Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Week 10




                                            Madeleine Vonfoester's "Mother of the Tree"


    Good day and welcome back, class.  Hope all is well with you.

It is week 10, the penultimate in the course!  Today we will review a story by George Saunders, and perhaps we will do so in the group format used previously.  Saunders is considered a contemporary master of the short story and very articulate on the matter of his artistic process (see the links below).

George Saunders on how to write a better story (video):  https://www.theatlantic.com/video/index/419391/george-saunders-on-story/

(Essay:
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/mar/04/what-writers-really-do-when-they-write

There is an element of the macabre in his work, mixing uncomfortably with the day-to-day ordinary.  The haunted house motif introduced early in "Puppy" seems to me to embody this point of view on human consciousness, a bit spooky.  His characters want happiness, comfort, peace of mind–but live in a branded, material world riven by disorienting, challenging forces and ironies of all sorts. What separates and connects the haves and have nots?  For example, what do Marie and Callie have in common?  How does their  meeting illuminate the limits to their knowing one another? What is the difference between growing up on a farm and "near a farm"? we might ask Callie.  Within the ordinary abides a sinister something, like the proverbial corn fields that will be harvested.


Short Essay Final week 11.

Monday, March 6, 2017

Week 9

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The scariest monsters are the ones that lurk within our souls.
–Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849)


   Poe explored the extremes of ratiocination, and of madness, responding in part to the desire of readers for the darkly romantic in literature.  He deplored the mysticism of the American Transcendentalist tradition, putting physical rot, disease, and gore front and center.  His narrator-protagonists often declaim their honesty and basic decency in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, seemingly glorying in the recall of their descent into hellish madness and cruelty.  And we readers love the horror tale, as contemporary Stephen King reminds us, for it assures us we occupy a more or less sane and good middle ground.  There is a kind of humility, it seems to me, in the work of Poe and Hawthorne, in being so strongly connected to the evils that assail us in our weakness, our dependencies, addictions, hypocrisy, and sheer ignorance and folly. The black veil taken by Father Hooper in Hawthorne's story is a symbol of the haunted aspect of human consciousness, and a sign that even the most godly, cannot escape the proverbial dark. But through it, and beside it, shines the light.  The intersection of opposites plays a strong role in romantic art.


So to Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960), one of my favorite short story writers, for her homely details and refusal to play to expectations, and for bringing the voices of the past to life through the vernacular of African Americans of the early 20th century.


Homework:  Read "Puppy," by George Saunders. Work on final project, due week 10 or 11.