Literature: May 2008 Archive Page

Great little tool from bookrags. Use a drop-down list to construct your own sonnet, using lines from Shakespeare's corpus. This might be a good tool to ease students into constructing their own sonnets.

Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up

(start a new sonnet)
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To make some special instant special-blest (undo) Sonnet 52, Line 11
Thy unused beauty must be tombed with thee (undo) Sonnet 4, Line 13
To make of monsters, and things indigest (undo) Sonnet 114, Line 5
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see (undo) Sonnet 18, Line 13
I make my love engrafted to this store (undo) Sonnet 37, Line 8
More flowers I noted, yet I none could see (undo) Sonnet 99, Line 13
To show false Art what beauty was of yore (undo) Sonnet 68, Line 14
And arts with thy sweet graces graced be (undo) Sonnet 78, Line 12
O how thy worth with manners may I sing (undo) Sonnet 39, Line 1
With means more blessed than my barren rhyme (undo) Sonnet 16, Line 4
They had not skill enough your worth to sing (undo) Sonnet 106, Line 12
To weigh how once I suffered in your crime (undo) Sonnet 120, Line 8
Beshrew that heart that makes my heart to groan (undo) Sonnet 133, Line 1
Lest the wise world should look into your moan (undo) Sonnet 71, Line 13

Congratulations! You just created a sonnet!

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Boston Globe:
Without a robust study of literature there can be no adequate reckoning of the human condition - no full understanding of art, culture, psychology, or even of biology. As Binghamton University biologist David Sloan Wilson says, "the natural history of our species" is written in love poems, adventure stories, fables, myths, tales, and novels.

The study of literature is worth doing - and worth doing well. No one should be content to watch it fading gently into that good night.

I'm not the first to argue for a closer engagement of literary studies with science. For instance, in his famous 1959 essay on "The Two Cultures," the British physicist and novelist C.P. Snow lamented the scientific ignorance of "literary intellectuals," identifying it as a main reason for the yawning divide between the cultures of literature and science.

But I would go beyond Snow's suggestion that literary scholars should know more about science. Literary scholars should actually do science. --Jonathan Gottschall

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Tomorrow is the last day of classes, but it's not too late to bring up a new topic.  Many of my students in "Intro to Literary Study" were fascinated by Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game, so I thought they might appreciate hearing about Card's dismissal of J.K. Rowling's suit against a fan-created reference work devoted to the world of Harry Potter.
The author of the Ender series has some choice words about the author of the Harry Potter series. Note that he's not actually accusing her of stealing his ideas, he's just pointing out how ridiculous he feels her claims are.

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This page is a archive of entries in the Literature category from May 2008.

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