Jake
Strange
ENGL
254
January
14, 2015
Blog
1
Hello,
my fellow classmates! My name is Jake Strange and I am senior advertising and
public relations major. I’m a future dog owner (see also “Alaskan Klee Kai”),
self-proclaimed music connoisseur and a person who truly enjoys meeting and
interacting with new people.
It’s
hard to comprehend some days, but this will be my final semester as a student
at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Come May, I will graduate with a
Bachelor Degree of Journalism. From there, I plan to work in an ad agency
setting, specializing in account services, client relations and project
management. Chances are good I’ll relocate somewhere where the winters aren’t
as cold!
Outside
of my classes, I work part-time as a project manager at Agent, an advertising
agency down in the Haymarket/Railyard area (just a few doors down from Blue
Sushi, to put a blip on the map). When I do get some free time from of classes
and work, I greatly enjoy playing guitar and writing music, expanding my
collection of vinyl records, spending time with the people who are close to me
and getting the occasional video game session in.
I
listen to a wide variety of music – it depends on the day – but my biggest influences
that translate to my own style are individuals like Jack White, John Mayer and
Gary Clark Jr. and groups such as the Arctic Monkeys and Band of Horses.
Collecting records also affords me a fun way to get a healthy dose of old
talent like Clapton, Led Zeppelin and Frank Sinatra as well!
Writing
has always been something I’ve gone to great lengths to improve at, both
academically and independently. One of the lines I shared with everyone in the
first-day popcorn activity was “I write because it holds great weight in
everything.” I stand by that. It is my belief that being able to write
effectively directly correlates with such ideas one’s own professional
skillset, intellectual capacity and overall well-being. In order to make
something of yourself, you must write well.
So,
yeah, that’s a bit about me as a writer and a person. On to the reading!
After
reading Joseph Harris’ The Idea of
Community in the Study of Writing, I drew some parallels between what he
had to say and my own understanding of what a community is. Harris did a much
better job of trying to wrest a finite definition out of the term, but, to me,
a community is a group of like-minded individuals who dedicate their time,
energy and skills to the pursuit of either a) a common end result, or b) a
unified vision or goal.
So,
for example, we (the students of this course) and the rest of the student body
at UNL can be considered a community. We are all working toward the common end
result of obtaining a degree and ensuing our viability and security in the job
market. By being a part of a community, one opens themselves to experiences and
people you may have never encountered otherwise. But that principle of working
toward the same thing really drives home the ideas of solidarity and support that
come with being a part of a community.
Jake,
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, two things: 1. I love that your blog is titled "Strange Blog"--it makes me smile. 2. I also love that you so strongly identify as a future dog owner!
Reading your post about your musical influences, makes me wonder--can we be part of a community with people we've never met or might even be dead? Can your musical influences be part of a community--even if it's just one that exists in your head? As influences, are the writers--be they musicians or prose writers--are we part of imaginary communities of influence in our own minds all the time? If so, what are the discourses we share?
You focus a lot on the idea of solidarity. How, though, would you say Harris's points about strife and conflict play in to that? And does having a shared goal always make us a community? For example, how do we know that all of us at UNL have a shared goal? Some student's goals in education might be to make money while others' goals is to know things... Even if our shared goal is "education," broadly, don't we all define and understand that differently? So how do those goals tie us together? I'm inclined to think that maybe it's more than goals. It might also be a shared culture or discourse (like Harris says) that draws us together. Can it be both things at once?