Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Assignment 3 Cameron Bazan


Sedaris would have written this story to show the frequent delays while traveling through airports and the weird conversation and arguments that go along with it. Also not everyone has experienced flight and Sedaris could use this to show some of his experiences while using airports as a mode of transportation. For example “2003 when the flight attendant asked us to pray for our troops in Iraq” (Sedaris 275). He talks about how this was weird and a first time he has ever heard this on an airplane. Most people have very stereo typical thoughts on flying that you go to a building walk through a tunnel and you hop in an airplane, Sedaris shows that there is more to flying then what meets the eye.

Sedaris didn’t just write this for his pleasure he wanted his audience to receive a message about airports. Sedaris hoped that readers would feel that airports are strange places: Places you don’t want to spend a long time in but sometimes you have no choice. While explaining airports he uses very descriptive and offensive languages. The main message he is trying to tell his audience is to not make weird conversations in airport because the make people around you judge and think negatively about you as he is doing in Standing By.

Throughout David Sedaris’s Standing By, he question himself and ethics. The starts of by questioning flight attendant’s how do they handle problems and what are some tips and tricks they use while flying; he also questions why some people strike conversations in an airport waiting lounge. Not only does he question the conversation he questions the ethics of each one. The main thing Sedaris is puzzled about is why he is flying overall. After the bad and weird experience he has had you think he wouldn’t fly, he says it makes him go brain dead.

Sedaris, David.”Standing By.”First year Composition Reader.Boston:Pearson,2011.275-277.Print.

1 comment:

  1. I definitely think the setting is important—why an airport and not the DMV?—but I think there is more to it than that. I think you get closer to identifying Sedaris’ purpose at the end of your second paragraph. What led you to that conclusion? Those details are the ones that could help you further understand his reason for writing this.

    The concept of ethics is really interesting. What stance does Sedaris take with each of the people and how does/could that relate to his purpose? Does Sedaris ever evaluate him own thoughts?

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