I bet you will agree that Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield is quite a departure from the other literature of the 18th Century that we have been studying. What then, is the main difference for the audience between fiction, poetry, drama and satire? How effective a genre is fiction for proposing ideas and themes?
Sorry for the late post. Did you notice?
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Friday, November 14, 2008
Is Gulliver a Yahoo?
This is my favorite question about Gulliver's Travels. I hope I'm not messing you up by asking a question about the upcoming reading rather than what we did last week, but I really want this as a blog question, and looking ahead, we will need to have at least one question on the Goldsmith book. So that is simply it: Is Gulliver a Yahoo?
I would like you also to consider what you think Swift's intentions were with Book III, as the voyage to Laputa and Lagodo and environs is so different from the formula of the other three books.
I would like you also to consider what you think Swift's intentions were with Book III, as the voyage to Laputa and Lagodo and environs is so different from the formula of the other three books.
Friday, November 7, 2008
Research Project Forum
Use this discussion thread to share your working thesis with the class (or topic if you aren't as far as a thesis) and ask for help and advice.
I think "forum" sounds important, don't you??
I think "forum" sounds important, don't you??
Gulliver as Social Commentary
Great discussion last week--I only wish more were participating--but they lose!
This week we will shift our focus to Gulliver. Thinking about Books I and II, what do you think is the most important result of the contrast between big and small? What about the Lilliputians and Brobdingnagians most impresses and influences Gulliver? What about humanity generally (and British or European people, specifically) do you think Swift, via Gulliver, is commenting on? (You might want to think about how Gulliver sees the Lilliputians and how the Brobdingnagians see Gulliver interms of how human each is.)
This week we will shift our focus to Gulliver. Thinking about Books I and II, what do you think is the most important result of the contrast between big and small? What about the Lilliputians and Brobdingnagians most impresses and influences Gulliver? What about humanity generally (and British or European people, specifically) do you think Swift, via Gulliver, is commenting on? (You might want to think about how Gulliver sees the Lilliputians and how the Brobdingnagians see Gulliver interms of how human each is.)
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