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How to Read Literature like a Professor

How to Read Literature like a Professor. A Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading Between the Lines. WE ’ VE ALL BEEN THERE. What your teacher thinks the author meant. What the author meant. For instance: “ The curtains were blue. ”

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How to Read Literature like a Professor

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  1. How to Read Literature like a Professor A Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading Between the Lines

  2. WE’VE ALL BEEN THERE What your teacher thinks the author meant. What the author meant. For instance: “The curtains were blue.” What your teacher thinks: “The curtains represent his immense depression and his lack of will to carry on.” What the author meant: “The curtains were really just blue.”

  3. HOW’D HE DO THAT?AN INTRODUCTION • Over time, good readers develop the use of a certain “Language of reading”. • The grammar of literature: A set of conventions and patterns, codes and rules, that we learn to employ in dealing with a piece of writing. • Memory • Symbol • Pattern

  4. HOW’D HE DO THAT?AN INTRODUCTION • Memory • Spin your mental Rolodex. Look for correspondences and corollaries. • Where have I seen his face? • Don’t I know this theme? • Symbol • Everything is a symbol of something else unless proven otherwise. • Is this a metaphor? • Is this an analogy? • What does the thing over there signify? • Pattern • Life and books fall into similar patterns. • Experienced readers have an ability to overlook all the less important details to find the patterns, the routines, the archetypes at work in the background.

  5. A SHORT STORY… You’re reading a book about an average 16 year old kid in 1968. The kid – let’s call him Kip – who hopes his acne clears up before he gets drafted, is on his way to the grocery store. His bike is a one-speed with coaster breaks which is humiliating and riding it to run an errand for his mom makes it even worse. Along the way he has a couple of disturbing experiences, including a minorly unpleasant encounter with a German shepherd, topped off in the supermarket parking lot where he sees the girl of his dreams, Karen, laughing and horsing around in Tony Vauxhall’s brand-new Barracuda.

  6. A short Story Continued Kip hates Tony already because he has a name like Vauxhall and not like Smith, which Kip thinks is pretty lame as a name to follow Kip, and because the ‘Cuda is bright green and goes approximately the speed of light, and also because Tony has never had to work a day in his life. So Karen, who is laughing and having a great time, turns and seeks Kip who has recently asked her out, and she keeps laughing. Kip goes on into the store to buy the loaf of Wonder Bread that his mother told him to pick up, and as he reaches for the bread, he decides right then and there to lie about his age to the Marine recruiter even though it means going to Vietnam, because nothing will ever happen for him in this one-horse town where the only thing that matters is how much money your old man has.

  7. What Just Happened? A knight just had a not very suitable encounter with his nemesis. Huh? A knight just had a not very suitable encounter with his nemesis. The knight → Kip Dangerous road → German shepherd Holy Grail → Wonder Bread Dragon → ‘68 Baracuda Evil knight → Toney Princess → Karen

  8. EVERY TRIP IS A QUEST (EXCEPT WHEN IT’S NOT) • Quests consist of five things: • A quester • A place to go • A stated reason to go there • Challenges and trials en route • A real reason to go there (the real reason is always self-knowledge)

  9. The Goonies

  10. The Goonies • Questers – “The Goonies” – group of outcast/mistfit kids • Place to go – seeking the pirate ship of One Eyed Willy • Stated reason to go –hoping to find enough treasure so they will be able to save their homes from being destroyed • Trials/challenges – booby traps, being chased by convicts • Real reason to go – to learn about friendship, acceptance of each other, sticking together etc…

  11. Examples of a Quest?? • Movies • Books • Television shows With someone sitting next to you, come up with an example of a quest…we’ll wait… → → → → → →

  12. Every Trip is a Quest (cont.) • The real reason for a quest is always self-knowledge. • The quester often fails at the stated task. • They don’t know enough about the subject that really matters: themselves. • This is why questers are young, inexperienced, immature, sheltered.

  13. WHAT COMES TO MIND WHEN YOU HEAR THE WORD “COMMUNION”?

  14. Nice to Eat with You: Acts of Communion • Whenever people eat or drink together, it’s communion. • Communion: • The act or an instance of sharing, as of thoughts or feelings. • Religious or spiritual fellowship. • There are all kinds of communions; it’s not solely religious, holy or even decent.

  15. Communion (cont.) • Thing to remember about all communions: In the real world, breaking bread together is an act of sharing and peace, since “if you’re breaking bread, you’re not breaking heads.” • We’re very particular about those with whom we break bread. *Think about the people you eat lunch with. Why do you spend time with them instead of other people?

  16. Communion (cont.) • Always exceptions: Tribal leader or Mob boss may invite enemies to lunch and then have them killed. • Has to be a compelling reason to include a meal scene (as they’re difficult to write and inherently uninteresting).

  17. Tom Jones

  18. Nice to Eat You: Acts of Vampires • Vampires should be defined by traits, not long teeth and dark capes. • Vampirism = selfishness, exploitation, a refusal to accept the autonomy of others • Look for ghosts and doppelgangers (evil twin) • Ghosts and vampires are never only about ghosts and vampires • Look for a character who grows in strength by weakening someone else.

  19. The Scarlet Letter Roger Chillingsworth -  …there came a glare of red light out of his eyes; as if the old man's soul were on fire, and kept on smoldering duskily within his breast …In old Roger Chillingworth was a striking evidence of man’s faculty of transforming himself into a devil. Arthur Dimmesdale - How feeble and pale he looked amid all his triumph!... The glow, which they had just before beheld burning on his cheek, was extinguished…It seemed hardly the face of a man alive, with such a deathlike hue

  20. Now Where Have I Seen Her Before? • There is no such thing as a wholly original work of literature. • There’s only one story. And that story is about ourselves, about what it means to be human. • “Intertexuality”—recognizing the connections between one story and another deepens our appreciation and experience, brings multiple layers of meaning to the text, which we may not be conscious of. The more consciously aware we are, the more alive the text becomes to us.

  21. Now Where Have I Seen Her Before? • Going After Cacciato by Tim O’Brien: Characters fall into a hole and one character says, “the way to get out is to fall back up.” • Where have we heard this story before? • Alice in Wonderland

  22. WHEN IN DOUBT IT’S FROM SHAKESPEARE… • If you’re reading a work, and something sounds too good to be true, you know where it’s from • Writers use what is common in a culture as a kind of shorthand. Writer’s can say more in fewer words when we make connections. • Shakespeare coined ‘em: • To thine own self be true • We few, we happy few, we band of brothers • Double, double, toil and trouble • O brave new world / that has such people in it • To be or not to be, that is the question

  23. WHEN IN DOUBT IT’S FROM SHAKESPEARE… Feuding families? Young love? Romeo & Juliet Jealousy? Heroic character, revenge, indecision? Melancholy in nature? Othello Hamlet A power grab? Three fortune telling witches? Murder? Macbeth

  24. CONNECT THE DOTS… serpent Garden Parting the waters plagues flood betrayal loaves The Bible fishes Forty days Milk and honey denial Slavery and escape Fatted calves

  25. …OR THE BIBLE • The Bible is a favorite of authors. Every writer prior to sometime in the middle of the 20th century was solidly instructed in religion.

  26. …OR THE BIBLE Popular Themes • Garden of Eden: women tempting men and causing their fall, the apple as symbolic of an object of temptation, a serpent who tempts men to do evil, and a fall from innocence • David and Goliath—overcoming overwhelming odds • Jonah and the Whale—refusing to face a task and being “eaten” or overwhelmed by it anyway. • Job: facing disasters not of the character’s making and not the character’s fault, suffers as a result, but remains steadfast

  27. …OR THE BIBLE • The Flood: rain as a form of destruction; rainbow as a promise of restoration • Christ figures (a later chapter): in 20th century, often used ironically • The Apocalypse—Four Horseman of the Apocalypse usher in the end of the world. • Biblical names often draw a connection between literary character and Biblical character. Eve, Cain, Jacob, Jonah, Rebecca, Joseph, Mary, Stephen, Moses…

  28. …OR THE BIBLE

  29. Hanseldee and Greteldum • Fairytales and kiddie lit. provide a basic story we all know. • They make use of the patterns in the stories to build depth, texture, theme, irony, and our knowledge. • Fairytales often address morals. • Glimpses of the familiar.

  30. Hanseldee and Greteldum Common Story Themes • Hansel and Gretel: lost children trying to find their way home • Peter Pan: refusing to grow up, lost boys, a girl-nurturer/ • Little Red Riding Hood: See Vampires • Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz: entering a world that doesn’t work rationally or operates under different rules, the Red Queen, the White Rabbit, the Cheshire Cat, the Wicked Witch of the West, the Wizard, who is a fraud • Cinderella: orphaned girl abused by adopted family saved through supernatural intervention and by marrying a prince

  31. Hanseldee and Greteldum • Snow White: Evil woman who brings death to an innocent—again, saved by heroic/princely character • Sleeping Beauty: a girl becoming a woman, symbolically, the needle, blood=womanhood, the long sleep an avoidance of growing up and becoming a married woman, saved by, guess who, a prince who fights evil on her behalf. • Evil Stepmothers, Queens, Rumpelstilskin • Prince Charming heroes who rescue women.

  32. Hanseldee and Greteldum Your turn! Working with two to three other people around you and follow these instructions: 1. Think of a movie/book that fits the pattern of a fairytale. • List the elements of the movie/book that match the fairytale. • When called upon, tell the class which movie/book you selected and the rest of us will try to guess which fairytale you found.

  33. IT’S GREEK TO ME • Myth is a body of story that matters – the patterns present in mythology run deeply in the human psyche. • Odyssey and Iliad (the hero) Odysseus – The struggle to return home. Achilles—a small weakness in a strong man; the need to maintain one’s dignity Penelope (Odysseus’s wife)—the determination to remain faithful and to have faith Hector – The need to protect one’s family • Other Myths (the underworld, Oedipus, Medea, ect.)

  34. IT’S MORE THAN JUST RAIN OR SNOW • Weather is never just weather…pay attention to it. • It’s never just rain. • Fertility and life, Noah, drowning… • Rain can be cleansing or restorative. • Rain can be destructive • Rainbows – a promise from God never to flood again, hope, peace, ect. • Fog is almost always signals some sort of confusion; mental, ethical, physical “fog”; people can’t see clearly • Snow is clean, stark, severe, warm, inhospitable, inviting, playful, suffocating, filthy [note paradoxes!]

  35. IT’S MORE THAN JUST RAIN OR SNOW How is each weather element utilized in these scenes? What do you think the elements represent?

  36. …MORE THAN IT’S GONNA HURT YOU: CONCERNING VIOLENCE • Violence in literature usually means more than just a punch. • Two kinds of violence • Character caused—shootings, stabbings, drownings, poisonings, bombings, hit and run, etc (mysteries fit here) • Death and suffering for which the characters are not responsible. Accidents are not really accidents. • Questions to ask: • i. What does this type of misfortune represent thematically? • ii. What famous or mythic death does this one resemble? • iii. Why this sort of violence and not some other?

  37. Is that a Symbol? • Sure it is. • Not all symbols are objects or images; action can also be symbolic. • Symbols rarely have one specific interpretation.

  38. Is that a Symbol? • Ask: what is the writer doing with this image, this object, this act? What possibilities are suggested by the movement of the narrative or the lyric? And most important, what does it feel like it’s doing? • Use your instinct as well as your knowledge, literary background, education, etc.

  39. YES, SHE’S A CHRIST FIGURE, TOO 1. crucified, wounds in hands, feet, side, and head, often portrayed with arms outstretched 2. in agony 3. self-sacrificing 4. good with children 5. good with loaves, fishes, water, wine 6. thirty-three years of age when last seen The values and principles of religion inevitably inform an author’s literary work.

  40. YES, SHE’S A CHRIST FIGURE, TOO 12. last seen in the company of thieves 13. creator of many parables 14. buried, but arose on the third day 15. had disciples 16. very forgiving 17. came to redeem an unworthy world 7. employed as a carpenter 8. known to use humble modes of transportation, feet or donkeys preferred 9. believed to have walked on water 10. spent time alone in the wilderness 11. believed to have had a confrontation with the devil, possibly tempted

  41. D.H. LAWRENCE, “THE ROCKING-HORSE WINNER” He wanted luck, he wanted it, he wanted it. When the two girls were playing dolls in the nursery, he would sit on his big rocking horse, charging madly into space, with a frenzy that made the little girls peer at him uneasily. Wildly he horse careered, the waving dark hair of the boy tossed, the eyes had a strange glare in them. The girls dared not speak to them…He knew the horse could take him to where there was luck, if only he forced it…At last he stopped forcing his horse into the mechanical gallop and slid down.

  42. North by Northwest

  43. IT’S ALL ABOUT SEX… • Holy grail and lance – fertility • Lock and key • Curtains blowing in the wind • Wrestling

  44. IT’S ALL ABOUT SEX… • Holy grail and lance – fertility A knight, usually a very young one whose “manhood” is barely established, sallies forth bearing his lance, which will certainly do until a phallic symbol comes along. The knight becomes the emblem of pure, if untested maleness in search of a chalice, the Holy Grail, which, if you think about it is a symbol of female sexuality as understood once upon a time: the empty vessel, waiting to be filled. Typically the knight rides out from a community that has fallen on hard times. Crops are failing, rains have stopped, livestock is dying or failing to be born, the kingdom is turning into a wasteland. We need to restore fertility and order, says the aging king, too old now to go in search of fertility symbols. Perhaps he can no long use his lance, so he sends the young man.

  45. …EXCEPT SEX • When authors write about literal sex, they’re really writing about something else. • Sex is hard to write, it’s awkward, odd, mechanical. • Writing about sex for the sake of sex is pornography. • Sex can be pleasure, sacrifice, submission, rebellion, resignation, supplication, domination, enlightenment, the whole works.

  46. IF SHE COMES UP, IT’S BAPTISM • If a character gets wet, pay attention. • Baptism is symbolically the death of the old self & the rebirth of a new self. • Drowning is symbolic baptism, IF the character comes back up, symbolically reborn. Drowning on purpose can also represent rebirth. • Traveling on water—rivers, oceans—can symbolically represent baptism..

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