THE
CRAB
CANNERY
SHIP
1
"BUDDY, WE'RE OFF TO HELL!"
Leaning over the deck railing, two fishermen looked out on the
town of Hakodate stretched like a snail embracing the sea. One of
them spit out a cigarette he had smoked down to his fingertips. The
stub fell skimming the tall side of the ship, turning playfully every
which way. The man reeked of liquor.
Steamships with red bulging bellies rose from the water; others
being loaded with cargo leaned hard to one side as if tugged down
by the sea. There were thick yenow smokestacks, large bell-like
buoys, launches scurrying like bedbugs among ships. Bleak whirls
of oil soot, scraps of bread, and rotten fruit floated on the waves as
if forming some special fabric. Blown by the wind, smoke drifted
over waves wafting a stifling smell of coal. From time to time a harsh
rattle of winches traveling along the waves reverberated against the
flesh.
19
..
21 KOBAYASHI TAKIJI 20
Directly in front of the crab cannery ship Hakkomaru rested a
sailing ship with peeling paint, its anchor chain lowered from a
in its bow that looked like an ox's nostril. Two foreign sailors with
pipes in mouth paced the deck back and forth like automatons. The
ship seemed to be Russian. No doubt it was a patrol vessel sent to keep
an eye on the Japanese cannery ship.
"I don't have a damned penny left. Shit, look:' One of the fish
ermen moved closer to the other, gripped his hand and pressed it
against the pocket of the corduroy trousers beneath his jacket. The
pocket seemed to contain a small box.
The other man silently watched his mate's face.
"He, he, he:' chuckled the first man. "They're cards:'
The ship's captain was smoking a cigarette and strolling along the
deck like an admiral. The smoke he exhaled broke into sharp angles as
it passed the tip of his nose, and flew away in shreds. Sailors draggling
wooden-soled zori were bustling in and out of the forward cabins,
food pails in hand. Preparations had been completed and the ship
was ready to sail.
The two fishermen, peering down through the hatch into workers'
quarters in the dim bottom of the ship, saw a noisy commotion inside
the stacked bunks, like a nest full of birds' darting faces. The workers
were all boys of fourteen or fifteen.
"Where're you from?"
"X District:'
They were all children from Hakodate's slums. Poverty had
brought them together.
"What about the guys in the bunks over there?"
"They're from Nambu:"
"And those?"
"Akita:' Each cluster of bunks belonged to a different region.
"Where in Akita?"
"North Akita:' The boy's nose was running with thick, oozing
mucus, and the rims of his eyes were inflamed and drooping.
"You farmers?"
"Yeah:'
The air was stifling, filled with the sour stench of rotten fruit.
'ft,"
The Crab Cannery
Dozens of barrels of pickled vegetables were stored next door, adding
their own shit-like odor.
"From now on you can sleep hugging your old Dad here:' smil.
T h e O p e n B o a t1T h e O p e n B o a tNON.docxperryk1
T h e O p e n B o a t
1
T h e O p e n B o a t
NONE OF THEM KNEW THE COLOR OF THE SKY.
Their eyes glanced level, and remained upon the waves that swept
toward them. These waves were gray, except for the tops, which were
white, and all the men knew the colors of the sea. The line between
sky and water narrowed and widened, and fell and rose.
A man likes to take a bath in a bigger area than this boat could
provide. These waves were frightfully rapid and tall; and each boiling,
white top was a problem in the small boat.
The cook sat in the bottom, and looked with both eyes at the six
inches of boat which separated him from the ocean. He had bared his
fat arms as he worked to empty the water from the boat. Often he said,
“God! That was a bad one.” As he remarked it, he always looked toward
the east over the rough sea.
p
S t e p h e n C r a n e
The oiler, guiding with one of the two oars in the boat, sometimes
raised himself suddenly to keep away from the water that poured in. It
was a thin little oar, and it often seemed ready to break.
The correspondent, pulling at the other oar, watched the waves
and wondered why he was there.
The hurt captain, lying in the front, was feeling defeat and despair.
It was despair that comes, for a time at least, to even the bravest and most
enduring when the business fails, the army loses, the ship goes down.
The mind of the master of a vessel is rooted deep in her wood, whether
he commands for a day or many. And this captain had in his thoughts
the firm impression of a scene in the grays of dawn, with seven faces
turned down in the sea. And later the remains of the ship, washed by
waves, going low and lower and down. Thereafter there was something
strange in his voice. Although steady, it was deep with grief, and of a
quality beyond speech or tears.
“Keep her a little more south, Billie,” said he.
“A little more south, sir,” said the oiler in the back.
A seat in this boat was not unlike a seat upon a jumpy horse, and
a horse is not much smaller. The boat was much like an animal. As each
wave came, and she rose for it, she seemed like a horse leaping over a
high fence. The manner of her ride over these walls of water is a thing
of mystery. Each wave required a new leap, and a leap from the air. Then
jumping and slipping and racing and dropping down, she steadied for
the next threat.
A particular danger of the sea is the fact that after successfully get
ting through one wave, you discover that there is another behind it. The
next wave is just as nervously anxious and purposeful to overturn boats.
In a tenfoot boat one can get a good idea of the great force of the sea.
As each gray wall of water approached, it shut all else from the view of
the men in the boat. It was not difficult to imagine that this particular
wave was the final outburst of the ocean, the last effort of the deter
mined water.
The sun climbed steadily up the sky. The men k.
THE BLUE HOTELIThe Palace Hotel at Fort Romper was painted a.docxhe45mcurnow
THE BLUE HOTEL
I
The Palace Hotel at Fort Romper was painted a light blue, a shade
that is on the legs of a kind of heron, causing the bird to declare
its position against any background. The Palace Hotel, then, was
always screaming and howling in a way that made the dazzling winter
landscape of Nebraska seem only a gray swampish hush. It stood alone
on the prairie, and when the snow was falling the town two hundred
yards away was not visible. But when the traveler alighted at the
railway station he was obliged to pass the Palace Hotel before he
could come upon the company of low clap-board houses which composed
Fort Romper, and it was not to be thought that any traveler could pass
the Palace Hotel without looking at it. Pat Scully, the proprietor,
had proved himself a master of strategy when he chose his paints. It
is true that on clear days, when the great trans-continental
expresses, long lines of swaying Pullmans, swept through Fort
Romper, passengers were overcome at the sight, and the cult that knows
the brown-reds and the subdivisions of the dark greens of the East
expressed shame, pity, horror, in a laugh. But to the citizens of this
prairie town, and to the people who would naturally stop there, Pat
Scully had performed a feat. With this opulence and splendor, these
creeds, classes, egotisms, that streamed through Romper on the rails
day after day, they had no color in common.
As if the displayed delights of such a blue hotel were not
sufficiently enticing, it was Scully's habit to go every morning and
evening to meet the leisurely trains that stopped at Romper and work
his seductions upon any man that he might see wavering, gripsack in
hand.
One morning, when a snow-crusted engine dragged its long string of
freight cars and its one passenger coach to the station, Scully
performed the marvel of catching three men. One was a shaky and
quick-eyed Swede, with a great shining cheap valise; one was a tall
bronzed cowboy, who was on his way to a ranch near the Dakota line;
one was a little silent man from the East, who didn't look it, and
didn't announce it. Scully practically made them prisoners. He was
so nimble and merry and kindly that each probably felt it would be the
height of brutality to try to escape. They trudged off over the
creaking board sidewalks in the wake of the eager little Irishman.
He wore a heavy fur cap squeezed tightly down on his head. It caused
his two red ears to stick out stiffly, as if they were made of tin.
At last, Scully, elaborately, with boisterous hospitality, conducted
them through the portals of the blue hotel. The room which they
entered was small. It seemed to be merely a proper temple for an
enormous stove, which, in the center, was humming with godlike
violence. At various points on its surface the iron had become
luminous and glowed yellow from the heat. Beside the stove Scully's
son Johnnie was playing High-Five with an old farmer who had
whiskers both gray and sandy. They were quarreling. Frequ.
T h e O p e n B o a t1T h e O p e n B o a tNON.docxperryk1
T h e O p e n B o a t
1
T h e O p e n B o a t
NONE OF THEM KNEW THE COLOR OF THE SKY.
Their eyes glanced level, and remained upon the waves that swept
toward them. These waves were gray, except for the tops, which were
white, and all the men knew the colors of the sea. The line between
sky and water narrowed and widened, and fell and rose.
A man likes to take a bath in a bigger area than this boat could
provide. These waves were frightfully rapid and tall; and each boiling,
white top was a problem in the small boat.
The cook sat in the bottom, and looked with both eyes at the six
inches of boat which separated him from the ocean. He had bared his
fat arms as he worked to empty the water from the boat. Often he said,
“God! That was a bad one.” As he remarked it, he always looked toward
the east over the rough sea.
p
S t e p h e n C r a n e
The oiler, guiding with one of the two oars in the boat, sometimes
raised himself suddenly to keep away from the water that poured in. It
was a thin little oar, and it often seemed ready to break.
The correspondent, pulling at the other oar, watched the waves
and wondered why he was there.
The hurt captain, lying in the front, was feeling defeat and despair.
It was despair that comes, for a time at least, to even the bravest and most
enduring when the business fails, the army loses, the ship goes down.
The mind of the master of a vessel is rooted deep in her wood, whether
he commands for a day or many. And this captain had in his thoughts
the firm impression of a scene in the grays of dawn, with seven faces
turned down in the sea. And later the remains of the ship, washed by
waves, going low and lower and down. Thereafter there was something
strange in his voice. Although steady, it was deep with grief, and of a
quality beyond speech or tears.
“Keep her a little more south, Billie,” said he.
“A little more south, sir,” said the oiler in the back.
A seat in this boat was not unlike a seat upon a jumpy horse, and
a horse is not much smaller. The boat was much like an animal. As each
wave came, and she rose for it, she seemed like a horse leaping over a
high fence. The manner of her ride over these walls of water is a thing
of mystery. Each wave required a new leap, and a leap from the air. Then
jumping and slipping and racing and dropping down, she steadied for
the next threat.
A particular danger of the sea is the fact that after successfully get
ting through one wave, you discover that there is another behind it. The
next wave is just as nervously anxious and purposeful to overturn boats.
In a tenfoot boat one can get a good idea of the great force of the sea.
As each gray wall of water approached, it shut all else from the view of
the men in the boat. It was not difficult to imagine that this particular
wave was the final outburst of the ocean, the last effort of the deter
mined water.
The sun climbed steadily up the sky. The men k.
THE BLUE HOTELIThe Palace Hotel at Fort Romper was painted a.docxhe45mcurnow
THE BLUE HOTEL
I
The Palace Hotel at Fort Romper was painted a light blue, a shade
that is on the legs of a kind of heron, causing the bird to declare
its position against any background. The Palace Hotel, then, was
always screaming and howling in a way that made the dazzling winter
landscape of Nebraska seem only a gray swampish hush. It stood alone
on the prairie, and when the snow was falling the town two hundred
yards away was not visible. But when the traveler alighted at the
railway station he was obliged to pass the Palace Hotel before he
could come upon the company of low clap-board houses which composed
Fort Romper, and it was not to be thought that any traveler could pass
the Palace Hotel without looking at it. Pat Scully, the proprietor,
had proved himself a master of strategy when he chose his paints. It
is true that on clear days, when the great trans-continental
expresses, long lines of swaying Pullmans, swept through Fort
Romper, passengers were overcome at the sight, and the cult that knows
the brown-reds and the subdivisions of the dark greens of the East
expressed shame, pity, horror, in a laugh. But to the citizens of this
prairie town, and to the people who would naturally stop there, Pat
Scully had performed a feat. With this opulence and splendor, these
creeds, classes, egotisms, that streamed through Romper on the rails
day after day, they had no color in common.
As if the displayed delights of such a blue hotel were not
sufficiently enticing, it was Scully's habit to go every morning and
evening to meet the leisurely trains that stopped at Romper and work
his seductions upon any man that he might see wavering, gripsack in
hand.
One morning, when a snow-crusted engine dragged its long string of
freight cars and its one passenger coach to the station, Scully
performed the marvel of catching three men. One was a shaky and
quick-eyed Swede, with a great shining cheap valise; one was a tall
bronzed cowboy, who was on his way to a ranch near the Dakota line;
one was a little silent man from the East, who didn't look it, and
didn't announce it. Scully practically made them prisoners. He was
so nimble and merry and kindly that each probably felt it would be the
height of brutality to try to escape. They trudged off over the
creaking board sidewalks in the wake of the eager little Irishman.
He wore a heavy fur cap squeezed tightly down on his head. It caused
his two red ears to stick out stiffly, as if they were made of tin.
At last, Scully, elaborately, with boisterous hospitality, conducted
them through the portals of the blue hotel. The room which they
entered was small. It seemed to be merely a proper temple for an
enormous stove, which, in the center, was humming with godlike
violence. At various points on its surface the iron had become
luminous and glowed yellow from the heat. Beside the stove Scully's
son Johnnie was playing High-Five with an old farmer who had
whiskers both gray and sandy. They were quarreling. Frequ.
The following are the primary source of the paper the page n.docxadelaider1
The following are the primary source of the paper the page numbers on the right sides of the paragraphs in light which helps to cite. On the two last pages you will find the guide lines. *The paper should not be symbolic. The Chrysanthemums *[1938]
Read the Biography
John Steinbeck
The high grey-flannel fog of winter closed off the Salinas Valley° from the sky and from all the rest of the world. On every side it sat like a lid on the mountains and made of the great valley a closed pot. On the broad, level land floor the gang plows bit deep and left the black earth shining like metal where the shares had cut. On the foothill ranches across the Salinas River, the yellow stubble fields seemed to be bathed in pale cold sunshine, but there was no sunshine in the valley now in December. The thick willow scrub along the river flamed with sharp and positive yellow leaves.
It was a time of quiet and of waiting. The air was cold and tender. A light wind blew up from the southwest so that the farmers were mildly hopeful of a good rain before long; but fog and rain do not go together.
Across the river, on Henry Allen's foothill ranch there was little work to be done, for the hay was cut and stored and the orchards were plowed up to receive the rain deeply when it should come. The cattle on the higher slopes were becoming shaggy and rough-coated.
Elisa Allen, working in her flower garden, looked down across the yard and saw Henry, her husband, talking to two men in business suits. The three of them stood by the tractor shed, each man with one foot on the side of the little Fordson. They smoked cigarettes and studied the machine as they talked.
5Elisa watched them for a moment and then went back to her work. She was thirty-five. Her face was lean and strong and her eyes were as clear as water. Her figure looked blocked and heavy in her gardening costume, a man's black hat pulled low down over her eyes, clodhopper shoes, a figured print dress almost completely covered by a big corduroy apron with four big pockets to hold the snips, the trowel and scratcher, the seeds and the knife she worked with. She wore heavy leather gloves to protect her hands while she worked.
She was cutting down the old year's chrysanthemum stalks with a pair of short and powerful scissors. She looked down toward the men by the tractor shed now and then. Her face was eager and mature and handsome; even her work with the scissors was over-eager, over-powerful. The chrysanthemum stems seemed too small and easy for her energy.
She brushed a cloud of hair out of her eyes with the back of her glove, and left a smudge of earth on her cheek in doing it. Behind her stood the neat white farm house with red geraniums close-banked around it as high as the windows. It was a hard-swept looking little house with hard-polished windows, and a clean mud-mat on the front steps.
Elisa cast another glance toward the tractor shed. The strangers were getting into their Ford coupe. She took off a glove an.
Prisoner's of Hope - Colonial Gloucester, VirginiaChuck Thompson
A book written in the late 19th century by Mary Johnston about events that occurred in 17th century Gloucester, Virginia. The book is fiction based on actual facts. Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website. Visit us for more incredible content.
Answer Questions attachedit was said , read the text The Man Wh.docxhirstcruz
Answer Questions attached
it was said , read the text :
The Man Who Would Be King Pages 13-25
by Rudyard Kipling
The Kumharsen Serai is the great four-square
sink of humanity where the strings
of camels and horses from the North load
and unload. All the nationalities of Central
Asia may be found there, and most of the
folk of India proper. Balkh and Bokhara
there meet Bengal and Bombay, and try to
draw eye-teeth. You can buy ponies, turquoises,
Persian pussy-cats, saddle-bags, fat-tailed
sheep and musk in the Kumharsen
Serai, and get many strange things for
nothing. In the afternoon I went down
there to see whether my friends intended to
keep their word or were lying about drunk.
A priest attired in fragments of ribbons
and rags stalked up to me, gravely twisting
a child’s paper whirligig. Behind him was
his servant, bending under the load of a
crate of mud toys. The two were loading
up two camels, and the inhabitants of the
Serai watched them with shrieks of laughter.
“The priest is mad,” said a horse-dealer to
me. “He is going up to Kabul to sell toys
to the Amir. He will either be raised to
honor or have his head cut off. He came
in here this morning and has been behaving
madly ever since.”
“The witless are under the protection of
God,” stammered a flat-cheeked Usbeg in
broken Hindi. “They foretell future events.”
“Would they could have foretold that my
caravan would have been cut up by the
Shinwaris almost within shadow of the
Pass!” grunted the Eusufzai agent of a Rajputana
trading-house whose goods had been
feloniously diverted into the hands of other
robbers just across the Border, and whose
misfortunes were the laughing-stock of the
bazar. “Ohé, priest, whence come you and
whither do you go?”
“From Roum have I come,” shouted the
priest, waving his whirligig; “from Roum,
blown by the breath of a hundred devils
across the sea! O thieves, robbers, liars,
the blessing of Pir Khan on pigs, dogs, and
perjurers! Who will take the Protected of
God to the North to sell charms that are
never still to the Amir? The camels shall
not gall, the sons shall not fall sick, and the
wives shall remain faithful while they are
away, of the men who give me place in
their caravan. Who will assist me to slipper
the King of the Roos with a golden slipper
with a silver heel? The protection of Pir
Kahn be upon his labors!” He spread out
the skirts of his gaberdine and pirouetted between
the lines of tethered horses.
“There starts a caravan from Peshawar to
Kabul in twenty days, Huzrut,” said the
Eusufzai trader. “My camels go therewith.
Do thou also go and bring us good luck.”
“I will go even now!” shouted the priest.
“I will depart upon my winged camels,
and be at Peshawar in a day! Ho! Hazar
Mir Khan,” he yelled to his servant “drive
out the camels, but let me first mount my
own.”
He leaped on the back of his beast as it
knelt, and turning round to me, cried:—
“Come thou also, Sahib, a little along the
road, and I will sell thee a charm—an amulet
that shall .
The ancient mariner is a poem written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. In this poem, he talks about an old sailor who happened to stop one of the three wedding guests to listen to his woeful tale. The wedding guest was bewitched by the mariner's glittering eye and he sat down to hear his narrative of his disastrous journey he undertook.
The debate on the ratification of the U.S. Constitution was conducte.docxtodd241
The debate on the ratification of the U.S. Constitution was conducted between those who favored its passage who were known as “Federalists” and opponents to the ratification known as “Anti-Federalists”.
http://web.archive.org/web/20120312200301/http://www.utulsa.edu/law/classes/rice/constitutional/antifederalist/84.htm
Cite the name of the paper and the Author.
Identify two main points of each commentary.
Cite two or more quotes that are relevant to our modern day and explain how the quotes are relevant.
Visit the Founding Fathers Home Page index of Federalist Papers (
http://www.foundingfathers.info/federalistpapers/fedi.htm
). Choose ANY three of those papers and:
Cite the name of the paper and the Author.
Identify the two main points of each commentary.
Identify two or more quotes from each paper that identify limits on government that are currently being ignored by people in elected office and explain how elected officials are ignoring those limits.
.
The debate over the Constitution is not only crucial to understandin.docxtodd241
The debate over the Constitution is not only crucial to understanding politics in American society in this time, but it is also VERY relevant today. What brought about the drive for the Constitution? What were some of the arguments for it? Against it? (Remember to cite specific evidence from the module when talking about this.) Which would you have preferred, the Constitution or the Articles? Why?
.
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Similar to THE CRAB CANNERY SHIP 1 BUDDY, WERE OFF TO HEL.docx
The following are the primary source of the paper the page n.docxadelaider1
The following are the primary source of the paper the page numbers on the right sides of the paragraphs in light which helps to cite. On the two last pages you will find the guide lines. *The paper should not be symbolic. The Chrysanthemums *[1938]
Read the Biography
John Steinbeck
The high grey-flannel fog of winter closed off the Salinas Valley° from the sky and from all the rest of the world. On every side it sat like a lid on the mountains and made of the great valley a closed pot. On the broad, level land floor the gang plows bit deep and left the black earth shining like metal where the shares had cut. On the foothill ranches across the Salinas River, the yellow stubble fields seemed to be bathed in pale cold sunshine, but there was no sunshine in the valley now in December. The thick willow scrub along the river flamed with sharp and positive yellow leaves.
It was a time of quiet and of waiting. The air was cold and tender. A light wind blew up from the southwest so that the farmers were mildly hopeful of a good rain before long; but fog and rain do not go together.
Across the river, on Henry Allen's foothill ranch there was little work to be done, for the hay was cut and stored and the orchards were plowed up to receive the rain deeply when it should come. The cattle on the higher slopes were becoming shaggy and rough-coated.
Elisa Allen, working in her flower garden, looked down across the yard and saw Henry, her husband, talking to two men in business suits. The three of them stood by the tractor shed, each man with one foot on the side of the little Fordson. They smoked cigarettes and studied the machine as they talked.
5Elisa watched them for a moment and then went back to her work. She was thirty-five. Her face was lean and strong and her eyes were as clear as water. Her figure looked blocked and heavy in her gardening costume, a man's black hat pulled low down over her eyes, clodhopper shoes, a figured print dress almost completely covered by a big corduroy apron with four big pockets to hold the snips, the trowel and scratcher, the seeds and the knife she worked with. She wore heavy leather gloves to protect her hands while she worked.
She was cutting down the old year's chrysanthemum stalks with a pair of short and powerful scissors. She looked down toward the men by the tractor shed now and then. Her face was eager and mature and handsome; even her work with the scissors was over-eager, over-powerful. The chrysanthemum stems seemed too small and easy for her energy.
She brushed a cloud of hair out of her eyes with the back of her glove, and left a smudge of earth on her cheek in doing it. Behind her stood the neat white farm house with red geraniums close-banked around it as high as the windows. It was a hard-swept looking little house with hard-polished windows, and a clean mud-mat on the front steps.
Elisa cast another glance toward the tractor shed. The strangers were getting into their Ford coupe. She took off a glove an.
Prisoner's of Hope - Colonial Gloucester, VirginiaChuck Thompson
A book written in the late 19th century by Mary Johnston about events that occurred in 17th century Gloucester, Virginia. The book is fiction based on actual facts. Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website. Visit us for more incredible content.
Answer Questions attachedit was said , read the text The Man Wh.docxhirstcruz
Answer Questions attached
it was said , read the text :
The Man Who Would Be King Pages 13-25
by Rudyard Kipling
The Kumharsen Serai is the great four-square
sink of humanity where the strings
of camels and horses from the North load
and unload. All the nationalities of Central
Asia may be found there, and most of the
folk of India proper. Balkh and Bokhara
there meet Bengal and Bombay, and try to
draw eye-teeth. You can buy ponies, turquoises,
Persian pussy-cats, saddle-bags, fat-tailed
sheep and musk in the Kumharsen
Serai, and get many strange things for
nothing. In the afternoon I went down
there to see whether my friends intended to
keep their word or were lying about drunk.
A priest attired in fragments of ribbons
and rags stalked up to me, gravely twisting
a child’s paper whirligig. Behind him was
his servant, bending under the load of a
crate of mud toys. The two were loading
up two camels, and the inhabitants of the
Serai watched them with shrieks of laughter.
“The priest is mad,” said a horse-dealer to
me. “He is going up to Kabul to sell toys
to the Amir. He will either be raised to
honor or have his head cut off. He came
in here this morning and has been behaving
madly ever since.”
“The witless are under the protection of
God,” stammered a flat-cheeked Usbeg in
broken Hindi. “They foretell future events.”
“Would they could have foretold that my
caravan would have been cut up by the
Shinwaris almost within shadow of the
Pass!” grunted the Eusufzai agent of a Rajputana
trading-house whose goods had been
feloniously diverted into the hands of other
robbers just across the Border, and whose
misfortunes were the laughing-stock of the
bazar. “Ohé, priest, whence come you and
whither do you go?”
“From Roum have I come,” shouted the
priest, waving his whirligig; “from Roum,
blown by the breath of a hundred devils
across the sea! O thieves, robbers, liars,
the blessing of Pir Khan on pigs, dogs, and
perjurers! Who will take the Protected of
God to the North to sell charms that are
never still to the Amir? The camels shall
not gall, the sons shall not fall sick, and the
wives shall remain faithful while they are
away, of the men who give me place in
their caravan. Who will assist me to slipper
the King of the Roos with a golden slipper
with a silver heel? The protection of Pir
Kahn be upon his labors!” He spread out
the skirts of his gaberdine and pirouetted between
the lines of tethered horses.
“There starts a caravan from Peshawar to
Kabul in twenty days, Huzrut,” said the
Eusufzai trader. “My camels go therewith.
Do thou also go and bring us good luck.”
“I will go even now!” shouted the priest.
“I will depart upon my winged camels,
and be at Peshawar in a day! Ho! Hazar
Mir Khan,” he yelled to his servant “drive
out the camels, but let me first mount my
own.”
He leaped on the back of his beast as it
knelt, and turning round to me, cried:—
“Come thou also, Sahib, a little along the
road, and I will sell thee a charm—an amulet
that shall .
The ancient mariner is a poem written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. In this poem, he talks about an old sailor who happened to stop one of the three wedding guests to listen to his woeful tale. The wedding guest was bewitched by the mariner's glittering eye and he sat down to hear his narrative of his disastrous journey he undertook.
The debate on the ratification of the U.S. Constitution was conducte.docxtodd241
The debate on the ratification of the U.S. Constitution was conducted between those who favored its passage who were known as “Federalists” and opponents to the ratification known as “Anti-Federalists”.
http://web.archive.org/web/20120312200301/http://www.utulsa.edu/law/classes/rice/constitutional/antifederalist/84.htm
Cite the name of the paper and the Author.
Identify two main points of each commentary.
Cite two or more quotes that are relevant to our modern day and explain how the quotes are relevant.
Visit the Founding Fathers Home Page index of Federalist Papers (
http://www.foundingfathers.info/federalistpapers/fedi.htm
). Choose ANY three of those papers and:
Cite the name of the paper and the Author.
Identify the two main points of each commentary.
Identify two or more quotes from each paper that identify limits on government that are currently being ignored by people in elected office and explain how elected officials are ignoring those limits.
.
The debate over the Constitution is not only crucial to understandin.docxtodd241
The debate over the Constitution is not only crucial to understanding politics in American society in this time, but it is also VERY relevant today. What brought about the drive for the Constitution? What were some of the arguments for it? Against it? (Remember to cite specific evidence from the module when talking about this.) Which would you have preferred, the Constitution or the Articles? Why?
.
The Cultural Literature Review includes a review of the litera.docxtodd241
The Cultural Literature Review
includes a review of the literature regarding the influences of culture and application of this information in programs serving children
along with
a personal reflection of works cited.
Please see attachment for additional instructions.
.
The CTO appreciated the analysis performed between the cloud s.docxtodd241
The CTO appreciated the analysis performed between the cloud service providers (Amazon, Google, and Microsoft).
She has decided to proceed with an
Amazon Virtual Private Cloud
.
Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) enables you to launch AWS resources into a virtual network that you've defined. This virtual network closely resembles a traditional network that you'd operate in your own data center, with the benefits of using the scalable infrastructure of AWS.
To begin, the CEO would like you to provision two subnets.
One subnet will be for the developers (Subnet A), which will be provisioned with 146.38.70.105/20.
The second subnet will for the marketing department (Subnet B), which will be provisioned with 215.16.52.119/19.
2. What is the network address, broadcast address, and subnet mask for Subnet A and
B?
Perform the necessary calculations and explain your answer.
.
The deadline for the final paper is Monday May 11th at 1159pm. .docxtodd241
The deadline for the final paper is
Monday May 11th at 11:59pm
. We will workshop your topics in class next Friday, and you can submit your outlines for me to review by
Tuesday May, 5th.
I hope to give you all feedback on your essay by Wednesday May 6th. As before, it may be best for me to call you over phone (if possible), so if you send me your outline, please provide a contact number if you are comfortable.
And some additional info about the paper: (gratefully adapted from an email the other TA., Prof, Colebrook, send to students in his recitations)
What's the paper about?
As Dr. Appiah discussed in class today, for this final paper, you're being given a wide latitude to write an in-depth, argumentative essay on the subject of your choosing. The only limitations are that (1) it must be about gender, human rights, or economic inequality, either in a national or international context, and (2) it must include some of the philosophical thought of at least two of the traditions we've covered (Confucian, Islamic, or "Western"/Liberal).
How will I be grading it?
I will use the same rubric I used to evaluate the midterm papers for this essay. You can consult your midterm papers for details on this.
Where do I start?
Here are a few pointers on how to get started. (None of what I say here is
necessary
for the paper, just suggestions).
1. Start with a specific human right or moral claim. The
UDHR
is a great place to begin.
2. Pick a human right. For example, the UDHR guarantees the right to freedom of religion.
3. Pick two or three of the traditions we've covered. In my case, I'd compare, say, a liberal perspective on freedom of religion and an Islamic perspective on freedom of religion.
4. Formulate a thesis. For example, "in this paper, I will argue that freedom of religion, conceived of as a human right guaranteed in the UDHR, is both (a) a non-negotiable element of human dignity and (b) incompatible with basic Koranic obligations and the Islamic tradition of commanding and forbidding." This thesis should be
argumentative
. You ought to take a stand, and argue in favor of one perspective's interpretation or for your own new perspective. Papers that simply list what each tradition would say on an issue would be inadequate. In formulating your thesis, remember that the narrower your thesis, the easier it will be to defend. Narrow theses are the bread and butter of philosophy papers!
5. Assemble the textual support for this thesis. Go through the syllabus and compile each of the articles that we've covered that is relevant to this thesis - both the required and supplemental readings.
6. Reference your notes for broad outlines of arguments that are relevant to your thesis. In this case, I'd want to use at least Kant, Rawls, and Singer to put together an argument for (a) above, and Cook's work to put together the argument for (b) above.
7. As you're putting together these arguments, refer back to the texts we've covered t.
The CRM implementation of the project has been underway for 3 months.docxtodd241
The CRM implementation of the project has been underway for 3 months. Ben has been reviewing the invoices from the IT vendor that is providing design and programming services for the CRM implementation. Ben is working with this vendor on a number of different projects, and there are a handful of people that work on multiple projects for him, including the CRM implementation. He just told you that there are some problems with the invoices, and he is not sure what to do about them.
George is working on the CRM implementation and 2 other smaller projects. His hours look okay when Ben first looks at them. However, when Ben adds up George's hours for the past month across all 3 projects, they total more than 65 hours per week. Ben knows that George is barely on-site more than 4 hours per day and does not feel that George is producing anything close to 65 hours of work.
Two hours per day were billed for Louise for 1 week when she was on vacation. As far as Ben knows, Louise was not invited to any project conference calls nor was there any critical project e-mails sent to her during that time.
The rate for Betsy increased by 15% half-way through the second invoice. No explanation was given.
Nothing was billed for Ron his entire first month on the project.
.
THE CRISIS A DECADE LATERLehman’s Last Hires LookBack.docxtodd241
THE CRISIS: A DECADE LATER
Lehman’s Last Hires Look
Back
Four people who started at Lehman Brothers the day it
failed reflect on the lessons they’ve learned.
By Corrie Driebusch
September 15, 2008, was one of the darkest days in the
history of Wall Street. For four new college graduates,
it was also their first day of work at Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc.
Sohil Sheth, Luvleen Sidhu, Justin Gaines and Brian
Grossman walked through the doors of Lehman just as
the venerable investment bank filed for bankruptcy
protection, an event that sent shockwaves around the
globe. The aftershocks continue to define many aspects
of American life a decade later.
The crisis provided these unlucky millennials with a
new perspective. Big institutions were no longer
infallible. Wall Street no longer offered a guaranteed
career path. Life was more fragile than they knew.
One thing was certain: Their world would never again
look the same.Sohil Sheth
Works for Boston technology firm Harding Point
Works for Boston technology firm Harding Point
My junior year at Amherst, everyone was trying to get
an internship in New York at a bank, and I got one with
Lehman’s investment management division. All we
heard from executives was that Lehman was going to
be the next Goldman Sachs.
The summer of 2008 I moved to New York for training.
I was definitely getting nervous that maybe they would
start laying people off. But the messaging at Lehman
was ‘don’t worry.’ There’s no way the government
would let anything happen to a company as big as
Lehman.
I was preparing for a licensing exam in my apartment
on Sunday, Sept. 14, and there was a new news story
every minute. I refreshed my computer browser and all
a sudden there was a headline that Lehman declares
bankruptcy. I got that feeling in the pit of my stomach.
The next day we all went in to work, but everyone was a
zombie.
I kept working there, but this cloud was hanging over
us. I worked in the fund of hedge funds group for two
and a half years, but then got super jaded. I went to
Peru and worked for a nonprofit for almost a year.
A decade ago I defended the finance industry. Looking
back, it’s tough to be socially conscious and work in it.
I’m not saying tech is saving the world, but there’s
more practical applications that can apply to a lot of
people than just making the rich richer.Luvleen Sidhu
Co-founded digital banking startup BankMobile
I interned at Lehman after my sophomore and junior
years at Harvard. I graduated in 2008 and started six
weeks of training, and the first day on the job was the
bankruptcy. I remember contacting HR and I asked,
should I come in? I’ve locked the response in my head
because it was so unusual. The response was, ‘please
come in, it’s business as usual.’
My first day was kind of crazy, in an eerie way that we
were ignoring reality. No one was acting panicked. No
one was acting out of line, though maybe they were
behind closed doors.
For it to happen the first day of my car.
The data in the case are quotes taken from interviews of parents.docxtodd241
The data in the case are quotes taken from interviews of parents, faculty, and staff of an elementary school by request of the school’s principal, Nancy:
Organize these data to present to Nancy. Notice demographic details such as grade level, interviewee role, and tenure.
Try organizing the data a different way. Did you notice anything different from the first time you analyzed the data? Which method do you think was more effective?
How would you structure the feedback meeting with Nancy? Which themes would you present and why?
case is on page 270. Please write at least 500 words.
.
The Dark Side of the Force”Language & ProcessRisk Aversio.docxtodd241
“The Dark Side of the Force”
Language & Process
Risk Aversion & Risk Culture
Corruption & Unethical Behaviors
Reading
:
Please note, you have to log on to the NSU library to complete the link.
Ballante, Don & Link, Albert N. (1981). Are public sector workers more risk averse than private sector workers?
Industrial and Labor Relations Review
, 34, 3, 408-412.
http://lib.nova.edu/333 (Links to an external site.)
Baumol, W. J. (1990). Entrepreneurship: Productive, unproductive and destructive.
Journal of
Political Economy
, 98(5), 893-921.
http://lib.nova.edu/148 (Links to an external site.)
Boettke, P. J. &, Coyne, C. J. (2003). Entrepreneurship and development: Cause or
consequence?
Advances in Austrian Economics,
6
, 67-88. Retrieved from the Mercatus
Organization web site:
http://mercatus.org/uploadedFiles/Mercatus/Publications/Cause%20or%20Consequence.pdf (Links to an external site.)
Cohen, S., Eimicke, W., & Salazar, M. P. (1999, November).
Public ethics and public
entrepreneurship
. Paper presented at the Annual Research Meeting of the Association of
Public Policy Analysis and Management, Washington, D.C. Retrieved from
ResearchGate:
http://www.researchgate.net/publication/252936584_Public_Ethics_and_Public_Entreprenuership (Links to an external site.)
Schacter, H. L. (1995). Reinventing government or reinventing ourselves: Two models for
improving government performance.
Public Administration Review
,
55
(6), 530-537.
http://lib.nova.edu/138 (Links to an external site.)
Simmons, R., Yonk, R., & Thomas, D. (2011). Bootleggers, Baptists, and political entrepreneurs:
Key players in the rational game and morality play of regulatory politics.
The
Independent Review
,
15
(3), 367–381.
http://lib.nova.edu/183 (Links to an external site.)
Due
: Essay 6 Question: Entrepreneurial governance sounded like such a good idea, didn't it? What do you make of the critique against entrepreneurial governance/public management? Do you think the critique is valid, and why/why not?
.
The Criminalization of American BusinessWhat do Bank of Americ.docxtodd241
The Criminalization of American Business
What do Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, and Goldman Sachs have in common? All paid hefty fines for purportedly misleading investors about mortgage-backed securities. In fact, these companies paid the government a total of $50 billion in fines. The payments were made in lieu of criminal prosecutions.
Today, several hundred thousand federal rules that apply to businesses carry some form of criminal penalty. That is in addition to more than four thousand federal laws, many of which carry criminal sanctions for their violation. From 2000 to 2019, about 3,200 corporations either were convicted or pleaded guilty to violating federal statutes or rules.
Criminal Convictions
The first successful criminal conviction in a federal court against a company—the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad—was upheld by the Supreme Court in 1909 (the violation: cutting prices). Many other successful convictions followed.
One landmark case developed the
aggregation test
, now called the Doctrine of Collective Knowledge. This test aggregates the omissions and acts of two or more persons in a corporation, thereby constructing an
actus reus
and a
mens rea
out of the conduct and knowledge of several individuals.
Not all government attempts at applying criminal law to corporations survive. Courts have sometimes found insufficient evidence to show that a company acted with specific intent to commit a crime. Often, however, companies choose to reach settlement agreements with the government rather than fight criminal indictments.
Many Pay Substantial Fines in Lieu of Prosecution
More than four hundred corporations reached so-called non-prosecution agreements with the government from 2000 to the beginning of 2019. These agreements typically involve multimillion- or multibillion-dollar fines. This number does not include fines paid to the Environmental Protection Agency or to the Fish and Wildlife Service.
According to law professors Margaret Lemos and Max Minzner, “Public enforcers often seek large monetary awards for self-interested reasons divorced from the public interest and deterrents. The incentives are strongest when enforcement agencies are permitted to retain all or some of the proceeds of enforcement.”
Questions Presented
1)Why might a corporation’s managers agree to pay a large fine rather than to be indicted and proceed to trial?
2)How does a manager determine the optimal amount of legal research to undertake to prevent her or his company from violating the many thousands of federal regulations?
.
The Creation of the Ocean FloorSCI209Running head .docxtodd241
The Creation of the Ocean Floor
SCI/209
Running head: THE CREATION OF THE OCEAN FLOOR
1
THE CREATION OF THE OCEAN FLOOR
5
The Creation of the Ocean Floor
One scientific speculation about the beginning of ocean water declares that as Earth developed from a gas and dust cloud more than 4.5 billion years ago, an enormous quantity of insubstantial elements such as oxygen and hydrogen became confined inside the liquefied inner part of the newly formed planet (Advameg, 2013). In the course of the first few billion years following planets formation, these basic gases emerged across thousands of miles of red-hot and liquefying rock to discharge on the Earth’s surface through fissures (long narrow cracks) and volcanoes.
Inside the earth and atop the exterior, the gas hydrogen joined oxygen developing water. Massive amounts of liquid blanketed the planet as an extraordinarily heavy atmosphere of water cloud. Close to the uppermost part of the atmosphere, where high temperature may possibly dissipate to outward reaches of the earth, water vapor concentrated to a liquid form and dropped into the stratum below, chilling the level. This atmospheric cool down procedure lasted till the initial precipitation dropped to the planet’s young exterior and flared into a misty haze. This came to pass as the creation of an astonishing downpour that through the course of time, progressively filled the ocean cavities.
There are three major classes of tectonic plate boundaries: divergent boundaries, covergent boundaries, and transform boundaries. The divergent boundaries outstanding features are fresh crust is produced as two or more plates tear away from one other. Oceans are generated and grow broader where plates deviate or pull apart. Seafloor expanding is a process in which the molten rock produces new ground underneath water. This progression takes millions of years to establish a 10 foot hill because growth fluctuates from two to 10 centimeters yearly. The convergent boundaries outstanding features are here crust is demolished and reprocessed back into the inside of the Earth as one plate descents under another. These are recognized as Subduction Zones - volcanoes and mountains are often discovered where plates come together. The kinds of volcanoes that can occur depend on the chemical composition of the molten rock that decides its fluidity. There are three kinds of convergent boundaries: Oceanic-Continental Convergence, Oceanic-Oceanic Convergence, and Continental-Continental Convergence (Platetectonics, 2010). The transform boundaries outstanding features are when two plates are skimming parallel by each other. These are additionally identified as transform boundaries or in addition normally called faults. The San Andreas Fault is the best known and considered the most lethal translational line.
One natural event that occurs as a direct result of plate boundary interactions is a tsunami. Plate tectonics are the secondary trigger of tsunamis. When a maj.
The creation of a weak acid titration plot is described in chapter 1.docxtodd241
The creation of a weak acid titration plot is described in chapter 10-5 of your technique book. A generic four-step procedure is given. Rewrite the four steps to be a specific prcedure to be used to titrate a sample of potassium hydrogen phthalate (MM 204.22 g/mol) using the NaOH soluiton you will prepare.
.
The Dark Ages World History Crash Course #141. The period b.docxtodd241
The Dark Ages: World History Crash Course #14
1. The period between ________ and _______________ is often called the ________________________ in Europe because it came between the Roman Empire and the beginning of the modern age. And it’s sometimes called the Dark Ages because it was purportedly ________________________.
2. What is feudalism?
3. How was feudalism an economic system in addition to the political system described above?
4. Regarding Islam in the Dark Ages, the Umayyad Dynasty was overthrown in _________ and was replaced by the ______________________. They moved the capital to Baghdad and were welcoming of _________________________________ into positions of power.
5. The “golden age” of Islamic learning was centered in Baghdad. What were five accomplishments of this time-period you found to be the most interesting?
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
6. Meanwhile, China was experiencing a golden age of its own where it ruled over _______________________________ across four million square miles.
7. What necessitated the Chinese inventing the use of paper money?
8. By the 11th century, the Chinese were writing down their recipe for a mixture of saltpeter, sulfur, and charcoal that we now know as ________________________.
Here is the link to the video ...... https://youtu.be/QV7CanyzhZg
.
The cult of Machismo (masculine superiority) appeared early in Latin.docxtodd241
The cult of Machismo (masculine superiority) appeared early in Latin America (page 23 in this week’s assigned reading), yet many colonial Latin American families contradicted this stereotype. Explain the evidence the authors present that contradicts this prevailing gender image. Be sure to review the culture box “Elite Women and Economic Power” on page 24. Textbook provided
Modern Latin America, 9th Edition - 180 Day Option
.
The CultureBooksdu r ing t he f ir s t se a son of her.docxtodd241
The Culture
Books
du r ing t he f ir s t se a son of her cr i t i-
cally acclaimed HBO series, Girls, Lena
Dunham’s character Hannah Horvath,
high on opium, tells her parents, “I don’t
want to freak you out, but I think that I
may be the voice of my generation—or
at least a voice of a generation.” The line
made waves as people conflated the fic-
tional character with her creator, perhaps
not wrongly. How dare a young woman
make such a bold claim? All too often our
culture tells young women their voices
don’t matter or deserve to be heard.
In her debut essay collection, Not That
Kind of Girl: A Young Woman Tells You
What She’s “Learned,” Dunham demon-
strates her 28-year-old voice’s admirable
range. While some celebrity essay col-
lections and memoirs are lackluster,
even embarrassing to read, Not That Kind
of Girl suffers few missteps. Dunham’s
cinematic flair translates to the page
with vigor and clarity—not unlike the
late Nora Ephron, to whom she is often
compared and to whom the book is
dedicated (along with Dunham’s family
and her boyfriend Jack Antonoff of the
indie-rock band fun.). Instead of tossing
pithy, pseudo-motivational observations
at the reader, Dunham has crafted warm,
intelligent writing that is both deeply
personal and engaging, clustered in five
topical sections: “Love & Sex,” “Body,”
“Friendship,” “Work” and “Big Picture.”
Each of the 29 pieces—essays mixed
with lists, like “18 Unlikely Things I’ve
Said Flirtatiously”—is confident and
assured, sidestepping self-deprecation
and instead offering intense self-
examination. Dunham’s self-awareness
can almost overwhelm with truthiness,
as in “Barry,” her glancing, tragicomic
account of being raped by a “mustachioed
campus Republican” who, among other
nonconsensual acts, removes his condom
without her permission or knowledge.
“A sexual encounter that no one can
classify properly” sounds precisely like
a voice of her generation, one struggling
to come to terms with rape culture.
(And yet, “I feel like there are fifty ways
it’s my fault . . . But I also know that at no
moment did I consent to being handled
that way” sounds like a voice of every
generation of women.)
Unlike Hannah Horvath, Dunham in
her self-awareness does not come across
as self-obsessed. When she is absurd,
she acknowledges that absurdity. “13
Things I’ve Learned Are Not Okay to
Say to Friends” is among the most drolly
enlightened of the lists, made up of osten-
sible real-life Dunham quotes like “No,
please don’t apologize. If I had your moth-
er I’d be a nightmare, too” and “There’s
nothing about you in my book.”
She reveals her vulnerabilities in
a deadpan manner, showing us how she
loves and has been loved, how she has
wronged and been wronged. But it’s not
all laughing around the hard stuff. At
the end of “Barry” comes a teary phone
call with Antonoff, in which she tells
him what happened with the hipster
rapist; here the narrative tur.
The CultureBooksduring the first season of her criti-.docxtodd241
The Culture
Books
during the first season of her criti-
cally acclaimed HBO series, Girls, Lena
Dunham’s character Hannah Horvath,
high on opium, tells her parents, “I don’t
want to freak you out, but I think that I
may be the voice of my generation—or
at least a voice of a generation.” The line
made waves as people conflated the fic-
tional character with her creator, perhaps
not wrongly. How dare a young woman
make such a bold claim? All too often our
culture tells young women their voices
don’t matter or deserve to be heard.
In her debut essay collection, Not That
Kind of Girl: A Young Woman Tells You
What She’s “Learned,” Dunham demon-
strates her 28-year-old voice’s admirable
range. While some celebrity essay col-
lections and memoirs are lackluster,
even embarrassing to read, Not That Kind
of Girl suffers few missteps. Dunham’s
cinematic flair translates to the page
with vigor and clarity—not unlike the
late Nora Ephron, to whom she is often
compared and to whom the book is
dedicated (along with Dunham’s family
and her boyfriend Jack Antonoff of the
indie-rock band fun.). Instead of tossing
pithy, pseudo-motivational observations
at the reader, Dunham has crafted warm,
intelligent writing that is both deeply
personal and engaging, clustered in five
topical sections: “Love & Sex,” “Body,”
“Friendship,” “Work” and “Big Picture.”
Each of the 29 pieces—essays mixed
with lists, like “18 Unlikely Things I’ve
Said Flirtatiously”—is confident and
assured, sidestepping self-deprecation
and instead offering intense self-
examination. Dunham’s self-awareness
can almost overwhelm with truthiness,
as in “Barry,” her glancing, tragicomic
account of being raped by a “mustachioed
campus Republican” who, among other
nonconsensual acts, removes his condom
without her permission or knowledge.
“A sexual encounter that no one can
classify properly” sounds precisely like
a voice of her generation, one struggling
to come to terms with rape culture.
(And yet, “I feel like there are fifty ways
it’s my fault . . . But I also know that at no
moment did I consent to being handled
that way” sounds like a voice of every
generation of women.)
Unlike Hannah Horvath, Dunham in
her self-awareness does not come across
as self-obsessed. When she is absurd,
she acknowledges that absurdity. “13
Things I’ve Learned Are Not Okay to
Say to Friends” is among the most drolly
enlightened of the lists, made up of osten-
sible real-life Dunham quotes like “No,
please don’t apologize. If I had your moth-
er I’d be a nightmare, too” and “There’s
nothing about you in my book.”
She reveals her vulnerabilities in
a deadpan manner, showing us how she
loves and has been loved, how she has
wronged and been wronged. But it’s not
all laughing around the hard stuff. At
the end of “Barry” comes a teary phone
call with Antonoff, in which she tells
him what happened with the hipster
rapist; here the narrative turns deeply
.
The critique of the Musical Cats must include the following informat.docxtodd241
The critique of the Musical Cats must include the following information:
1- Who was in the play meaning the actors and the characters they played?
2- What era is the play supposed to be taking place in?
3- Where does it take place?
4- How and Why did you connect emotionally and intellectually?
5- What was it about (breif plot synopsis)?
6- Were you able to relate to a part or most of the play (what part if any?
This musical was based on Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats by TS. Eliot
.
The CSI effect at university forensic science students’ telev.docxtodd241
The CSI effect at university: forensic science students’ television viewing
and perceptions of ethical issues
Roslyn Weavera*, Yenna Salamonsona, Jane Kocha,b and Glenn Porterc
aUniversity of Western Sydney, Family and Community Health Research Group; bUniversity of
Technology, Sydney, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health; cUniversity of Western Sydney,
School of Science and Health
(Received 3 January 2012; final version received 3 May 2012)
Although the so-called ‘CSI effect’ has received attention in the literature for the
influence of forensic science television on jurors’ expectations of evidence
admitted into trials, less research explores the influence of such television
programs on university students enrolled in forensic science degrees. This paper
describes the quantitative and qualitative results of a study of forensic science
students regarding the forensic-related television programs they watch, such as
CSI, Bones and Dexter. We asked students to share their impressions of the
accuracy, ethics, professionalism and role models in the programs. The results
show that forensic science students are almost universally disparaging about the
realism of these programs and have mixed impressions of how the programs
portray forensic science professionalism and ethics. Most students believed that
the programs gave an unrealistic representation of the profession to the public;
yet students were also able to identify positive elements for recruitment and
education purposes.
Keywords: forensic science; CSI effect; students; television; education; Australia
Introduction
Popular media have suggested that crime science television programs such as CSI
may influence how lay jurors consider forensic evidence during criminal trials1–8.
This influence has been described as the CSI effect and named after the popular
television drama. It is suggested that jurors confuse the capacity of forensic evidence
with the fictional idealisation of forensic evidence as portrayed on the television
program2. Goodman-Delahunty and Verbrugge4 suggest that, despite the popular
media claims, there is little objective evidence to support the notion that crime scene
dramas such as CSI have a negative impact on jury verdicts. Wise5 indicated that
there are two issues relating to the ‘CSI effect’ proposition, with each affecting either
the prosecution or defence position; (i) the jurors held an inflated value of the
forensic evidence producing guilty verdicts2–5,9, or (ii) in the absence of forensic
evidence or when the evidence failed to reach the juries’ idealised expectations the
juries would acquit2–3,5. Evidence of the influence of the CSI effect, as claimed in the
popular media, has been mixed1–9.
Although the so-called CSI effect has received attention in the literature for the
influence of CSI on jurors’ expectations of forensic evidence admitted into criminal
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
Australian Journal of Forensic Sciences
Vol. 44.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Welcome to TechSoup New Member Orientation and Q&A (May 2024).pdfTechSoup
In this webinar you will learn how your organization can access TechSoup's wide variety of product discount and donation programs. From hardware to software, we'll give you a tour of the tools available to help your nonprofit with productivity, collaboration, financial management, donor tracking, security, and more.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
He discussed the concept of quality improvement, emphasizing its applicability to various aspects of life, including personal, project, and program improvements. He defined quality as doing the right thing at the right time in the right way to achieve the best possible results and discussed the concept of the "gap" between what we know and what we do, and how this gap represents the areas we need to improve. He explained the scientific approach to quality improvement, which involves systematic performance analysis, testing and learning, and implementing change ideas. He also highlighted the importance of client focus and a team approach to quality improvement.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...
THE CRAB CANNERY SHIP 1 BUDDY, WERE OFF TO HEL.docx
1. THE
CRAB
CANNERY
SHIP
1
"BUDDY, WE'RE OFF TO HELL!"
Leaning over the deck railing, two fishermen looked out on the
town of Hakodate stretched like a snail embracing the sea. One
of
them spit out a cigarette he had smoked down to his fingertips.
The
stub fell skimming the tall side of the ship, turning playfully
every
which way. The man reeked of liquor.
Steamships with red bulging bellies rose from the water; others
being loaded with cargo leaned hard to one side as if tugged
down
by the sea. There were thick yenow smokestacks, large bell-like
buoys, launches scurrying like bedbugs among ships. Bleak
whirls
of oil soot, scraps of bread, and rotten fruit floated on the waves
as
if forming some special fabric. Blown by the wind, smoke
drifted
over waves wafting a stifling smell of coal. From time to time a
harsh
rattle of winches traveling along the waves reverberated against
the
2. flesh.
19
..
21 KOBAYASHI TAKIJI 20
Directly in front of the crab cannery ship Hakkomaru rested a
sailing ship with peeling paint, its anchor chain lowered from a
in its bow that looked like an ox's nostril. Two foreign sailors
with
pipes in mouth paced the deck back and forth like automatons.
The
ship seemed to be Russian. No doubt it was a patrol vessel sent
to keep
an eye on the Japanese cannery ship.
"I don't have a damned penny left. Shit, look:' One of the fish-
ermen moved closer to the other, gripped his hand and pressed
it
against the pocket of the corduroy trousers beneath his jacket.
The
pocket seemed to contain a small box.
The other man silently watched his mate's face.
"He, he, he:' chuckled the first man. "They're cards:'
The ship's captain was smoking a cigarette and strolling along
the
deck like an admiral. The smoke he exhaled broke into sharp
angles as
3. it passed the tip of his nose, and flew away in shreds. Sailors
draggling
wooden-soled zori were bustling in and out of the forward
cabins,
food pails in hand. Preparations had been completed and the
ship
was ready to sail.
The two fishermen, peering down through the hatch into
workers'
quarters in the dim bottom of the ship, saw a noisy commotion
inside
the stacked bunks, like a nest full of birds' darting faces. The
workers
were all boys of fourteen or fifteen.
"Where're you from?"
"X District:'
They were all children from Hakodate's slums. Poverty had
brought them together.
"What about the guys in the bunks over there?"
"They're from Nambu:"
"And those?"
"Akita:' Each cluster of bunks belonged to a different region.
"Where in Akita?"
"North Akita:' The boy's nose was running with thick, oozing
mucus, and the rims of his eyes were inflamed and drooping.
"You farmers?"
"Yeah:'
The air was stifling, filled with the sour stench of rotten fruit.
'ft,"
The Crab Cannery
4. Dozens of barrels of pickled vegetables were stored next door,
adding
their own shit-like odor.
"From now on you can sleep hugging your old Dad here:' smiled
the fisherman lewdly.
In a dim corner, a mother was peeling an apple for her son who
lay prone on his bunk. The mother wore a triangular scarf and a
la-
borer's jacket and trousers. She watched the child eat the apple,
and
ate the spiral peeling. While talking to him, the mother kept
untying
and retying a small cloth-wrapped package that lay next to her
child.
There were seven or eight mothers. Children from the main
island
whom no one had come to see off stole occasional glances in
their
direction.
A woman took caramels out of a box and handed two each to the
nearby children, saying, "You be good to my Kenkichi, and
work to-
gether like friends:' The woman's hair and clothes were covered
with
cement dust. Her hands were ungainly, large and rough like
roots of
a tree.
Other mothers were blowing their children's noses, wiping their
faces with hand towels, and talking to them in subdued voices.
"Your boy looks so strong:' said one of the mothers.
5. "I guess."
"Mine's so weakly. Wish I could do something .. :'
"We're all worried."
With some relief, the two fishermen drew their faces back from
the
hatch. Suddenly mute. they returned sullenly to their trapezoid-
shaped
"nest" situated closer to the prow than the hole that held the
workers.
With each rise and fall of the anchor everyone in the nest was
tossed up
and then thrown together, as if dumped into a concrete mixer.
In the dim interior, fishermen lay about like pigs. The
nauseating
stench itself was that of a pigsty.
"Damn. it stinks here!"
"It sure does. thanks to us:'
A fisherman whose head resembled a red mortar was pouring
sake from a half-gallon bottle into a chipped teacup. He
munched on
a cuttlefish as he drank. Next to him a man lay on his back
eating an
apple and looking through a pulp magazine with a torn cover.
.a.
22 KOBAYASHI TAKIJI The Crab Cannery Ship 23
Four men sat drinking in a circle. A man who hadn't yet had
6. enough to drink wedged himself among them.
"Damn, we're going to be at sea for four frigging months. I
knew
I'd have no chance to get laid so .. :' The sturdily built man
licked
thick lower lip and narrowed his eyes. He raised a shrunken
money-
pouch that looked like a dried persimmon and swung it at eye
level.
"Look at my wallet. That widow might be a skinny little slut but
she
sure knows how to fuck!"
"Hey, just shut up about that!"
"No, no, we want to hear:'
The man laughed merrily.
"Look at those two over there. Isn't that a sight for sore eyes?"
A drunken man pointed with his chin, ftxing his bleary eyes on
a
bunk directly across. A ftsherman was handing money over to
his
wife. "Look at that!"
The two had laid out crumpled banknotes and silver coins on a
small box, and were counting them. The man was writing
something
in a small notebook, repeatedly licking his pencil.
"For crying out loud, can you believe that?"
"I got a wife and kids myself!" growled the fisherman who had
spent his money on the prostitute.
A young ftsherman spoke up loudly from a bunk a little way off.
7. His face was swollen with a hangover and his hair hung long
over his
forehead. "1 thought I wouldn't set foot on a ship this time. But
I got
a runaround from the employment agency and ended up
penniless.
They'll keep me at this till I drop dead:'
A man with his back to him, evidently from the same region,
whispered something to him.
A pair of bowlegs appeared at the top of the cabin stairs, and
a man shouldering a large old-fashioned cloth bag came down
the
steps. His eyes darted around. Spotting an empty bunk he
climbed
into it.
"Hullo," he said, bowing to the man next to him. ''I'll be joining
you:' His face was oily and black, as if dyed with a dark
substance.
Later on, they were to learn the following story about this man.
Shortly before coming on board. he had been working as a
miner at
the Yiibari coal mine and had almost got killed in a recent gas
explo-
sion. Similar things had happened many times before, but this
time
the miner had suddenly grown frightened and quit the mine. At
the
time of the explosion, he had been at work pushing a coal car
along
the rails. He had loaded the car with coal and was shoving it
toward a
8. man at a relay station when it happened. He thought that a
hundred
magnesium flares had burst before his eyes at once. In a
fraction of
a second he felt his body float up into the air like a scrap of
paper.
Several coal cars blown by the blast flew past his eyes more
lightly
than matchboxes. That was the last thing he knew. After some
time,
the sound of his own groans woke him up. Foremen and miners
were
building a wall across the shaft to keep the flames from
spreading. At
that moment he clearly heard other coal miners' voices from
beyond
the wall, pleading for help. Their cries tore unforgettably into
his heart.
There was still time to rescue them! He suddenly rose, jumped
into the
middle of his comrades, and began madly to scream, "Stop,
stop!" (In
the past he too had built such walls, but it hadn't bothered him
then.)
"You damned idiot! If the ftre gets to us, we're dead:'
Couldn't they hear the voices growing fainter and fainter?
Hardly
knowing what he was doing, he began to run frantically along
the
mineshaft, waving his arms and crying out. He stumbled and fell
countless times, struck his head against overhead beams, grew
soaked
with mud and blood. Finally he tripped over a railway tie,
somer-
9. saulted like a thrown wrestler, and crashed against the tracks,
losing
consciousness.
Hearing the miner's story, a young fisherman said, "Well, things
are not much better here either .. :'
The miner gazed at him with the yellowish, lusterless eyes com-
mon among people who toil underground, and said nothing.
Some of the "ftshermen farmers" from Akita, Aomori, and Iwate
sat around with legs loosely crossed, arms akimbo, ignoring
every-
one. The rest leaned against pillars, hugging their knees,
innocently
watching others drink and listening attentively to their idle
chatter.
The task of feeding their families, impossible despite working
in the
ftelds from before dawn, had forced them to come here. They
had left
the oldest sons behind, still short of food, and sent the
daughters to
Ai
24 25 KOBAYASHI TAKIII
work in factories. Even the second and third sons had to go
somewhere
to work. Masses of such surplus people, like beans scooped up
in a
pan, were driven away from the countryside and flowed into the
10. cit-
ies. All of them dreamed of saving up a bit of money and
returning
home. But once they began to work-in Hakodate, Otaru, and
other
cities-they struggled like fledglings trapped in sticky rice-cake
until
they were thrown out of work as stark naked as the day they
were
born. They could not go home again. To survive the winter in
snowy
Hokkaido where they had no relatives, they had to "sell" their
bodies
as cheaply as dirt. Though they had done it over and over, they
would
calmly (if such a word is appropriate) do the same again the
follow-
ingyear.
Three people now entered the workers' quarters: a woman with
a box of sweet bean-jam buns on her back, a druggist, and a
ped-
dler who sold small daily necessities. They spread out their
respective
wares in the center of the cabin, in a place marked off like an
outly-
ing island. The workers in all the surrounding bunks, high and
low,
leaned forward to joke and tease.
"Got something sweet for me, honey?"
"Hey, what're you doing?!" The woman jumped up with a
scream.
"Don't grab my butt, you pervert!"
11. The man, embarrassed at drawing everyone's eyes to himself,
roared with laughter. "This here woman's a real sweetie;' he
mumbled
through a mouthful of sweets.
A passing drunk, tottering back from the toilet with one hand
holding onto the bulkhead, poked the woman's plump sunburned
cheek with his finger.
"What do you want?!"
"Don't get all sore .... I just want to get hold of you and show
you
a good time;' he downed, to general laughter.
"Hey;' shouted someone loudly from a distant corner. "Hurry up
and get me those buns!"
"Coming right up!" The woman-a rarity in such a place-replied
in a dear, penetrating voice. "How many would you like?"
"How many would I like? How the hell many do you have? Just
get your buns over here!"
The Crab Cannery Ship
Everybody burst out laughing.
"The other day a guy called Takeda dragged that woman
someplace there was nobody around; said a young drunk man.
"It
was so funny. No matter how hard he tried, he couldn't get
anywhere
with her. She was wearing drawers, so Takeda ripped them off
12. with
all his might. But there was another pair underneath. Would you
be-
lieve it, she was wearing three pairs!" The man shrugged and
began
to laugh.
This man worked in a factory during winter, making rubber
boots.
When he lost his job in the spring, he went to work in
Kamchatka. Be-
cause both jobs were "seasonal work" (as was nearly all work in
Hok-
kaido), whenever there was night work it went on without a
break.
be thankful if I can live on for another three years:' His skin
was
the lifeless color of coarse rubber.
Among the company of fishermen there were some from Hok-
kaido's cultivated interior, others who had been sold into
railway
construction, wanderers who had gone broke in countless
places, and
still others who were content so long as they could just get
enough
to drink. Mixed among them were also farmers from around Ao-
mori who had been chosen by worthy village heads and were
honest
and ignorant as tree roots. It was highly convenient for the
employ-
ers to assemble such a crew of unorganized migrant workers.
(Ha-
kodate's labor unions were desperately trying to place
organizers on
13. crab cannery ships and among the fishermen who were heading
to
Kamchatka. The Hakodate unions were connected with the
Aomori
and Akita unions. This sort of thing worried bosses the most.)
A cabin boy in a gleaming-white starched jacket stepped busily
in
and out of the saloon called "Friends;' carrying beer, fruit, and
glasses
of foreign liquor. The saloon was filled with corporate honchos,
the
cannery ship's captain, the manager, the commander of the
destroyer
charged with keeping an eye on Kamchatka, the chief of the
maritime
police, and one or two walking briefcases from the seamen's
union.
"Sons of bitches are drinking their heads off;' said the cabin boy
sulkily.
The fishermen's shit-hole was lit by feeble electric lights. Its air
was
thick with tobacco smoke and the odor of crowded human
bodies; the
27 26 KOBAYASHI TAKIJI
entire cabin stank like a toilet. People moving about in their
bunks
looked like squirming maggots. With the fishing company's
manager
leading the way, the ship's captain, the factory agent, and the
14. fore-
man came down the hatchway stairs. The captain kept patting
his up-
per lip with a handkerchief, fretting about the tips of his
upturned
moustache. The passageway was strewn with discarded apple
and
banana skins, a crushed hat, straw sandals, and wrappers stuck
with
grains of rice. It was one clogged gutter. The manager glanced
around,
and unceremoniously spat. The visitors all seemed drunk, their
faces
flushed red.
''I'd like to say a word:' declared the manager. He had the
power-
ful build of a construction worker. Placing one foot on a
partition
between bunks, he maneuvered a toothpick inside his mouth, at
times
briskly ejecting bits of food stuck between his teeth.
"Needless to say, as some of you may know, this crab cannery
ship's business is not just to make lots of money for the
corporation
but is actually a matter of the greatest international importance.
This
is a one-on-one fight between us, citizens of a great empire, and
the
Russkies, a battle to find out which one of us is greater-them or
us. Now just supposing you lose-this could never happen, but if
it did-all Japanese men and boys who've got any balls at all
would
slit their bellies and jump into the sea off Kamchatka. You may
be
15. small in size but that doesn't mean you'll let those stupid
Russkies
beat you.
"Another thing, our fishing industry off Kamchatka is not just
about canning crabs and salmon and trout, but internationally
speak-
ing it's also about keeping up the superior status of our nation,
which
no other country can match. And moreover, we're accomplishing
an
important mission in regard to our domestic problems like
overpopu-
lation and shortage offood. You probably have no idea what I'm
talk-
ing about, but anyhow I'll have you know that we'll be risking
our
lives cutting through those rough northern waves to carry out a
great
mission for the Japanese empire. And that's why our imperial
warship
will accompany us and protect us all along the way .... Anyone
who
acts up trying to ape this recent Russky craze, anyone who
incites oth-
ers to commit outrageous acts, is nothing but a traitor to the
Japanese
•
The Crab Cannery Ship
empire. And though something like that could never happen,
make
damned sure all the same that what I'm saying to you gets
through to
16. your heads .. :'
The manager sneezed repeatedly as he began sobering up.
THE DESTROYER'S INTOXICATED captain, stepping jerkily
like a spring-
loaded marionette, tottered down the gangway to a waiting
launch.
Supporting the skipper from above and below as if he were a
canvas
bag filled with rocks, sailors barely managed to get him on
board. The
captain was waving his arms, bracing his legs, shouting random
non-
sense, and repeatedly spraying the sailors' faces with saliva.
"Always making fancy speeches:' murmured a sailor, glancing at
the captain while untying the rope from the gangway, "and look
at the
sorry sack now:'
"Do we toss him overboard!? .. :'
The two caught their breath for a moment ... and then simulta-
neously burst into laughter.
2
Far off to the right the light of the Shukutsu lighthouse, flashing
each time it revolved, penetrated the gray expanse of sea -like
fog. Its
long and distant silvery beam swept mystically for miles around
as it
pivoted.
Off the coast of Rumoi a thin, drizzly rain began to fall. Fisher-
17. men's and laborers' hands grew numb as crab claws as they
worked,
forcing them to thrust them occasionally into their pockets, or
to cup
them over their mouths and blow on them. Endless threads of
brown
viscous rain fell into an opaque sea of the same color. As the
ship
neared Wakkanai, raindrops turned into grains, the sea's broad
sur-
face began to wave like a flag, to swell, and to grow jagged and
restless.
Wind struck at the masts with an ominous howl. The ship
creaked
endlessly as though its rivets were coming loose. Entering the
Soya
Strait, this vessel of nearly three thousand tons began to move
jerk-
ily as if seized by a fit of hiccups. Hoisted high by a wonderful
force
28 KOBAYASHI TAKIJI
the ship floated in space for a moment only to sink abruptly to
its
original position. Each time this happened it triggered a
disagreeably
ticklish sensation, an urge to urinate such as one experiences at
the
instant an elevator drops. Workers wilted, their eyes looked
unhappy
and seasick, and they vomited.
The hard outline of the snowy mountains of Karafuto could be
18. glimpsed now and then through the round porthole windows
streaked
with spraying waves. But the sight was soon obscured by
swelling
waves that rose like icy alpine peaks. Deep cold valleys formed
and
rushed up to the portholes, crashing against them and breaking
up
into torrents of foam, then flowing away, sliding past the
windows
like a diorama. From time to time the ship's entire body
shuddered
like a feverish child. All sorts of objects fell smashing from
shelves,
things bent and squealed, the ship's sides boomed colliding with
the
waves. The constant throb of the motors ringing out from the
engine
room transmitted its vibrations through the motley utensils and
sent
mild tremors through bodies. Sometimes the ship rode the back
of a
wave, making the propeller spin in the air and stabilizer fins
slap at
the water's surface.
The wind continued to grow stronger and stronger. The two
masts whistled and kept bending like fishing poles. The waves,
like a
band of rampaging thugs, swarmed unopposed from one side of
the
ship to the other. The cabin's hatchway abruptly turned into a
torren~
tial waterfall.
Mountains of water rose up in a flash lifting the ship like a toy
19. to
the top of a huge slope and turning it slightly sideways.
Tumbling for-
ward, the ship pitched to the bottom of the ravine. It was sure to
sink!
But in the depths of the valley a new wave heaved up high,
slamming
with a thud against the sides of the ship.
As the ship reached the Sea of Okhotsk, the color of the water
be-
came a clearer gray. The chilling cold penetrated the laborers'
cloth-
ing and turned their lips blue as they worked. The colder it
became,
the more furiously a fine snow, dryas salt, blew whistling
against
them. Like tiny shards of glass, the snow pierced faces and
hands of
the laborers and fishermen who worked on all fours on the deck.
Af-
ter each wave washed over them, the water promptly froze,
making
The Crab Cannery Ship 29
the deck treacherously slippery. The men had to stretch ropes
from
deck to deck, and work dangling from them like diapers hung
out on
a clothesline. The manager, armed with a club for killing
salmon, was
roaring like mad.
RUSSIA
20. ~
Sea of Okhotsk
~.
31 30 KOBAYASHI TAKIJI
Another crab cannery ship that had sailed out of Hakodate at the
same time had gotten separated from them. Even so, whenever
their
ship surged to the summit of a mountainous wave, two masts
could be
seen swaying back and forth in the distance like the waving
arms of a
drowning person. Wisps of smoke torn by the wind flew by
skimming
the waves. Intermittent howls of the other ship's whistle were
clearly
audible amid the waves and shouts. Yet the next instant one
ship rose
high and the other fell away into the depths of a watery
crevasse.
The crab cannery ship carried eight fishing boats. The sailors
and fishermen were forced to risk their lives tying down the
boats
so that the waves, baring their white teeth like thousands of
sharks,
would not tear them off. "Losing one or two of you won't matter
a
damn, but if a boat gets lost it can't get replaced:' shouted the
man-
21. ager distinctly.
The sea of Kamchatka seemed to be waiting for them, surprised
they had made it this far. Its huge waves leapt upon them like
greedy,
starving lions. The ship seemed frailer than a rabbit. The
blizzard cov-
ering the entire sky looked like an enormous white flag
billowing in the
wind. Night was approaching but the storm showed no signs of
abating.
Once the work ended everyone crept back into their shit-hole.
Hands and feet hung from bodies like radishes, frozen and
devoid of
sensation. The men all crawled into their bunks like silkworms,
no
one uttering a single word. Throwing themselves down, they
grabbed
hold of the iron rails. The ship bucked and shook desperately,
like a
horse struggling to drive a biting horsefly off its back. The
fishermen
cast hopeless glances at the ceiling whose white paint had
turned yel-
low with soot, and at the bluish-black portholes that were
almost sunk
underwater. Some gazed blankly into space, their mouths half
open as
though they had lost their minds. No one was thinking of
anything. A
dazed, anxious awareness made everyone sullenly silent.
They drank whisky lying on their backs, straight from the
bottle.
Bottle edges occasionally glimmered in the dull and turbid
22. amber
of the electric light. Empty whisky bottles, thrown from the
bunks
with the drinkers' whole might, hit the aisles and burst like
successive
bolts oflightning. Other men merely turned their heads to follow
the
bottles with their eyes. Someone was angrily shouting in a
corner.
The Crab Cannery Ship
Broken up by the storm, the words came through as incoherent
fragments.
"Guess we've left Japan:' said someone wiping the porthole win-
dow with a sleeve.
The shit-hole stove merely sputtered and smoked. Barely alive
human beings shivered with cold as though they'd been
mistaken for
salmon and trout and thrown into a refrigerator. Great waves
splashed
thunderously, sweeping across the canvas-covered hatchway.
The re-
verberation of each blow within the shit-hole's iron walls was as
deaf-
ening as the inside of a drum. At times heavy thuds rang out
directly
beside the sprawling fishermen, like mighty shoves from a
powerful
shoulder. Now the ship was writhing within the sea-storms
raging
waves like a whale in its death agonies.
"Chowtime!" The cook stuck his torso into the doorway and
23. shout-
ed encircling his mouth with both hands. "No soup cause of the
storm:'
"What'd he say?"
"We're serving rotten salted fish!" The cook withdrew his face.
They struggled to their feet as best they could, like convicts
seized
by a voracious craving for food.
Sitting cross-legged and placing plates of salted fish across
their
legs, they blew against the steam, filled their cheeks with hot
bits of
fish, and rolled them around inside their mouths. The food was
the
first hot object they had been near all day, and their noses kept
run-
ning, threatening to drip into the dishes. They were still eating
when
the manager walked in.
"Stop swilling it like pigs, damn it. You couldn't even do a
decent
day's work, and now you think you can stuff yourselves?" He
glow-
ered at the upper and lower bunks before strutting out of the
cabin,
his left shoulder swinging forward as he walked.
"What the hell gives him the right to talk to us like that:' mum-
bled a former student, a youth gaunt with seasickness and
overwork.
"That Asakawa acts like he owns the ship:'
24. "The Emperor is up above the clouds so he can do whatever he
likes, but Asakawa better not think that he can do the same:'
"You stingy fucker, like you give a shit about a bowl or two of
rice!
Let's kick his ass!" shouted someone furiously.
6
33 32 KOBAYASHI TAKIJI
"Wonderful, wonderful! Say the same thing in front of
Asakawa,
and it'll be even more wonderfull"
Though they were still angry, everyone laughed.
It was quite late at night when the manager, wearing a raincoat,
stepped into the quarters where the fishermen were sleeping.
Holding
on to the bunk frames to steady himself against the ship's
tOSSing, he
walked through the aisles with a lantern. Sleepers' heads rolled
from
side to side like pumpkins. Rudely turning each face toward
him, the
manager shone the light on it. They would not wake up even if
he
stepped on them. Done with his inspection, the manager paused
and
clicked his tongue. He seemed puzzled but soon went on to the
galley.
25. With each sway of the lantern, the fan-like bluish shaft of light
flick-
ered over segments of the squalid bunks, tall waterproof boots,
hang-
ing jackets, and wicker trunks. Then the light moved on,
trembled
at his feet, stopped for a moment, and shifted the circle of its
round
projector-like beam onto the door of the galley. The next
morning the
men found out that one of the workers was missing.
Recalling the previous day's horrendous work, everyone
concluded that the man had been swept away by the waves. It
made
them feel awful. They were forced to resume work before dawn
and
had no chance to talk about it.
"Who the hell would jump into that freeZing water? He's hiding
someplace, that's where he is. I'll beat the living crap out of that
son
of a bitch when I find him." The manager searched through the
ship,
twirling his club like a toy.
The storm had passed its peak. Even so, each time the ship
plowed
into a swelling wave, the water swept over the foredeck as
effortlessly
as if stepping over a threshold. Looking badly wounded by a
day and
night ofstruggle the ship made an oddly limping sound as it
advanced.
Clouds resembling thin smoke drifted so low they seemed
within a
26. hand's reach, struck the masts, broke into sharp angles and blew
away.
A chilling rain continued to fall. With each rise in the
surrounding
angry waves, the pouring rain could be clearly seen pelting the
sea. It
felt more eerie than being lost in a rainstorm in a primeval
forest.
Hemp ropes were hard and cold to the touch, like iron pipes.
While cautiously crossing the deck and clutching the rope to
keep
The Crab Cannery
from slipping, the student met the cabin boy who had come
bounding
up the gangway ladder two steps at a time.
"Come here a minute:' said the cabin boy, pulling him into a
corner out of the wind. "I got something interesting to tell you:'
It was around two in the morning. Waves were leaping thunder-
ously onto the deck at regular intervals and pouring like
waterfalls.
At times the waves' bared teeth shone bluish-white in the
darkness.
No one could sleep because of the storm. That was when it
happened.
The radio operator had rushed into the captain's cabin.
"Captain, sir, awful news. We have an SOS!"
"SOS? Which ship?!"
"It's the Chichibumaru. They were running parallel to us."
"That's a leaking old tub, that one!" Asakawa, still wearing his
27. oilskin raincoat, sat in a corner straddling a chair with his legs
wide
apart. Mindlessly tapping the floor with a tip of …
TIlE CARAMEL FACTORY
ONE
As always Hiroko
l
began eating breakfast in the space made by
.' 2
rolling up the end of the futon on which her younger brother
was sleeping.
Her small ashen face was swollen as though she was still asleep.
Her grandmother was in the kitchen, rice pot in fI'ont of her,
filling
lIiroko's lunchmx in the dim morning light. The dawn chill sank
into
lIiroko's mdy al though she moved her hands. She could
occasionally
hear sounds of breakfast being prepared somewhere.
Hiroko took a deep breath and blew vigorously on her rice;
presently,
when she had finished the bowl-ful she stood up hurriedly.
28. "Hey, what amut your breakfast?"
"I've finished. If Hiroko was already taking her tram fare from
the
drawer in the hibachi
3
.
"You haven't finished. Eat one more bowl-ful, you're not late
yet, come on."
"But I can't eat quickly," Hiroko said tearfully as she handed
the
bowl back to her grandmother.
"You say you can't eat quickly, but if you don't eat hot food on
cold days like this you'll freeze."
"But when you're late you get into trOUble."
Just four or five days before she had first been late and at her
factory lateness was not tolerated. 'fhe factory gates shut at
precisely
seven a.m. Hiroko had been made to take that whole day off
whether she
wanted to or not. This was because it was troublesome for the
factory to
29. deduct the time lost from the girls' meagre daily wage.
That earlier morning, on the tram, she had a feeling she might
be
late. well-dressed women could 1;0 seen and people who looked
like
workers had disappeared. ' SlJe looked around anxiously, trying
to
discover the time from the a tmosphere on the tram. Eventually
- 14-
she went as far as the entrance. The comuctor, who had taken
his watch from llis breast-pocket with one ham, turned over a
board
of discounts that was hanging there. Although the tram had
reached
the stop refore llers, lliroko fel t as though the neighbourhood
had
changed.
ller red-brick factory stretched our horizontally along the
tramline like a tenement building, just in front of the tram stop.
Among those doorways was liiroko's. She stared at them one by
30. one,
aware that she must not overlook hers. She fel t a pang of fear
as though something was pressing on her stomach.
She raced from the tram to her entrance.
seen from the tram.,
It was as she bad
She had left home while it was still dark. Her tram fare
was copper coins ga thered up from among the family •.•.• The
metallic
iron door in front of her was completely shut. She was late.
'1'he factory closed its doors at seven a.m. Hiroko passed by
furti vely. She grasped her lupcllbox with both hams beneath
her cape, pressed it firmly to her breast and walked on.
ready to cry.
She was
Pedestrians had become more numerous. The sun shone. Female
students were slowly walking by. The traffic had changed from
the
ear ly morning kind sIle was used to, to tha t of a later time.
31. Hiroko feared lateness even more than freezing.
niroko, who had finished breakfast while being scolded by her
grandmother,
buried her face in her scarf and walked on feeling as though she
was going into
battle. outside, the brightness of the dawn was like a newly-
sharpened
knife. It was so cold it seemed to crackle. Her wooden clogs
slipped
many times on the bridge.
The tram with its lights still on was full of smocks and over-
aIls.
All the faces were red against the cold. They had come running,
cramming
miso soup4 into their mouths and so it seemed as if the smells
of all their
- 15-
kitchens were here beneath the dim tram lights.
Hiroko squeezed in between the adult's legs. She was a worker
like
them, a small fragile worker like a blade of grass about to be
eaten by a
32. horse.
"What a good girl! How far are you going?" The man who had
vacated his seat for her had spoken. "What does your father
do?"
"He hasn't got a job." Hiroko was embarrassed to say so.
"Oh he's out of 'WOrk? It's really tough isn't it."
a friendly expression.
He assumed
The pitying eyes around Hiroko did not stare at her all at once.
They were all moved because she looked like one of their own
children.
16
TWO
Hiroko's father used to be an office worker in a small town. He
wore a striped suit and played billiards at a club. While his
wife,
who had been ill for three or four years before she died, was
still alive
he· had lo~t what little real estate they had. When he married
33. his
second wife he strangely came to yearn after a middle class
lifestyle.
His second wife went around teaching the koto
5
and ikebana
6
to the Company
executives' families.
shakuhac11i
7
•
At times she accompanied him when he played the
Once, Hiroko's father abandoned his mother and two children
and went
to live with his wife's parents, but eventually came to feel that,
for
appearances' sake, he could not allow this to continue. He had
to
send the children to middle school, his income was probably
unable to
withstand the expense. He thought that as an office worker he
would
34. never be able to rise in society. He had no idea that people like
himself could not improve their prospects. He took his family
and
went to 'l'okyo. The divorce from his second wife strengthened
his
decision to go and the illness of his younger brother, studying
under
financial hardship in Tokyo, hastened the move.
His moving was simply an escape from such things as the
neighbourhood
and the Heed to keep up appearances. He had not a single plan
or aim.
He drank, shouted and took his frustations out on the family.
His younger brother had been adopted as the heir of another
family
and had had just enough money for schooling expenses but
Hiroko' s father,
who was in charge of the money, squandered it and so the
younger brother
was studying under financial hardship. Manual labour, to which
he was
unaccustomed, ruined his health and he became bed-ridden.
35. After coming to Tokyo H.:troko's family supported the invalid
and their
paltry funds soon ran out. At that time her father worked as a
labourer
in a brewery and then a caterer's odd-job man because those
jobs were near
by but the work made his shoulders ache and his feet swell so
he quit.
- 17 -
Grandmother did piece-work at home but could, not support
them.
Hiroko was then in her fifth year at school.
"What about Hiroko going and giving one of these a try?" her
father
said one evening and threw the newspaper down to no one in
particular.
H±roko peered at it as she held her rice bowl.
her father's apparently casual words.
She was confused by
The caramel factory was recruiting female workers. Hiroko
lowered her head and forced rice mechanically into her mouth in
36. silence.
Everyone was quiet.
"How about it Hiroko?" her father said after a short while and
and smiled faintly.
"But school ...... as she began speaking her eyes filled with
tears.
"Oh you poor girl ......
"Be quiet 1 " Father interrupted Grandmother. Now and then
Hiroko's
younger brother peered at her secretively with a comforting
look. The
invalid lay face up in bed with his eyes closed.
'l'he next day Hiroko was left alone while her father and a clerk
negotiated in the factory's office.
"She's thirteen, I see." 'l'he clerk noted down her name and
particulars.
"She's still really a child so it will be rather a nuisance for
you."
"Yes, well, here are our regulations." The clerk continued
talking,
bluntly brushing aside her father's words which threatened to
become intimate.
37. On the way home Father took Hiroko into a noodle shop. He
was in a
good humour as, with legs crossed, he leaned across the low
table and poured
8
sake.
"It's a bit far but, well, you can try commuting.
about school someday soon."
We'll do something
Actually it was suppos~d to take about forty minutes to the
factory,
even by tram but, more impOrtantly, it was not economical to
take the tram
fare out of her daily wage. Female workers all looked for jobs
within
walking distance or lived in at a large factory. Hiroko's father,
however,
- 18-
did not consider such things. 'l'his factory was rather well-
known and
so it, was the only one he considered.
38. a heavy heart.
The next day Hiroko set out with
- 19 -
THREE
':Mittchan
9
, have you finished three cans yet?"
"No I've only just done two. How about you?"
"Same with me, my hands are nUmb."
Some. twenty girls stood facing each other at tables lined up in
two rows. They wore white coats and talked with heads down
while intently
moving their fingers. Their bodies trembled mechanically,
violently as
they strove to maintain the rhytlw of their work.
Iliroko; a girl whose eyes streamed; and their overseer's
younger
sister had a separate table because they were the new intake of
workers
39. for the year. In a corner of the room apart from the other
girls.they
wrapped snaIl caramels in pieces of paper in an, as yet, rather
unskilled
manner.
"They're all fast aren't they," Hiroko said to the girl with
stream-
ing eyes next to her.
"But they're old hands at it."
"Yes, so it's only natural," the overseer's younger sister
whispered.
She was thin and slight. Her mouth was sharp and her face like
that of
an adult.
'l'he girl next to Hiroko had trachoma and her eyes were always
running
pathetically. Her body was small and shrivelled.
When one of the older g irIs began to sing a popular song the
others
all joined in. Hiroko piled up the few cartons she had finally
finished
and counted them.
40. A clerk came in holding two sheets of paper. It was the cler~
~iroko
remembered from before.
"Who will it be today I wonder?"
:10
"It I S bound to be O-Ume, surely. "
" I did more yesterday too."
As they talked the clerk gave one sheet of paper to the overseer
to hold
and stretched up to paste the other onto the wall. It was a list of
the
- 20 -
previous day's ratings. The names of the', three best workers
and the
three :-;or st were posted up each day.
"Just as usual."
"No one can match up to O-Ume."
"You ~<ll have to work harder." The clerk smirked teasingly.
Although Hiroko heard someone read out her name she did not
look up_
41. She could hear the apparently relentless overseer, whose hair
was done
up in the Shimada style, curtly say to her younger sister,
"You've got
to work harder too."
Hiroko remembered what it had been like at school. Even there
her name had always been posted up as one of the best pupils.
the names of the worst pupils were not put up separately.
Hiroko wanted somehow to quickly become good at the work.
At school
l'lhile other girls filled five cans she could only manage two-
and-a-half.
Even OIl days when she thought she had done more than usual,
when the final
hour came it was still two-and-a-half. Hiroko was impatient.
She just
wanted her name removed somehow or other from the list of
worst workers.
They continued working furiously. It was a competition. With
the
list of ratings in mind they all pushed their small bodies as hard
as
42. possible.
- 21 -
FOUR
'l'he back of their workroom faced the river. All day long no sun
shone into the room. The entrance was along a dark passage
inside the
factory and light only entered from a window by the river.
From the window the ramshackle backs of houses could be seen
on the
other side of the foul-smelling river along which ships carrying
empty
barrels: rubbish barges and the like moved sluggishly all day
long.
Billboards advertising such things as soap and sake had been set
up
on the soot-stained roofs and the sun shone on them for the
whole day.
The sunlight was like happiness. The girls could only see the
warm-looking colour coming in through the closed glass door.
Before
sunset a faint redness was reflected diagonally in the dirt of the
43. glass
window and soon disappeared. Then the room became
completely dark.
At that time the wind blew every day and so the glass door
rattled
all day long. The wind blew in freely through a hole in a pane
of
glass. Although they had already asked that it be repaired it was
still un touc hed •
The girls stood working in that room all day.
Until they became used to it their legs were as stiff as sticks;
their hearts were heavy with fatigue and at times they felt dizzy.
When evening came they were chilled to the bone and on
occasions ~hat
caused their stomaches to ache. They all wore haramaki}}
around their
waists and their fathers' old long johns which they had altered.
- 22 -
FIVE
Just before noon one of the girls said impatiently, "Isn't it
44. already time for us to warm our lunchboxes up?"
"If we don't put our lunchboxes by the hibachi soon they won't
get very warm. 11
"Pass mine over next thanks."
"And mine, it's in the purple furoshiki.,,12
Presently the edge of the hibachi was covered with aluminium
lunchboxes. The lunches, which had been packed at six a.m.,
had
frozen and crumbled. Various complaints typical of the girls
were
aired around the hibachi.
"My mother's going to have another baby. I've had enough of
babies because when I go home I'm only made to look after it.
Going
into service is much better."
"It's New Year but I'm not going to buy anything •••• how
dUll."
"I think I'll be daring and go into service too, only my mother
and
I are working so I must find a job with more money."
45. "Become a apprentice geisha?" another girl asked peering in.
"No, I wouldn't be a geisha or anything like that."
"Well, my older sister always wears such lovely kimono when
she comes
home."
"oh no, I don't want to wear nice kimono."
Hiroko and the girl with trachoma stood in the group and
listened
to the conversation. Hiroko asked her softly, "Don't you want to
go to
school 1"
"My eyes are bad so it's a waste of time."
At three o'clock they had a mid-afternoon snack, the cost of
which
was deducted from their meagre daily wage. It was always
limited to a
. h 13 baked sweet potato WhlC cost one sen. After feeling
embarrassed on
her first day when she did not have the money Hiroko always
brought just
the right amount.
46. - :lJ -
A different pair of girls went out to ~uy the potatoes each day_
That was the only time they were permitted to go out.
lverness coats and working jackets fluttered in the wind, on the
street where second-hand clothes shops were lined up facing the
factory.
T!:!e gir Is walking huddled against the cold, wi th their jacket
sleeves
rolled up and bare arms thrust beneath their aprons looked
somehow
deformed.
- 24 -
SIX
'l'he caramels that the female workers wrapped up were made in
another room. 'I'hey were placed in a box and brought over by
male
workers.
"Lemon today. It
"Oh, I thought so, I've been smelling it for a while."
47. The flour-covered caramels flowed out noisily onto the table. A
sweet
lemon smell rose up. Lemon caramels were not made very often
because
they were not profitable for the factory owner. The fact that the
sweets the girls handled were their favourite ones made them
happy;
just as the lemon caramels would presently appear in shops and
delight
children.
'rhey were allowed to eat any fragments of caramel. Hiroko and
the
girl with trachoma gathered them up and ate them.
"Hey, although we can eat some pieces you'll get into trouble if
you
eat that many." 'l'he ill-tempered overseer's younger sister
suddenly
lowered her head.
Hiroko looked up for the first time and glanced around. The
factory owner's wife had come to inspect them.
"Good afternoon."
48. "Good afternoon," they replied in unison and bowed. Every day
the factory owner, or his wife, came round on inspection.: At
times
they caile together.
The mistress came silently into the centre of the room and
stopped
suddenly. I - h' 'lkl4 d h ld h h d b h' d She wore ayers of Os
1ma S1 an e er an s e 1n
her back. A cute maid followed behind her. She attended closely
to
the mistress's personal needs and so was made to keep herself
neat.
The overseer then gave a polite report. The mistress smacked
her lips
as she listened. She chuckled, apparently satisfied because the
girls
were working obediently as usual. However, as if that was not
enough
a man was employed to search the sleeves, purse and lunchbox
of each girl
- 25 -
at the gate as they left for horne. They had all stood in the wind
49. waiting for the watchman to corne.
"She's so proud isn't she," Hiroko whispered softly·to the girl
next to her as they watched the mistress disappear through the
door.
"Watch out, you'll get into trouble." As her eyes streamed the
girl realised that Hiroko still did not understand the situation
fully
am warned her. Hiroko had thought a lady would at least smile
at
little girls.
, . 15 1 b' bl h 1 l' It "Isn t O-Suml. ucky, el.ng a e to wear suc a
ove y k~mono.
The overseer's younger sister spoke of the maid jealously.
Hiroko;
the girl with trachoma and the overseer's younger sister each
had
their attention attracted towards her when the mistress appeared.
- 26 -
SEVEN
'1'he sound of feet treading on stepping-boards resounded along
50. the
dim basement passage and the small light on the ceiling rocked.
The
girls went down to the basement, talking noisily. It was time for
the roid:-afternoon snack. The overseer came to say that they
had
finished with caramels for the day.
"Are we washing bottles again?"
" I hate doing that, it's so cold."
"Miss, can we please have some hot water today?"
When the work with caramels finished they were always made
to wash
lotion bottles. Lotion was the factory's original product. The
bottles
were washed in an area of the basement which had a muddy
floor; it was
slushy and damp. Their bare feet were cold on the stepping-
boards.
'l'he sound of a ship moving along the river could be heard
through the
top window.
"Oh, the water's stone cold, isn't there any hot water?" a girl
51. cried out in despair. '1wo or three other girls called out in loud
high-pitched voices after her, "I can't bear it."
"Let I s get some hot water."
The overseer looked concerned. "Just wait and I'l~ see about
getting
some hot water." She went to discuss the matter elsewhere.
They all restrained their distress and went on rinsing out the
small
oottles one at a time. When they took their hands a little out of
the
water the skin smarted and cracked instantly. Then, they hastily
plunged their hands back in again. Hiroko washed bottles in
stoney
silence, tears trickled from the tip of her nose.
- 27 -
EIGH'r
Hiroko took the tram to the factory for only a month. After
that her return tram fare was all used up and she walked horne.
Before
52. then there had been times when she had to walk in the morning
too.
At such times her grandmother walked along with heri they
walked for
nearly tWo hours and when at last they neared the factory and
their
destination was in sight the street lights would go out all at
once.
She got used to walking in those days.
It was past eight p.m. Everyone was at horne doing piece-work
in
the six-mat room
l6
which had been closed off. Beneath the light, nice
fine wool was being pulled out from the knitted hat on
Grandmother's knee
as she moved her hands. Fragments of the brown wool fluttered
in the
light.
In a corner the invalid was lying on his stomach in bed, painting
roses, birds and the like on green paper. It was to be an
exercise-
book cover. Father sat cross-legged at his bed-side, and also
53. copied
from the sample to help him. For some time younger brother had
been
reading a magazine behind Grandmother and his eyes were now
red.
Kiroko put out a small table beside the sliding kitchen door.
- 17
Zosui had been boiling on the charcoal stove. Fro~ the next
house
which made clog thongs and was separated from them by a wall,
the tapping
sound of night-work could be heard as usual, as though they
were all in the
one house.
Hiroko lifted her face, red from the steam of the zosui, and said,
"There's nothing better than eating hot food like this when you
come from
outside. II When Hiroko came home from work she felt she had
become a
real worker.
"Ha, ha, ha .•.. how cheeky ••• and how are you getting along
nowadays,
still two and a half cans?" Hiroko flushed and hung her head at
54. her
father's teasing words.
The system of daily wages had recently been stopped at the
factory
- 28 -
and wages were now calculated by the number: of completed
cans.
Seven sen for each can. The incomes of girls who were used to
the work
increased, however, most girls had to push themselves even
harder to make
as much money as their previous daily wage. They had already
been
WOrking with all their might previously. It was impossible for
them
to produce just that much more as soon as they were told they
would be
paid by the number of cans. 'l'heir incomes all decreased at
once.
The wages of girls like Hiroko were reduced by one-third. Also
the list
of ratings was posted up each day. It became unnecessary for
55. the
overseer to say "Well, time to begin." after the .lunchbreak. In
order
to reach the amount they had received as a daily wage, they all
struggled
like a mouse in an exercise-wheel.
"'r'he employers are so shrewd ..... Grandmother sniffed primly
and
turned the hat she was working on inside out as she spoke, "If
this hat
goes into holes we'll have to pay them compensation won't we?
Take
today's yarn for instance, it's no good and soon goes into holes
so 1'm
worried about it and can't get anything done. n
"You're talking about your work aren't you Mother, but how are
you
getting on Hiroko? DO you think you'll improve if you carryon
like
this?" Father said while lighting a cigarette.
"Yes, I'm working my hardest."
"What if you were to stop working there?"
56. Father spoke again as though it was a trifling matter.
with a flash of understanding, "What would I do then?"
"It doesn't matter, sanething will turn up later. II
"'rhis factory is a bit much isn't it, it's so far."
Hiroko looked up
The invalid
set his paintbrush down and turned over. Father was encouraged
by his
words and spoke again. "Give it up, give it up •. there's no other
way.
When you take the tram fare out each day there's no change left
over is
there?"
Her father's words made Hiroko feel weak and inadequate.
However
- 29 -
she went to bed that night feeling that, at', last after many days,
she
was free. She recalled such things as the girl with trachoma that
she
57. had been friendly with, and being bullied by the overseer's
younger sister
who said she was uppity to wear a cape, as they waited at the
gate to be
searched.
presently niroko was taken by a woman from the employment
agency
for an interview at a small Chinese noodle shop in a downtown
area because
her father had said, "She's not very strong so please find her an
easy
position ... Hiroko could not even peel potatoes there.
One day a letter carre from the teacher in her old home town. It
said tha t if Hiroko could somehow get someone to provide
money for school
expenses, because not a very large sum would be needed, it
would be
better if she could at least graduate from primary school.
'l'here was a label to indicate a change of address attached am
when
the letter was forwarded to her at the noodle shop ( she was
already living
in by then) she ripped it open and began to read it but then took
58. it and
went into the toilet. She reread it. It was dark and she could not
read
it clearly.
wept.
She crouched over the dim toilet, without urinating, and
ContentsAcknowledgementsTranslator's noteThe life of Sata
Ineko(i) Childhood and Early Years (1904-1926)(ii) Meeting the
Members of Roba - Sata's Birth as a Writer (1927-32)(iii) The
Conversion Period and the Pacific War (1933-45)(iv) Post-War
Period (1946-60)(v) Recent Works (1960 -)The Caramel
FactoryKyarameru Kojo Kara - A DiscussionKyarameru Kojo
Kara and Kurenai - A
ComparisonNotesIllustrationsBibliography
Papers should be in academic prose and should be checked
carefully for
spelling, grammar, punctuation errors. Avoid generalizations or
aphorisms,
be as specific as possible by citing concrete passages from the
text and
referring directly to the language of each text. Do not
summarize the plot
or explain events in the narrative. Citations can be Chicago
style or MLA.
The essays should be well-reasoned, coherently organized, and
display
your ability to read the text closely. Your responses will be
59. graded for
clarity of ideas, evidence of careful reading, organization, and
how well
you support your central argument.
Choose one of the prompts below. Paper length: 500-600 words.
1) Writer Kobayashi Takiji set CrabCannery Ship on a boat
because he
believed that this setting elucidated certain realities of
exploitative
capitalism. In what ways is the labor on the cannery ship a
“unique” kind
of labor(different say, than working in a factory in Tokyo, for
instance)?
What makes these workers particularly vulnerable to
exploitation?Refer
directly to the text and employ quotes when stating your claims.
There is
no need to write out extensive quotes (longer than 3 lines), but
please do
include page numbers.
2) The effectiveness of Sata Ineko’s “From the Caramel
Factory” can be
attributed in part with the way in which the third person
perspective shifts
between 1) giving us close access to the point of view and
interiority of
Hiroko, to 2) giving us an objective view, looking upon Hiroko
from the
perspective of an adult. Discuss these two perspectives in the
work and
60. how it emphasizes the particular vulnerability of young girls
like Hiroko.
Refer directly to the text and employ quotes when stating your
claims.
There is no need to write out extensive quotes (longer than 3
lines), but
please do include page numbers.