I, for one, am sorry to say this is the last post of the semester--and on time for the first time in weeks, I might add!
This has been a fantastic discussion and I thank you all for your thoughtful responses. I think the level of the discussion has been incredibly high and you have treated each other with the respect and consideration you all deserve. I hope you have found this as useful and intellectually stimulating--and as entertaining--as I have (and as I'd hoped I would!). Discussions like this make me want (and need) to return to teach another day.
So for the last issue for discussion: What about The Hours? Remember that this film is based on a novel of the same name, which is an excellent read, by the way. What did this vision of the novel, from three perspectives (a modern retelling, a woman reading the novel, and the life of Woolf), add to your understanding of the novel? Did the combination of themes and characters, especially in the New York retelling, reveal anything new to you about the story Woolf tells?
You only need to respond to this prompt for grading purposes, but feel free to respond to each other.
Friday, April 25, 2008
Friday, April 18, 2008
Woolf and . . . Austen? In the same sentence?
Now, I must admit that I was thinking to myself that I was re-reading Woolf like I re-read Austen BEFORE I read the Eagleton comment, but his connecting of the two has me intrigued. If you accept his assertion that both Austen and Woolf write about the home, and what goes on inside it (very little of the rest of the world is there, only peripherally in Mrs. Dalloway), and the home of the upper middle class, for that matter, then you will also see that they treat the subject differently. How so? Indeed, you may not think they do. Critics call Austen's works novels of manners. Could you classify Mrs. Dalloway in the same way?
Figure out the question(s) in that!!
Figure out the question(s) in that!!
Friday, April 11, 2008
The Death of the Soul
We began our discussion of Peter's dream in class. Because we have just had Peter's point of view before he falls asleep, it seems natural that the point of view is still his. Some interpretations say the traveler is Peter himself, who sees a woman figure at the end of the path in the forest (symbol of the soul that Clarissa mentions????--just speculation) that begins as branches and sky, progresses to a mother-figure, and finally ends in the form of a landlady. This is ripe for psychoanalytic criticism as we try to analyze the dream by looking at the dream narrative and then trying to find the meaning of it. Plus, who hasn't had dreams that go all over the place? Hmmmm.
Think about that, but focus for this discussion on what he says immediately upon waking, "the death of the soul." To what is he referring and how does this comment and its origins reveal his relationship with Clarissa?
Think about that, but focus for this discussion on what he says immediately upon waking, "the death of the soul." To what is he referring and how does this comment and its origins reveal his relationship with Clarissa?
Sunday, April 6, 2008
The Modern World
The issues of the modern world that permeate Lawrence's fiction are social and political. To name a few, they are Collectivism, Industrialization, Commercialism, Materialism, Urbanization (and the resulting blight to the countryside) and Secularism. Where is the place of the individual in all this, according to Lawrence? What characters in his novels achieve individualism, if any do? And finally, because the beginnings of the modern world were hovering on the horizon in the 19th century, how is Lawrence's treatment of this different from Hardy's?
Again, please excuse the late post.
Again, please excuse the late post.
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