Sunday, August 31, 2014

Sex Ex Machina


So, first things first, let’s get something clear.  I did NOT choose this essay because the idea of writing the word “sex” in an AP assignment multiple times was sort of rebellious.  Don’t get me wrong, I am enjoying it as much as any other teenager.  But, what comes after sex is what interests me the most (for those laughing at that line, minds out of the gutter please).  The term “ex machine” comes from the Latin term “deus ex machina”.  This expression is used when an event happens in a story that is just a little too convenient and falls outside the realms of reality.  For example, the entire 2012 movie is one big, giant deus ex machina.  I mean really, how in the world could a limo out run explosions, a falling parking lot, then drive through a building, get to the airport, find an empty plane, and fly it though San Francisco as it falls into the pits of hell.  Watch this clip to fully understand what I mean.
 

You see what I mean.  There is no logical way that they are alive right now.  The perfect example of a deus ex machina.
(Found on YouTube)
  The author, James Thurber, the famous American humorist, cartoonist, author, journalist, and playwright, establishes immediately that the topic at hand will attempt to use sex to create an all-inclusive and somewhat ridiculous explanation as to why this certain event occurred.  Just as promised by the title, Thurber takes the audience, readers of the New Yorker, on a wild adventure of car-on-human interactions set in the newly forming technological age of 1937.  He does this to explain the human psyche and explain why some actions are not as crazy as they seem.  Thurber talks about three people, A, B, and C, and the hypothetical situation where a car drives right at them.  A jumps out of the way, B stands still and excepts that they will be hit, but C jumps around a bit, then runs right at the car.   Thurber claims that Freudians will look at C and find that the car represents sex, with C running straight at the uncontrollable and scary situation and is therefore crazy and wrong.  Thurber turns around and quickly debunks that idea, claiming it to be outright ridiculous.  He does this through the extended metaphor of Mr. A, Mr. B, and Mr. C, who are slightly changed over time to include animal and female versions of them.  Also, he uses his friend, Harvey Lake, who when driving, “the steering bar of an old electric runabout broke off in his hand, causing the machine to carry him through a fence and into the grounds of the Colubus School for Girls” (Thurber 158).  Thurber claims that Harvey experienced what Mr. C did, but claimed it was rational.  Of course he is now scared of vehicles, he has an accident with left him scarred.  By establishing that C is not crazy, he states that by running at problems we may face, such as sex, we may end up scarred, but we may also conquer our fears and become stronger.  I don’t know about you, but I’m ready to parkour some cars right about now.  Wish me luck.
            You indentured servant,
                                    Ian Wilenzik

 

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