Friday, September 11, 2015

Dark Days Documentary


Watching documentaries has always been an in class sort of thing. In history class, especially, we would watch documentaries on all of the wars and empires, Rome and Greece and the like. My freshman year of college, however, I had an interesting class where we watched a few different kind of documentaries. It was called Cultural Diversity, and we watched documentaries on Native Americans, why Canadians speak the way they do, and so on. It was interesting to watch films that are about things other than war and disease, especially one as random as Canadian speech origins. I would argue that my favorite documentary was the one about the Native Americans. It was called Don't Get Sick After June. I thought it was an interesting viewpoint on the lives of Native Americans. The reason it is called Don't Get Sick After June is because after June is typically when all of their funding for hospitals runs out. So if you get sick, you're more or less on your own. 


Using the information gained from the documentaries watched can and most likely will aid in the writing and development of papers and other projects that calls upon the information given in the aforementioned documentaries. However, more often than not it is not that simple. While touching on things like social media, the documentaries can play an integral role as supportive evidence. Getting all of your information online versus using a mix of sources can play a big difference in the integrity of your work. Also, as mentioned in the previous paragraph, many documentaries that people have seen have been in history classes, about wars and the like. Oftentimes, in wars, there are revolutions, which is the central theme to this class. Therefore, having watched informative documentaries on revolutions can help gain an overall understanding of the class as a whole, as well as with individual projects and papers. 


After watching Dark Days by Marc Singer, I feel enlightened to a new meaning of family. The people living under the subway station in New York all have at least one thing in common: being homeless. Except they're not homeless, because they have all worked hard to create a home within the boundaries and limitations of the subway track. Many of them described their sort of fall into homelessness, whether it be from drug use or otherwise, and they all have faced hardships beyond the scopes of many. However, as the saying goes, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. Some of them have been down there for months, some for as much as twenty years. Living in the dark, dank living conditions for twenty years is a hardship in itself, as well as picking through garbage for a living in order to find something worth selling. 

A sense of greater knowledge comes from watching this documentary. I now know more about the true definition of homelessness: that just because you are without a legal "home" does not mean that you don't have one. This film definitely changed my perspective on that subject, and that will translate into my writing because of that. Now I have a new viewpoint to bring up in papers and discussion, and higher level thinking questions to ask of others as well. 

http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/82908402/
10:58-11:05 Henry says that houses stop you from being helpless, not from being homeless.

This is an important quote because it helps define homelessness further still, and because it is coming out of the mouth of a homeless person it accentuates the reality of it all. 

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