[A new semester is upon us, so this week I’ll preview texts I’m excited to teach in my Spring 2022 classes. Leading up to a weekend update on my book project in progress!]
On three
stimulating pairings from my accelerated
online Short Story syllabus.
1)
“Girl” and “I
Stand Here Ironing”: We start our seven-week semester with this pair of
stories about mothers and daughters, multi-generational continuities and
changes, social expectations and pressures, and where and how we place our
sympathies as readers (the topic for their weekly response post on whichever
story they choose to analyze). I’ve used this pairing in at least a dozen
sections over the last decade, and continue to get different responses and
ideas from students, which is about as positive a recommendation for these stories’
quality as you could ever find.
2)
“Boys
Go to Jupiter” and “Where
Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”: Danielle Evans’ story is one of my
favorites of all time, as that hyperlinked post (among many others) indicates. It’s
about many important things, including race and racism to be sure; but fundamentally
it’s a portrait of a teenage girl struggling with the many different kinds of
pressures and forces that are part of her 21st century life and
world. That makes it a very provocative pairing with Joyce Carol Oates’ famous 1960s
depiction of those issues and themes in my course’s second week, and my prompt
asking students to analyze one of these protagonists always produces thoughtful
and compelling work.
3)
“Chapter Two”
and “Sonny’s
Blues”: At the end of our seven weeks we come to this pair of long,
challenging, stunning stories about addiction, family and community, and the
lies and truths we tell to and about ourselves. This is the only weekly post
where I ask students to analyze both stories (in preparation for their similarly
comparative final paper), and one particularly striking topic for such
comparisons is the very different ways Antonya
Nelson and James
Baldwin use the literary elements of narration and perspective to frame
those similar themes. A great reminder of the nuanced work all of our authors
do to create these amazing stories!
Special update
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Spring courses or other work you want to share?
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