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Currently on On The Road by Jack Kerouac. Anyone read it?
I ****ing loathe Jack Kerouac.
:frown: You, sir, are WRONG! On the INTERNETS! This must be settled with a duel.Ennui said:Razumikhin is one of my favorite Dostoevsky characters period. Raskolnikov is a shitbag but what an interesting shitbag he is!
you can impress even the most dubious and groundless of ideas on the reader if you state it callously and boldly enough.
Heh.Oscar Wilde
Oscar Wilde's short stories for children were superb, worth checking out if you haven't done so yet.
Wat?Oh yeah no Oscar Wilde will totally fall victim to that if you take him seriously, but I think that Lord Henry in particular is obviously supposed to be like some sort of caricature of the public image he had. What I mean to say is bitch be trollinnnnnn
It's easier to hate him than to love him. Just remember he didn't ask anyone for all the attention, nor was he terribly concerned with having received it. I'm sure I understand exactly why you dislike him, and it's certainly a valid view (I agree at least that he's overrated by almost everybody) but to loathe him seems a bit strong! Note that I worded this diplomatically enough to avoid arguing about it, tis not worth itI ****ing loathe Jack Kerouac.
That's a pretty awesomely succinctly way to put it although I am still about 1000x warmer towards Thoreau than I am to Ayn Rand. Admittedly I never could make it all the way through Walden... but I find some of the language in the essay Civil Disobedience to be extraordinary, even if it's a bunch of self-evidently hyperbolic idealism. He's certainly not meant to be followed or interpreted strictly but I think there is still something quite valuable to be gained from it all.I'm not too big on Thoreau, but that could just be that I find most of the Romantics p. boring. For the most part, I think that a lot of his ideas fall victim to what I've lovingly dubbed "Ayn Rand Syndrome": that is, you can impress even the most dubious and groundless of ideas on the reader if you state it callously and boldly enough.
Oh, he's a brilliant character, but evidently that is not enough in Dostoevsky's opinion. I also would argue that Porfiry Petrovich (the detective who figures it all out) is pretty goddamn brilliant too. All I have to say is that despite his brilliance and dedication to his pursuits, he is still fatally afflicted by his moral corruption / self-absorbed attitute. The whole point is that he has to realize his error and seek faith, atonement and redemption in order to ever hope to experience happiness or fulfillment again.:frown: You, sir, are WRONG! On the INTERNETS! This must be settled with a duel.
Seriously though, Raskolnikov (in spite of his megalomania) is IMO the smartest character in the book.
He refuses to abandon the problem of mediocrity vs. greatness even when the others are like, "Who cares?"
It's easier to hate him than to love him. Just remember he didn't ask anyone for all the attention, nor was he terribly concerned with having received it. I'm sure I understand exactly why you dislike him, and it's certainly a valid view (I agree at least that he's overrated by almost everybody) but to loathe him seems a bit strong! Note that I worded this diplomatically enough to avoid arguing about it, tis not worth it
I actually do quite a lot of medieval stuff on my course - it's just not something that's we talk about much here. It's a time I find interesting enough that I'm certainly still going to be reading its products once I'm done with academia. Right now I'm desperately trying to re-familiarise myself with Pearl and Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde (I plan to read Henryson's fanfic as well), but in the past I've done work on breton lai romances, dream vision, the lyrics in the Harley manuscript and the Travels of Sir John Mandeville (which are completely, utterly amazing despite being probably, definitely fake). My exams are in three weeks, so if you want to do a helpful essay exchange or the like I'm up for anything by this point.I think I finally understand my disconnect with this forum (esp. Toaster and the bookkeeper aka Dodds) and other English majors in general. Everyone else is off reading belles-lettres-era social philosophy while I'm stuck in the Middle Ages. It's my rabbit hole: the further I go the more lost I get, until last year I emerged on the other side of modernism (did I spoil Piers Plowman for you guys? I think I just did.).
Absolutely. I'm assuming you're aware of the Ricardian court theory? It's pretty hard to reject the idea that there is an intense influence from Cheshire's language and politics. I can't say I prefer the London dialect, necessarily, as for me it's mostly a matter of vocabulary. I will say that the poems are bloody irritating for their lack of claimed authorship, but then perhaps that's why they're so fascinating. The political history becomes very interesting: I recall my professor mentioning that there was a popular London priest in the 1370s who used the parable of the vineyard in a diatribe against the 'boy king' Richard. This makes the parable's inclusion in Pearl very... fruitful.I mean, when I read Pearl or Gawain I'm thinking "bloody northerners" and have an acute sense of how English geography and history* contributed to the differences between them and, say, the Canterbury Tales. Do you feel part like these things are part of your history?
Thank you for improving my reading list for 2010.Reading the Collected Tales of Nikolai Gogol at the moment. Actually enjoying him more than Dostoevsky, which I didn't think was possible beforehand. It's the typical biting Russian wit and tragic ridiculousness you'd expect, but he fuses the real and the abnormal in a way I've never encountered: completely matter of factly, while suggesting he himself can't offer any explanation or understanding. He will also occasionally directly refer to the characters as creations, comment on the nature of a novel and his purpose as a writer without breaking out of the narrative at all. Much of his writing was improvised as well, so the stories are entirely unpredictable and even seem to surprise him sometimes.
Quite simply some of the best literature I've ever read and highly recommended to anyone with an interest in Russian works, and a more than worthy place to start if you don't. As with Crime and Punishment, I recommend the Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky translation. My first experience with Gogol was with an inferior translation which was a confusing read, so it's certainly worth putting effort into finding one that is skilfully handled.
I'm on the road to reaching my 2010 goal of reading 666 books.
Right now I'm reading Burning Wild by Christine Feehan and Vampire Transgression by Michael Schiefelbein.