Tuesday, November 25, 2008

The Defense of Little Hood Goody

The Defense of Little Hood Goody

By Rosanna Mecklenburg

 

Until the dawn of words mirror howling

Illuminations of enmeshed melodies and blessed bays

Rhapsodic urges,

Psalms of life.

 Laconic, righteous singsong.

The notes of tragic sacrifice renewing,

Accepting, and allowing sweet delights of poetry

Of marriage and triumph.

Stories of birth, mockingbird tales

Of isolation and lust, chaotic and sinful

Of mankind, flawed and godlike

Of godkind nearly.

 

Until notes and golden voice

Glisten bare in the virgin pool,

And mother, maiden and maker,

Siren, father and bride,

Child and savior

 Emerge as ghostly demarcations of the soul

But of one body, wholly body,

Mythical and rhythmic,

Alive.

 Until then, her hymn will decompose.

 

Pungent and festered, arisen,

She spoke.

Disconsolate over what was once

Commanded

To be seen and not heard

A mound in the dirt.

 

Pregnant with fruit seed

Little Hood Goody read to Riding Shoes.

She sang to the

Children, the mask, the man behind the curtain,

 The melody that made their hearts soar because she loved

Them for they were simple.

She praised the sunlight that warmed

The cherished brown soil and the soft and

Gentle touch of rebirth.

 

Little hood goody looked and knew

That the darkness had accrued her bounty

In the magic breeze

Her invigorating joy was the only need

Eternity caught in a minute

As they listened to the sweet honey sound

Of a daughter’s innocent grace

In an abundant heaven

Displaced.

 

 

The song transformed enchantment

Romantically

And with speed

Young boys danced around their

Handsome steeds.

One hundred fair Dulcineas

Cried gleefully

As the shepherds kept watch over

 Triumphal ceremony and

  Tears of Frye ecstasy showered on donkeys.

 

Rejoice, lift your hands into the air and sing

The sweet melody song

Of salvation and chastity, hand-shaking

Celebration’s illuminating,

Jubilation,

Deviation from the beginning

Of wanting to get a head, not an apple

Sang the Ideal matchmaker’s protégée,

Little Hood goody.

 

And in an exacting melodic moment

A strange new key betrayed

A faint relief

To the madness.

Soundly in the fiddling tune

A note of terror

Resumed and mimed to overtake the

Festive mood. 

 

The arrangement between

Father and groom not wholly completed

Doth made her song the Blues.

Hood Goody turned to the crowd,

Her Siren head hung,

Aged beauty to all good

Wilting in puddles of ice.

Sharp came the insightful notes

From the mournful Lady of flight.

The children, the mask, the man behind the curtain

Took heed to Riding Shoes plight

Asking, dissecting, demanding to

Right

Little Hood Goody.

 

For they had heard her sing.

Or was it more than that?

Had she sung of them

Late at night, did she cry tears,

Alphabetical smeared elegies,

 Goddess-less dirges of iniquitous play?

Violent death and sacrificial bays?

They questioned the traitorous hymns and tragic games.

They shattered her mirror

And the sound went away.

 

Under white floods

Little Hood Goody turned from the fall

Of the life she loved most and

She laughed with them in the retelling of

The passion and the betrayal.

 Corpus Christi she could have named herself while

Forever intertwining

 The flesh of fishnet stockings in an erotic embrace

In Sisyphus-like glee turned tragedy, now irony.

 

It was a dance of unspoken communication

It was a wordless,

Sorrowful sound echoing

Down

In cold darkness, hood goody returned.

It was the dance of war and heartache,

Of weapon dissipation

And human elevation into the spirit

She heard the song of her epic beginning

When she first heard the beat that stole her being

And the purgation of her soul.

Finalizing the final phase of her ritual. 

Where meaning is slaughtered

And remains the empty possibility

Of hope.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Nov. 21st class- Hazelnuts and mustard seeds

Blooms introduction:  
  1. DQ is at war with Freud's reality principle
  2. DQ has double vision. neither fool nor madman
  3. Sees something else also. (Baffle us when we try to share their knowledge)

Pg. 725 Magical horse sequence: read out loud. What is there to say?!
(The Game genre)
hazelnuts and mustard seeds
If they cannot be knights, then shepherds.
How PS got away without lashes on the buttocks.

Metafiction chapter:
DQ repents for reading storybooks. But now he would read the BIBLE! 
"When I was mad, I would have given him the governorship of an...but now a kingdom!"
In will: Fake copy of Don Quixote...
"For he alone was DQ born, And I of him..." I can write and he can act...
Cervantes wrote to execrate and vilify books of chivalry...Is that the only reading?


Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Nov 19th class-Enchanted Dulcinea

*Apology Presentations (be quixotic
)
Monday Nov. 24th:
Sarah
Kelsy
Jessica
Gabby
Heather
Carly
Jon
Kyle 2
(Claire)

Nov. 26th
Ben 
Lisa
Rosanna
Kevin
Jiwon
Kyle 1
Jake
Kayla
(Erica)

Dec. 1st (After Thanksgiving Vacation)
Danielle 
Judson 
Victoria
Derek
Joan
Doug 
Alex

Last session
Everyone else


Metafiction- writing about writing.
Tangents-frame stories-Where did we start from? Tangents just as important as central theme...circumference...


Mr. Miogi. Business of learning karate...
Ten years later, we should evaluate class.
Ramon says what? Not content, but form. Lights, zones, poles..schematic. Having an order that wasn't seen before.

DQ Pg. 518
Representation of Reality in Western Literature
Enchanted Dulcinea
Three homely peasants...Sancho uses DQ rhetoric of chivalry...
Imitation of the way people speak
DQ and SP use no irony in their speeches.
Low-born and ugly and garlicky Dulcinea mounted the donkey as only Sarah Palin would have dreamed of.
DQ blames everything on the enchanters.

DQ and SP change by talking to eachother
We change by reading IOKW

*Extra credit: Impersonate DQ and SP in bOZman!


 

Monday, November 17, 2008

Nov 17th class- Cave of Montesinos















Cave of Montesinos (Pg 604) 
  • DQ tells grisly story to old knight. 
  • Sancho questions DQ's "Theme of descent" 
  • Woman carrying human heart
  • Sees Dulcinea El Toboso who asks for money!!!
  • Pg 610 central literary apology metaphor..."The hour that seems like an eternity"
  • DQ believed he was in the underworld for three days (Christ archetype)
  • The two (illusionist and realist) trade places

Life Imitates art

I googled DQ illusion and reality, not knowing what I was supposed to do, when I found the following written by Dale Wasserman:


In self-defense I should like it noted that I am not, nor ever have been, an Hispanic scholar. I am a playwright, one of whose works,Man of La Mancha, is enjoying performances in some forty languages, and which seems to have gone into theatrical history as the first truly successful adaptation of the novel Don Quixote. I consider this an unfortunate impression. Man of La Mancha, strictly speaking, is not an adaptation of Don Quixote at all. It is a play about Miguel de Cervantes. I do claim to know a little about Cervantes. That's a fairly safe claim, as there is no one who knows a great deal about him.
     For those interested in beginnings, Man of La Mancha was born not by design but by accident. The year was 1959. I was in Spain writing a movie when I read in a newspaper that my purpose there was research for a dramatization of Don Quixote. That was nonsense, of course, for like the great majority of people who claim to know Don Quixote, I had never read it. Spain was a logical place to repair that omission, so I waded in, emerging on the other side of its half-million words convinced that there was no way to dramatize this amazing compendium of the good, the bad, and the brilliant.
     I was aware that there had been dozens, perhaps hundreds, of such attempts —plays, opera, ballet, puppet shows, movies— every dramatic form possible. I was also aware that they had one thing in common: they failed. Having now read the book, I wasn't at a loss.

Wow! Look what I found...a true case of life (or nature) imitating art.  Cool!  


Friday, November 14, 2008

Nov-14th class-DQ Part II (Test day)


DQ part II
  1. Cave of Montesinos
  2. Puppet show
  3. Wooden Horse
  4. Sancho's governorship
  5. DQ's defeat by knight of moon
  6. Homecoming and death
Google: Don Quixote: Illusion and reality

Friday, November 7, 2008

Some of my tochstone moments

To Kill a Mockingbird spoke to me when I was a sophomore in high school, and I fell in love with literature. Then, when I did my paraprofessional experience, I taught the book to a sophomore class and I had the same experience again. This book is truly amazing.

I wanted you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand.  It's when you know you're licked before you begin but you begin anyway and you see it through no matter what.  You rarely win, but sometimes you do.  ~Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird, Chapter 11, spoken by the character Atticus

She seemed glad to see me when I appeared in the kitchen, and by watching her I began to think there was some skill involved in being a girl.  ~Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird, Chapter 12

The sixth grade seemed to please him from the beginning:  he went through a brief Egyptian Period that baffled me - he tried to walk flat a great deal, sticking one arm in front of him and one in back of him, putting one foot behind the other.  He declared Egyptians walked that way; I said if they did I didn't see how they got anything done, but Jem said they accomplished more than the Americans ever did, they invented toilet paper and perpetual embalming, and asked where would we be today if they hadn't?  Atticus told me to delete the adjectives and I'd have the facts.  ~Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird, Chapter 7

The book that inspired me to get my degree in English Literature is Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon. Here is the touchstone quote that causes me .... I just cannot explain it...words cannot describe...but I need to find my book, first. I could say that the whole book is a touchstone.

He closed his eyes and thought of the black men in Shalimar, Roanoke, Petersburg, Newport News, Danville, in the Blood bank, on Darling Street, in the pool halls, the barbershops. Their names. Names they got from yearnings, gestures, flaws, events, mistakes, weaknesses. Names that bore witness. Macon Dead. Sing Byrd, Crowell Byrd, Pilate, Reba, Hagar, Magdalene, First Corinthians, Milkman, Guitar, Railroad Tommy, Hospital Tommy, Empire State (he just stood around and swayed), Small Boy, Sweet, Circe, Moon, Nero, Humpty-Dumpty, blue Boy, Scandinavia, Quack-Quack, Jericho, Spoonbread, Ice Man, Dough Belly… (330) (Toni Morrison, Song of Solomon)

And then there is the book that inspired me at the end of my education to go further in my education and apply to grad school: Margrett Atwood's Alias Grace.

"It says there were two different trees, the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge; but I believe there was only the one and that the Fruit of Life and the Fruit of Good and Evil were the same. And if you ate of it you would die, but if you didn't eat of it you would die also; although if you did eat of it, you would be less bone-ignorant by the time you got around to your death...Such an arrangement would appear to me more the way life is."
-Margaret Atwood, 
Alias Grace

"But it's not easy being quiet and good, it's like hanging on to the edge of a bridge when you've already fallen over; you don't seem to be moving, just dangling there, and yet it is taking all your strength."-Margaret Atwood, Alias Grace

"People dressed in a certain kind of clothing are never wrong. Also, they never fart."
-Margaret Atwood, 
Alias Grace

  I am just putting some of my all-time favorite passages on here, and I see that I clearly pick poetry for the message. But it is the way that the message is given that is attractive to me. This last poem I love because of the way it sounds. When I first found this poem, it was a recording on a CD. After listening to it, I went out and bought the book of poetry.

 Tonight I Can Write by Pablo Neruda

Tonight I can write the saddest lines.

Write, for example, 'The night is starry
and the stars are blue and shiver in the distance.'

The night wind revolves in the sky and sings.

Tonight I can write the saddest lines.
I loved her, and sometimes she loved me too.

Through nights like this one I held her in my arms.
I kissed her again and again under the endless sky.

She loved me, sometimes I loved her too.
How could one not have loved her great still eyes.

Tonight I can write the saddest lines.
To think that I do not have her. To feel that I have lost her.

To hear the immense night, still more immense without her.
And the verse falls to the soul like dew to the pasture.

What does it matter that my love could not keep her.
The night is starry and she is not with me.

This is all. In the distance someone is singing. In the distance.
My soul is not satisfied that it has lost her.

My sight tries to find her as though to bring her closer.
My heart looks for her, and she is not with me.

The same night whitening the same trees.
We, of that time, are no longer the same.

I no longer love her, that's certain, but how I loved her.
My voice tries to find the wind to touch her hearing.

Another's. She will be another's. As she was before my kisses.
Her voice, her bright body. Her infinite eyes.

I no longer love her, that's certain, but maybe I love her.
Love is so short, forgetting is so long.

Because through nights like this one I held her in my arms
my soul is not satisfied that it has lost her.

Though this be the last pain that she makes me suffer
and these the last verses that I write for her.


Monday, November 3, 2008

Nov. 12th- class-Test Review

*Test on Friday

  • Frye 119, 136-141, 147, 148, 153, 156, 163, 165, 187, 214, 215, 223
  • 3 apologists for poetry
Arnold: Poetry is substitution for religion. Touchstone.
Walter Pater: Art for arts sake.
Keats: 3 things: 
  1. negative capability
  2. Remembrance
  3. Veil of soul making
  •  The movie: My Book and Heart
  • First half of DQ

  • 9 specific critics:
Longinus- sublime
I. A. Richards- pseudo-statement (all literature is hypothetical)
Juila Kristeva- Intertextuality (books are about books)
Oscar Wilde- Life is an imitation of art (more than art is an imitation of life).
Stanley Fish- Poetry is that which one sees with poetry seeing eyes
William Blake- Imagination, Visionary
Bakhtin- Carnival (Literature is bawdy...human body)

  • Idea of Key West (Recite from Ramon Fernandez) What is he asking RF to say?!?
  • Class questions:
  1. DQ slices _______ and not... (wineskins)
  2. NF. (145) Anagogic level_____ is the _____ of nature. (Man, container)
  3. Bloom's introduction...compares SP to ______ and _______ (Hamlet, Falstaff)
  4. As myth moves to irony, metaphor is to _________ (simile)
  5. B&H Literature moves us from (innocence to experience)
  6. Who said that it is not the fruit of the experience but the experience itself (Pater)
  7. Matthew Arnold wrote that we are suffering from (Crisis of Faith and criticism of life)
  8. Frye (pg. 225) compares DQ to which Archetypal character? (The white knight of Alice in Wonderland)
  9. According to Arnold, what power does the best poetry have? (Inform and delight as nothing else can)
  10. Terms for filling up and emptying out are ( Plerosis, Kenosis)
  11.  Is Frye a half empty or half full guy? (Full. Comedy and Romance)
  12. Who does DQ believe roamed free during the golden age? (virgins)
  13. NF. Two great forms of undisplaced myths are the _____ and the _____ (apocalyptic and demonic)
  14.  four phases...(mortification, purgation, invigoration, and jubilation).
  15. What does this saying mean: "What's the difference?" (deconstruction)
  16. DQ is a mirror held up not to nature but to_________ (the reader)
  17. 187 NF 3 parts of the myth of Summer (conflict, death struggle, recovery).
  18. 148 NF Physical or the actual is opposed to the ________ (hypothetical- Literature isn't real)
  19. Negative god appears in the section of the demonic. Ch. 3
  20. Who is DQ's squire and what does his name mean? (Sancho Panzo, belly)
  21. NF. Structural principles of literature are to be derived from (Archetypal-mythology  and Anagogic-religion)
  22. In what seasonal pattern does the sense of relief come when the New Year has become (Jubilation- lets party!)
  23. 162 NF Top half- romance...bottom half-realism
  24. Keats believes that poetry should (Surprise In Excess)
  25. The word demonic comes from (daemon) and what does it mean?
  26. DQ is in all of the seasonal cycles.
  27. Pg 119. In anagogy we are not in the center of things, we are in the_____(circumference)
  28. Name the 4 master tropes (metaphor, metonomy, synecdoche, irony
  29. Negative capability is when the artist becomes___ so the work becomes___(nothing, everything)
  30. What mode would innocence be placed in? (Myth)


Gabby- critic: Ralf Waldo Emerson
Nature and Self Reliance
The American Scholar
"Father of American Literature"
Poet preacher orator
Inspirational writing
Journals. Critics of literary religious and educational...encouraged rejection of traditional values.
transadentialist movement

Carly- critic: William Blake
Very much like Frye
Anogogical phase
Visionary...creates in spiritual world
symbolism. Form and image are the same thing. 1000 realities.
Senses go directly to imagination
Marriage of Heaven and Hell

Nov.10th- class- Seasons

*Questions on Wed (test review).  Use: is this relevant? Online critics
*Write a 3-5 page apology paper reflecting previous apologists. At least one reference to DQ. 
*Make paper into a three minute oral presentation. Paper is due day of presentation
*post paper to blog.
*After test, we will focus on DQ until 3 minute presentations. We will go backwards alphabetically (nine names per day).
*Groups 1 and 2 will start first.

Joan- critic: Eve Sedgwick
Born in 1950. Yale
paranoid reading.  Automatic responses to changes. We need to remain aware and objective.
Normal/abnormal...legal/illegal...paranoid reading. 

Kevin- critic: Stanley Fish
Teaches English and law. Milton scholar.
Reader response critic. Interpretive communities. 
Accused of relativist arguments, but believes that literary interpretations should be specific. 
"Bit of a maverick"
"humanities are their own good"
"A poem is what one sees when one is looking with poetry seeing eyes"

Chris- critic: Susan Gubar/ Sandra Gilbert
Susan Professor of English and women's studies.
Sandra Professor of English
wrote together: The Madwoman in the Attic
About angels and monsters...but not literally.
Dichotomy of woman as pure or crazy.

Derek- critic: homi k. Bhabba
Born in India
Post colonial theory. Post Structuralism
criticized for too much jargon in prose.
cultural identity
signifier and signified inseparable but not unified.

Bobby-critic: Virginia Woolf
not crazy just a little mad. Bipolar disorder...visions...voices...
Book: A Room of Her Own
feminist publisher critic
stream of consciousness. 
A founder of the modernist movement
Drowned herself.

Class:
"what's the point?" Arnold's discussion of touchstones...no meaning, just image.
haiku 
Pullman's book list...Wallace Stevens (Northern Lights)...Auroras of Autumn...Art of Memory

NF Pg. 158 rythms of nature (kenosis and plerosis) we are in the season of kenosis.
New Years- rid self and re-born. Mort(death)ification. mourning for god who is going to the underworld.
 Autumn-elogy-carpe diem
Scapegoat rites. Irony. Tyrany, anarchy, blood...T.S. Eliot's Wasteland
Partying until you loose consciousness. Blackout. End of a cycle.
Next phase is called invigoration.
Theory of mythos and production
Pg. 160 cyclical phases. seasons.

Nov. 7th class-Daemons


Exam on Friday- 
  • Only responsible for the first half of the book!!! (wow!) Thank you Dr. Sexson.
  • Intro to NF by Bloom.
  • Words or phrases that we think the class should know about our critics

Kayla- critic: Annett Kol0dny
Literary Journals.
Radical eco-feminist
Domestic fictioness. 
Challenged wilderness of Adam. Land and women, what we have done to both.
Book: The Lay of the Lamb

Maggie- critic: Louis Gates JR
Middle Age African American man
forum: the roots.com (what not to do if you are white or black in celebration of elect Obama)
Born in W. Virginia in 1950
History, English Lit
Norton anthology of African American lit

Jessie- critic: William Wordsmith
Born in 1770 orphaned. Long walks- nature is healing.
Cambridge University
Poetry should not be confusing. Common life in common language. Show how much nature effects people.
Read sister's diary. 

Douglas- critic: T.S. Eliot
American poet, playwright, and lit critic
Learned crank. Schooled throughout the world. well-read. Classics. was a modernist.
Contemporary issues of the time combined with past issues.
Poetry begins with what are you previously existed.
Hamlet and His Problems (Shakespeare was flawed)
Objective correlative. Look at each words meaning.

Class:
Frye understands literature as arising from rituals.
Rituals of Kenosis and plerosis.
Pullman's book: The Dark Materials. cannot look at things dualistically.
Tolken and Lewis...Academic Christians 
Why is Jesus a Lion instead of a lamb?  Because the story requires a lion.
Right or wrong? Imagination working itself out.
The word demon comes from the Greek Daemon, or another part of your personality or your psyche. Thought of as the inferior part. (Alter ego) But could it be your angel? Seen as positive.
In the Dark Materials Trilogy, everyone has an animal (anima-soul) that is opposite but completes them.  The wicked people are trying to get rid of the daemons.
(Jungian psychology)
NF- these works are not a contradiction, except in the level of content.

Nf Pg. 146 Bad gods.
Gnostic- demurge- the snake is the savior who liberated Adam and Eve from ignorance.
Sarah Palin mythos (Hardy frontier woman having babies)

NF 165 illumination, 187 quest, 215 tragedy, 223irony 

Nov. 5th class- This day is call'd the feast of Crispian

* Pull a phrase from NF for each seasonal mythos.

Wed Nov. 5th
Judson- critic-Ivor Armstrong Richards

Rosanna- critic: Mikhail Bakhtin
dialogical Imagination
The carnival

Claire- critic: Jung
psychologist who compliments Frye's... 
sorry...I missed this one
 
Jon- Paul de Man
first introduction to deconstructionism
Studied romantics- Metaphor sign symbol.
Break between sign and meaning
Metaphor can control discourse
One period during WWII, he wrote some racist comments that eventually made headlines.
He was defended by certain literary critics.

Jessica- critic: bell hooks
White supremacy capitalist patriarchy
media-movies...tools to teach about ideas and criticism
Dark Vader has the voice of a black man. 
Movie, Crash (?) thief is young black man.

Class: The Elections
Apacolyptic image (positive sense that human becomes divine being) and Demonic (hero crucifiction) (Golden Bough-King is killed and eaten) ...body of christ...imagery 
McCain's speech. Macbeth...you know, just before he was hanged, he repented...The better part of his life was his concession speech.

Obama...Henry the Fifth... "This day is called the feast of Crispian..."
This day is call'd the feast of Crispian. 
He that outlives this day, and comes safe home, 
Will stand a tip-toe when this day is named, 
And rouse him at the name of Crispian. 
He that shall live this day, and see old age, 
Will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbours, 
And say, "Tomorrow is Saint Crispian." 
Then will he strip his sleeve and show his scars, 
And say, "These wounds I had on Crispian's day." 
Old men forget; yet all shall be forgot, 
But he'll remember with advantages 
What feats he did that day. Then shall our names, 
Familiar in his mouth as household words, 
Harry the King, Bedford and Exeter, 
Warwick and Talbot, Salisbury and Gloucester, 
Be in their flowing cups freshly rememb'red. 
This story shall the good man teach his son; 
And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by, 
From this day to the ending of the world, 
But we in it shall be remembered, 
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers. 
For he to-day that sheds his blood with me 
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, 
This day shall gentle his condition; 
And gentlemen in England now a-bed 
Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here, 
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks 
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day
Remembrance. 
NF 140  Ironic begins with realism, and tends toward myth. more realistic...more sureal...more mythical. Picture metaphor. New Critics like to analyze the brush strokes. Move closer or go back farther to get out of the content.  We perceive the organizing design of it.  Story of Job.
  1. Alice in Wonderland- archetypal need to set it in summer
  2. Through the Looking Glass- Autumn.

Tones and meaning

While reading Frye's chapter on Myth, I found at the very beginning, a light bulb moment. "

Our handbook would not give the reader a complete musical education, nor would it give an account of music as it exists in the mind of God or the practice of angels--but it would do for its purposes."



This brought back my waitressing days at The Great China Wall. My boss, who spoke Mandarin as well as English, explained to me that in the Mandarin language, the way you say the words is as important as the words that you are using when speaking. The rhythm, intonation, stressing, pitch, and movement makes words very different in meaning when they are spelled the same on paper.

I found this new form of language intimidating and intriguing, as I tried to say a basic, "hello, how are you today?" with the right vocal inflections. I never did get it right.  I also caused great amusement in the kitchen when I tried to say hello to the cooks. After that lesson, I listened to the conversations that went on around me, and I was aware that the sounds that I heard meant a great deal more than I had assumed before. 

Frye's comparison of music to literature shows how it would be impossible to write about music, and explain it correctly even if what was written entails all that can be vocalized about music.  

And Literature, as Frye says, is an "

art of words."