- Jan 3, 2006
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Why is it that almost EVERY professor finds phallic imagery in every piece we are assigned? What's with the dick obsession? :hmm:
My roommate says that lit professors find way more interpretations in a single sentence than the author intended in the entire book.
Interesting. I'm taking ENG 125 this summer. We'll see how it goes.
Should I start searching for cucumbers now?
Interesting. I'm taking ENG 125 this summer. We'll see how it goes.
Should I start searching for cucumbers now?
Of course they do, they wouldn't have a job (as was mentioned above) otherwise.
It wouldn't matter if an author implicitly stated that his/her entire book was to be taken 100% literally some English-lit professor would carve it up and arbitrarily decide it means something else, something hidden that only through his/her advanced knowledge could it be discovered. Just another form of quackery (for the most part).
Take a Literature class assigned to the Womens Studies department in your University. Oh what fun that will be.
Especially if your Prof is a lesbian.
I was one of two dudes in that class and our class got into some very interesting conversations as most everything we read was overtly sexual.
Along with religion, womens studies is one of the last sanctuaries of stupidity in the world today. Everyone knows this.
I must know your opinion on African American studies.
you people must hate reading/writing? get fondled by a professor in college, maybe?
you people must hate reading/writing? get fondled by a professor in college, maybe?
What do you mean, you people? :awe:
I am a writer, so yes, I hate it. People who love writing don't do it that often.
I love reading for pleasure,but I severely dislike reading to analyze/critique/find symbolism. Literature classes are nothing but a waste of time, IMO, and they certainly don't promote anyone to read any more.
I also dislike writing in general, but that is its own story.
I love reading for pleasure,but I severely dislike reading to analyze/critique/find symbolism. Literature classes are nothing but a waste of time, IMO, and they certainly don't promote anyone to read any more.
I also dislike writing in general, but that is its own story.
I think critical analysis is a wonderful thing. it helps you to judge the quality of your sources, and what you read.
Sure, no one's going to sit you down and make you analyze John Grisham or Stephen King's latest crapfest, as it's generally shallow to begin with.
There are authors that absolutely must be approached from a critical view. You can't really tackle Ulysses expecting a mindless, wasteful romp. There is a very intentional structure and subtext, many levels of which. Joyce even authorized one of his buddies to lay out the road map.
Some work invites analysis, some doesn't. The skills one learns in doing such analysis can be applied elsewhere, though.