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 The real reason for a 
quest is always self-knowledge 
 The quest consists of 
5 things 
 A. quester 
 B. place to go 
 C. a stated reason to 
go there 
 D. challenges and 
trials en route 
 E. the real reason to 
go there
 A. Whenever people eat or drink 
together it is communion 
• -sharing of the peace 
• -particular about who we eat with 
• -community 
• -shared experience 
 bond, drugs, ritual, tradition 
• Failed is a bad sign 
 -don't harm the mouth that feeds you
 Sex and Evil 
 Vampirism 
• -selfishness 
• -exploitation 
• -refusal to respect the autonomy of other people 
• -using people to get what we want 
• -our desires over someone else 
 Literary Ghosts 
• -lessons, morals, warnings 
 Ghosts and Vampires are never only about Ghosts 
and Vampires 
• -not only visible 
• -psychosocial imbalance 
• -dysfunction of something
 -pattern recognition 
 -learning to look 
 -literature grows out of literature 
 There is no such thing as a wholly original 
work of literature 
 -stories cannot be written in a vacuum 
 There is only one story 
• -mythos 
 Literature Makes Comparisons, parallels 
 -intertextuality-the ongoing interaction 
between stories 
 Nothing ever changes 
 -using other stories gives topical resonance
 -makes authors 
smart and gives 
them authority 
 a. Romeo and Juliet 
 b. Ten Things I Hate 
About You 
 c. She's the Man 
 d. O 
 e. Hamlet 
 g. Macbeth
 -every step about the loss of innocence is really 
someone's private reenactment of the fall from 
 grace 
 -proves everything is ages old 
 -the great tribulations to which human beings 
are subject to are all detailed in scripture 
 -gives modern stories the power of 
accumulated myth 
 -archetypal 
 a. The Flood 
 b. Moses 
 c. The Messiah 
 d. Miraculous Birth
 -most drawing power 
 -lost 
 -loss of control 
 -hopelessness, helplessness 
 -temptation 
 -fend for themselves 
 -belongs to the one big story 
 -why use this parallel? 
• -because of how much it covers the human 
experience
 -myth is a body of story that 
matters 
 -aren't we all descended from 
Gods? 
 -legendary heroes are normal 
 -no form of dysfunctional 
family or personal 
disintegration of character for 
which there is not 
 a Greek or Roman archetype 
 -myths are an explanation for 
natural phenomena 
 -potential for greatness 
resides in all of us 
• a. Icarus 
• b. Prometheus 
 THESE ARE THE 4 GREAT 
STRUGGLES OF THE HUMAN 
EXPERIENCE 
 Homer 
 -need to protect the family 
 Hector 
 -determination to remain 
faithful and to have faith 
 Penelope 
 -the struggle to return home 
 Odysseus 
 -maintain one's dignity 
• Archilles
 Due Wednesday 100 points 
 Pick a myth that attempts to explain an element of nature or 
reasoning for behavior. You may also choose a creation myth. 
 In a response essay, you will analyze the following elements of 
your myth: 
 A. what does it attempt to explain 
 B. Brief synopsis of the myth 
 C. How/Why do the gods intervene? 
 D. Literary Devices 
• Symbols, motifs, themes, allusions, conflicts 
E. You will need to look up another culture’s explanation of your 
topic and go through steps A-D with that one and then analyze 
how they are similar and if there are any repeating archetypes 
and signs of intextuality.
 -water/floods 
 -wate is trying to reclaim us 
 -pulling down our improvements 
 -big eraser that destroys buut also allows a brand new start 
 It is used as 
 a. plot device 
 b. atmospherics 
 c. misery 
 d. democratic 
 -falls on the just and unjust alike 
 -it's clean 
 -paradox 
 clean coming down but mud created when it lands 
 -cleansing characters symbolically 
 -transformation 
 -stain is removed 
 -restorative 
 -Spring, new growth, return to the Green World 
 -rain and literal ailments it causes 
 -Spring means revival, renewal, new awakenings
 Fisher King Figure 
 -hero as a fixer 
 -something in society is 
broken and a hero emerges to 
put things right 
 -agricultural fertility is 
important to sustain life 
 a. wastelands to restore to 
fertility therefore need rain 
therefore what does the 
absence of rain mean 
 -rainbows 
 -divine promise 
 -fog 
 -confusion/can't see clearly 
 -snow 
 -same as rain 
ALWAYS CHECK THE WEATHER 
IN A BOOK
 Violence 
 -most personal and intimate act between humans 
 a. can be cultural and societal, symbolic, thematic, biblical, 
Shakespearean, romantic, allegorical 
 b. it is a means beyond mere mayhem 
 Two Categories 
 1. specific injury that authors cause characters to visit on one 
another or themselves 
 2. narrative violence that cause characters harm in general 
 plot advancement 
 thematic development 
 -What is the motive? 
 -What does it represent thematically? 
 -What mythic death does it resemble? 
 -Why this violence and not some other? 
 -What is the motive?
SYMBOLIC POLITICAL 
 sure it is 
 -cannot be reduced to 
meaning just one thing 
 Allegory 
 -if a symbol stands for one 
thing it is an allegory 
 -one for one basis 
 -convey a certain message 
 -actions can be symbolic 
 -meant to change society 
 -addresses the rights of 
persons and the wrongs of 
those in power 
 -nearly all writing is 
political on some level 
 -part of the social problem 
or part of the solution 
 -the social and political 
milieu out of which the 
writer creates to help us to 
 understand the work
 Why? The writer wants to express a 
specific theme 
• Make a parallel to deepen the comparison, the 
sacrifice, their redemption, a miracle, or just to 
be ironic 
 Culture is influenced by its dominant 
religious systems 
• These values and principles of those religions 
will inform the work
 Human beings cannot fly 
• 1. a superhero 
• 2. a ski jumper 
• 3. crazy 
• 4. fictional 
• 5. a circus act 
• 6. suspended on wires 
• 7. an angel 
• 8. heavily symbolic 
 -uninhibited 
 -freedom 
 -defy gravity then you can 
defy laws 
 In Myths 
 -flying Africans 
 -Quetzalcatl the Aztec 
God who looks like a 
snake with wings 
 -Icarus 
 -angels 
 -dragons 
 -witches
 FLIGHT IS FREEDOM 
• -of soul/spirit 
• -unbound by earthly 
cares 
• -escape 
• -journey 
• -return home/soul 
ascends to heaven 
 but . . . Irony Trumps Everything 
• -reversal of the expectations 
of flight and freedom 
 -caged 
 -enslaved 
 -trapped 
 -burdened (Peter Pan) 
 -or chooses not to fly 
 -reduction of power 
 -crash and burn (and then maybe 
live would be symbolic of a 
rebirth) 
 -thrilled by flying but fearful of 
falling
 There is an ugly rumor 
circulating that English 
professors have dirty minds 
• Phallic Images 
• Yonic Images 
 -depending on the 
society/censorship sex does 
not have to look like sex 
 -sexuality may be encoded in 
their reading, while writers 
are learning that they can 
encode sexuality into their 
writing 
 the actual act is very plain 
forward 
 -when they are writing about 
other things it really means sex, 
and when they write about sex, 
they really 
mean something else. If they 
write about sex and mean strictly 
sex it is called pornography. 
 -the sexiest thing a writer can do 
is show everything but the sex 
 -about exploring a character's 
personality 
• -is really about 
• pleasure, sacrifice, 
submission, rebellion. 
resignation, supplication, 
domination, 
• enlightenment, power
 To drown or not to drown has profound 
plot implications 
 Many writes have meet their deaths in 
water 
 Tossing characters in the river 
• Wish fulfillment 
• Exorcism of primal fear 
• Exploration of the possible and not just 
• A solution to messy plot difficulties
 What does the 
character do? 
• The after is symbolic 
 Rescued 
 Swim out 
 Rise up and walk 
 Driftwood just appears 
 Luck 
 The character should 
have died, but didn’t 
• Rebirth and baptism 
through the medium of 
water 
 The old identity dies 
 Being born is painful
 Symbolic 
• Submersion=Baptism 
 Have to be ready to 
receive it 
 Cleansing 
 The flood 
• Suicide=Choosing 
 Exerting control in a 
society that has taken 
control away from them 
 So. . .when they 
actually drown? 
• They die 
• Serves its own 
purpose 
 Character revelation 
 Thematic development of 
violence 
 Failure 
 Guilt 
 Plot complication 
 Denouement
 -is setting, but it's also psychology, 
attitude, finance, industry, anything that 
place 
 can forge in the people who live there 
 -create mood,atmosphere,tone 
 -can alo define or even develep a 
character 
 -only by leaving home, and travelling to 
his real home can he find his real self 
 -geography can be a character
 General Rule 
 When writers send characters south, it's so they can run amok 
 The Sublime Landscape 
 -the dramatic and breathtaking vista-has been idealized, 
sometimes to the point of cliche 
 -mountains, overgrown vegetation, large mansions 
 as opposed to 
 The Places Where We Call Home 
 -the flat or gently rolling ground, farm land, water, non-threatening 
 IN THIS WAY THE GEOGRAPHY BECOMES NOT ONLY A WAY BY 
WHICH THE AUTHOR EXPRESSES HIS PSYCHE BUT ALSO A 
CONVEYER OF THEME
 Why did Jack go up the hill? 
 -what goes up must come down and things go up and go down a 
hill 
 Down 
 -swamps, crowds, fog, darkness, fields, heat, people, 
 Up 
 -snow, ice, purity, thin air, clear views, isolation, the gods 
 it's place and space and shape that bring us to ideas and 
psychology and history and dynamism.
 Shall I compare thee to a summer's day 
 Thou art more lovely and more temperate 
 Now is the winter of our discontent/made 
glorious summer by this son of York 
 Fear no more the heat o' th' sun/Nor the 
furious winter's rages
 Spring-childhood 
and youth 
 Summer-adulthood, 
romance, fulfillment, 
passion 
 Autumn-decline, 
middle age, 
tiredness, harvest, 
 Winter-old age, 
resentment, death 
 Pastoral Elegy 
-written for a 
young man who 
died much too young 
-typically he is a 
shepherd from his 
pasture at the height 
of Spring or 
Summer and instead 
of rejoicing there is 
mourning
 The human experience 
 Stories are the explanation of us and the 
world or us in the world 
 Intertextuality 
 Archetype
 Quasimodo 
 Frankenstein 
 Oedipus 
 Grendel 
 Harry Potter 
 -these are all character who are as famous for their shape as for 
their behavior 
 -their shapes tell us something about them or other people in the 
story 
 -in real life, when people have any physical mark or imperfection 
it means nothing thematically 
 but in physical imperfections are understood to always be 
symbolic 
 All myths and fairytales that hero is marked in some way 
 -scars, one fatal spot, a shorter leg, birthmark
 -Romanticism gave us the notion of the dual nature, that 
in each of us, no matter how well made a monstrous 
Other exists. 
 -Concept of Duality/Dopplegangers 
• a. The Prince and the Pauper 
• b. The Picture of Dorian Gray 
• c. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde 
• d. Beauty and the Beast 
 So, if a writer brings up a physical problem or handicap 
or deficiency, he means something by it.
 -usually can divine things "see things 
from the other world" 
 -can see the truth of what's actually 
happened 
 -most famous is Tiresias "the blind seer" 
 -Every move, every statement by or 
about a blind character has to 
accommodate 
 the lack of sight; notice, to behave 
differently, if only in subtle ways
 In literature there is no better, no more lyrical, 
more more perfectly metaphorical illness than 
heart disease. 
 the heart is the symbolic repository of emotion, 
the center of emotion within the body 
 when we fall in love, we feel it in our hearts and 
when we lose love we feel heartbroken 
 when overwhelmed by strong emotions, we 
feel our hearts are full to bursting
 the writer uses heart ailments as a kind of shorthand for the 
character 
 -uses it as a social metaphor 
 -the afflicted character can have nay number of problems for 
which heart disease 
 provides a suitable emblem: 
 bad love, loneliness, cruelty, cowardice, lack of determination 
 for something seriously amiss at the heart of things 
 -emphasis is on the character's humanity 
 -if heart trouble shows up in a novel or play, start looking for the 
significance 
 -if we see that characters have difficulties of the heart, don't be 
surprised when emotional trouble becomes the physical ailment
 -need to ask what is their 
condition telling us about their 
character 
 -paralysis 
 physical, moral, social, spiritual, 
intellectual, political 
 There are certain principles 
governing the use of disease in 
works of literature: 
 1. Not all diseases are created 
equal 
• TB is better than Choleria 
• Syphillis is moral corruption 
 but not grade A literary 
diseases/devices 
 2. It should be picturesque 
• TB is sexy 
 3. It should be mysterious in 
origin 
 4. It should have strong 
symbolic or metaphorical 
possibilities 
 makes a statement about the 
victim of the disease
 . . .and the winner is 
Tuberculosis 
 -the skin becomes pale, the 
eyes sunken in and dark 
 -anyone could get it, it would 
wipe out entire families 
 -love and tenderness gave the 
disease to all 
 -metaphorical wasting 
away/frailty physically and 
emotionally 
 -joined cancer in dominating 
the literary imagination 
 i.e Moulan Rouge 
 runner up is The Plague 
 -individual suffering 
 -societal devastation 
 -damage to crops and 
people/whole cities 
 -Oedipus 
 -biblical 
 punishment/wrath 
 -the confrontations with 
devastation 
 -the randomness 
 -the despair
 3rd place-Malaria aka 
Roman Fever 
 -actually translates into 
"bad air" 
 gossip, hositle public, 
frantic, FINE 
 then comes Inherited 
Diseases 
 -symbolizes bad 
parenting/dysfunctional 
family 
 -Syphilis 
 4th place-AIDS 
 -has a wasting quality 
 -questions of morality 
 -spreads easily and mutates 
 -can lie dormant and then be 
brought out 
 everyone could be a carrier 
 -100% mortality rate 
 -young people, gay people, 
artsy people 
 -tragic and despair, but 
courageous and resilient and 
compassion 
 -political
 HOW 
 -how does the character react to others 
 -how did they get the disease 
 -how do they deal with their illness 
 -how to they let others take care of them 
 -how does the character accept or deny death?morality? 
 All symbolize 
 -randomness of fate 
 -harshness of life 
 -unknowability of the mind and of God 
 -can say whatever the author needs it to say
 Last-Chance-For-Change 
 how they work 
 -the character, usually old, has experienced a number of 
opportunities to grow, reform, to get it right- 
 but never has 
 -is presented with one last chance to educate himself in this most 
important area 
 -the reason why they are older is because his time for growth and 
learning is running out 
 -time is the imperative, a sense of urgency permeates 
 -the situation itself is compelling 
 -can this person be saved? 
 -at the end of the day, these stories are about salvation and 
redemption 
 -if they can't be saved this last time, then they never will
 Irony Trumps Everything 
 A sign is something that signifies a 
message. The signifier doesn’t have to be 
used in the planned way. Its meaning can 
be deflected from the expected meaning, 
 The Ironic Mode 
• Characters who possess a lower degree of 
autonomy, self-determination, or free will than 
ourselves

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How to read literature like a professor

  • 1.  The real reason for a quest is always self-knowledge  The quest consists of 5 things  A. quester  B. place to go  C. a stated reason to go there  D. challenges and trials en route  E. the real reason to go there
  • 2.  A. Whenever people eat or drink together it is communion • -sharing of the peace • -particular about who we eat with • -community • -shared experience  bond, drugs, ritual, tradition • Failed is a bad sign  -don't harm the mouth that feeds you
  • 3.  Sex and Evil  Vampirism • -selfishness • -exploitation • -refusal to respect the autonomy of other people • -using people to get what we want • -our desires over someone else  Literary Ghosts • -lessons, morals, warnings  Ghosts and Vampires are never only about Ghosts and Vampires • -not only visible • -psychosocial imbalance • -dysfunction of something
  • 4.  -pattern recognition  -learning to look  -literature grows out of literature  There is no such thing as a wholly original work of literature  -stories cannot be written in a vacuum  There is only one story • -mythos  Literature Makes Comparisons, parallels  -intertextuality-the ongoing interaction between stories  Nothing ever changes  -using other stories gives topical resonance
  • 5.  -makes authors smart and gives them authority  a. Romeo and Juliet  b. Ten Things I Hate About You  c. She's the Man  d. O  e. Hamlet  g. Macbeth
  • 6.  -every step about the loss of innocence is really someone's private reenactment of the fall from  grace  -proves everything is ages old  -the great tribulations to which human beings are subject to are all detailed in scripture  -gives modern stories the power of accumulated myth  -archetypal  a. The Flood  b. Moses  c. The Messiah  d. Miraculous Birth
  • 7.  -most drawing power  -lost  -loss of control  -hopelessness, helplessness  -temptation  -fend for themselves  -belongs to the one big story  -why use this parallel? • -because of how much it covers the human experience
  • 8.  -myth is a body of story that matters  -aren't we all descended from Gods?  -legendary heroes are normal  -no form of dysfunctional family or personal disintegration of character for which there is not  a Greek or Roman archetype  -myths are an explanation for natural phenomena  -potential for greatness resides in all of us • a. Icarus • b. Prometheus  THESE ARE THE 4 GREAT STRUGGLES OF THE HUMAN EXPERIENCE  Homer  -need to protect the family  Hector  -determination to remain faithful and to have faith  Penelope  -the struggle to return home  Odysseus  -maintain one's dignity • Archilles
  • 9.  Due Wednesday 100 points  Pick a myth that attempts to explain an element of nature or reasoning for behavior. You may also choose a creation myth.  In a response essay, you will analyze the following elements of your myth:  A. what does it attempt to explain  B. Brief synopsis of the myth  C. How/Why do the gods intervene?  D. Literary Devices • Symbols, motifs, themes, allusions, conflicts E. You will need to look up another culture’s explanation of your topic and go through steps A-D with that one and then analyze how they are similar and if there are any repeating archetypes and signs of intextuality.
  • 10.  -water/floods  -wate is trying to reclaim us  -pulling down our improvements  -big eraser that destroys buut also allows a brand new start  It is used as  a. plot device  b. atmospherics  c. misery  d. democratic  -falls on the just and unjust alike  -it's clean  -paradox  clean coming down but mud created when it lands  -cleansing characters symbolically  -transformation  -stain is removed  -restorative  -Spring, new growth, return to the Green World  -rain and literal ailments it causes  -Spring means revival, renewal, new awakenings
  • 11.  Fisher King Figure  -hero as a fixer  -something in society is broken and a hero emerges to put things right  -agricultural fertility is important to sustain life  a. wastelands to restore to fertility therefore need rain therefore what does the absence of rain mean  -rainbows  -divine promise  -fog  -confusion/can't see clearly  -snow  -same as rain ALWAYS CHECK THE WEATHER IN A BOOK
  • 12.  Violence  -most personal and intimate act between humans  a. can be cultural and societal, symbolic, thematic, biblical, Shakespearean, romantic, allegorical  b. it is a means beyond mere mayhem  Two Categories  1. specific injury that authors cause characters to visit on one another or themselves  2. narrative violence that cause characters harm in general  plot advancement  thematic development  -What is the motive?  -What does it represent thematically?  -What mythic death does it resemble?  -Why this violence and not some other?  -What is the motive?
  • 13. SYMBOLIC POLITICAL  sure it is  -cannot be reduced to meaning just one thing  Allegory  -if a symbol stands for one thing it is an allegory  -one for one basis  -convey a certain message  -actions can be symbolic  -meant to change society  -addresses the rights of persons and the wrongs of those in power  -nearly all writing is political on some level  -part of the social problem or part of the solution  -the social and political milieu out of which the writer creates to help us to  understand the work
  • 14.  Why? The writer wants to express a specific theme • Make a parallel to deepen the comparison, the sacrifice, their redemption, a miracle, or just to be ironic  Culture is influenced by its dominant religious systems • These values and principles of those religions will inform the work
  • 15.  Human beings cannot fly • 1. a superhero • 2. a ski jumper • 3. crazy • 4. fictional • 5. a circus act • 6. suspended on wires • 7. an angel • 8. heavily symbolic  -uninhibited  -freedom  -defy gravity then you can defy laws  In Myths  -flying Africans  -Quetzalcatl the Aztec God who looks like a snake with wings  -Icarus  -angels  -dragons  -witches
  • 16.  FLIGHT IS FREEDOM • -of soul/spirit • -unbound by earthly cares • -escape • -journey • -return home/soul ascends to heaven  but . . . Irony Trumps Everything • -reversal of the expectations of flight and freedom  -caged  -enslaved  -trapped  -burdened (Peter Pan)  -or chooses not to fly  -reduction of power  -crash and burn (and then maybe live would be symbolic of a rebirth)  -thrilled by flying but fearful of falling
  • 17.  There is an ugly rumor circulating that English professors have dirty minds • Phallic Images • Yonic Images  -depending on the society/censorship sex does not have to look like sex  -sexuality may be encoded in their reading, while writers are learning that they can encode sexuality into their writing  the actual act is very plain forward  -when they are writing about other things it really means sex, and when they write about sex, they really mean something else. If they write about sex and mean strictly sex it is called pornography.  -the sexiest thing a writer can do is show everything but the sex  -about exploring a character's personality • -is really about • pleasure, sacrifice, submission, rebellion. resignation, supplication, domination, • enlightenment, power
  • 18.  To drown or not to drown has profound plot implications  Many writes have meet their deaths in water  Tossing characters in the river • Wish fulfillment • Exorcism of primal fear • Exploration of the possible and not just • A solution to messy plot difficulties
  • 19.  What does the character do? • The after is symbolic  Rescued  Swim out  Rise up and walk  Driftwood just appears  Luck  The character should have died, but didn’t • Rebirth and baptism through the medium of water  The old identity dies  Being born is painful
  • 20.  Symbolic • Submersion=Baptism  Have to be ready to receive it  Cleansing  The flood • Suicide=Choosing  Exerting control in a society that has taken control away from them  So. . .when they actually drown? • They die • Serves its own purpose  Character revelation  Thematic development of violence  Failure  Guilt  Plot complication  Denouement
  • 21.  -is setting, but it's also psychology, attitude, finance, industry, anything that place  can forge in the people who live there  -create mood,atmosphere,tone  -can alo define or even develep a character  -only by leaving home, and travelling to his real home can he find his real self  -geography can be a character
  • 22.  General Rule  When writers send characters south, it's so they can run amok  The Sublime Landscape  -the dramatic and breathtaking vista-has been idealized, sometimes to the point of cliche  -mountains, overgrown vegetation, large mansions  as opposed to  The Places Where We Call Home  -the flat or gently rolling ground, farm land, water, non-threatening  IN THIS WAY THE GEOGRAPHY BECOMES NOT ONLY A WAY BY WHICH THE AUTHOR EXPRESSES HIS PSYCHE BUT ALSO A CONVEYER OF THEME
  • 23.  Why did Jack go up the hill?  -what goes up must come down and things go up and go down a hill  Down  -swamps, crowds, fog, darkness, fields, heat, people,  Up  -snow, ice, purity, thin air, clear views, isolation, the gods  it's place and space and shape that bring us to ideas and psychology and history and dynamism.
  • 24.  Shall I compare thee to a summer's day  Thou art more lovely and more temperate  Now is the winter of our discontent/made glorious summer by this son of York  Fear no more the heat o' th' sun/Nor the furious winter's rages
  • 25.  Spring-childhood and youth  Summer-adulthood, romance, fulfillment, passion  Autumn-decline, middle age, tiredness, harvest,  Winter-old age, resentment, death  Pastoral Elegy -written for a young man who died much too young -typically he is a shepherd from his pasture at the height of Spring or Summer and instead of rejoicing there is mourning
  • 26.  The human experience  Stories are the explanation of us and the world or us in the world  Intertextuality  Archetype
  • 27.  Quasimodo  Frankenstein  Oedipus  Grendel  Harry Potter  -these are all character who are as famous for their shape as for their behavior  -their shapes tell us something about them or other people in the story  -in real life, when people have any physical mark or imperfection it means nothing thematically  but in physical imperfections are understood to always be symbolic  All myths and fairytales that hero is marked in some way  -scars, one fatal spot, a shorter leg, birthmark
  • 28.  -Romanticism gave us the notion of the dual nature, that in each of us, no matter how well made a monstrous Other exists.  -Concept of Duality/Dopplegangers • a. The Prince and the Pauper • b. The Picture of Dorian Gray • c. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde • d. Beauty and the Beast  So, if a writer brings up a physical problem or handicap or deficiency, he means something by it.
  • 29.  -usually can divine things "see things from the other world"  -can see the truth of what's actually happened  -most famous is Tiresias "the blind seer"  -Every move, every statement by or about a blind character has to accommodate  the lack of sight; notice, to behave differently, if only in subtle ways
  • 30.  In literature there is no better, no more lyrical, more more perfectly metaphorical illness than heart disease.  the heart is the symbolic repository of emotion, the center of emotion within the body  when we fall in love, we feel it in our hearts and when we lose love we feel heartbroken  when overwhelmed by strong emotions, we feel our hearts are full to bursting
  • 31.  the writer uses heart ailments as a kind of shorthand for the character  -uses it as a social metaphor  -the afflicted character can have nay number of problems for which heart disease  provides a suitable emblem:  bad love, loneliness, cruelty, cowardice, lack of determination  for something seriously amiss at the heart of things  -emphasis is on the character's humanity  -if heart trouble shows up in a novel or play, start looking for the significance  -if we see that characters have difficulties of the heart, don't be surprised when emotional trouble becomes the physical ailment
  • 32.  -need to ask what is their condition telling us about their character  -paralysis  physical, moral, social, spiritual, intellectual, political  There are certain principles governing the use of disease in works of literature:  1. Not all diseases are created equal • TB is better than Choleria • Syphillis is moral corruption  but not grade A literary diseases/devices  2. It should be picturesque • TB is sexy  3. It should be mysterious in origin  4. It should have strong symbolic or metaphorical possibilities  makes a statement about the victim of the disease
  • 33.  . . .and the winner is Tuberculosis  -the skin becomes pale, the eyes sunken in and dark  -anyone could get it, it would wipe out entire families  -love and tenderness gave the disease to all  -metaphorical wasting away/frailty physically and emotionally  -joined cancer in dominating the literary imagination  i.e Moulan Rouge  runner up is The Plague  -individual suffering  -societal devastation  -damage to crops and people/whole cities  -Oedipus  -biblical  punishment/wrath  -the confrontations with devastation  -the randomness  -the despair
  • 34.  3rd place-Malaria aka Roman Fever  -actually translates into "bad air"  gossip, hositle public, frantic, FINE  then comes Inherited Diseases  -symbolizes bad parenting/dysfunctional family  -Syphilis  4th place-AIDS  -has a wasting quality  -questions of morality  -spreads easily and mutates  -can lie dormant and then be brought out  everyone could be a carrier  -100% mortality rate  -young people, gay people, artsy people  -tragic and despair, but courageous and resilient and compassion  -political
  • 35.  HOW  -how does the character react to others  -how did they get the disease  -how do they deal with their illness  -how to they let others take care of them  -how does the character accept or deny death?morality?  All symbolize  -randomness of fate  -harshness of life  -unknowability of the mind and of God  -can say whatever the author needs it to say
  • 36.  Last-Chance-For-Change  how they work  -the character, usually old, has experienced a number of opportunities to grow, reform, to get it right-  but never has  -is presented with one last chance to educate himself in this most important area  -the reason why they are older is because his time for growth and learning is running out  -time is the imperative, a sense of urgency permeates  -the situation itself is compelling  -can this person be saved?  -at the end of the day, these stories are about salvation and redemption  -if they can't be saved this last time, then they never will
  • 37.  Irony Trumps Everything  A sign is something that signifies a message. The signifier doesn’t have to be used in the planned way. Its meaning can be deflected from the expected meaning,  The Ironic Mode • Characters who possess a lower degree of autonomy, self-determination, or free will than ourselves