This will be the last posting of the semester, and as we have only one class day remaining, you need only respond once this week. You can respond to this now, or you can wait until we have finished the movie.
You need to do a little mind reading here. Why do you think I wanted you to see this movie? What about the story--the emphasis on the human reaction to war--makes it appropriate for inclusion in this class? I know the obvious answer is that it is about WWI and we studied poetry and a novel, but my rule for the texts we read (and the briefs you did) was that they must be British writers. So why this?
The Literature of War: The Human Experience
This is the weekly discussion of ENG 2312-01, Survey of English Literature II, at Texas Wesleyan University, Spring 2011.
Friday, April 29, 2011
Friday, April 22, 2011
What is this Novel About, Anyway?
The Remains of the Day tells the story of a butler who is trying to make sense out of a present that is very different from his past. But what is the theme of the novel? What is is about? What do you think might be Ishiguro's purpose in writing this novel?
By the way. I was very impressed with the intellectual level of the discussion about the symbolism in the novel. I myself was hard pressed to find any symbols except perhaps the house itself.
By the way. I was very impressed with the intellectual level of the discussion about the symbolism in the novel. I myself was hard pressed to find any symbols except perhaps the house itself.
Friday, April 15, 2011
Symbolism and The Remains of the Day
Mrs Dalloway and Brideshead Revisited were both full of symbols. Do you see any in The Remains of the Day? Remember that symbols can be physical objects (like the pocketknife and clock, or fountain and chapel) or suggested (the thread or web), but characters can also be symbolic. It is also possible to have no symbols in a work of literature. So, can you identify any in Remains? Make sure you explain what those symbols represent. If you don't see any, do you think that matters to the development of the themes in the novel?
Friday, April 8, 2011
Friday, April 1, 2011
The Storm at Sea
Aside from the obvious, that the storm at sea allows Charles and Julia to get together, what other purposes--literal and symbolic--does the storm serve? That it happens on a journey (from America back to England, but it could be thought of as any journey) might also have some significance.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Sebastian and Charles
By the end of the reading you had to do for this week (Book I, Chapter 6), the heady, idyllic life in Oxford and the summer in Brideshead had completely changed. What is the principle cause of the change in the relationship between Charles and Sebastian? Sebastian's drinking is obvious, but look at the cause of that.
Friday, March 11, 2011
One More Look at Mrs. Dalloway
I like the discussion about Clarissa this week. It really gives me something to think about.
Remember that you will need to finish this discussion March 24. I will NOT be posting a prompt next week during Spring Break.
So, for this week:
At the very beginning of the novel, Clarissa sees these lines from Shakespeare: "Fear no more the heat o' the sun / Nor the furious winter's rages." Then, at the end, when she has left the party after hearing of Septimus's death, and she sees the old lady turn out the light, "the words came back to her, Fear no more the heat of the sun" (186).
What does that mean? Why does Woolf use this reference at the beginning (about 6 pages in) and at the end (about six pages from the end)?
Remember that you will need to finish this discussion March 24. I will NOT be posting a prompt next week during Spring Break.
So, for this week:
At the very beginning of the novel, Clarissa sees these lines from Shakespeare: "Fear no more the heat o' the sun / Nor the furious winter's rages." Then, at the end, when she has left the party after hearing of Septimus's death, and she sees the old lady turn out the light, "the words came back to her, Fear no more the heat of the sun" (186).
What does that mean? Why does Woolf use this reference at the beginning (about 6 pages in) and at the end (about six pages from the end)?
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