http://steel-not-glass.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] steel-not-glass.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2010-11-09 01:35 pm
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Is A Cigar Just A Cigar, Tuesday, Period 3

Cindy wasn't late for class, but only barely, skidding inside just as the bell rang. Taking a moment to compose herself in the doorway, Cindy patted her hair and smiled as if she hadn't just come racing in. "Morning class," she said, walking sedately over to her desk. Which was coffee-free as she hadn't had a chance to hit the Perk before class. Dammit.

"So, last week we finished talking about sex and symbolism," she said, still unaware she'd missed an entire week and some. "Today we're moving on to colors, much to the relief of some of you. Though I do want to compliment those of you who wrote a scene. Many of them were quite good and showed a lot of creativity."

But time to move on. "Colors are used a lot in literature, though it is one of the more culturally-specific topics we'll be discussion. For example, in the West, white is often considered to mean innocence and purity. Brides wear white to show their chastity and virginity, even now in a time when sex before marriage is a common thing. In the East, however, white is a symbol of mourning and loss, with people wearing white to funerals. Many Eastern brides wear red, as a sign of good luck, while in the West, red was often seen as the color of sexual availability. In the musical Jekyll and Hyde, Lucy, a whore, sings the line 'I've always known / I've always said / That silk and lace / In black and red / Will drive a man / right off his head.' Simply by walking on the stage in a costume with those colors, Lucy made her profession clear to the audience."

Though the short skirts had helped with that identification, too.

"Colors have many different meanings, some even contradictory. Green can mean both healthy growing things and envy, which can be a very unhealthy emotion. Black, when worn to a funeral, is a symbol of respect and mourning. When worn by teenagers, it's usually seen as a sign of disaffection with society at large. Yellow usually means 'caution,' whether it's a yellow traffic light, yellow tape around a structure, or the suggestion of cowardice, when someone is called 'yellow.' Color cliches abound, both in our daily life and in literature; how many times have you read or said phrases like 'white as a ghost' or 'feeling a little blue'?"

"By incorporating color into the descriptions, authors are again taking a short cut. By giving a female character with white or pink roses, the author is playing up her girlish innocence. By giving her red roses, however, the author is suggesting that she's a little older, perhaps ready to dabble in adulthood and sexual maturity. A reference to gray skies or blue lets us know what kind of weather to expect, without any more detail than that. Even in movies, the colors used in the scene can be a signal for what the director is trying to make you feel or think. Sepia tones or black and white for flashbacks to the past, blues for sad or depressing scenes, bright yellows and golds for action sequences. Color can be very important to people; sumptuary laws dictated what colors and fabrics different ranks were allowed to wear, and wearing the wrong color could result in fines, imprisonment, or worse. The use of colors as symbols begins at birth, when baby girls are swaddled in pink blankets and baby boys in blue. That's a relatively new meaning, by the way, gaining cache only in the past two hundred years. Before then, pink was considered a manly color, because it was a hue of red, symbolizing passion and violence. What colors mean, which many people think of as innate, are just as fluid and prone to shifting as any other kind of symbol."

Cindy smiled. "Just something for you to think about."

[OCD on its way up]

Re: Sign in #9

[identity profile] showmetheproof.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 06:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Dana Scully (Police Blue)

Re: Sign in #9

[identity profile] ancientbschamp.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 06:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Gabrielle (a very, very, very dark, almost-black blue)
ashockingbitch: (HM - legs for days)

Re: Sign in #9

[personal profile] ashockingbitch 2010-11-09 07:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Jenny Sparks (red)
icecoldfrost: (nail bite // black dress)

Re: Sign in #9

[personal profile] icecoldfrost 2010-11-09 08:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Emma Frost

Re: Sign in #9

[identity profile] onapalebicycle.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 09:48 pm (UTC)(link)
George Lass. Funereal black.
furnaceface: (Fire - Human Firestorm!)

Re: Sign in #9

[personal profile] furnaceface 2010-11-09 10:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Jonothon Starsmore

Re: Listen to the Lecture

[identity profile] showmetheproof.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 06:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Yesterday hadn't been more than an increase of energy, a little more lack of attention than usual; today... Scully was wondering if her adolescent body was going through some kind of hormonal disruption, and was trying to be extra-studious to make up for it.

She had a great deal of practice remaining deadpan in the face of boredom and the urge to fantasize about her partner, after all.
weldedtomyspine: (a bit distracted)

Re: Listen to the Lecture

[personal profile] weldedtomyspine 2010-11-09 08:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Jaime managed to concentrate on the lecturer. Er. Lecture! On the lecture!

The lecture looked nice. Er! Sounded! Sounded nice! Or... Interesting! Yeah, that's what he meant!

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] showmetheproof.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 06:55 pm (UTC)(link)
"White for doctors, and the medical profession, and science," Scully said, possibly predictably. She paused, and added, "I've always thought it was so the blood could show better. Easier to spot."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] onapalebicycle.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 09:49 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's probably for cleanliness," George shrugged. "White looks crisp and professional. You could tell if your doctor hadn't washed his coat. Might tip you off that you have a lazy doctor."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] showmetheproof.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 09:53 pm (UTC)(link)
"Now I want to look this up, see if there was an original reason," Scully said, tilting her head. "That makes sense as well. Even though I've known a few doctors who seem to use it as a sign of ... oh, office. Separation. A signal of hygiene would be a better one."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] onapalebicycle.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 10:03 pm (UTC)(link)
"That makes sense, too," George said. "Separation is ... you want your doctor to be someone Other. Old and wise and not just some idiot who passed the right classes. The average person is a fuck-up. I don't want my doctor to be average."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] showmetheproof.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 10:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Scully was startled into a laugh, then a thoughtful look. "Doctors were priests, originally, too, weren't they? In Egypt, or Greece? I don't know if that makes sense or not. But it would definitely fit with your idea there. Someone with more knowledge and power."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] onapalebicycle.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 10:11 pm (UTC)(link)
"I ... have no idea," George admitted. Because ... seriously, no clue. "But you don't want to think about your doctor as someone just like you. There's the whole doctor mystique."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] showmetheproof.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 10:13 pm (UTC)(link)
"White for the doctors, and soothing colors for nurses in a hospital. Pink and blue and green scrubs," Scully said, taking the metaphor further. "Not as intimidating."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] onapalebicycle.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 10:18 pm (UTC)(link)
"Nurses don't need to be Other," George agreed. "Professional, sure, but they can be normal people. Probably better if they are, so they can ... do that whole bedside manner thing."

Re: Class Activity: Color Cliches

[identity profile] showmetheproof.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 10:27 pm (UTC)(link)
"It would be unnerving to have them taking your temperature or sticking needles in you if they were removed away from you," Scully had to agree. "They used to be; I wonder when they changed that? From white-dressed nurses to light colors." Now she was all curious. "The way nuns don't all have to wear black and white any more either. Or blue and white."
weldedtomyspine: (chortling)

Re: Talk to the TA

[personal profile] weldedtomyspine 2010-11-09 08:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Jaime's having a hard enough time paying attention WITHOUT the hot teacher talking to him one-on-one.
weldedtomyspine: (Default)

Re: OOC

[personal profile] weldedtomyspine 2010-11-09 08:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I SAW THAT MUSICAL! WITH THE HOFF!

*shudder*

Re: OOC

[identity profile] onapalebicycle.livejournal.com 2010-11-09 09:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Les Misssssssss. ♥ I saw it on Broadway zomg.