Title: Critical Necessities: Using Literary texts in the EFL Classroom
1Critical Necessities Using Literary texts in
the EFL Classroom
- Amos Paran
- Institute of Education, University of London
2Reasons for using literary texts
- Psychological reasons building on the human
common ground - Educational reasons doing what we can to educate
the learners - Pedagogical reasons responding to our wishes and
wants as teachers - Linguistic reasons building on what people do
with language and with literature
3The ubiquity of literature
- You stand like a Gulliver on some rocky outcrop
while thousands of feet below Dinky-toy ships
drift towards a Lego-sized settlement surrounded
by emerald green fields the size of postage
stamps. - I am chauffeured in a sleek green 1932
Studebaker, brought up from the underground
museum. Im not denying I feel a bit
self-conscious, looking most unlike Jay Gatsby
reclining on the leather upholstery in my Helly
Hansen jacket and walking boots. - (BA High Life Magazine, March 2012)
4Secondary Worlds
- Present in every human being are two desires, a
- desire to know the truth about the primary world,
the - given world outside ourselves in which we are
born, - live, love, hate and die, and the desire to make
new - secondary worlds of our own or, if we cannot make
- them ourselves, to share in the secondary worlds
of - those who can.
- W. H. Auden
5The Secondary Worlds of the Gaming Community
6The Secondary Worlds of Fanfiction
7The Secondary Worlds of Fanfiction
8Secondary Worlds
- What really happens (when a reader engages with a
- text) is that the story-maker proves a successful
sub- - creator. He makes a Secondary World which your
- mind can enter. Inside it, what he relates is
true it - accords with the laws of that world. You
therefore - believe it, while you are, as it were, inside.
-
- J. R. R. Tolkien
9Flow and Secondary Worlds
- The sense of effortless action they feel in
moments that stand out as the best in their
lives. - Players living in a self contained universe
- Flow tends to occur when a persons skills are
fully involved in overcoming a challenge that is
just about manageable. - M. Csikszentmihályi
10Flow matters because quantity matters
- Reading as a complex cognitive skill
- Written language vs. spoken language
- Importance of vast amounts of exposure
- (see Paran 1996)
11The importance of narrative
- Thats how people live, Milt Michael
Antonious - again, still kindly, gently by telling
stories. - Whats the first thing a kid says when he learns
how - to talk? Tell me a story. Thats how we
understand - who we are, where we come from. Stories are
- everything.
- Jeffrey Eugenides, Middlesex
12Psychological reasons
- Ubiquity of literature
- Language play
- Secondary worlds
- Importance of flow
- Connection with the complexity of reading
- Centrality of narrative
13Task 1
14Eveline/James Joyce
- She sat at the window watching the
- evening invade the avenue. Her head
- was leaned against the window curtains,
- and in her nostrils was the odour of dusty
- cretonne. She was tired.
-
15The Prohibited PARSNIP
- Politics
- Alcohol
- Religion
- Sex
- Narcotics
- Isms
- Pork
16Talking Points
17Literature outside EFL
- The hospital poetry of U. A. Fanthorpe
- Nurses Poetry Expanding the Literature
- and Medicine Canon
- In Brief A Literature Seminar in
- Clinical Medical Education
- Light to the Mind Literature in the
- Medical Spanish Course
- The Nineteenth Centurys Obsession with
- Medicine Flauberts Madame Bovary
18Literature and Medicine
- Mention of The Use of Force almost amounts
to a club handshake among medical humanists. The
storys importance lies in the way it succinctly
brings into focus a whole cluster of everyday
dilemmas that characterize the medical encounter.
The tension that arises between a doctor, a child
who wont open her mouth for a throat exam, and
the childs two parents opens up discussion of
medical authority, bedside manners, assignment of
medical responsibility, doctor-patient dialogue,
childrens rights and fear as a factor in
treatment. (Hawkins McEntyre, 189)
19Task 2 Transplants
- Which body parts have been successfully
- transplanted to date?
- Turn to your neighbour and list as
- many as you can.
20 The Body
- He said, Listen you say you cant hear well and
your back hurts. Your body wont stop reminding
you of your ailing existence. Would you like to
do something about it? - This half-dead old carcass? I said. Sure.
What? - How about trading it in and getting
something new? - (Hanif Kureishi)
21POUNDS OF FLESHThe rich go shopping for body
parts - the poor and the dead provide. By Fay
Weldon
- "When human tissue is an investment opportunity
for Richard - Branson," writes Donna Dickenson, "you know it's
become just - as much an object of commerce as mobile phones,
CDs or train - tickets. Virgin's decision in February 2007 to
set up a new - business in umbilical cord blood banking is just
another example of - body shopping.
- Dickenson's alarm is justified. Body parts have
become big - business. In Body Shopping she describes a
science-fiction world - that turns out to be the one we are living in.
The rich go shopping - for body parts the poor and the dead provide
them. The nice, kind - man in the white clinician's coat turns out to be
a ruthless body - robber.
- (Review of Body Shopping The Economy Fuelled by
Flesh and Bloodby Donna Dickenson)
22Literature and abstract concepts
- Use of metaphor, symbol, image
- Develops symbolic and abstract thinking
- Wolfe (2004) Picken (2007)
23Task 3 Literature and response
- Read the poem Returning, we hear the
- larks on your handout. Then turn to your
- neighbour and discuss it briefly.
24Returning, we hear the larks
25Types of response
- Aesthetic vs. efferent reading
- (Louise Rosenblatt)
- Reading as a transaction with the text
- Can we rescue literature from reading
26Educational reasons
- Literature as a site for discussing values
- Dealing with values in a non-didactic way, from a
safe distance - Developing abstract concepts
- Eliciting a response
27Pedagogical reasons
- Using literature allows you to teach what you
like - Greater variety of possible activities
- Using literature provides a better opportunity to
incorporate other cultural knowledge
28Task 4
- Look at the other side of your handout
- and the poem The Wheel.
- With your neighbour(s) prepare a group
- reading of the poem.
29Reading aloud
30Linguistic reasons
- Literature is written to be read aloud
- Literature lends itself to repeated readings
- Literature lends itself to learning by heart
- Literature is written with the intention that the
reader will finish reading - You dont always have to understand everything
31Task 5
32The Dance
- In Brueghels great picture, The Kermesse,
- the dancers go round, they go round and
- around, the squeal and the blare and the
- tweedle of bagpipes, a bugle and fiddles
- tipping their bellies (round as the thick-
- sided glasses whose wash they impound)
- their hips and their bellies off balance
- to turn them. Kicking and rolling about
- the Fair Grounds, swinging their butts, those
- shanks must be sound to bear up under such
- rollicking measures, prance as they dance
- in Brueghels great picture, The Kermesse.
- William Carlos Williams.
-
33- Only Connect.
- E.M. Forster, Howards End
34- Perhaps the greatest of all pedagogical
- fallacies is the notion that a person learns only
- the particular thing he is studying at the time.
-
- John Dewey (1938)