Tuesday, March 11, 2008

"What I Don't Understand is...."

Here are the responses to Monday's 'gimmie-quiz' question:

"What I don’t understand here is…"
  • Why I bother coming to lecture?
  • Why the quizzes are at the beginning of class.
  • Why it is expected of me that I do not understand the course material or some small part of it.
  • Why anyone would have a difficult time understanding the course material in this class (not to be a jerk.)
  • If the Victorian Age was so prosperous and magnificent as it seems, why did it end? Or, what caused it to appear like it ended?
  • The cultural impact Victorian England has on the 20th Century.
  • What is Succubus? I didn’t catch the definition in lecture or its significance to the material in the week we looked at Cranford.
  • How to read poems like Childe Roland.
  • The significance of Childe Roland
  • The reoccurring significance of Arnold’s quote “sweetness and light”. Why is it brought up so often? Why does it hold such important connotations?
  • The significance of Ruskin in the course. What was the importance of talking about him?
  • John Ruskin, Gothic-ness
  • The significance of ‘gothic’ architecture in Ruskin’s work
  • Ruskin’s 5-rows exercise
  • The importance of architecture in the work of Ruskin
  • The concepts of via media and Ruskin. What is via media? I thought Ruskin’s ideas were of things being flawed, imperfect but apparently they are not? How did the in class “game” relate to Ruskin?
  • What I should focus on – in terms of the readings- that will pertain to the final exam. Will we have to know ALL the readings?
  • Why Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is so dumb in your eyes?
  • Nothing’ everything has been clear and straight forward, to my understanding.
  • How domestic power was considered more powerful than non-domestic.
  • Via Media is a middle way of. It is a middle way between Roman Catholicism and what?
  • The concept of via media. If it is very important I would love to have it more precisely examined.
  • Victorian Sexuality. Is it or isn’t it present. (Pre-Gissing)
  • The importance and role of domestic powering Victorian England. What are the strong points and weak points of domestic power?
  • Is the “Sherlock Holmes” studying method mainly finding data before making a theory? Or is there more to it that I’m missing?
  • We’re supposed to let “the text talk to us” without incorporating our previously learned information.
  • Ruskin’s oppositional anatomy. Specific south vs. north what that represents
  • Need to further clarity the distinction between dialogic and didactic
  • Thomas Hardy’s “The Withered Arm”
  • The representation of gothic in John Ruskin’s work we have looked at.
  • Dialogic / dialectic’s relationship. Are these the same? Is one a necessary component of the other?
  • The whole Darwin and capitalism thing and the “sweetness and light” concept.
  • The connection between Darwinism and capitalism
  • How colonialism ties in to other Victorian principles like natural selection and industrialism.
  • The Capitalism / Darwinism connection
  • Why we cannot question Darwin. Please don’t tell any one that. I don’t want to get kicked out of SFU!
  • Gissing and Darwinism, what’s he think about it?
  • Who is a Darwinist of the authors we have read?
  • Why Darwin and his ideals were the beliefs of the majority of people in the time we’re studying.
  • Why you don’t like Mr. Darwin ?!?
  • The application of ‘social Darwinism in a capitalistic society.
  • Why Charles Darwin is the do all and end all, when there are so many opposing views.
  • The difference between John Henry Cardinal Newman’s theory and Darwin’s
  • Cardinal Newman’s points in both his essays.
  • Where did George Gissing think women fit in Victorian society?
  • What was the social position in Aurora Leigh?
  • The dialectic, didactic, dialogic -vs- polemic is still a little blurry
  • Dialectic and Didactic in the readings and how it is important.
  • How to determine if a piece is dialogic or didactic.
  • Why is didactic literature denigrated as being “lower brow”? For merely stylistic reasons?
  • Enough about the nature of the didactic vs. dialectic argument.
  • Dialogistic vs didactic.
  • What exactly Gissing wants to get across with the novel. And mainly, what’s the deal with the novel’s ending? I feel like it just ended and I am still wondering what he is really trying to get across with the novel and the way he left it.
  • The plot in the book In the Year of Jubilee.
  • The Pedagogical fallacy with respect to Matthew Arnold
  • How Elizabeth Gaskell’s view on domestic power applies to other aspects of Victorian Literature. I understand how it applies to Sherlock Holmes but not how it applies to other texts.
  • The Cranford / Holmes connection. [Dr.] Ogden showed that the women in Cranford observed small details, and then showed that Holmes also observed small details. This was said to show that Holmes was a male with a female mind. I don’t understand why male brains cannot observe small details.
  • How Hardy’s presentation of women can be seen as proof of domestic power being stronger than public power.
  • How paying attention to detail in the domestic sphere constitutes “real power” for women. You’re not powerful unless you have equal rights.
  • What exactly is the Woman Question?
  • What Nancy Lord represents in relation to the portrayal of Victorian women.
  • "The Woman Question” – what exactly does it encompass? Is it just about class? Domestic power? etc. Is there more I’m missing?
  • How the woman question pertains to every text. Was it really that big a deal?
  • The woman question. It’s very broad.
  • Why we have such strong preconceptions about lack of women’s power in the 19th century.
  • "our society” in Cranford
  • I didn’t really get the women issue we talked about in lecture
  • Class systems, the limits of each class and any overlapping or inter-mingling characteristics - generally and women’s roles
  • Why it is domestic power that has the greatest influence on society, how does it bring about change
  • Why is being interested in the Queen a lower class thing?
  • How we should get rid of an beliefs in order to understand a piece of literature.

1 comment:

aki said...

For the person(s) who asked the questions regarding "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came" by Browning and how to read or interpret the significance of that work, on an interesting aside i'd recommend reading Stephen King's the Dark Tower 1: The Gunslinger, which King himself has said he was inspired by the poem to write the novel. Thus, the homage to Roland as the protagonist in The Gunslinger. It's neat to see how other writer's (devoid of the fact that King is considered 'popular', demotic or generally his writing is considered 'low brow') have spun Victorian texts.