I recently wrote an article on A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens for the Chestermere Anchor City News. Since I am rather proud of the article I want to share it on my blog. Read it below or go to The Anchor for the original article. Thanks for reading.
As surely as winter brings snow and cold, skating and tobogganing, so
too does Christmas bring light displays, mistletoe, ugly sweaters and
holiday traditions.
While most families have their own unique traditions, the manner in
which they decorate the tree or baking a family recipe passed down
through the generations, one custom that seems to be nearly universal is
the sharing of A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens.
“A Christmas Carol stands as a good call to rediscover those things that
are important,” said Chestermere Public Library Librarian Andrea Pflug.
In her opinion, the story’s popularity comes from the focus on the heart of Christmas.
“Which is…reconnecting with one another spending time with loved ones
and with family having a generosity of spirit and basically stepping out
of the everyday,” said Pflug.
The story tells of a transformative Christmas for miserly money lender Ebenezer Scrooge.
He is haunted first by his dead business partner and then three spirits
in an effort to make him turn from a path of selfishness and greed.
A path that would see him suffer in chains after his death was changed
to a long life of generosity and compassion for those who are less
fortunate, such as his clerk Bob Cratchit.
This story has worked its way in to all aspects of Christmas. The themes
and characters can be seen in television, film, theatre and even in
advertising such as the popular Canadian Tire ads that ran in the 1980s.
“It’s been adapted to film purposes,” said Shannon Robertson who has
studied and taught courses about A Christmas Carol, “it’s been adapted
to musical purposes.”
“It has been really well worked through the modern culture,” she said.
Robertson is an Athabasca University Tutor and former instructor at
Grant MacEwan University in Edmonton where she taught a class on A
Christmas Carol.
Every year it is read, viewed and taken in, in its original form as well as countless adaptations.
The story has become so intertwined with Christmas culture that even
people who have never seen or read the story have an understanding of
the plot.
“Lots of people understand the word Scrooge to refer to some sort of
miserly, negative, stingy kind of character even if they haven’t read A
Christmas Carol,” said Robertson.
A Christmas Carol was one of several Christmas stories that author
Charles Dickens wrote but it has been the only one to take a hold of
society’s collective imagination.
“None of them were as popular as A Christmas Carol,” said Robertson.
Proving its longevity, Dickens’ novella about the redemption of Ebenezer
Scrooge through his haunting by the ghosts of Christmas Past, Present
and Future, has not been out of print since it was first published in
1843.
The reason that a Christmas Carol has managed to maintain its popularity is that it captures the focus of our day to day lives.
“We live day to day in the grips of the daily needful activities,” she
said, “we worry about money, we seek to in some way effect or accomplish
our own security.”
These fears can consume the everyday activities of many people and are embodied in the character of Ebenezer Scrooge.
When these worries overtake a person’s life the results and consequences are the same as for Scrooge.
“There is a sense that we will be judged by how it is we have dealt with the…vulnerable among us,” said Robertson.
Like Scrooge as he discovers that his miserly way of life is viewed
quite differently by those around him, people today are judged by how
they treat others.
“The story of our lives is one that will not only be told by us but it
will be told by those people we either blessed or did not bless,” she
said.
“That is just as much a part of a legacy, what we fail to do…as what we in fact manage to do,” said Robertson.
She said that in the story, Scrooge is confronted by this fact in an uncomfortable and haunting way.
“These ghosts visit him nightly and he has a chance to consider his impending death,” she said.
As with Scrooge, Robertson believes that people want their legacy to be
something that shows mercy, generosity and nobility of spirit.
Which is why this story keeps being passed down to each new generation at Christmas.
Joining in on this tradition, the Chestermere Public Library’s adult book club read A Christmas Carol as their December pick.
“It’s a story we’re all familiar with in all its different forms whether
it’s A Muppet’s Christmas Carol or we happen to see it on stage at some
point,” said Pflug.
Despite her career, until she chose it for the book club, she had never read it.
“I thought it might be interesting to have a chance to visit the text
itself and give people a chance to see if the image of the story in
their heads matched what was in the original writing.”
A Christmas Carol is a relatively short story, about 100 pages long depending on the edition.
“A Christmas Carol is consumable in a single sitting,” said Robertson.
The length of the original text has allowed for generally accurate reflections of the story in other forms.
However, she does suggest that the Disney and children’s versions should
be considered as being inspired by the original text and not an
accurate portrayal.
“The musicals that are performed almost every year…they are really quite faithful,” said Robertson.
Having now read the book, Pflug who is most familiar with the children’s adaptations of the story agrees.
She believes that the fear and terror inspired in Scrooge by the ghosts has been toned down for kids.
This is especially true she feels in the scene where Jacob Marley
confronts Scrooge to warn him about what lies ahead of him if he doesn’t
mend his ways.
“It’s actually rather haunting the way it’s described,” said Pflug.
Even in the most accurate portrayals, Robertson said that there is a
loss of emphasis on Scrooge reflecting on himself as a child.
“It really does ask Scrooge to consider himself as a child, the younger wounded child,” she said.
And how that exclusion, loneliness and separation from the care of his family affected him in later years.
Those formative experiences in Scrooge’s early life are reflected in the man Scrooge grows to be.
Scrooge’s greed has grown out of a fear of want created in him as a child.
“It really is a call to mercy and to generosity for the sake of those
who are less fortunate,” said Robertson, “it was in Dickens’ time and it
still is now.”
There is a historical context such as the workhouse that no longer exist
in western society but many of the themes from the story can still be
seen in Chestermere and society today.
“We can get focused on other things, on the day to day concerns and how easy it is to ignore or scoff at Christmas,” said Pflug.
It is too easy to focus on the shiny extras as Pflug puts it; the
decorations and trappings of Christmas instead of focusing on what the
true meaning of Christmas is, people and connections.
This is something that she tries to foster through the library book club.
The club meets once per month to discuss their chosen book.
“Just something we can explore together,” she said.
The books are chosen by Pflug and are based around the feedback of the members and what they want to read.
“Part of the joy of reading is sharing the experience with other people,” said Pflug.
The club provides a venue for people to discuss the books they are reading and the books that they enjoy.
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Saturday, December 17, 2016
Saturday, November 12, 2016
My Response To Trump
Everyone seems to be reeling and searching for answers in the wake of Donald J. Trump's historic and unprecedented election win Nov. 8. Social media is ablaze with both celebration and fear. Which of these responses you see depends upon where you are politically. I have seen mostly fear and dejection. News media, comedians, pundits and pollsters have all been trying to bring some sense of normalcy by analyzing how this could happen. Although it has only been a few days, it is time to move from passive reaction and shock to proactive effective response.
As I watched the election I was surprised but not as shocked as I could have been. I fully expected Clinton to win. I expected rational and educated thinking to carry the day. I was wrong. I was nervous when the polls suggested Clinton would win. They have been more wrong than right in recent years, predicting vastly different outcomes in elections here in Canada. More ominously they were wrong in Europe with the astounding Brexit vote.
Even before the votes were counted I was starting to get a sinking feeling when I read an article about a person who has correctly predicted every Presidential election since the '80s. He predicted Trump, or rather he predicted Republican and hedged his bets saying that Trump was a wild card. (See the article here.)
As the results started to come I was more and more certain that Trump would win. And he did.
The Question now is how do we respond? The pronoun 'we' can mean Americans, Canadians or people in General. The response, so far, to this election reminds me of the cookie cutter response to mass shootings in the U.S. There is a lot of consternation, fear and anger that is forgotten almost as fast as it erupts. It is too soon to tell whether the election's response will continue to follow this pattern. If things are to be righted I hope it doesn't.
I am (thankfully) not an American. I will however suggest some courses of action to those that oppose Trump. Like it or not, the American election has consequences globally and thus everyone has a reason to comment.
Now is the call to action. If you are sitting at home stunned now is the time to start working. Don't move to Canada (we don't want you. You made this mess, it's your responsibility to fix it.) Don't wait till the next primaries. Start working. Now. Join the Democrats, be active, hold the party elites to account. Makes sure that next election the best, and I mean the best candidate is put forward, not the one whose turn it is or the history maker. Nominate the best, most electable Democrat in the entire country regardless of race, gender or creed.
If you aren't a Democrat, work to change the system, abolish the electoral college, grow a third party to the point it is viable and not just a distraction. If you are a Republican, find the values of the party that have integrity. The GOP abolished slavery. If it was once able to do good in the world find a way to do it again. It doesn't matter where your political allegiances lie everyone has a part to play.
Be active in your community. Do not tolerate ignorance, hate racism and misogyny. Don't fight hate with hate. Fight with love, with patience and with education. This won't be easy but it needs to be done.
This same advice applies in Canada and to the whole world. No matter when the next election is, Now is the time to take a stand. As Canadians we will have no excuse if this hatred takes root here. We have watched the rise of intolerance in other countries and need to guard against it at home. If it comes and finds a home here it is because we have ignored the lessons of Britain and America and invited intolerance and ignorance into our home.
Canada can be and needs to be a beacon of hope in the world, guiding others forward and showing that although it is hard, inclusion, tolerance and love can turn back the tide of hate.
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As I watched the election I was surprised but not as shocked as I could have been. I fully expected Clinton to win. I expected rational and educated thinking to carry the day. I was wrong. I was nervous when the polls suggested Clinton would win. They have been more wrong than right in recent years, predicting vastly different outcomes in elections here in Canada. More ominously they were wrong in Europe with the astounding Brexit vote.
Even before the votes were counted I was starting to get a sinking feeling when I read an article about a person who has correctly predicted every Presidential election since the '80s. He predicted Trump, or rather he predicted Republican and hedged his bets saying that Trump was a wild card. (See the article here.)
As the results started to come I was more and more certain that Trump would win. And he did.
The Question now is how do we respond? The pronoun 'we' can mean Americans, Canadians or people in General. The response, so far, to this election reminds me of the cookie cutter response to mass shootings in the U.S. There is a lot of consternation, fear and anger that is forgotten almost as fast as it erupts. It is too soon to tell whether the election's response will continue to follow this pattern. If things are to be righted I hope it doesn't.
I am (thankfully) not an American. I will however suggest some courses of action to those that oppose Trump. Like it or not, the American election has consequences globally and thus everyone has a reason to comment.
Now is the call to action. If you are sitting at home stunned now is the time to start working. Don't move to Canada (we don't want you. You made this mess, it's your responsibility to fix it.) Don't wait till the next primaries. Start working. Now. Join the Democrats, be active, hold the party elites to account. Makes sure that next election the best, and I mean the best candidate is put forward, not the one whose turn it is or the history maker. Nominate the best, most electable Democrat in the entire country regardless of race, gender or creed.
If you aren't a Democrat, work to change the system, abolish the electoral college, grow a third party to the point it is viable and not just a distraction. If you are a Republican, find the values of the party that have integrity. The GOP abolished slavery. If it was once able to do good in the world find a way to do it again. It doesn't matter where your political allegiances lie everyone has a part to play.
Be active in your community. Do not tolerate ignorance, hate racism and misogyny. Don't fight hate with hate. Fight with love, with patience and with education. This won't be easy but it needs to be done.
This same advice applies in Canada and to the whole world. No matter when the next election is, Now is the time to take a stand. As Canadians we will have no excuse if this hatred takes root here. We have watched the rise of intolerance in other countries and need to guard against it at home. If it comes and finds a home here it is because we have ignored the lessons of Britain and America and invited intolerance and ignorance into our home.
Canada can be and needs to be a beacon of hope in the world, guiding others forward and showing that although it is hard, inclusion, tolerance and love can turn back the tide of hate.
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Friday, November 11, 2016
Remebrance Day-Part 1
Sgt. Maxine McKellar retired after a 25 year career in Air Force. |
Remembrance Day is always a challenge to cover for the newspaper. The solemn act of remembrance does not pair well with the activity of trying to be everywhere and photograph everything at once. But proper coverage both in story and picture are integral parts of the day. If no record exists how can we remember as memories fade and veterans pass?
The act of remembrance isn't passive and it isn't meant to last just the one day.
The Act of Remembrance
"They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
We will remember them."
It may have been because I haven't covered a Remembrance Day Ceremony in a while but I was acutely aware that people may have been viewing my work to record the story of Remembrance as more of a distraction from the act then as an means to honour it.
It wasn't until after the ceremony that I realized that people do understand the importance of recording the ceremony.
I was thanked by so many people for my preview coverage of Remembrance Day that I started to feel uncomfortable. I am not a veteran. I have done nothing worthy of thanks on this day. I was thanked by veterans people I should be thanking, and did.
The final affirmation came when I sat down for coffee with a veteran from England, David Hale. This senior gentleman who spent 18 years in the SAS was delighted to see my pictures of him and was unable to contain his excitement at being able to share our ceremony with his buddies in the legion back home.
In pictures, "They shall not grow old".
We will remember them.
Retired Cpl. David Hale. He served 18 years with the 22 SAS Regiment |
Works Cited
"The Act of Remembrance" The Royal Canadian Legion, 2016, http://www.legion.ca/honour-remember/remembrance-day-ceremony/ Accessed Nov. 2016
Reboot. Or Déjà vu again
I am restarting this blog once again. If you look just a few inches down you will see another post that states I am going to school and will be posting about that.
It didn't happen, the EMT program did not inspire me to write and that career did not take off. If I wanted to stay in the medical field, nursing or lab tech are fields I could likely succeed in. EMS is not the fit for me.
My period of unemployment and rediscovery has inspired me to write. That same inspiration to write fiction, write essays, write opinions has also inspired me to get back into journalism as a route into PR and communications.
I am back in school again, working to finish my degree. Between reporting and school I can't commit to regular posts but as I am inspired, my writing will appear here.
Thanks for reading,
Jeremy
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It didn't happen, the EMT program did not inspire me to write and that career did not take off. If I wanted to stay in the medical field, nursing or lab tech are fields I could likely succeed in. EMS is not the fit for me.
My period of unemployment and rediscovery has inspired me to write. That same inspiration to write fiction, write essays, write opinions has also inspired me to get back into journalism as a route into PR and communications.
I am back in school again, working to finish my degree. Between reporting and school I can't commit to regular posts but as I am inspired, my writing will appear here.
Thanks for reading,
Jeremy
-30-
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Sunday, April 15, 2012
RMES Ride along
After seven years as a photojournalist and dozens of emergency calls I have never travelled to a scene with lights and sirens.
Until April 6 that is.
I was in the Chief’s office at the Redwood Meadows Emergency Services (RMES) station to interview Rob Evans about his promotion to Fire Chief.
About five minutes into the interview Evans paused, said they had a call and left to see what it was.
They had received a call for a car fire on a service road in Kananaskis Country.
When I stepped out of the office to see what was happening, Evans asked if I had my camera gear and if I wanted to ride with him in the departments’ rapid response pick-up truck.
I, of course, said yes, went back into the office to grab my camera and while being careful to stay out of the way of the engine crew, go into the rapid.
The drive from the hall was fascinating, the first thing I noticed was that the sirens, which I’ve heard from the outside and are quite loud, are much quieter when heard from inside.
I was also stunned, more than I probably should have been, out how other drivers on the road reacted as we drove down Highway 22.
When I drive myself to the scene of and accident or fire, I have a general idea of where all of the responding police and fire units are thanks to my radio scanner.
If I am ahead of any emergency vehicles I frequently check my mirrors and makes sure to pull off the road and be out of the way well before they reach me.
Even without the advantage of knowing that they’re coming there’s no excuse not to get out of the way of emergency vehicles.
On this call, two pick up trucks continued driving, blocking the way, oblivious to us for some time as Evans honked the horn and worked to safely pass them.
I was told that this is actually about average but it does get worse on weekends as more people come out into the country.
We arrived on the scene moments after the engine did while that crew was still unrolling hose lines and getting their breathing masks on.
Evans said that everything went well at that scene. The proper strategy was with a combination of water and dry chemical extinguisher used to put out the fire.
With the fire out, they cleaned up their gear, turned the scene over to the Kananaskis Fire Investigator and returned to the hall where I was able to finish my interview with Evans about his promotion.
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Tuesday, April 3, 2012
First on the scene - a river rescue
It's actually been a long time since I've arrived first on the scene. With most of the hard news happening outside of the town limits it's pretty tough to beat vehicles that don't have to follow posted speed limits, red lights and the rest of the rules of the road like I have to.
On this river rescue I arrived first by about a minute or two. I was followed closely by Cochrane Fire Services Capt. Huw Jeffries in their ERU (its a pickup truck, I'm not sure what the designation means). He drove right onto the bridge to asses the situation. The Engine was off responding to what turned out to be a false alarm fire.
Moments later, two ambulances arrived and their crews started asking me what was happening, which unfortunately I didn't know much since I had just arrived and only knew what had been transmitted over the radio (I did tell them what I'd heard the police say since I have no idea if ambulance crews monitor RCMP radio traffic).
Shortly after that the crews who had been paged into the fire hall for this call started to arrive with the necessary equipment to effect the rescue.
From there things progressed quickly, safety ropes were tied, water rescue team members got in position to back up the high angle rescue, and a firefighter climbed over the edge to effect the rescue.
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