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Non-Standard Approaches
to Post-modernist Literature
by Kate Elkins, Comparative Literature
In the Fall of last academic
year I taught a Comparative Literature 1B class entitled "Ghosts,
Doubles, and Divided Selves." As the semester drew to a close we
were preparing to read the final text on the syllabus, a novel by Philip
Roth entitled The Counterlife. Appearing rather simple on the surface,
it is in fact a novel of great complexity, especially on the level of
narrative structure. In presenting a very "postmodern" novel,
I wondered what approach to take to ensure that students did not become
frustrated. One of the challenges in teaching composition classes is that
students bring to the classroom a wide variety of interests and backgrounds.
Few will go on to study literature, and many embark on the study of literature
with a fair amount of skepticism. I therefore hesitated to approach the
work using a standard "literary approach," either by starting
with close readings or assigning critical essays discussing postmodernism.
Furthermore, I did not wish to lecture on the relation of postmodernism
to modernism and realism since this historical overview is tangential
to the main focus of the class - learning to develop sophisticated interpretations
and to write well.
Instead, I decided to try a
very different approach by looking at the plastic arts. I chose a video
documentary on the sculptor Alexander Calder in which his various sculptures
provide concrete innovations paralleling changes occurring in the modern
novel. I wanted to see if examining a very concrete art form would enable
students to deduce some of the concepts and innovations occurring contemporaneously
in the novel. First I asked students to write down all of the elements
Calder introduces in his sculpture and together we came up with a master
list. The list included the introduction of shifting and multiple perspectives,
the role of chance, change through time and space, and the practice of
art as play. Then, in groups, I asked students to hypothesize about how
they would implement these same innovations were they to write a novel.
Some of the suggestions put forth by students were elements which appear
in the novel we were about to read: the element of playfulness in which
the plot reflects the manipulation of characters or other elements; portraying
characters who change according to their movement through time and space
or in response to chance events; and characters who appear radically different
from different perspectives. Having produced these hypotheses, the students
were then eager to move on to the novel to see if Roth had incorporated
any of these elements into his novel. This overview also enabled the students
to read the novel on two levels simultaneously - both following the intricacies
of the plot and from a bird's eye view looking at character and plot structure.
Based on the students' own enthusiasm and sophisticated textual interpretations,
I felt this class activity a great success. In addition, I noted several
unexpected positive results. Many hitherto quiet science students became
active participants in explaining the theory of relativity discussed in
the video and its possible relation to innovations in the arts. Students
were also energized to see the interconnection between fields often accepted
as non-related the sciences, the plastic arts, and literature.
Finally, I felt the students developed a more personal approach to literature
by answering questions about the production of art rather than remaining
on the level of reception.
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