From the math thread:
Every time somebody says something like this, I feel that I have to stand up and defend the classics. First of all, teachers don't have to require you to read books that you would read on your own. Should English teachers be assigning Twilight? When I was taking a two-semester course on American Theatre, some of the other students (MFA actors, whiny bitches) complained that we stopped in the 1970's. My teacher said, "I have to tell you to read Sam Shepard and Marsha Norman and David Mamet? You already know about them. I need to teach you what you don't know." It's about learning, not enjoyment.
Classics usually also have a greater importance beyond just being a work of literature. For us theatre folk, it would be unspeakable to teach a basic theatre class and not require them to read something by Shakespeare*. For American Lit...yeah, you need to read The Scarlet Letter, the poems of Walt Whitman, and the short stories of Edgar Allen Poe. That's our cultural heritage. An early World Lit class will and should require The Illiad, The Odyssey, and The Aeneid. Hopefully it will include writings by Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle as well...since they are the foundation of pretty much all pre-Enlightenment thought.
Frankly, I think we need more classics. Again, in theatre, we obsess over England and France. (Sorry, English theatre hasn't produced anything of worth since the death of the Restoration comedy.) But German and Russian theatre are sorely overlooked. Romanticism may be the single most important literary and artistic movement in history, since it broke the hold French Neoclassicism had over all culture. Yet, most students don't understand Romanticism because they haven't read Lessing, Schiller, or even *sigh* Goethe. Mary Shelley doesn't cut it. Victor Hugo and Dumas pere don't cut it (as much as I love both of them). You MUST know Goethe. And no Russian? The Russians have been kicking the world's ass in literature (dramatic or otherwise) since the 19th century. Pushkin, Lermontov, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Turgenev, Ostrovsky, Gorky, Mayakovsky, and especially Bulgakov should be better known. I mean, can you honestly tell me that your average sci-fi book has more importance than The Master and Margarita? A highly subversive work written during the peak of Soviet realism?
Furthermore, don't blame literacy rates on schools. Blame it on lazy parents who don't read to their kids. I could read at 4, because my mother taught me. And don't feed me the "parents are too busy" line. Nobody is busier than a farm wife, and mom made the time. The schools should not dumb down their curriculum to cater to kids who think the classics are stupid. Teachers can, and should, make these works as exciting as possible. But they should still be required.
*Although for me, the greater crime is that they aren't generally required to read Marlowe, who would've written circles around Shakespeare if he hadn't been stabbed in the eye.
Originally posted by jackfaire
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Classics usually also have a greater importance beyond just being a work of literature. For us theatre folk, it would be unspeakable to teach a basic theatre class and not require them to read something by Shakespeare*. For American Lit...yeah, you need to read The Scarlet Letter, the poems of Walt Whitman, and the short stories of Edgar Allen Poe. That's our cultural heritage. An early World Lit class will and should require The Illiad, The Odyssey, and The Aeneid. Hopefully it will include writings by Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle as well...since they are the foundation of pretty much all pre-Enlightenment thought.
Frankly, I think we need more classics. Again, in theatre, we obsess over England and France. (Sorry, English theatre hasn't produced anything of worth since the death of the Restoration comedy.) But German and Russian theatre are sorely overlooked. Romanticism may be the single most important literary and artistic movement in history, since it broke the hold French Neoclassicism had over all culture. Yet, most students don't understand Romanticism because they haven't read Lessing, Schiller, or even *sigh* Goethe. Mary Shelley doesn't cut it. Victor Hugo and Dumas pere don't cut it (as much as I love both of them). You MUST know Goethe. And no Russian? The Russians have been kicking the world's ass in literature (dramatic or otherwise) since the 19th century. Pushkin, Lermontov, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Turgenev, Ostrovsky, Gorky, Mayakovsky, and especially Bulgakov should be better known. I mean, can you honestly tell me that your average sci-fi book has more importance than The Master and Margarita? A highly subversive work written during the peak of Soviet realism?
Furthermore, don't blame literacy rates on schools. Blame it on lazy parents who don't read to their kids. I could read at 4, because my mother taught me. And don't feed me the "parents are too busy" line. Nobody is busier than a farm wife, and mom made the time. The schools should not dumb down their curriculum to cater to kids who think the classics are stupid. Teachers can, and should, make these works as exciting as possible. But they should still be required.
*Although for me, the greater crime is that they aren't generally required to read Marlowe, who would've written circles around Shakespeare if he hadn't been stabbed in the eye.
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