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Friday, June 12, 2009

Friday, June 12, 2009 12:04 am by M. in , , ,    No comments
Today an audio course in literature (containing a couple of lectures on Wuthering Heights) and a poem:
Classic Novels: Meeting the Challenge of Great Literature
Course No. 2310 (36 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture)
The Teaching Company
Taught by Arnold Weinstein
Brown University
Ph.D., Harvard University

8. Brontë—Wuthering Heights
9. Brontë—Wuthering Heights, Part 2

If you could travel anywhere in the world, where would you go? Europe? South America? The remote reaches of the African continent?
What if you could travel in time as well? Imagine yourself transported to the sparkling court society of 18th-century France, or sailing aboard a 19th-century whaling ship. What secrets would you learn about the human condition and the lives lived in distant lands and eras?
And what about the most remarkable journey of all: the voyage inside the mind of another human being, in which you plumb the thoughts and emotions that usually remain hidden deep within? What does this journey tell us about the puzzling, sometimes shocking thing we call human nature? More importantly, what does it tell us about ourselves?

These adventures await you in Classic Novels: Meeting the Challenge of Great Literature, taught by veteran Teaching Company Professor Arnold Weinstein. As Professor Weinstein says, "Life flows onto the pages of the books we read." More than a mere "slice of life," classic novels perform a sort of miracle, jolting us to see the remarkable, often provocative truths that underlie the human condition. To experience these extraordinary novels is to ask deep and sometimes unsettling questions about our lives and our world.
Classic Novels is your invitation to the dazzling, surprising, and deeply moving worlds revealed through these great works. You'll move beyond what is often offered in literary courses: plot synopses, anecdotes, facts about where and when a novel was written. With Professor Weinstein's guidance you'll gain something greater and more profound: an opportunity to experience the startling brilliance that makes each of these works a classic.
The Alexandria Echo Press published recently a review about the course.

And thanks to an article in the Telegraph-Journal reviewing Joanne Weber's poetry book The Pear Orchard, we have discovered that it contained a poem entitled Catherine Earnshaw.
The Pear Orchard
Joanne Weber
* ISBN: 0973972777
* ISBN-13: 9780973972771
* Format: Paperback, 95pp
* Publisher: Hagios Press
* Pub. Date: April 2007

The Pear Orchard portrays the struggle of a woman to embrace her deafness. In this difficult passage the poet weaves a rich tapestry of imagery from history, visual art, lives of the saints and life on a prairie farm. Weber seamlessly draws on themes of suffering, childbirth, sexuality, rebirth, language and relationships with a poetic language that is charged with insight and spirituality. Perceptions are altered, new topographies are understood, and unheard stories are finally told through this unsettling, yet cathartic journey. This is an auspicious debut by a remarkable new voice in Canadian poetry.
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