thinks it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free

Return to Learning Goal:

Why does Leunig think it’s important to “cut the rope” and be free?

Your understanding: /4