Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Week 11


And so we've come to week 11, your final day in the literature course 1102.  I have you have enjoyed the readings.  There were many we did not get time to address but they remain for your leisure.  You can access the links here indefinitely, that is until such time as I might take the site down.  

     Some themes to think about:  

Authority/Society and the Individual:  how authority is defined, how founded and invested, its impacts and its relation to those figures and institutions and cultural activities in our society that wield it ( as distinguished from mere power or force).  In literature, the author creates or writes and the story that is told may be in fiction or non-fiction form, in poetry or prose, but it is its truths that tell us something,  shape our understanding of what it means to be human and to exist in a world that is palpable and real, but ever-changing and always beyond us in so many ways.

The Natural World:  the womb of all life, Nature is the alpha and omega, and whatever face Nature wears, for good or ill, our fates are linked inextricably.  Whether the world ( and we ourselves) appears as it does in accordance with some divine plan or design or Fate, whether what science calls natural selection and chance events are an aspect of that, whether the mythic stories of creation, lost paradises and first peoples are "true", certainly the world is unfolding and we along with it, witness to, and participant in the show.

Art:  the made world, constructed from the material elements of the world and human imagination and ingenuity and energy and will and the desire to control and shape the experience we are thrown into at birth, and from which only death will deliver us, ultimately.  What does it all mean?  What pleasures, what pains, what needs? To these art address itself.





Year’s End                                        by Richard Wilbur (b.1921)

Now winter downs the dying of the year,   
And night is all a settlement of snow;
From the soft street the rooms of houses show   
A gathered light, a    atmosphere,   
Like frozen-over lakes whose ice is thin   
And still allows some stirring down within.

I’ve known the wind by water banks to shake
The late leaves down, which frozen where they fell   
And held in ice as dancers in a spell   
Fluttered all winter long into a lake;   
Graved on the dark in gestures of descent,   
They seemed their own most perfect monument.

There was perfection in the death of ferns   
Which laid their fragile cheeks against the stone   
A million years. Great mammoths overthrown   
Composedly have made their long sojourns,   
Like palaces of patience, in the gray
And changeless lands of ice. And at Pompeii

The little dog lay curled and did not rise   
But slept the deeper as the ashes rose
And found the people incomplete, and froze   
The random hands, the loose unready eyes   
Of men expecting yet another sun
To do the shapely thing they had not done.

These sudden ends of time must give us pause.   
We fray into the future, rarely wrought
Save in the tapestries of afterthought.
More time, more time. Barrages of applause   
Come muffled from a buried radio.
The New-year bells are wrangling with the snow.



The poet Richard Wilbur, a winner of the Pulitzer Prize and one time Poet Laureate, said the following:  “What poetry does with ideas is to redeem them from abstraction and submerge them in sensibility.”  Poetry makes us feel, brings our senses into the moment or view described (as does prose, I might add) Moreover he wants his students to memorize poetry: 

“The kind of poetry I like best, and try to write, uses the whole instrument,” he says. “Meter, rhyme, musical expression—and everything is done for the sake of what’s being said, not for the sake of prettiness.” At the same time, he believes that “For anyone who knows how to use these forms powerfully, they make for a stronger kind of poetry than free verse can ever be.”
“All these traditional means are ways of being rhythmically clear,” he explains: “making the emphases strong, making it clear what words are important. Rhyme is not just making a jingling noise, but telling what words deserve emphasis. Meter, too, tells what the rhythm of thought is. It doesn’t necessarily sound like music, but it has the strength of sound underlying everything being said. I encourage my students to memorize poems. If a poem is good, it is well to say it again and again in your mind until you’ve found all the intended tones and emphases.” He adds, “One of the great fascinations of poetry is that you’re going almost naked: the equipment is so small, just language.”

Good luck on your recitations and paperwork.  It was a pleasure having you all in class!






Monday, December 8, 2014

Week 10



Gannets Mate for Life

Good afternoon!  Today we will read a few final story pieces and poetry selections and review the works covered over the quarter and how they might be used for the in-class short essay final and the final project, if you choose.

You will help decide what we read from among the various selections already provided, including the vernacular pieces by Zora Neale Hurston and Edward C.L. Adams and what I bring today,  "Puppy," a short story by George Saunders, considered one of today's very best writers in the short story genre. In fact at the following link you can read the convocation speech he delivered in 2013 and which bears the thematic marks of many his stories, namely, the difficulty and utmost desirability of human kindness and love:  http://6thfloor.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/31/george-saunderss-advice-to-graduates/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0


An extra credit piece or final project essay might be based on the short story by Philip Van Doren called "The Greatest Gift," which the director Frank Capra so liked he made it into a film, a classic at Christmas now called It's a Wonderful Life. The movie is a story of personal sacrifice and final redemption and stars Jimmy Stewart, a man so cast down he wishes he were dead!  The PDF is here:
http://kbancroft.weebly.com/uploads/2/8/3/7/2837022/the_greatest_gift.pdf

For Next week:  Bring recitation notes, if needed or in case of a memory lapse, on a verse piece of 14 lines or more.  Select a piece or portion of a longer piece that you understand reasonably well and that offers some dramatic appeal.  Bring, also, the final project and, if you wish, draft material for the in-class essay.

Response #5 (300-350 words) may be composed on any of texts distributed thus far, new or old, as long as you have not yet addressed the piece.

The final in-class essay (#7) directions and topics (to be written in final draft in class) are below.  Please bring text handouts to use for reference and support.


ENC1102 Final Exam/Summer 2013

In an essay of 500 words or more, address four or five different texts from the course material to show the images, symbols, and story elements that address one or more of the following themes:

·      The personal work/struggle involved in finding one’s own measure of direction, strength, truth
·      The rebellion or revolt against materialist values, family influence, or cultural conformity in favor of truer, more self-reliant values or personhood 
·      Father/son, mother/daughter conflicts:  what motivates them, how they get resolved (or not) and the narratives expressive of them
·      The spiritual dimensions discoverable in the natural world and/or human soul/psyche
·      The various faces Nature wears or the perceptions and uses made of the natural world, in fiction, poetry, and actual life itself
·      The writer’s use of symbols and figurative language to express ideas about artists and art works, what they can deliver and what they cannot (as an expression of humanity’s need to create, to play, make meaning and underscore a sense of connection to what is true and to others and to what is past and is to come
·      The writer’s use of narrative (story), including its imagery, symbols and figurative language to communicate the beauty, mystery, peace, sweetness, ugliness, chaos, bitterness, danger (etcetera) of the world
·      Explorations of Love, familial, romantic, or nature-inspired, whether
“divine” or idealized as a vision of harmony and fulfillment; you may include of course love’s limits, its fault lines, as in works that show a negative face or reversal of the bonds of love

You may find overlaps here.  You are free to make associations between works and themes.  You must include titles and authors and use direct quotation to make specific the examples and language used in the referenced texts (20% rule applies).





Final Project Composition Description (#6)

Due week 10 or week 11, the final composition is an individual creative piece of 1000 words length, fictional or non-fictional: original poetry, short story, brief play, essay, or some combination of the genres.  You might consider rewriting or remaking some well-known story, myth, or fairytale. If you choose to write a short story or other fictional piece and the word count falls short, an introduction to the piece, discussing your creative intent and influences, may serve for any shortfall in the main text. Short stories or fictional works should be plausibly developed and structured to maximize aesthetic and dramatic engagement of the reader.
Original illustrations in whatever medium you choose may be used to enhance the presentation and substitute for any minimal word shortfall (of 200-300 words). Double space and title your piece.

All essays must address themselves to a literary text(s) and/or theme and make reference to particular textual sources.  You may write on a theme developed in any one or several of the various texts looked at this quarter.   You may choose to write a personal essay that recounts your own “journey,” with references to and/or comparisons to stories or poems read; in short, you may write a piece that illustrates certain literary plot lines or themes in terms of your own personal experience. Double space and title your piece
If you are writing a standard interpretative essay that focuses on the specific construction and meaning of a text, introduce subject texts by title and author up front.  The introductory paragraph(s) should make clear what point you intend to develop as a thesis, and the body paragraphs should set forth the material textual evidence and examples that have led to your thesis claim.  Your aim is to show readers how a text may be read in the manner you are claiming.  Provide support for your thesis through use of direct quotation, paraphrase and summary where necessary.
Topic Suggestions:
*Explore natural images that provide us with a way of thinking about human feelings and the self, the life cycle from birth through death, the effects of time’s passing, our place in the natural world, what we need and want from life.
*Explore stories that illustrate particular conflicts between generations, as between children and parents, men and women, or between the relatively powerless and those who have power– be it superior physical strength, age, or perhaps the authority of tradition, custom, and law on their side.  
*Explore the individual’s search for meaning in the world, or of those characters whose experience is of a kind that seems to offer insight and understanding as regards some particular subject, whether the importance of family, role models, the need for independence, distance, freedom, strength, courage, fortitude, a quiet space to reflect and create, etcetera.


Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Week 8

Class Cancelled for Thanksgiving Holiday.  Time to work on assigned readings and responses.