A Pedagogue's Progress
Monday, July 30, 2007
 
Required reading

I can't believe I didn't come across PhDinHistory earlier.

Oh, and free JSTOR access (at the moment, only from work) is bliss.


Sunday, July 22, 2007
 
King Lear

Watched King Lear with Ian McKellen last night. It was predictably superb, even if the (very expensive) seat that I had paid for did not always give me a clear view of the stage, particularly when there were a lot of people on it. Besides Sir Ian, I thought that the guy who played Edmund was also excellent. Although you have to admit that Edmund, like Richard III, does get to play to the audience a great deal. Am warming to Edmund as a villain, but still prefer Iago.

It's been five years since I read King Lear for Saccio's English 24; I did give it a shot earlier this year after buying tickets to the play, but never finished it. I should finish it. But really, lecture notes come first!


Tuesday, July 17, 2007
 
I've been discovered!

08A13B, allow me to congratulate you for being the first class (as far as I know) to uncover this and my other blog.

Similarly intrepid work on your class presentations and term assignments will be much appreciated!


Saturday, July 14, 2007
 
Computers and writing

This James Fallows piece from the July 1982 edition of The Atlantic (linked to by Andrew Sullivan) got me thinking about how my own prose style has been shaped by the machine I use to write. Now you'd think that a computer ought to speed up the writing process. For me it's the opposite: I write slower because of MS Word -- much, much slower. While I type faster than I write, it takes me longer to churn out a piece of work on the computer than I'd take if I simply wrote it out by hand. And the word-processed article would be much, much better. This, I realise, isn't only because I'm something of a perfectionist when it comes to my own writing (and frequently, other people's as well), but because Word allows me to indulge my perfectionist habits without having to waste pages and pages of paper.

I am far less finicky when it comes to handwritten work, because I can't bear cancelling and editing my own prose and seeing a page full of cancellations and arrows. That said, my handwritten stuff isn't bad either -- although it tends to be full of semicolons -- because of the many, many exams that I've sat for, and because paying attention to one's typewritten work has spillover effects. I guess being a sensitive (to language) literary type helps as well.

Right, back to next week's work then.