Title: Identity and History
1Identity and History
- Literary Criticism
- Identity, Trauma and Globalization
- Introduction
- Fall 2004
- Kate Liu
2Outline
- Identity and History
- Q1 -- What is Identity?
- Q2 -- History what
- examples -- Time in a Bottle
- examples -- The Dream Before
- Q3 -- History -- why and how?
- examples
- Two Villages
- Somewhere in Time
- About our Course
3Q 1 Identity
- What is Identity?
- Does it matter to you? If so, how do you define
your identity (or identities)?
4Identity Who am I?
explanation
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Body, Desire, Work, Experience, Memory/Trauma
5Identity Who am I?
- To talk about our identity, we try to answer the
question, "Who am I?" - We have different kinds of collective identity
- national identity, social identity,
cultural/racial identity, class identity,
familial identity, gender identity, sexual
identity, etc. - All these identities are formed beyond our
control (at least partly). (This explains why
some contemporary theories say that we have
multiple identity and that our identity is
split.)
6Identity Who am I? (2)
- Out of all of these inter-related kinds of
collective identity we form our personal (sense
of) identity. "Usually" we do not loudly
pronounce (articulte and/or defend) a certain
kind of identity unless it is strongly related to
our beliefs or unless it is threatened. - However, constructions of our identities and our
personal senses of them, consciously or not, are
written on our bodies and embodied in our actions
in daily life, which, in turn, become
historical traces written on our bodies.
7Q 2 History what
- What is history? What do you think about the
following statements - Shes history.
- The past is passé, gone forever.
- We should put the past behind us and move
forward. - History is progressive. History repeats itself.
- . . . to the elderly all the past is not a
diminishing road but, instead, a huge meadow
which no winter ever quite touches. divided from
them now by the narrow bottleneck of the most
recent decade of years (A Rose for Emily)
8A 2 History what
- Kinds -- Official history and personal histories
(biography, memoir, anecdote, diary, etc.) grand
narrative, small narrative - Negative views of history --
- Shes history.
- The past is passé, gone forever.
- We should put the past behind us and move
forward. - History repeats itself. ?? progressive
- Traditional view linear view history as a
route we take in life.
9A 2 History what (2)
- Personal sense of history
- . . . to the elderly all the past is not a
diminishing road but, instead, a huge meadow
which no winter ever quite touches. divided from
them now by the narrow bottleneck of the most
recent decade of years (A Rose for Emily)
10Example 1 Time in a Bottle
- The song
- Please do a close analysis of the song, both the
lyrics and the music. What does it say and how
does it say it? Are there contradictions and
tensions in this song? - How is it similar to or different from the quote
from A Rose for Emily?
Jim Croce, Died September 20, 1973 Does it
matter who writes the song?
11Example 2 The Dream Before
- The song the last part
- History is a pile of debris And the angel wants
to go back and fix things To repair the things
that have been broken But there is a storm
blowing from Paradise And the storm keeps
blowing the angel backwards into the future And
this storm, this storm is called Progress.
Laurie Anderson
12Example 2 The Dream Before
- How does the song deal with the fairy tale of
Hansel and Gretel? - They live in a life not as heroic and adventurous
as their life in the fairy tale. - Hansel
- 1) attached to the witch (why?)
- 2) Expresses Walter Benjamins view of history.
13Paul Klee's "Angelus Novus"
14Benjamin on Paul Klee's "Angelus Novus"
- An angel looking as though he is about to move
away from something he is fixedly contemplating.
His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his
wings are spread. This is how one pictures the
angel of history. His face is turned toward the
past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he
sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling
wreckage upon wreckage and hurls it in front of
his feet.
15Benjamin on Paul Klee's "Angelus Novus"
- The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead,
and make whole what has been smashed. . . . But a
storm is blowing from Paradise . . .
irresistibly propels him into the future to which
his back is turned, This storm is what we call
progress. Walter Benjamin, Theses on the
Philosophy of History
16Q3 History why and how?
- Why do we write and read histories? To record
events only? What are the functions of history?
- To serve their functions, how are histories
told?
17Example 1 -- ????????
- ??????,???????????????,??????,?????????????????
????,????????????????????????,??????,???????????,?
????????,???????????????,???????,????????,??????,
?????????????????,?????????????????,??????????,???
?????????,????,??????????,???????????????,????????
?????
Source http//contest.ks.edu.tw/7Etaiwan/main.ht
m
18Example 1 Official/National History
- Exact dates, numbers and facts
- Only the names of VIPs His-story
- General avoiding and/or erasing details
- Suggesting progress
19Example 2 My Grandmother Ironed the King's
Shirts
- 1999 Torill Kove
- How is this animation different from an official
story of Norway? Pay attention, again, to its
form and content.
20Example 2 My Grandmother Ironed the King's
Shirts
- Content
- Characterization the grandmother a royalist and
a professional shirt-presser - history She no longer approved.
- Form
- child-like drawing
- digressions ? ice-skating dancer, the ending.
- language unemployed royals.
21For your reference
- ?????????(Oslo)
- 1905, separated from The Bernadottes the union
between Sweden and Norway to be a separate
nation. - On 18 November, 1905, the solemn election of
Prince Carl as king of Norway took place in the
Storting, taking the name of Haakon the seventh. - The Royan family of Norway http//www.kongehuset.
no/default.asp?langeng
22For your reference (2)
- When the Norwegian forces in Northern Norway
capitulated after two months of fighting in June
1940, the king, prime minister and government
evacuated to Great Britain. Throughout the war
years, Norway retained a operating government in
exile. And as the years passed by, the number of
Norwegian refugees abroad grew to some 80.000. - (source http//home.online.no/gestrom/history/no
rartxt.htm )
23Example 3 Two Villages
- What is the use of numbers here?
- How are the two passages with numbers in contrast
with the other two about Mr. Tat and Mr. Tuong.
24For your reference Historythe use of hard facts
and photos e.g. Paul Hardcastle '19
- In a newscasters voice "In world war two the
average age of the combat soldier was twenty six.
In Vietnam he was nineteen. I-I-I-I-In Vietnam he
was nineteen. N-n-n-n-nineteen."
25For your reference Vietnam War
- History the country divided in 1954 the U.S.s
involvement since around 1955 support forces
arriving since 1961, intense bombing since 1965,
withdrawal since 1969, and the total withdrawal
in 1973, a few months after a ceasefire was
signed in Jan. The fall of Saigon in May 1975.
26For your reference Vietnam War
- Atrocities
- A. American side
- 58,148 dead, 270,000 injured
- Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Agent Orange
- Vietnamese side
- dead (from both sides) more than 4,000,000
civilians and soldiers10 of the entire
population - displaced 9,000 out of 15,000 villages
- destroyed farmland, forest, farm animals all
six of the industrial cities in the North - affected 200,000 prostitutes, 879,000 orphans,
181,000 disabled people, 1 million widows
27Example 4 Time Travel e.g. Somewhere in Time
(1980)
- Plot
- Chicago playwright Richard Collier goes back in
time 60 years to find the love (Elise McKenna)
hes been missing all his life. Richard -- - 1978 ? 1912
- Location Mackinac Island, Michigan, the Grand
Hotel
28Example 2 Time Travel e.g. Somewhere in Time
(1980)
- Method of Time Travel (clip 4)
- Sources Jack Finney, a science fiction writer
- -- location a hotel
- -- erase the traces of the present
- -- hypnotize ones mind
- how Richard does it (clip 5)
29Example 2 Time Travel e.g. Somewhere in Time
(1980)
- Who determines their destiny?
- A gold watch, the photo as mementos? destiny?
- Richards crisis in life?
- The producer (clip 8)
- What is eternal love?
-
30Example 2 Somewhere in Time (1980) -- a
reinterpretation
- Time travel -- Can we really travel in time?
- time travel can get us into 1) a never-ending
loop - 2) multiple time line.
- 2. Isnt realistic novel or historical tales
like this?
31Example 2 Somewhere in Time (1980) -- a
reinterpretation (2)
- 3. History and fixation in history --
- Other possibilities
- -- There could be two Richards
- -- It could all be Richards fantasy, made with
the gold watch and the photo. (It could be
another woman that gave Richard the watch.) - In the end, its either Richard or Elise, or
both, who is fixated by their memory or
immobilized by their traumatic experience, and
thus seeks to perpetuate it (in life and in
death).
32A 2 History why and how?
- Purposes
- a memento to keep (and past to
immortalize), and to be fixated by, ? Somewhere
in Time - -- sense-making, legitimating ?.grandmother
- -- re-interpretation ? relating it to our
present world and selves. - Cannot be re-presenting the past histories have
to be fictions, or constructions.
33Q 4 History and Identity
- History and Identity How does History/histories
shape our identities? - And how do we establish/construct our identities
through telling stories?
34About our Course
- Identity ? History ? History and Literature
- Identity and (History of) colonialism and racism
- History as influenced by Postmodernism
- Identity as influenced by Globalization and Trauma