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The times, time and “the timeless”. Current dilemmas in teaching literature. The times, time and “the timeless”. Teaching Literature in an Age of Accountability, Multimodality and Critical Literacy Literature = “the timeless” The age = the times Time = pressing demands on teachers.
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The times, time and “the timeless” Current dilemmas in teaching literature
The times, time and “the timeless” • Teaching Literature in an Age of Accountability, Multimodality and Critical Literacy • Literature = “the timeless” • The age = the times • Time = pressing demands on teachers
Then came, at a predetermined moment, a moment in time and of time, • A moment not out of time, but in time, in what we call history: transecting, bisecting the world of time, a moment in time but not like a moment of time, • A moment in time, but time was made through that moment: for without the meaning there is no time, and that moment of time gave the meaning. • - T.S. Eliot
The times, time and “the timeless” • Without meaning there is no time • Without time there is no meaning
Without time there is no meaning • Every text comes with a context • Text is implicated with society and social meaning • Basis of critical literacy
Critical Literacy • The inscription of ideology in all texts/representations • The power of texts to shape beliefs, and indeed identities • Social justice and the marginalisation of non-privileged groups • The importance of critical analysis of the ideological imposition texts are making on our subjectivities • The need for ethical judgment on the ideology exposed in texts
Critical Literacy • Who or what is being excluded from the text? • Irrelevant considerations • Framed view • “value-added” • Whose interests are being served? • Ours • Power
The aesthetic • Concern with feeling as well as thinking • Concern with artistic shaping • Fusion of form and feeling
Lullaby - W.H. Auden • Lay your sleeping head, my love, • Human on my faithless arm: • Time and fevers burn away • Individual beauty from • Thoughtful children, and the grave • Proves the child ephemeral: • But in my arms till break of day • Let the living creature lie, • Mortal, guilty, but to me • The entirely beautiful.
Lullaby - W.H. Auden • Beauty, midnight, vision dies: • Let the winds of dawn that blow • Softly round your dreaming head • Such a day of welcome show • Eye and knocking heart may bless, • Find our mortal world enough; • Noons of dryness find you fed • By the involuntary powers, • Nights of insult let you pass • Watched by every human love.
Literature and Critical Literacy • What is the experience that the text is giving me? • How is that experience created textually? • What does this show me about the nature of textuality? • What generic expectations are being activated or played with
Literature and Critical Literacy • What are the discourses out of which the text is constructed? • What is its relation to its time, and howdoes a modern reader read it • What s the text valuing and wanting me to believe? • What do I think of this?
Literature and Critical Literacy • Relativity of discourses - no discourse is absolute and true • Analysis brings you closer to the experience of the text • Empathy and ethics are not in conflict
…the wisdom that becomes available over a deep, lifelong engagement with the aesthetic cannot, I venture to say, be duplicated by any other kind of seriousness. Indeed, the various definitions of beauty come at least as close to a plausible characterization of virtue, and of a fuller humanity, as the attempts to define goodness as such. -Susan Sontag
….their passion for literature was bound up with an engagement with entire civilisations. What else is language but the bridge which links the two? Language is the medium in which both Culture and culture – literary art and human society – come to consciousness; and literary criticism is thus a sensitivity to the thickness and intricacy of the medium which makes us what we are. -Terry Eagleton
Without meaning there is no time • Language as constitutive of the culture and individual identity • The project of critical literacy • Help us understand our social world better • Help us understand ourselves better
Reading • Reading is an imaginative act • A text is a scaffold on which we build our understanding • Texts mean things
W.H. Auden: The more loving one • Looking up at the stars, I know quite well • That, for all they care, I can go to hell, • But on earth indifference is the least • We have to dread from man or beast. • How should we like it were stars to burn • With a passion for us we could not return? • If equal affection cannot be, • Let the more loving one be me.
Admirer as I think I am • Of stars that do not give a damn, • I cannot, now I see them, say • I missed one terribly all day. • Were all stars to disappear or die. • I should learn to look at an empty sky • And feel its total dark sublime, • Though this might take me a little time.
The times, time and “the timeless” Current dilemmas in teaching literature