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Bored?
  Research on Boredom

Scientific American Mind research on boredom

The High School Survey of Student Engagement covers some of the same issues as the Student Aspirations Survey being used here.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 03/21 at 12:18 PM
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Readings •
Modernism
  Readings in the anthology

“A Wagner Matinee” by Willa Cather, p. 539-546
“His Father’s Earth” by Thomas Wolfe p. 550-556
Robert Frost poems p. 558-574
“Winter Dreams” by F. Scott Fitzgerald, p. 586-602
“The Leader of the People” by John Steinbeck p. 609-619
“A Worn Path” by Eudora Welty p. 634-639
“Soldier’s Home” by Ernest Hemingway 653-659
T.S. Eliot poems p. 661-670
“A Rose for Emily” by William Falkner p. 716-722
“Night” by Elie Wiesel p. 921-930

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 03/19 at 12:13 PM
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Montana Literature: Elective course for English 12
  Offered for 2009-09 School Year

Montana Literature: Reading and Writing and the Sense of Place

Montana is fortunate to have a rich literary tradition. Many Montana writers have earned national reputations by telling stories about what life has been like at various times in “the last best place.” This course will explore some of the best-loved works of Montana literature, including fiction, memoirs and poetry.

Students in this course will not only read Montana literature, they will create some. Using the readings to form important questions, they will gather stories from their own family or community, researching in family photo albums, old newspapers, and other documents, and conducting oral history interviews. Each student will be expected to finish one previously unpublished story based on this research.

The reading will pay special attention to several important themes that occur over and over in Montana’s literature:

Men and Women and Families in Literature: Many Montana writers have written about the joys and challenges of living in families, including differences and similarities in male and female nature and character; possibilities of conflict between men and women; equality, subordination, oppression, rebellion, manipulation, conflict, harmony, and happiness in the relations between the sexes; love, courtship, marriage, maternity and paternity; ideals of masculinity and femininity.

Nature in Literature: We will pay attention to the role of nature and the landscape in literary works; relations between human beings and the natural world; obligations of human beings toward nature; conflicts between ecological and human interests; proper and improper uses of nature; meaning and role of natural forces and phenomena in literature; natural objects as symbols.

American Indians in Literature: We will explore how American Indians are represented in literature, discussing the relationship between culture and place; stories and storytellers in community; struggle and conflict with living between diverse worlds; traditional roles, stereotypes, and ideals of American Indians; cultural and personal loss and survival; concepts of power, success, relatedness, dreams, humor, and the sacred; the representation of heroes.

The Big Sky by A.B. Guthrie
The Big Sky is the first of Pulitzer Prize winning author A. B. Guthrie, Jr.’s, epic adventure novels of Montana’s vast frontier. In The Big Sky we will explore Montana during the fur trade era, traveling with Boone Caudill, Jim Deakins, and Dick Summers, three of the most memorable characters in Western American literature. Traveling the Missouri River from St. Louis to the Rockies, these frontiersmen live as trappers, traders, guides, and explorers. The story centers on Caudill, a young Kentuckian driven by a raging hunger for life and a longing for the blue sky and brown earth of big, wild places. Caught up in the freedom and savagery of the wilderness, Caudill becomes an untamed mountain man, married to the beautiful daughter of a Blackfoot chief. In The Big Sky, Guthrie gives us an unforgettable portrait of a spacious land and a unique way of life.

We Pointed Them North by E. C. ("Teddy Blue") Abbott $13.57
Blue’s recollections present a delightful view of cowboy life, drama, and humor during the great cattle drive and cattle ranching era. This fast-paced and irreverent memoir presents a vivid view of the real cowboy and the code that drove their action. Teddy Blue took part in the original cattle drives from the South to the Montana prairies and he tells the unforgettable stories of what young men in wild country did and thought.

The Undying West: A Chronicle of Montana’s Camas Prairie by Carlene Cross $9.66
In The Undying West, Carlene Cross creates a memorable blend of personal and Flathead Reservation history. It’s a wonderful model of writing based on family history research. She presents both homesteader and native views of the homestead era. The voices in her stories include those of her father and his “sod-busting” friends; the Salish, Kootenai, Nez Perce, and Iroquois Indians; the fossil remains of Montana’s prehistory; and even the wind, the soil, and the prairie grasses. She offers a personal testament to the enduring qualities of the West.

Winter Wheat by Mildred Walker $11.16
Montana’s literature is especially rich in its stories of what life was like for women here. With an arid “dry-land” wheat farm as both its geographic and metaphoric center, Winter Wheat--a One-Book Montana selection--is a love story in which eighteen-year-old Ellen Webb comes to understand herself better, but also comes to see her parents’ marriage in a new light. Her Vermont-born father and Russian-born mother, married during the first World War, have come as homesteaders to Barton, Montana - a grain-elevator and general store. It is 1940, the year Ellen will start college if the wheat harvest is good. The harvest pays and Ellen goes off to college, where she immediately falls in love: “I hadn’t meant to fall in love so soon, but there’s nothing you can do about it. It’s like planning to seed in April and then having it come off so warm in March that the earth is ready.” Ellen and Gil plan their marriage for after the summer harvest. But Gil arrives and doesn’t find Montana or the life of dry-land wheat farmers beautiful. Ellen begins to see everything, including her parents, with new eyes in this poignant examination of love and life.

Fools Crow (Contemporary American Fiction) by James Welch $10.20
Suspenseful and moving, written with an authenticity and integrity that give it sweeping power, Welch’s third novel is a masterful evocation of a Native American culture and its passing. >From their lodges on the endless Montana plains, the members of the Lone Eaters band of the Pikuni (Blackfeet) Indians live in harmony with nature, hunting the “blackhorns” (buffalo), observing a complex system of political administration based on mutual respect and handing down legends that explain the natural world and govern daily conduct. We watch the escalating tensions between the Pikunis and the white men ("the Napikwans"), who deliberately violate treaties and initiate hostilities with the hard-pressed red men, leading up to a searing experience based on the Marias River Massacre. There is much to savor in this remarkable book: the ease with which Fools Crow and his brethren converse with animals and spirits, the importance of dreams in their daily lives, the customs and ceremonies that measure the natural seasons and a person’s lifespan. Without violating the patterns of Native American speech, Welsh writes in prose that surges and sings. We follow Fools Crow’s growth from a boy in a traditional community to a man, responsible for keeping his family and tribe together through terrible challenges.

Red Rover by Deirdre McNamer $16.47
As boys, brothers Aidan and Neil Tierney ride the Montana prairie on horseback, yearning for adventure. As men, they find it: Neil pilots a B-29 over Japan, while Aidan hunts Nazis in Argentina for the FBI. But although they both return from the war, Aidan proves a casualty nonetheless. Sickened by a mysterious ailment, suffering almost more from disillusionment, he won’t survive 1946. Spanning the years 1927 through 2003 and employing richly layered, interlocking points of view, McNamer teases out the surprising truth behind Aidan’s death, portraying an era of idealism and of myopia and paranoia. If the high plains and deep valleys of Montana seem an unlikely place to play out the cynical spy hunting of the J. Edgar Hoover era, modern-day echoesallegations of profiteering in Iraqחremind us that no place on earth is too remote to be touched by the prevailing winds. The powerful ending rewards the time spent getting there. Elegant and assured, with a joy in language that shows on every page.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 03/17 at 10:00 PM
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Microsoft Workspace
  Access your files from home or from school?

Microsoft just announced they’ve made Microsoft Workspace available free to the public. Sign up is here: http://workspace.officelive.com/

You save your files on a free internet site instead of on the hard drive of your computer, so you can get to the files and open them from any computer that is connected to the internet.

* Save 1000+ Microsoft Office documents in one place
* Access them from almost any computer with a Web browser
* No more flash drives or sending yourself documents via e-mail

This is a great way to get files from home to school, or vice versa. Also, you can “share” your files so that others can read and comment on them, so this is a great way to work together on group projects. No more getting hung up if someone in the group is absent but the files are in their folder on the school server.

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 03/08 at 07:36 PM
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The New York Times, December 6, 1959
  The Literary Adventures of Huck Finn

by Norman Podhoretz

Mr. Podhoretz, a New York editor and fiction critic, first read Mark Twain at the age of 8 or 9, when the works arrived at his home, a volume at a time, as a bonus for a newspaper subscription.

“Persons attempting to find a motive in this narrative will be prosecuted,” wrote Mark Twain in a notice at the head of ”The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”; “persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot.” This month marks the seventy-fifth anniversary of the publication of ”Huckleberry Finn,” and by now the number of candidates for prosecution, banishment and shooting must be very large indeed - far greater than Mark Twain could ever have anticipated. No other American novel (with the possible exception of ”Moby Dick”) has been so thoroughly ransacked for motives and morals, so lovingly examined, so jealously claimed as an ally in so many different polemical campaigns.

. . .”Huckleberry Finn” is now read as a key to the very essence of the American imagination, a central document of our most primitive impulses. . .contemporary critics. . . have spoken of Huck as an archetype or a mythic figure who embodies the nostalgia for innocence and the fantasy of flight from maturity that are said to be so characteristic of the American soul.

Sooner or later, it seems, all discussions of “Huckleberry Finn” turn into discussions of America—and with good reason. Mark Twain was the quintessential American writer, quintessential because he was more or less untutored— “a natural,” as Wright Morris puts it, “who learned to write the way a river pilot learns the feel of a channel.” And Richard Chase, in his remarkable book on the American novel, observes that “Huckleberry Finn” is constantly engaged in an “exorcism of false forms” through parody and burlesque, and that the chief exorcism performed by the novel is done upon “European culture itself.”

Why did Mark Twain find it necessary to exorcise European culture? Partly, of course, in order to liberate himself from the grip of an approved literary style that bore no relation to living American speech, but also, in my opinion, because what he had to say about life could not have been said by a writer whose attitudes had been molded by the European sense of things.

. . .Lionel Trilling, in his brilliant introduction to ”Huckleberry Finn,”. . .recognizes that the novel is built on an opposition between nature and society, but he cautions us against thinking of that opposition as absolute. Huck, he tells us, “is involved in civilization up to his ears,” and his flight from society “is but his way of reaching what society ideally dreams of for itself.” This interpretation, I should say, is itself in need of exorcism, for it is an attempt to assimilate ”Huckleberry Finn” into what I have characterized as the European sense of things.

. . .No more devastating comment has ever been made on the fraudulent pretensions of civilization than the great scene in which Huck struggles with himself over the question of whether to turn Jim back to Miss Watson. Huck, of course, is not consciously a rebel against the values of his society, and he never doubts that he has done wrong in helping a runaway slave to escape. After he discovers that the Duke and the King have sold Jim back into captivity, he decides that the hand of Providence has slapped him in the face, “letting me know my wickedness was being watched all the time from up there in heaven, whilst I was stealing a poor old woman’s nigger that hadn’t ever done me no harm.” He tries to console himself with the reflection that “I was brung up wicked, and so I warn’t so much to blame,” but he is too honest to accept this as an adequate excuse, and finally he scrawls a note to Miss Watson telling her where she can find Jim.

The passage that follows the note is one of the supreme moments in all of literature: “I felt good and all washed clean of sin for the first time I had ever felt so in my life, and I knowed I could pray now. But I didn’t do it straight off, but laid the paper down and set there thinking—thinking how good it was all this happened so, and how near I come to being lost and going to hell. And went on thinking. And got to thinking over our trip down the river; and I see Jim before me all the time; in the day and in the night-time, sometimes moonlight, sometimes storms, and we a-floating along, talking and singing and laughing. But somehow I couldn’t seem to strike no places to harden me against him, but only the other kind.”

And he goes on remembering details of their voyage down the river together, until his glance falls on the note he has just written to Miss Watson. “It was a close place, I took it up, and held it in my hand. I was a-trembling, because I’d got to decide, forever, betwixt two things, and I knowed it. I studied a minute, sort of holding my breath, and then says to myself: ‘All right, then, I’ll go to hell’ —and tore it up. It was awful thoughts and awful words, but they was said. And I let them stay said; and never thought no more about reforming.”

We must not be misled by the humor of the concluding lines into supposing that Huck’s belief in his own damnation is perfunctory or insincere. Mark Twain is using the device of comic exaggeration—reaching all the way down into hell—in order to make the contrast between the “civilized” values and Huck’s natural feelings as stark as he possibly can.

The contempt for civilization that breathes through every page of “Huckleberry Finn"—both the particular civilization Mark Twain was writing about and civilization in general—is only matched in intensity by the reverence for nature embodied in the character of Huck and in the image of the river. The Mississippi, as Mr. Trilling rightly observes, is a god in this novel, and those who attune themselves to its ways are able to share in its power, its vitality and its beauty. There is also danger in the river and destruction and loneliness, for the god has his sullen moods and refuses to be placated. But though the river can maim and kill, it cannot do what society invariably does; it cannot warp a man’s feelings into ugly and unnatural shapes, and it cannot distort the clarity of his vision of the truth.

Now that I have succeeded in adding myself to the violators of Mark Twain’s ordinance against finding motives in “Huckleberry Finn,” I might as well follow Huck’s example and go the whole hog in wickedness by looking for a moral, too. The moral, I think, will be obvious to anyone who feels the sharpness of the opposition Mark Twain set up between nature and society. “Huckleberry Finn” is a celebration of the instinctive promptings of the individual against the conditioned self, and a refutation of the heretical idea that reality can be equated with any given set of historical circumstances. This heresy has become even more powerful today than it was seventy-five years ago, and there can be no better protection against the morality of “adjustment” than Mark Twain’s uncompromising, hard-headed insistence on the distinction between nature and society.

For that matter, it might be a good idea to pass a law requiring social workers, guidance counselors and all the members of certain schools of psychoanalysis to read ”Huckleberry Finn” at least once a year. There is no telling what might happen if the proponents of adjustment were forced into periodic contemplation of a character who is more civilized than his mentors and more mature than his elders precisely by virtue of his refusal to submit to their notion of what is necessary, “natural” and real.

[Podhoretz is referring to the Life Adjustment Curriculum, which was a school “reform” movement that began after World War II. It was founded on the belief that more than half of students were incapable of learning much. “According to Charles Prosser, the father of Life Adjustment, only 20 percent of American young people could master academic content; another 20 percent were capable of doing vocational subjects; and the remaining 60 percent needed courses in subjects like health and PE, effective use of leisure time, driver training, and knowledge of such “problems of American democracy” as dating, buying on credit, and renting an apartment.” (Barney Brawer - Education Next)]

Posted by Michael L Umphrey on 03/03 at 10:49 PM
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Realism •

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