Faculty
of Arts, Chulalongkorn University
Reading
Responses
Think of the responses as an attempt to explain, discuss or comment on a question that you pose about the
reading or on an issue that interests you in the text. I don't expect more than
one page double-spaced but these should be well thought out and carefully
proofread. Use MLA format. (See below for links to MLA citation guides.)
Sample
Student Reading Responses
Sample Student
Response to Seamus Heaney's poem "Digging"
(In-class writing,
15 minutes; responding to a
study question)
Study Question: Billy
Collins, in his essay "The Ride of Poetry," suggests that "the
poem can act as an imaginative vehicle, a form of transportation to a place
unknown." Among the four poems we have read today (Heaney,
"Digging"; Millay, "I, being born a woman and distressed";
Herrick, "Delight in Disorder"; and Johnson, "Granny in de Market
Place"), which one especially "spirits [you] away to a new conceptual
zone"? Write about the ride that the poem has given you, keeping in mind
Collins's description that "to view a poem as a trip means taking into
account the methods that give a poem vehicular capability. It means looking into
the way a poet manages to become the poem's first driver and thus the first to
know its secret destination."
Response
1:
Ployjai
Pintobtang
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
October
28, 2010
Reading
Response 1
My
Ride with Seamus Heaney in "Digging"
"Digging,"
a poem by Seamus Heaney sets me on a journey where past, present
and future meet. Beginning with the present, the son, Seamus
Heaney, is holding a pen in his hand, "snug as a gun"
while his father's boot "nestled on the lug." They're
using their different weapons, yet, with the same purpose: to
dig. The poem carries me through the past where his father and
his grandfather perform their duty as farmers then shows me how
that influences Seamus Heaney as a present writer. His
experience as a son and a grandson of farmers "awaken in my
(writer's) head." And though he has "no spade to follow men
like them (farmers)," he uses his different kind of weapon, his
pen, to dig for something good as well as his father and his
grandfather did. So in the end, the poem takes me to the
different future than those of his old men yet has its root from
them.
|
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Sample Student
Response to Sherman Alexie's short story "A Good Story"
(Responding to a
study question)
Study Question:
The
Aristotelian tradition that Le Guin adds to in her essay “What Makes a
Story” divides the structure of a narrative, like that of a play, into
something like Freytag’s pyramid: a beginning exposition where the
characters, setting and conflict are introduced, a middle which consists of
rising action, climax and falling action, and an end or denouement which
resolves conflict and wraps up the story.
What do you think of Sherman Alexie’s “A Good Story” which
seems to suggest that the beginning of a story is, rather, its very basic
inception: a story begins when someone wants to hear a story?
The body of the story is the tale being told.
And the ending of the story is the result of the telling—how it has
affected the listener and teller.
Response
1:
Chutamas
Chandchai
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Sorn Nangsue
June
21, 2010
Reading
Response 1
A
Symbiotic Story
For
many, stories begin with “Once upon a time,” establishing
setting and mood for the characters and plot that follow.
In Sherman Alexie’s “A Good Story,” the story
begins with the narrator’s mother telling him, “You should
write a story about something good, a real good story” (140).
It is the reader, not the writer who starts the story.
But Alexie provokes us further.
Junior responds to his mother’s request by putting
forward his own: “Okay…If you want to hear a good story, you
have to listen.” The
successful making, or “quilting,” of a story depends on the
reader’s participation.
Alexie
claims that he is not trying to “pull that Indian shaman crap
on” the reader with exotic Indian Americanness in telling a
story (xii). This
is, after all, a modern Diet Pepsi drinking, potato chip
munching, sandwich eating, HUD house dwelling tribe of Indians,
not the Disney Pocahontas running through the forest singing
“Colors of the Wind” type.
Yet, this very image of basketball playing half-braided
brown youths looks very exotic against the stereotype.
Junior’s earlier demand comes back to chide us: “If
you want to hear a good story, you have to listen”—a good
story is a good story with the proper cooperation of parties
involved. The
proper names of things are proper because we make it proper.
“Uncle Moses sat in his sandwich chair eating a
sandwich” (141). It is proper that one should eat a sandwich in a sandwich
chair. His
“it-is-a-good-day song” is what it is because he hums it and
makes it so.
The web of a story is spun
out for us in this interdependent way.
Arnold’s straight words to Moses in response to why he
hid from going on a field trip, “Because I wanted to see
you,” is an “unplanned kindness” and, for Moses, “a good
thing” (143). When
Arnold asks for a “good story,” his story—his actions
which lead him to Moses sitting in front of the house, and his
kindness—therefore, is what is told.
This “good story” is a proper name for it, fulfilling
as it does the request of the willing and attentive listener,
Junior’s mother, who responds, also properly, with an
approving “it-is-a-good-day song,” which in turn finishes
the story quilted of diverse pieces of material fitting together
in a symbiotic relationship. |
|
Response
1 (with instructor's comments):
Chutamas
Chandchai
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Sorn Nangsue
June
21, 2010
Reading
Response 1
A
Symbiotic Story
For
many, stories begin with “Once upon a time,” establishing
setting and mood for the characters and plot that follow.
In Sherman Alexie’s “A Good Story,” the story
begins with the narrator’s mother telling him, “You should
write a story about something good, a real good story” (140).
It is the reader, not the writer who starts the story.
But Alexie provokes us further.
Junior responds to his mother’s request by putting
forward his own: “Okay…If you want to hear a good story, you
have to listen.” The
successful making, or “quilting,” of a story depends on the
reader’s participation.
Alexie
claims that he is not trying to “pull that Indian shaman crap
on” the reader with exotic Indian Americanness in telling a
story (xii). This
is, after all, a modern Diet Pepsi drinking, potato chip
munching, sandwich eating, HUD house dwelling tribe of Indians,
not the Disney Pocahontas running through the forest singing
“Colors of the Wind” type.
Yet, this very image of basketball playing half-braided
brown youths looks very exotic against the stereotype.
Junior’s earlier demand comes back to chide us: “If
you want to hear a good story, you have to listen”—a good
story is a good story with the proper cooperation of parties
involved. The
proper names of things are proper because we make it proper.
“Uncle Moses sat in his sandwich chair eating a
sandwich” (141). It is proper that one should eat a sandwich in a sandwich
chair. His
“it-is-a-good-day song” is what it is because he hums it and
makes it so.
The web of a story is spun
out for us in this interdependent way.
Arnold’s straight words to Moses in response to why he
hid from going on a field trip, “Because I wanted to see
you,” is an “unplanned kindness” and, for Moses, “a good
thing” (143). When
Arnold asks for a “good story,” his story—his actions
which lead him to Moses sitting in front of the house, and his
kindness—therefore, is what is told.
This “good story” is a proper name for it, fulfilling
as it does the request of the willing and attentive listener,
Junior’s mother, who responds, also properly, with an
approving “it-is-a-good-day song,” which in turn finishes
the story quilted of diverse pieces of material fitting together
in a symbiotic relationship.
Chutamas—
The
title of your response, “A Symbiotic Story,” is good, but I
think you should also have a one-sentence introduction stating
the main idea of your response before proceeding to the
discussion.
The
first paragraph is clearly and logically developed. I like the
way you picked up on Alexie’s use of the communal activity of
“quilting” as a metaphor for the cooperative way in which
stories are made.
In
paragraph 2, a topic sentence outlining the main idea of the
paragraph would be helpful to the reader. Otherwise, the
paragraph starts well and your marshalling of details from the
story to describe the modern Indian tribe is well executed.
However, clarity becomes an issue when you introduce the word
“proper.” It is used three times in one sentence alone and
its meaning becomes unfixed. You need to establish early on your
understanding and employment of the term “proper.”
Paragraph
3 begins with a good topic sentence. However, the slippage in
meaning in your use of “proper” continues to affect clarity.
The conclusion is nice and you return to the term
“symbiotic,” but apart from the title this is your only use
of that word. It should be explicated early on in the response
if it is central to your discussion.
Overall,
an insightful response but for the full effect you need to
clearly explicate key terms used in your discussion so that
clarity doesn’t become a problem in conveying your thoughts to
the reader. Furthermore, in fully responding to the question in
the ‘Weekly’ you should refer to the Aristotelian tradition
as background in discussing Alexie’s innovations in the short
story form. Also, have you directly addressed the final part of
the question, i.e. “how [the story] has affected the listener
and teller”?
A final point is that in paragraph 2, you tantalizingly
raise the issue of conscious exoticism and how Native American
products are viewed by non-Indians, but leave it hanging. It’d
be great if you could elaborate further on this point. |
|
Sample Student
Response to Rudolfo Anaya's novel Bless Me, Ultima
(Responding to a
study question)
Study Question:
What is Ultima to the narrator?
Response
1:
Tida
Damrongvej
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
10, 1998
Reading
Response #1 (Bless Me, Ultima)
What
was Ultima to the narrator? I pieced together an answer to
this question while following the narrator's division of the
world. He basically divides his world into one that is
established by the community and one that is its alternative.
From
the very first chapter of the novel, he introduces two possible
starting points to his tale: "Let me begin at the
beginning. I do not mean the beginning that was in my
dreams and the stories they whispered to me about my birth, and
the people of my father and mother, and my three brothers—but
the beginning that came with Ultima" (1). Antonio,
the narrator, makes a distinction between a historical origin
and a personal birth. He has a history whose origin is
defined through local conventions of ancestry, and he has a
history whose beginning exists outside of that definition. Using
Ultima to mark a beginning outside of tradition, Antonio
declares her as the embodiment of an alternative world.
Ultima's character, in many ways, is fitting for the role.
She comes to live with Antonio's family and is respected without
having to be a part of the family. She and the narrator's
father are the only people in the household not observing the
fast before holy communion. Ultima's powers of cure works
where those of God supposedly fails. Existing side by side
with, but not attached to the dominant religion and culture, the
figure of Ultima offers an option of seeing and living in the
world without the binds and obligations of a mainstream
mentality and custom, although this is a mainstream within a
minority culture in the larger culture of America. |
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Sample Student
Responses to Carol Ann Duffy's poem "Anne Hathaway"
(Responding to a study
question)
Study Question:
Texts speak to and are often shaped by other texts. Each of these works
presents characters that are informed by extratextual sources. Examine how
the character of something or someone is shaped in one of the literary
selections.
Response
1:
Kanokwan
Surapornchai
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
10, 2009
Reading
Response #1
A
Second Best Sonnet
Shakespeare’s
role-playing begins in bed according to Carol Ann Duffy’s
“Anne Hathaway.” The
willed item is an ever-changing stage for loveplay where the
stellar poet engages in earthly delights.
Encasing this “living laughing” Shakespeare is his
widow’s recollective sonnet “held” together by approximate
rhymes. World and
words half rhyme and seas and kisses is
light rhyme that is also a near rhyme which Duffy seems to dub
“soft.” The
feminine unstressed syllable of kisses transforms
Shakespeare’s words as they reach their goal (“these
lips”) into realized action.
After
this relaxed initial quatrain, the rhymes dissolve even further
as the repeated o’s of body, now, softer,
now, echo, assonance bring
enjambment, continuous over seven lines, to the eye-sonance touch-noun
end-rhymes and finally an end-stop, producing word-making and
love-making as one act. More
dissimilar eye-sonances substituting for end rhymes (romance-taste,
on-love) in the release of built emotions through
the next dreamy five lines make the sonnet seem to lose its
structure altogether. The
finish, however, is a resonant couplet containing an identical
rhyme that insists, in hearkening back, on that identical bed in
line 8 with a perfect twist.
This is a turn and final statement in Hathaway’s lesser
voice pronounced with the lingering identical chime of the exact
head-bed—the best coupling among second best
rhymes in a second best sonnet about the second best bed. |
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Sample Student
Responses to Sylvia Plath's The Bed Book
(Responding to a study
question)
Study Question:
Think about what reading is when you read a poem in this unit. In a
paragraph or two, show how that poem has urged you to read in a certain way.
Response
1:
Anchalee
Kamnoedkaeo
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
3, 2009
Reading Response #1
Beds
that Fly
In
the movie Basic Instinct (1992), the character Catherine
Tramell, played by Sharon Stone, notoriously invokes
Coleridge’s idea of “suspension of disbelief” as an alibi.
“You make it up,” she says, “but it has to be
believable.” Tramell
is being interrogated as a murder suspect and her defense is a
literary pact between writer and reader.
“I’d have to be pretty stupid to write a book about a
killing and then kill him the way I described in my book.
I’d be announcing myself as the killer.
I’m not stupid.”
In effect, she can’t be the murderer because she wrote
about the murder. That
the story is convincing shows her skill as a fiction writer, not
as perpetrator. Putting
your disbelief on hold is why you can enjoy Harry Potter.
You are willing to ignore your disbelief for the moment
of reading that paintings can talk, that sprinkling powder over
your head can get you from one place to another across town in a
flash. Put another
way, if you want to enjoy reading, you should be willing to
believe. This is
the demand of Sylvia Plath’s The Bed Book which offers
us such fantastic notions as Snack Beds with automatic
dispensers “Just a finger to stick in / The slot, and out come
/ Cakes and cold chicken” (39–41).
We are not stupid.
Plath’s
poem asks us to “see if the Big Dipper’s / Full of stew”
(173–74) and dares us to revel in springing “From a
Bounceable Bed” even though “You bounce into the blue—”
(l. 163–64). I
did not feel lost in that open blue.
In letting go of my preconceptions and inhibitions, I was
too busy entertaining new combinations of things, actions and
ideas, and the outcome is better than cakes.
For me, having traveled with Plath from Timbuktoo to Aunt
Joan’s and enjoyed every minute of it, reading is believing.
Works
Cited
Eszterhas, Joe. Basic
Instinct. 1992.
Screenplay. Daily
Script 3 June 2009 <http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/basic_instinct.html>. |
|
Response
1 (with instructor's comments):
Anchalee
Kamnoedkaeo
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
3, 2009
Reading Response #1
Beds
that Fly
In
the movie Basic Instinct (1992), the character Catherine
Tramell, played by Sharon Stone, notoriously invokes
Coleridge’s idea of “suspension of disbelief” as an alibi.
“You make it up,” she says, “but it has to be
believable.” Tramell
is being interrogated as a murder suspect and her defense is a
literary pact between writer and reader.
“I’d have to be pretty stupid to write a book about a
killing and then kill him the way I described in my book.
I’d be announcing myself as the killer.
I’m not stupid.”
In effect, she can’t be the murderer because she wrote
about the murder. That
the story is convincing shows her skill as a fiction writer, not
as perpetrator. Putting
your disbelief on hold is why you can enjoy Harry Potter.
You are willing to ignore your disbelief for the moment
of reading that paintings can talk, that sprinkling powder over
your head can get you from one place to another across town in a
flash. Put another
way, if you want to enjoy reading, you should be willing to
believe. This is
the demand of Sylvia Plath’s The Bed Book which offers
us such fantastic notions as Snack Beds with automatic
dispensers “Just a finger to stick in / The slot, and out come
/ Cakes and cold chicken” (39–41).
We are not stupid.
Plath’s
poem asks us to “see if the Big Dipper’s / Full of stew”
(173–74) and dares us to revel in springing “From a
Bounceable Bed” even though “You bounce into the blue—”
(l. 163–64). I
did not feel lost in that open blue.
In letting go of my preconceptions and inhibitions, I was
too busy entertaining new combinations of things, actions and
ideas, and the outcome is better than cakes.
For me, having traveled with Plath from Timbuktoo to Aunt
Joan’s and enjoyed every minute of it, reading is believing.
Works
Cited
Eszterhas, Joe. Basic
Instinct. 1992.
Screenplay. Daily
Script 3 June 2009 <http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/basic_instinct.html>.
Anchalee—
This
is an excellent first response. I like that you’re bringing in
different kinds of texts (Coleridge’s prose, film script,
films) to your analysis of Plath’s poem to show how they are
relevant to literary study, but be careful that they do not hog
your attention and detract from your focus on The Bed Book.
Changing your word choice of “notions” in “such fantastic
notions as Snack Beds” to a more thingy noun would work better
with the logical order of the thinking process that you
innumerate—a movement from concrete to abstract: things à
actions à
ideas. Overall, lively prose and a keen examination of your act
of reading. Good
job!
PT |
|
Response
1 (revised)
Anchalee
Kamnoedkaeo
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
3, 2009
Reading Response #1 (revised)
Beds
that Fly
Suspension
of disbelief is what makes fiction come alive.
This pact between writer and reader coined by Coleridge
is notoriously invoked as an alibi by the character Catherine
Tramell played by Sharon Stone in the movie Basic Instinct
(1992) when being questioned for murder: “You make it up, but
it has to be believable.”
Fiction can be made to seem real but it is not reality,
Tramell reminds her interrogators, “I’d have to be pretty
stupid to write a book about a killing and then kill him the way
I described in my book…I’m not stupid.”
The writer agrees to verisimilitude, the reader agrees to
put their disbelief on hold, and the fictional world is enabled
for our enjoyment: thriller dramas where writers can kill
without being killers, fantasy series like Harry Potter
where sprinkling floo powder can get you across town via
fireplaces, and, in this case, Sylvia Plath’s The Bed Book
where Snack Beds come with automatic dispensers “Just a finger
to stick in / The slot, and out come / Cakes and cold chicken”
(39–41). We are
not stupid, and our enjoyment does not come at the price of
intelligence.
The opposite is true.
Plath’s poem shows us “An Elephant Bed” that can
give “A trunk-spray shower” (129, 139), asks us to “see if
the Big Dipper’s / Full of stew” (173–74), and dares us to
revel in springing “From a Bounceable Bed” even though
“You bounce into the blue—” (163–64).
I did not feel lost.
In that wide open blue, I let go of my white little
preconceptions of beds and of my jam rambling inhibitions and
was fantastically busy eating up new combinations of things,
actions and ideas, and the outcome is better than cakes.
For me, having willingly suspended my disbelief in
traveling with Plath from Timbuktoo to Aunt Joan’s and enjoyed
every minute of it, reading is believing.
Works
Cited
Eszterhas, Joe. Basic
Instinct. 1992.
Screenplay. Daily
Script 3 June 2009 <http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/basic_instinct.html>. |
|
Sample Student
Responses to William Carlos Williams' poem "This Is Just to Say"
(Responding to a study
question)
Study Question:
Think about what reading is when you read a poem in this unit. In a
paragraph or two, show how that poem has urged you to read in a certain way.
Response
1:
Danai
Hengtrakul
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
3, 2009
Reading Response #1
Breakfast vs. Delicious Plums
Two
people depend on “the plums / that were in / the icebox” in
Williams’ “This Is Just to Say.”
For the unseen “you,” the reader of this message,
they are breakfast. For
the speaker, they are more than that. The understated title, for all its trivial anticipation,
actually announces a complex string of serious comparisons. Reading the poem as a contrastive display of wants and values
releases the true juiciness of Williams’ provocative act.
It is not only that he has eaten the plums (past tense,
sin committed), and the “you” was waiting till later (future
intention, object not consumed), but also conning us into
sympathizing with that defiant and remorseless stance,
forgetting that the other party has been deprived of a meal, and
one so important as that which will break a night-long fast.
We are asked to weigh the value of two worthies.
On the one hand there is breakfast, on the other,
plums—the same thing but meaningfully different.
One is tasteless, the other “delicious / so sweet / and
so cold.” One is
probable, the other certain; deferred vs. immediate
gratification. Present vs. future. Planned (“saving / for”) vs. unplanned. Singular vs. plural. Categorical
vs. specific. Of
the two that hang in the balance, Williams seems to claim that
your preserving of staid, conventional bodily sustenance is not
worth my now joltingly flavorful sensual nourishment.
In this poem so short and sweet, reading is simply
comparing: your thing vs. my aesthetic. |
|
Sample
Student Reading Responses to Roald Dahl’s “The
Landlady”
Response
1:
Nilobol
Wongsam
2202232
Introduction to the Study of English Fiction
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
November
6, 2008
Reading
Response
Guilty
Pleasures
Billy
Weaver, in Roald Dahl’s “The Landlady,” gives a clear
criterion for his preferred place to stay when he asks the
porter “is there a fairly cheap hotel not too far away from
here?” (142). Having
also taken the “slow afternoon train”—presumably cheap as
well—which deposits him at a late hour (“about nine
o’clock in the evening”) in Bath, Billy reveals himself to
be an aspiring businessman who is concerned not with the
business of how much he could make but with how little he would
spend.
Yet,
as he follows the porter’s ready reply to try the pub Bell and
Dragon, he encounters a bed and breakfast.
Here, Billy observes the “brilliantly illuminated”
temptation: “tall and beautiful” pussy-willows which
“looked wonderful” beside green velvety curtains, “a
bright fire burning in the hearth,” “a pretty little
dachshund” curled up asleep in a room “filled with pleasant
furniture,” containing “a baby-grand piano and a big sofa
and several plump armchairs” (143).
Billy’s vacillation in front of this lavish visual so
averse to his sense of thrift recalls an earlier contrast
between seeing and feeling: “the moon was coming up out of a
clear starry sky over the houses opposite the station entrance.
But the air was deadly cold and the wind was like a flat
blade of ice on his cheeks” (142).
The setting for this story establishes a discomfiting
tension between the pleasantness of what is seen and the
unpleasantness of what is felt.
The
word “dithering” (143), used to describe Billy in front of
the house window, contains both the physical and mental push and
pull between his pleasure at the sight and displeasure of the
idea: “he was a tiny bit frightened of them
[boarding-houses].” It
is also a continuing reminder of the “deadly cold” in the
expositional discrepancy. By
the time Billy sees the landlady’s “warm welcoming smile”
(144), its contradiction to his earlier feeling toward
“rapacious landladies” makes the conflict between seeing and
feeling almost a motif in the story.
Accepting
to stay at the “fantastically cheap” bed and breakfast
(144), then becomes an act of guilty pleasure for Billy not
because of indulgent spending but because of indulgent skimping.
His disapproving instincts lose to apparent low cost:
“The old girl is slightly dotty…but at five and sixpence a
night, who gives a damn about that?” (145).
The landlady’s guilty pleasures bring these words back
to haunt Billy. Her
pleasure in having beautiful boys smacks of illicitness: “They
were tall and young and handsome, my dear, just exactly like
you” (148) and “we don’t want to go breaking any laws at this
stage of the proceedings” (146).
This vocabulary shift to “proceedings,” evocative of
the court, hints at a shift in the story where the business at
hand is no longer economic but (il)legal.
One suspects that an overnight stay at a local bed and
breakfast is turning into a longer mysterious series of events. Our act of continuing to read is Dahl pulling us inexorably
into the mire of a murder that we would rather not be a part of,
much like Billy Weaver being drawn into the house despite his
trying to hold back (144).
“When
I’m writing for adults, I’m just trying to entertain
them,” says Dahl (West 65).
To continue reading is to continue seeing Billy’s
downfall. Ignoring
his feelings and believing only his eyes probably costs Billy
his life. Even
though the anticipated climactic murder never takes place
explicitly in the text, are we ignoring our feelings of guilt as
we are “entertained” by the pleasure not of killing, an
illicit act, but of reading about it?
Works
Cited
Dahl,
Roald. Tales of
the Unexpected. London:
Joseph, 1979.
West,
Mark I. “Interview
with Roald Dahl.” Children’s
Literature for Education 21.2 (1990): 61–66. |
|
Sample
Student Reading Responses to Saki’s short story “The Open Window”
(Responding to a study
question)
Study Question:
Consider movement in the story.
Response 1:
Tida
Navakul
2202232
Introduction to the Study of English Fiction
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
16, 2008
Reading
Response
From Lady
to Child: The Moving Identity of Vera
Vera is first introduced in Saki’s “The Open
Window” as “a self-possessed young lady of fifteen” (4).
This identity quickly slides into the next, less
mature-sounding, one even as she acts in the very adult role of
playing host to the nervous Mr. Framton Nuttel who is visiting
for the first time with a letter of introduction from his
sister. By the second sentence, the young lady in control
of the conversation is referred to as the niece, identified
merely as a temporary replacement for her aunt through their
kinship. We soon see behind the young lady niece who
receives her uneasy house guest with such poise. The story
turns out not to be a simple parlor scene when yet another
identity is revealed: “‘Her [aunt’s] great tragedy
happened just three years ago,’ said the child” (5).
This dramatic shift from lady to child makes one wonder.
What has transpired seems to be an exposition to a different
development. “‘Then you know practically nothing about
my aunt?’ pursued the self-possessed young lady” becomes not
the voice of a grown up niece making polite drawing room
conversation but that of a child gauging her audience in setting
up a game. While the men are out snipe-shooting for their
entertainment, the child at home is doing some hunting of her
own. Vera, stalking her prey, we realize when the aunt
arrives and asks whether she is “amusing you [Mr. Nuttel],”
is ironically amusing herself (6). The shifting label for
Vera from lady to niece to child suggests that perhaps what she
would rather be is none of these. Perhaps what she most
prefers has nothing to do with age, but activity. Tracked
through Vera’s moving identity, this short story is a conflict
of desire, of a child trapped in the role of a young lady.
She wants excitement and adventure, and, thwarted, seeks them
where she can, making do with “romance at short notice” as
her “specialty” (7). In the end, she is not even Vera.
Operating as she does in fiction rather than in truth, she is
perhaps more suited to “authoress.” |
|
Sample
Student Reading Responses to Saki’s short story “The Open Window”
(Responding to a study
question)
Study Question:
What does the open window mean?
Response 2:
Pete
Jaidee
2202232
Introduction to the Study of English Fiction
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
June
16, 2008
Reading
Response
The Open
Window
“That
window wide open on an October afternoon” in Saki’s short
story named after it is such an invitation for imagination (5).
Space for this view seems even greater when we discover that it
is actually a door: “a large French window that opened on to a
lawn.” The story that follows, wild though it may be,
however, is marked by precision. It was “three years ago
to a day” is very precise. How freely can imagination
run when it is curbed by such control? The men did not
merely go shooting, but specifically “snipe-shooting.”
The window is not open to infinite possibilities.
There
was only one opportunity for this precise machination to work.
That is a limit in terms of time.
There was only one event that needs to happen.
That is a limit in terms of activity.
There was only one place where the event can happen.
That is a limit in terms of space.
There was no room for choice.
There was no room for chance.
Everything is definite.
“The open window” was open to one assured happening.
The time was “twilight” but there could be no two ways about
it (7). The event
happens exactly the way it is known and said to happen:
three
figures were walking across the lawn towards the window; they
all carried guns under their arms, and one of them was
additionally burdened with a white coat hung over his shoulders.
A tired brown spaniel kept close at their heels.
Noiselessly they neared the house, and then a hoarse
young voice chanted out of the dusk: “I said, Bertie, why do
you bound?” (7)
Each detail was fixed and in place, down to dusk, white
coat, spaniel, and song. Open windows can mean a limitless
multitude of things, but despite the temptingly wide open image
of its title, for Saki’s “The Open Window” to be the
masterpiece that it is, the open window must be closed to all
but a singular experience. There is nothing to imagine
because all is known. You are not allowed boundless wonder
because everything is told. What does it mean, then, that
the open window is in fact very closed? It means that, in
this perverse condition of strict limitation that showcases the
meticulousness of plot where every element must fit unerringly
together, this open window, so locked against possibilities and
so restricting to imagination, is perfect. |
|
Responses to W. Somerset Maugham’s
short story “The
Colonel’s Lady”
Response
1:
Tida
Navakul
2202232
Introduction to the Study of English Fiction
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
August
2, 2007
Reading
Response
The
Modern Eve
We
have discussed the significance of names in class looking at the name Peregrine.
Its association with falconry hearkens back to an old culture of chivalry
and legacy, one that corresponds nicely to “the walls” where “George
Peregrine’s ancestors, painted by the fashionable painters of the day, looked
down upon them,” the current couple upholding the Peregrine heritage (53).
Being a bird of prey, the peregrine falcon also matches George’s love
for the hunt with several “trophies of the chase” to show off his skill
(54).
I
have extended the examination of names to that of Evie, which comes from Eva,
and shares the same root as Eve, the biblical first woman, the helpmeet and
companion of man, and mankind’s first mother.
The name Eve is derived from Latin Ēva from Hebrew Havva
which means “a living being” or “Life.”
In the biblical story, Adam gives names to all the animals and also to
his wife. Each name designates a different animal and defines what the
animal is. In the same way, Eve
means, and is, life, and part of her identity is “mother of all living.”
In
Maugham’s “The Colonel’s Lady,” Evie as George’s wife, contrary to the
legacy of her namesake, is said to be “barren” (55).
Unlike Adam’s Eve, she cannot be a mother.
She cannot continue the Peregrine family line.
George thinks “she hadn’t any vitality,” is “faded” and “thin
as a rail” (55) and goes to another “blonde and luscious” woman (56), one
who seems more fertile and full of life than Evie.
George,
however, is wrong. Evie’s book, Dashwood says, “throbs” with passion “in
every line” (60). Contrary to
George’s perception, Evie shows that she is full of vitality (from the Latin vitalis
“of life” from vita “life”).
She gives birth to a new tradition and generation of man. Her legacy is a society where women can be creative, not in
the physical terms of making babies, but in the intellectual and emotional terms
of producing a work of art. This is
the creation and contribution of the new Eve—“fresh and original, very
modern without being obscure” that from conception has taken on a life of its
own and grown beyond the imagining and control of its parent, just like a child
(59).
|
|
Sample
Student Reading Responses to Billy Collins’s poem “My Number”
Response 1:
Renu
Panya
2202242
Introduction to the Study of English Poetry
Acharn
Puckpan Tipayamontri
July
3, 2008
Reading
Response
The Life of Death: Personification in Billy
Collins’s “My Number”
Billy
Collins’s poem “My Number” presents death in action.
Death’s description is suggestive of personification,
where an inanimate thing, an animal, or an abstract idea “is
made human or is given human qualities” (Coursebook
28). He breathes
(l. 3). He reaches
for (l. 2), tampers with (l. 6), scatters (l. 7), and loosens
(l. 8) things. But
how human are these “human qualities”?
How human-like is it to kill a woman who has already lost
her husband, or to snatch away a person who wants to find his
way home, or to give disease for which there is no cure? The token gesture to humanize death is doubly undermined by
the hypotheticality of the questions in which the
personification is couched and by the inhumanity of Death’s
supposedly human actions.
What
human can have a reach that is limitless in space (can be
everywhere from Cincinnati to British Columbia to roller
coasters and dark lanes) and time (is never too busy)?
What person can find every life no matter how hidden?
What person has breath that ends life rather than begins
it?
It seems the speaker’s questions try to humanize
death so he can deal with him as a person who can be persuaded,
who will “find it hard to find” his house (l. 10, 1), and
who has ears and can hear him talk.
The speaker is not brave in talking to death, but afraid.
If personification humanizes death and gives it life,
perhaps taking away personification can end its life?
The personifying imagery makes death more clearly
person-like (having a car, “stepping from a…car” l.11),
bringing him closer and closer in space and the tense shift from
“Is something so?” (first three stanzas) to “I will” (l.
17) to “I start talking” bring death closer and closer in
time. The
hypothetical becomes a definite future, and finally an ongoing
present. At the
end, the actions cease, personification of death stops.
Death is no longer a person who can make arrangements (l.
5) or park a car (l. 12). The
pronoun for death is no longer a “he” but a “this” (l.
17), a definite vagueness that is here.
The sense of doom throughout the poem forebodes the
failure to make death human, and this last word speaks of the
more important failure: after personification, death’s life
continues. |
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