Active Users:950 Time:02/11/2025 02:59:08 AM
But yet I know several history teachers who have done this Larry Send a noteboard - 07/02/2010 10:38:49 AM
As a work of literature, it's a weak book. The style is a bit monotonous and character motives are poorly developed. The erratic way in which the absurd and fantastical is thrown in alongside the "realistic" leads to an uneven reading (to my mind). Perhaps that's why Eco wrote that travesty of a book, Baudolino. I have the same problems with it that I have with Cien años de soledad.

It could be a more interesting book if seen in the context of political turmoil in Latin America. However, to do that you'd have to combine a literature class with a history class, something that most schools don't generally do.


And as a work of literature, I believe it is a rather strong book, as the "monotony" is meant to be a symbolic representation of the Liberal/Conservative battles that still rage in a slightly altered form even today in the form of FARC and its right-wing paramilitary counterparts. The character motivations are closely tied to the historical mindsets of the time (the more I learned about Colombian history of the late 19th/early 20th century, the more sense the Arcadios and the Aurelianos made to me). The strange/fantastical I believe were meant to highlight the absurdity of the "real" events occurring at the edges of the narrative.

As for Baudolino, oddly enough, I received a copy of the Italian edition in the mail on Saturday. I happened to like that book precisely because of how Eco treats the issue of fabrication and exaggeration in medieval accounts.

Hrmm...perhaps either one of these two books ought to be considered for a future Book Club discussion? ;)

Edit: I forgot to say that I've been an advocate ever since I was a grad student of combining the two, just as several of my university history professors would assign us literary works to read and to discuss in context of the times and locales. I learned much more about literature and critical theory from history professors than I ever learned from literature professors.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie

Je suis méchant.
This message last edited by Larry on 07/02/2010 at 10:40:45 AM
Reply to message
Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 05/02/2010 05:15:17 PM 1511 Views
Interesting post - 05/02/2010 06:19:06 PM 1017 Views
I agree. One Shakespeare is sufficient. *NM* - 06/02/2010 06:42:51 AM 382 Views
Oh, fun! You mentioned the 语录 by Chairman Mao... - 06/02/2010 06:35:21 PM 911 Views
Tough Subject, censorship - 05/02/2010 07:24:39 PM 1022 Views
tough questions - 05/02/2010 08:26:30 PM 989 Views
I never saw the humour in Dilbert... - 06/02/2010 06:28:57 PM 997 Views
I actually ran into this in high school. - 05/02/2010 08:33:10 PM 1164 Views
I found that we covered a lot about American Indian issues in US History. - 06/02/2010 06:23:16 PM 941 Views
we coverd most of those things as well - 06/02/2010 08:08:22 PM 1135 Views
Anyone interested in German history in particular and European history in general should read it. - 05/02/2010 08:47:14 PM 1116 Views
I think jane austen and the brontes would be good to leave in - 06/02/2010 03:44:10 AM 847 Views
They could read Pride & Prejudice & Zombies instead. *NM* - 06/02/2010 04:03:34 PM 370 Views
They could. It'd be very educational. - 06/02/2010 04:37:23 PM 774 Views
What about... - 18/02/2010 06:57:56 PM 1199 Views
Hmm. - 05/02/2010 09:11:13 PM 987 Views
Love the survey. - 05/02/2010 09:42:29 PM 1128 Views
Interesting. Do you really think that Nineteen Eighty-Four is plausible? - 06/02/2010 10:13:56 AM 938 Views
It doesn't have to be plausible as a whole to be relevant. - 06/02/2010 08:28:20 PM 938 Views
I agree entirely - 06/02/2010 10:32:07 PM 1031 Views
You raise an interesting point. - 06/02/2010 06:06:20 PM 936 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 05/02/2010 11:09:41 PM 1087 Views
Nietzsche as mandatory reading - that's a fun idea. - 06/02/2010 06:00:29 PM 994 Views
Re: Nietzsche as mandatory reading - that's a fun idea. - 06/02/2010 06:03:59 PM 994 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 05/02/2010 11:47:08 PM 1075 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 06/02/2010 12:11:06 AM 943 Views
I agree with most of that. But to quote our eminent Camilla... - 06/02/2010 10:30:15 AM 1056 Views
I agree on the Shakespeare (and mentioned that below). - 06/02/2010 05:54:50 PM 943 Views
Re: I agree on the Shakespeare (and mentioned that below). - 06/02/2010 06:05:48 PM 1056 Views
I don't think high school students need to discuss possibilities for staging. - 07/02/2010 01:36:03 AM 884 Views
I think there is value to discussing staging - 07/02/2010 01:52:47 AM 889 Views
nice post - 06/02/2010 01:27:23 AM 929 Views
Re: nice post - 06/02/2010 01:29:34 AM 921 Views
A lot of people think von Clausewitz is important. - 06/02/2010 05:51:44 PM 854 Views
More than Sun Tzu? *NM* - 06/02/2010 08:31:44 PM 353 Views
Sun Zi was relatively unknown in the West until recently. - 07/02/2010 01:30:06 AM 901 Views
Sure, but he could still have influenced world history by influencing Asia... *NM* - 07/02/2010 01:35:17 AM 382 Views
Doubtful. - 07/02/2010 01:41:01 AM 917 Views
Tom, you did not just write that - 07/02/2010 10:12:40 AM 967 Views
The Mongols are not East Asian. They are Central Asian. - 07/02/2010 03:06:19 PM 953 Views
Neat. - 06/02/2010 06:41:37 AM 1181 Views
Brave New World is an excellent choice. - 06/02/2010 05:15:15 PM 874 Views
In many ways, books are like automobiles or power tools... - 06/02/2010 11:08:01 AM 1101 Views
The interesting thing, to my mind, is that the BBC article talks about "Lebensraum". - 06/02/2010 04:46:34 PM 911 Views
And nary a thing about Alois Hitler, no? - 06/02/2010 05:52:50 PM 1117 Views
I have yet to see a literature teacher in schools teach history through literature. - 07/02/2010 01:33:57 AM 937 Views
But yet I know several history teachers who have done this - 07/02/2010 10:38:49 AM 1055 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 06/02/2010 01:44:07 PM 1046 Views
I agree that Shakespeare is over-emphasised. - 06/02/2010 04:29:16 PM 804 Views
Before responding to others, I'll post my own responses - 06/02/2010 04:26:53 PM 1070 Views
Re: Before responding to others, I'll post my own responses - 06/02/2010 10:34:10 PM 898 Views
Hmm. - 06/02/2010 11:33:02 PM 963 Views
New Zealand has culture? - 07/02/2010 03:25:28 PM 1097 Views
Which book of his would you recommend ? - 09/02/2010 04:20:15 PM 893 Views
The Whale Rider is lovely. - 10/02/2010 02:36:01 PM 819 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 07/02/2010 11:52:02 PM 991 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 08/02/2010 03:14:24 AM 1169 Views
Re: Censorship, promotion of books and dissemination of ideas. - 11/02/2010 10:58:23 PM 1031 Views

Reply to Message