Friday, February 19, 2010

History Of Japan

Flag of Japan

     Legend attributes the creation of Japan to the sun goddess, from whom the emperors were descended. The first of them was Jimmu, supposed to have ascended the throne in 660 B.C. , a tradition that constituted official doctrine until 1945. 

     Recorded Japanese history begins in approximately A.D. 400, when the Yamato clan, eventually based in Kyoto, managed to gain control of other family groups in central and western Japan. Contact with Korea introduced Buddhism to Japan at about this time. Through the 700s Japan was much influenced by China, and the Yamato clan set up an imperial court similar to that of China. In the ensuing centuries, the authority of the imperial court was undermined as powerful gentry families vied for control.
At the same time, warrior clans were rising to prominence as a distinct class known as samurai. In 1192, the Minamoto clan set up a military government under their leader, Yoritomo. He was designated shogun (military dictator). For the following 700 years, shoguns from a succession of clans ruled in Japan, while the imperial court existed in relative obscurity. 

     First contact with the West came in about 1542, when a Portuguese ship off course arrived in Japanese waters. Portuguese traders, Jesuit missionaries, and Spanish, Dutch, and English traders followed. Suspicious of Christianity and of Portuguese support of a local Japanese revolt, the shoguns of the Tokugawa period (1603–1867) prohibited all trade with foreign countries; only a Dutch trading post at Nagasaki was permitted. Western attempts to renew trading relations failed until 1853, when Commodore Matthew Perry sailed an American fleet into Tokyo Bay. Trade with the West was forced upon Japan under terms less than favorable to the Japanese. Strife caused by these actions brought down the feudal world of the shoguns. In 1868, the emperor Meiji came to the throne, and the shogun system was abolished.

THE IMPORTANCE OF VITAMIN C


The importance of vitamin C in maintaining optimal health cannot be overstated. For your health, it is crucial to get your daily dose of this power vitamin.

Immune Function
If you’re trying to kick a cold or prevent illness from coming on, vitamin C is the nutrient to seek out. It helps your body maintain healthy tissues and can boost your immune system to fend off bugs.

Iron Absorption
Vitamin C helps your body absorb iron—an important factor for anemic individuals or anyone taking iron supplements.

Bone Building
Vitamin C helps with the formation of collagen, which is abundant in the connective tissues found in cartilage and bone. Vitamin C also stimulates bone building cells and enhance calcium and vitamin D’s effects.

Wound Healing
Because vitamin C helps encourage collagen production, it’s an important nutrient for wound healing.

Healthy Skin
Not only is collagen important for skin, but vitamin C is also an antioxidant that can help clean up the damage caused by free radicals or wrinkle-fighters that are formed due to sunlight, smoke and pollution.

Blood Pressure
Researchers have found that vitamin C can help lower blood pressure in hypertensive patients.

Eyesight
Studies suggest that vitamin C may help reduce the risk of age-related macular degeneration. Vitamin C is also one of the top antioxidants in your eye lens and it prevents cataracts from developing. It also helps keep the shape of the cornea as the nutrient strengthens capillaries and builds collagen. 

INTERESTING ARTICLE

 SAMHAIN AND HALLOWEEN




       Halloween history traces back to a period about 800 years before the birth of Christ. The Celts celebrated Halloween's progenitor, under the name Samhain. Samhain was actually a ritual to mark the end of the year. The Celtic celebration was more akin to partying on New Year's Eve, only their calendar year began on Nov. 1. How Samhain evolved into Halloween instead of being adopted as a year-end festival has to do with the more metaphysical aspects the Celts associated with the day.

       When looking at history, we see many similarities between Samhain and Halloween. Samhain was not just a celebratory occasion; it also represented to the Celts that day in which the barrier separating earthly existence from the afterworld broke down, allowing the dead to return to life in the physical vessel of an animal, such as a black cat.

Friday, February 12, 2010

REFLECTION

Today ,I realize that my beloved English Teacher,Pn Sharifah is a good English teacher.I haven't do this blogger before this.Now,I have know to do e-mail and blogger.My teacher said that our learning is interesting because we use the blog as our English exercise book.I'm proud of my teacher because my teacher teaches us same like at the university.

DAILY LOG

Today I'm so happy because all SMKASR student will go back to our hometown.I'm so excited to see my beloved parents and grandmother.Happy Chinese New Year and a good holiday with family.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Homework

1. Daily Log
have done @ plan to do

2. Reflection
~Persornal thoughts

3. Interesting Reading List
~Article/Newspaper

Give personal comment
                                        SYNOPSIS OF ROBINSON CRUSOE




Robinson Crusoe is about a young Englishman who goes to sea without his parents’ blessing. He has many adventures on both land and sea, and learns many new things like trading, navigation, mathematics and fishing. A storm at sea leaves his shipwrecked and alone on a deserted island. The resourceful Crusoe manages to build himself a home on the island.

As years go by, he builds two more homes and, makes furniture and pottery for his own use. He also rears goats, plants rice and corn and collects fruit for food.

One day, he rescues a victim of a cannibal attack, who becomes his companion and friend for life. He names his new friend, Friday, because he rescued him on a Friday. Later, they save Friday’s father and a Spaniard for savages. Much later, they rescue mutineers on board a ship. Te captain takes Crusoe back to England and married a woman and had three children. After his wife death , he visits his island, and finds the English and the Spaniard living in harmony. Crusoe stays for a while, then continues to travel the seas.
 
 
                                                        Character and characteristics                                                 
 
 
Robinson Crusoe - The novel’s protagonist and narrator. Crusoe begins the novel as a young middle-class man in York in search of a career. He father recommends the law, but Crusoe yearns for a life at sea, and his subsequent rebellion and decision to become a merchant is the starting point for the whole adventure that follows. His vague but recurring feelings of guilt over his disobedience color the first part of the first half of the story and show us how deep Crusoe’s religious fear is. Crusoe is steady and plodding in everything he does, and his perseverance ensures his survival through storms, enslavement, and a twenty-eight-year isolation on a desert island.




Friday - A twenty-six-year-old Caribbean native and cannibal who converts to Protestantism under Crusoe’s tutelage. Friday becomes Crusoe’s servant after Crusoe saves his life when Friday is about to be eaten by other cannibals. Friday never appears to resist or resent his new servitude, and he may sincerely view it as appropriate compensation for having his life saved. But whatever Friday’s response may be, his servitude has become a symbol of imperialist oppression throughout the modern world. Friday’s overall charisma works against the emotional deadness that many readers find in Crusoe.
 
The Portuguese captain - The sea captain who picks up Crusoe and the slave boy Xury from their boat after they escape from their Moorish captors and float down the African coast. The Portuguese captain takes Crusoe to Brazil and thus inaugurates Crusoe’s new life as plantation owner. The Portuguese captain is never named—unlike Xury, for example—and his anonymity suggests a certain uninteresting blandness in his role in the novel. He is polite, personable, and extremely generous to Crusoe, buying the animal skins and the slave boy from Crusoe at well over market value. He is loyal as well, taking care of Crusoe’s Brazilian investments even after a twenty-eight-year absence. His role in Crusoe’s life is crucial, since he both arranges for Crusoe’s new career as a plantation owner and helps Crusoe cash in on the profits later.
 
 
The Spaniard - One of the men from the Spanish ship that is wrecked off Crusoe’s island, and whose crew is rescued by the cannibals and taken to a neighboring island. The Spaniard is doomed to be eaten as a ritual victim of the cannibals when Crusoe saves him. In exchange, he becomes a new “subject” in Crusoe’s “kingdom,” at least according to Crusoe. The Spaniard is never fleshed out much as a character in Crusoe’s narrative, an example of the odd impersonal attitude often notable in Crusoe.
 
Xury - A nonwhite (Arab or black) slave boy only briefly introduced during the period of Crusoe’s enslavement in Sallee. When Crusoe escapes with two other slaves in a boat, he forces one to swim to shore but keeps Xury on board, showing a certain trust toward the boy. Xury never betrays that trust. Nevertheless, when the Portuguese captain eventually picks them up, Crusoe sells Xury to the captain. Xury’s sale shows us the racist double standards sometimes apparent in Crusoe’s behavior.
 
 
The widow - Appearing briefly, but on two separate occasions in the novel, the widow keeps Crusoe’s 200 pounds safe in England throughout all his thirty-five years of journeying. She returns it loyally to Crusoe upon his return to England and, like the Portuguese captain and Friday, reminds us of the goodwill and trustworthiness of which humans can be capable, whether European or not.
what do I learn today?




I learned to add some of my friends' blog. I also learned to copy an article from others blog and paste it to my blog. I hope I can learn more things from days to days...

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Robinson Crusoe

Synopsis

Robinson Crusoe tells us a story about a man who is shipwrecked on an island.He learns to survive by making use of the resources provided by nature.He rescues a native who becomes his faithul companion.They live together until they are rescued by a passing ship.Crusoe returns to England with Friday after staying on the island for twenty-eight years, two months and nineteen days.This story is about advanture, survival, courage and friendship.