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posts about #thehandmaidstale more →
Carrying 'Tales' Out Of School
"Dying Of Too Much Choice": Sarah Palin And The Handmaid's Tale
| posts about #thehandmaidstale more → |
Carrying 'Tales' Out Of School |
"Dying Of Too Much Choice": Sarah Palin And The Handmaid's Tale |
01/19/09
01/19/09
01/20/09
01/19/09
But the father is right on one part: the scenes of sexual assault and sexual dissociation are extremely disturbing, and bear no resemblance to the tawdry Shakesperean "sexual language" one commenter somewhat flippantly compared them to.
They disturbed me as a 25 year old and while I'm not sure I want the father to succeed, I think in this case he makes a (somewhat) legitimate point. This isn't just knee-jerk Christian conservatism at work.
That said - it is a powerful and stirring book with important things to say about society. I guess I can just *understand* a father's concern on this one, versus say, "lady chatterly's lover" or Judy Blume's "forever"...
01/20/09
Not to be flip, but there really are some horrible scenes of violence, rape, murder, mutilation, etc. in Shakespeare's canon. Check out Titus Andronicus. Worse than anything in The Handmaid's Tale by a good measure.
01/20/09
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But if he wants to use a baseball bat on the works of Robertson Davies, I'm more than happy to let him take a swing.
01/19/09
01/19/09
But damn, her dad's books drive me bonkers.
01/19/09
01/19/09
To me, it's right up there with 1984 and Farenheight 451.
Great literature should provoke. It should poke you with a stick and tell you to wake up and pay attention.
This man is an ass.
01/19/09
All issues of censorship aside, what the hell kind of parent subjects his child to this crap?
Oh, wait, I forgot that it's infinitely preferable for your child be singled out and ostracized because of your actions.
01/19/09
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01/19/09
/totally not bitter at all.
01/19/09
01/19/09
Stuff like this is really silly. The school wouldn't have the book on a required list unless it fit their curriculum and had educational value. Whatever happened to trusting the school?
I attend what could be called a 'fundamentalist' church. The parents at my church deal with situations like this in an appropriate manner. They read the book WITH THEIR KID. Imagine that! And they DISCUSS that book with their kid - not just the points they think the teacher wants them to learn, but they also take the opportunity to EXPLAIN why they feel that book is personally offensive to them. They're smart enough to know that hiding your kid away from this stuff does not help your kid to learn who you are as a Christian. It also does not help them deal with a situation like this when they are off on their own in college.
Stories like this give me one huge head/desk.
01/19/09
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01/19/09
(for the record, I hate Atwood. I want to wipe the smug smile off her face.)
01/19/09
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01/19/09
Smalltown CanLit: Unsubscribe.
01/19/09
01/19/09
I love reading and I eat books for breakfast, but it's truly a wonder that high school Lit classes in St. Catharines, Ontario didn't kill off all interest in the printed word forever. And the real fucking kicker is that I was taught by Richard Wright, a Governor General and Giller Prize-winning perpetrator of depressing CanLit monstrosities. Mr. Wright was a super-nice guy, but his books do not greatly inspire the will to live, it must be confessed.
Oddly enough, though, Atwood is one of the very, very few Canadian authors that I can be convinced to read. And I actually kind of loved The Robber Bride. But my patience generally wears very, very thin with that rural-small town malarkey. Life is too damn short.
01/19/09
01/19/09
If it helps any, Mr. Wright really was an extremely nice person. Gentle and friendly and encouraging and eye-twinklingly funny. But his fiction, though beautifully written, made me want to re-enact The Bunny Suicides. God bless him and all of his depressing literary comrades. ;-)
01/19/09
I never really had a teacher who published anything (though my English teacher said that when John Irving was researching for A Prayer for Owen Meany, he sat through several of her English classes...this English teacher was an alumna) but we had a visiting Canadian author every year. Basically, everyone between Grade 11 and OAC got the "afternoon off" to hear the writer talk about his/her book. Then there was the option of having tea with the author.
01/19/09
Those author meet-ups sound great! You lucky old thing. And yeah, it's best to forget most of what one was obliged to endure in high school classrooms. It's just better that way, eh?
01/20/09
Margaret Atwood I can take or leave. Oryx and Crake was terrible.
01/19/09
To quote: "Those who know what's best for us, must rise and save us from ourselves."
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