Thursday 23 May 2013

Just a reminder...


Just to remind everyone about the End of Exams social...IT'S 2 DAYS AWAY!!



Everyone's welcome!!!
Reasons why you should come: there aren't - you just should! Buuuuuuuuuuuut if we were to give you a few:

  • There will be food, 
  • Drinks, 
  • Good music and from what I hear, it looks like there'll be good weather too!!  
  • Fantastic opportunity to socialise and catch up with people before that long summer break and 
  • Another good one to unwind after exam stress.
  • Exams are done, what are you really doing with your life.
  • You have to eat, why not come eat (at our social)
  • It's the final event of the year, 
  • Missing it is actually NOT an option! RSVP here, now!

- There will be a walking bus leaving campus at 1PM - meet at the traffic lights by Lafrowda
- If you're lost or need more info - call/text - 07507966373
All you need to do is show up! :D

For more information, see and or contact us on our facebook page!!

Yours,

EACS x

Monday 20 May 2013

Rollin' with hoodies?

WE WANT STASH! WE WANT STASH!
Do you want stash?


So we're thinking of getting stash. Hoodies, maybe t-shirts - definitely hoodies! But we need you to tell us if you want them or not. I don't know about you guys but I definitely want an ACS hoodie to walk around campus in, personalised or not! So here's what we need you to do: VOTE! It's as simple as. Don't vote 'No' because a friend votes 'No', vote for you because in the end, you'll be the one wearing that aweeeeeeeesome ACS jumper! 

So, how can I vote?
- and yes you all need to vote, even if you are unsure.

Just go to the grey tabs hidden away on the right hand side of the page. If you select the first tab you will find a poll. Please fill this out as soon as possible so that we can begin preparing and know how many hoodies we'll need to put in for and if it's even worth doing!! Just wanna throw it out there...if you're not up for some sort of stash, you might just be a little craaaaaaaaazy!!

See below for visual instructions!! 

Love,

EACS x


Friday 10 May 2013

"The “Love Laws" that lay down "who should be loved, and how. And how much.”

The Alphabet Review: A

Arundhati Roy 


  • Born 24 November 1961
  • Indian author and political activist
  • Best known for the 1998 Man Booker Prize for Fiction winning novel ‘The God of Small Things’ (1997) and for her involvement in environmental and human rights causes. Roy’s novel became the biggest-selling book by a non-expatriate Indian author.
"It didn't matter that the story had begun, because Kathakali discovered long ago that the secret of the Great Stories is that they have no secrets. The Great Stories are the ones you have heard and want to hear again. The ones you can enter anywhere and inhabit comfortably. They don't deceive you with thrills and trick endings."

I first read GoST when studying English Literature in my 1st year of college, the theme for our course was ‘The Struggle for Identity’ and right there and then I fell in love with Literature all over again. The topic: 'The Struggle for Identity' allowed me to read novels, poems and films by ethnic authors and playwrights; I was able to explore the worlds of a number of talented artists. I decided to read GoST after reading the quote "The 'Love Laws' that lay down 'who should be loved, and how. And how much." I felt as though it was such a strong statement, not to mention the chance to educate myself a little bit about the Indian culture, as there would be no point in simply limiting myself to the works of African-American authors when considering 'The Struggle for Identity'. 

Review

The story primarily takes place in a town named Ayemenem or Aymanam, part of Kottayam in Kerala state of India. The temporal setting shifts back and forth from 1969, when fraternal twins Rahel and Estha are seven years old, to 1993, when the twins are reunited at age 31. It is narrated in the third person, however, during a great part of the narrative, the reader sees everything through Rahel's eyes, giving them a very special insight into the happenings and characters within the novel. 

As GoST focuses on and their impressions of the world, Roy uses various techniques to represent the children's viewpoint and their innocence. For example, the capitalisation of particular words and phrases to give them significance. Similarly, the children recombine things that adults say and place emphasis on words and ideas in a different way to the adults, thereby creating a new way of viewing the world and echoing their perception of the it in comparison to the grown-ups that surround them. 

‘Ammu loved her children (of course), but their wide-eyed vulnerability, and their willingness to love people who didn’t really love them, exasperated her and sometimes made her want to hurt them – just as education, a protection.’

 GoST shifts around in time allowing expressions from an older perspective, like the extract seen above and the disjointed narrative structure that Roy employs echoes the process of the resurfacing of a repressed memory. There are various moments which cross each other throughout the book. For example: in 1969, when Rahel is a seven-year-old child, we see the events of the book through a her 'child eyes'. Whereas, twenty-three years later, when she is in search something she lost in her childhood, has become a woman and her eyes have become more critical, facts, objects and people are seen in a completely different light. 

Although Roy uses a young narrator throughout the majority of the book, this does not affect the way in which each detail is described. We still feel how ‘May in Ayemenem’ was ‘a hot brooding month’. The reader is able to relate  to each character, whether it be personally or empathetically. We are still drawn in to listen to their stories, despite the fact that they are told through the eyes of a seven-year-old; it is possible that Roy uses a child  narrator because children tend to see people's true colours and often pay closer attention to detail. 

With the novel being written by a woman from an ethnic minority, you might expect  the novel to take a feminist approach, especially since the protagonist is a female. However Roy has chosen, instead, to tackle the issues including: love, death, cultural identity, morality, racism, loss of innocence along with many others. Amongst flagging up some of these issues,  Roy gives us with a taste of Kerala life through the liberal use of Malayalam words and presents the reader with aspects of Kerala living such as: communism, the caste system, and the Keralite Syrian Christian way of life.

GoST is a patchwork of flashbacks and lengthy sidetracks that weave together to pull gently on your heartstrings whilst telling the story of the Ipe family. It was captivating from beginning to end and I would definitely recommend it to literature lover! It is a true roller-coaster; at times you smile, laugh and may even cry. It will have you glued to pages and reading ahead of any book club you may have started it with!

Sarah Akinsola
Publicity Secretary





Monday 6 May 2013

End of Exams Social!!!!!!


So, exams will be over and done with for most of us by the end of May, WOOOOOOOOOO! I think that's a call for a celebration...

Come and join us for our 'End of Exams Social'! Everyone's welcome, there will be food, drink, people (obviously) and good music. It'll be a great chance to socialise and another good one to unwind after exam stress. The final event of the year, I don't think that missing it is even an option! RSVP here! For more information, see and or contact us on our facebook page!!

Once again, best of luck with exams, enjoy the sunshine, but not so much that it costs you your degree. Knowledge is power, and to some extent in today's society, so are qualifications. 

Yours,

EACS x

Sunday 5 May 2013

Now I know my ABC's, maybe I should read something a little more engaging...

Hey guys!

Hope that revision, exams and all that malarkey is going well (yes, I recognise that exams and essays are not nonsense or in anyway meaningless!), but we've got something new for you: The Alphabet Review!

So, what is the The Alphabet Review you ask? Or not because it's kind of a tautology...well, it is...

A monthly column, written by our very own Publicity Secretary: Sarah Akinsola! We're taking you all the way through The English Alphabet with reviews on texts (films included) written or directed by ethnic authors and directors, with either a first or last name beginning with the letter of The Alphabet that is relevant that month. Obviously, we're starting with 'A', so 'A' is the letter of the month for May. 'B' will be the letter for June and so on so forth .. Keep a lookout for the reviews! If you're looking for something good to read, you might find your next book right here on our blog!

Yours,

EACS x