Thursday, June 30, 2011
Beloved -- Reader Response
Select a brief passage from Toni Morrison's novel Beloved that spoke to you in some powerful way. This could be a passage that you could identify with due to personal beliefs or life experiences. It could be a passage from which you learned something you find especially valuable, or even a passage that you found particularly problematic for some reason. Share this passage and explain how it spoke to you. Probe it for some deeper meaning that it contributes to the novel as a whole but also how that meaning is relevant to your life. In other words, how does the passage enrich your understanding of both the novel and the world around you?
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Home Sweet Home
However you define home and family, A Home at the End of the World may challenge that definition as it portrays what many people consider to be very unconventional ideas of family life. Spending some time thinking about your own views of these concepts will prepare you for thinking more deeply about these concepts in the film as we discuss them in class.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Indian Killer / Reader Response
Select a brief passage from Sherman Alexie's novel Indian Killer that spoke to you in some powerful way. This could be a passage that you could identify with due to personal beliefs or life experiences. It could be a passage from which you learned something you find especially valuable, or even a passage that you found particularly problematic for some reason. Share this passage and explain how it spoke to you. Probe it for some deeper meaning that it contributes to the novel as a whole but also how that meaning is relevant to your life. In other words, how does the passage enrich your understanding of both the novel and the world around you?
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
The Power of Stories
Inherent in words, some believe, is the power of life and death. In many cultures, stories are revered as having great power both to create and destroy. According to Christian mythology, the world was spoken into existence. "God said..." and then it was. The idea that "In the beginning was the word" transcends the confines of Christianity to many world religions. In Native American mythology, words have similar power when brought together in story, and violating the sacredness of stories was believed to result in terrible, tragic consequences as indicated by the anecdote of anthropologist Barre Toelken in the article "'Was Jesus an Indian?' Fighting Stories with Stories in Sherman Alexie's Indian Killer." After reading this article, examine the act of storytelling in the novel. How do the characters use stories? What do the stories accomplish? In what ways do stories have the power to create and destroy?
Finally, examine the ways in which stories are used in the world outside the novel. The entire scope of human existence is encapsulated by and preserved through stories. Who we are in the world is determined by the stories we tell about ourselves and the stories others tell about us. In what ways do stories exert power in the world? In what ways do they exert power over people and events? Do stories have the power to create and destroy? Can they determine the details of our everyday lives? Consider these questions both on a macro- and microscopic level as they affect the world and our individual human lives.
Finally, examine the ways in which stories are used in the world outside the novel. The entire scope of human existence is encapsulated by and preserved through stories. Who we are in the world is determined by the stories we tell about ourselves and the stories others tell about us. In what ways do stories exert power in the world? In what ways do they exert power over people and events? Do stories have the power to create and destroy? Can they determine the details of our everyday lives? Consider these questions both on a macro- and microscopic level as they affect the world and our individual human lives.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
What is "The American Dream?"

Sunday, June 5, 2011
What is the Novel?
We all know what a novel is. Right? We've all read them--some of us only because we had to for school, some of us because we enjoy getting lost in a story. But surely, we can explain what a novel is. Easy peasy.
Or is it? What exactly are the characteristics of a book that make it a novel? Write your own definition and add it as a comment on this post. Consider length, genre, and any other components you think are characteristic of novels. Be as specific and thorough in your definition as possible. And whatever you do, don't look it up in a dictionary or google the word to see what other people have to say. I'm interested in finding out what you think a novel is, how you would describe a novel to someone who didn't understand the difference between it and a short story, movie, podcast, or any other medium of storytelling.
Let's see if together we can actually define what a novel is. It's not as easy as you might think.
Or is it? What exactly are the characteristics of a book that make it a novel? Write your own definition and add it as a comment on this post. Consider length, genre, and any other components you think are characteristic of novels. Be as specific and thorough in your definition as possible. And whatever you do, don't look it up in a dictionary or google the word to see what other people have to say. I'm interested in finding out what you think a novel is, how you would describe a novel to someone who didn't understand the difference between it and a short story, movie, podcast, or any other medium of storytelling.
Let's see if together we can actually define what a novel is. It's not as easy as you might think.
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