Friday, December 11, 2009

Final Entry


Why do you believe Nathaniel Philbrick ended the novel with the words "once the end has been reached and all hope, passion, and force of will have been expended the bones may be all that are left." Consider these words metaphorically in reference to the survivors (how they "fare in the dark shadow of their story,") the eventual fate of Nantucket and the whale itself.

Monday, December 7, 2009


Chapter 11
Philbrick very effectively uses several natural events as metaphorical to the sailor's experiences. Explore the parallel (metaphor) between the hawks and the tropic birds (pg. 147) and the situation which the castaways face as they grapple with survival in Chapter 11. How does their being Quaker play into the equation. Who are the hawks and who are the tropic birds? Please use the rubric to frame your answer.

Friday, December 4, 2009



Optional (for Extra Credit) Chapters 9 & 10

If you were one of the surviving sailors, would you have chosen to stay on Henderson Island or push on 3,000 miles to South America? Use details from the book to qualify and support your answer. Would it have made a difference if you were Pollard or Chase?

Wednesday, December 2, 2009


For the next two chapters 7 and 8,
I would like you to simply respond to the content intelligently and thoughtfully. Have a true 'dialogue' with your classmates--respond more than once, if you feel so motivated. For each chapter, include at least two insights, thoughts, questions or connections to your own life experiences. Consider the limits of human endurance!

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

III: Journal Entry


Write a journal entry from the point-of-view of Nickerson, Pollard or Chase. Thoroughly explore the question of WHY the whale attacked the Essex. Don't just RETELL what happened. Do support your explanation with details.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Chapters 1 and 2


In Chapter 1, you read about life in Nantucket. I found the history fascinating--a town of roof-dwellers, superstitions, the "imprinting of young Nantucketers (whale brain washing), the influence of the Nantucket Wives Club, and the social hierarchy. Chapter 2 provides detail about the beginning of their voyage and the mechanics of the Essex.

In your next blog entries, consider how the established hierarchy on the Essex reflects the social stratification of Nantucket. In other words, are the sailors all on equal footing as believed by the Quaker faith. Think about the exercise we did when we laid out the ship.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Jamie Gates "In the Heart of the Sea"

The preface and the first chapter of In the Heart of the Sea are all about the time period, and about whaling and why it was so important in those times. Whaling made Nantucket one of the most wealthy ports in all of America. The preface also talks about these men who are washed on shore who have been in horrible crash. I also agree with Nicole about the Quakers they were simple people with a simple look at life. They accepted anyone from any religion, and they were strong pacifists. The first chapter was about whale hunting and what whale to hunt. The right whale was the whale to hunt because it was the "right" whale. "The right whale grazed the waters like seagoing cattle." (pg. 5) Whales to them are like" a serpent with black, horselike eyes and a fifty foot body resembling a string of barrels floating on the water." (pg. 4) So What if Nantucket hadn't allowed Whaling? What would the port have become it sure would not be as rich.
-Jamie Gates
11/23/09