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Teaching Literature (2003)

von Elaine Showalter

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Teaching Literature is an inspirational guidebook for allteachers of English and American literature in higher education. Written by leading academic, prolific author and culturaljournalist, Elaine Showalter Original and provocative reflections on teaching literature inhigher education Encourages teachers to make their classroom practiceintellectually exciting Wide-ranging - covers the practical, theoretical, andmethodological aspects of teaching literature Highly practical - employs real examples from real classes andcareers throughout Draws on 40 years of international teaching experience… (mehr)
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This book reeks of the 20th century, and nothing can undo the fact that since it was published in 2003 (c), the world, politics, and consequently educational practice has changed... Or should. What strikes me as I read through Showalter's opening chapters in which she discusses the question "why teach literature" is that that precise question is what politicians and governmental agencies are asking now, with a much more derisive tone and a brutal axe behind their backs aimed at cutting budgets. Cliches such as "teaching the human", "teaching students to think critically", and "questioning the role of language in culture, etc" seem impossibly trite in the face of dwindling budgets for the humanities, and are easily manipulated into the accusations of the Right about the specter of an "intellectual elite" (heaven forbid we should *think*, that's so un-American).

Showalter's argument about teaching literature was compelling before the economic collapse. Now it sounds hopelessly idealistic, something our society no longer prizes. As a professor of literature this book did the opposite of inspiring me. Rather it made me think harder about the very real issue of the survival of the humanities in higher education. A case for the teaching of literature and the humanities desperately needs to be written, a manifesto of sorts: in the form of a twitter feed or a Facebook feed, something that actually has an audience.

The "digital humanities" are doing much to address this issue, but change isn't emerging fast enough to stem the tide of anti-intellectualism. The humanities need to find an argument that the economists, policy-makers, and even donors and philanthropists will understand and accept. This is not to depreciate the power of the humanities to transform the individual (though I think said transformation is what is most feared), rather it is a call to do some strategizing about our survival as a discipline. ( )
  voncookie | Jun 30, 2016 |
This book reeks of the 20th century, and nothing can undo the fact that since it was published in 2003 (c), the world, politics, and consequently educational practice has changed... Or should. What strikes me as I read through Showalter's opening chapters in which she discusses the question "why teach literature" is that that precise question is what politicians and governmental agencies are asking now, with a much more derisive tone and a brutal axe behind their backs aimed at cutting budgets. Cliches such as "teaching the human", "teaching students to think critically", and "questioning the role of language in culture, etc" seem impossibly trite in the face of dwindling budgets for the humanities, and are easily manipulated into the accusations of the Right about the specter of an "intellectual elite" (heaven forbid we should *think*, that's so un-American).

Showalter's argument about teaching literature was compelling before the economic collapse. Now it sounds hopelessly idealistic, something our society no longer prizes. As a professor of literature this book did the opposite of inspiring me. Rather it made me think harder about the very real issue of the survival of the humanities in higher education. A case for the teaching of literature and the humanities desperately needs to be written, a manifesto of sorts: in the form of a twitter feed or a Facebook feed, something that actually has an audience.

The "digital humanities" are doing much to address this issue, but change isn't emerging fast enough to stem the tide of anti-intellectualism. The humanities need to find an argument that the economists, policy-makers, and even donors and philanthropists will understand and accept. This is not to depreciate the power of the humanities to transform the individual (though I think said transformation is what is most feared), rather it is a call to do some strategizing about our survival as a discipline. ( )
  anna_hiller | Jun 22, 2016 |
Publishers Weekly: Showalter's distillation of her half-century of teaching (along with the experience of scores of other teachers) in this jargon-free blend of manual and memoir will appeal to readers with a general interest in education as well as to professionals. Provocative, evocative, spirited in tone and lucid in structure, the volume offers everything readers might want to know about teaching undergraduates. Showalter, an English professor at Princeton University, opens with practical matters (e.g., the anxieties that can plague teachers, lack of training, isolation, performance, evaluation) and then moves to the theoretical, exploring subject-centered, teacher-centered and student-centered teaching theories. Throughout, she addresses nitty-gritty matters, from preparing syllabi and lectures and leading discussions to grading and "housekeeping." On teaching literature classes (including poetry, drama, fiction and theory), Showalter offers a cornucopia of approaches, peppered with brief reflections from teachers about actual practice. She addresses the teaching of teachers, the issues raised in "dangerous subjects" (freshly, not the usual race and gender, but suicide and explicit sexual language) and "teaching literature in dark times." Differences and disagreements flourish, and the chorus of voices Showalter shares with readers, along with her own expertise and knowledge, makes this book particularly appealing as well as useful. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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3 abstimmen | mmckay | May 17, 2006 |
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Teaching Literature is an inspirational guidebook for allteachers of English and American literature in higher education. Written by leading academic, prolific author and culturaljournalist, Elaine Showalter Original and provocative reflections on teaching literature inhigher education Encourages teachers to make their classroom practiceintellectually exciting Wide-ranging - covers the practical, theoretical, andmethodological aspects of teaching literature Highly practical - employs real examples from real classes andcareers throughout Draws on 40 years of international teaching experience

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