The Body in Question
The Body in Question What does literature have to say about the fact that we are “embodied” beings?—that our consciousness interacts with the world through an envelope of flesh that both weighs us down with its mundane requirements and propels us forward with its remarkable abilities and insistent desires? We know that the world at large cares deeply about our bodies, for it continually categorizes us along the lines of race, gender, age, and “normality,” but who gets (or should get) the last word about what our skin and bones declare about us? In this class we will investigate what novelists, playwrights, and poets have to say about our ability to either make peace with our flesh or to transcend it, and whether such outcomes can best be accomplished through religion, imagination, drugs, sexuality, or political action. The works we address will include Shelley’s Frankenstein, Morrison’s Sula, Beckett’s Happy Days, Silko’s Ceremony, Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians, and others.
The Body in Question What does literature have to say about the fact that we are “embodied” beings?—that our consciousness interacts with the world through an envelope of flesh that both weighs us down with its mundane requirements and propels us forward with its remarkable abilities and insistent desires? We know that the world at large cares deeply about our bodies, for it continually categorizes us along the lines of race, gender, age, and “normality,” but who gets (or should get) the last word about what our skin and bones declare about us? In this class we will investigate what novelist …Read more
I messed up with my FYS. In my pre-middlebury anxiety I took this english literature class thinking it would be science based based on the name. This idiocy is my only reason for not loving the class as reading 10 books and writing a bunch of papers is not my cup o tea. However, with the intention of this course being to improve students writing, I have to give Baldridge good cred. He was friendly enough, was passionate and well spoken and the class was well structured and fairly/easily graded.
I messed up with my FYS. In my pre-middlebury anxiety I took this english literature class thinking it would be science based based on the name. This idiocy is my only reason for not loving the class as reading 10 books and writing a bunch of papers is not my cup o tea. However, with the intention of this course being to improve stud …Read more