2017: Our Year of Reading Proust discussion
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Lori
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Jan 03, 2017 05:48PM

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OK: how we did it before. Tackled questions about the story; offered insights/questions about the characters & action; examined critical essays; those of us lucky enough to have visited Illiers-Combray posted photos & comments..
Really, it was how I used to run my class discussions; say anything you like, just keep it (fairly) clean & not spiteful.



Is it ok if I just play catch up? I was looking forward to reading this one this year ! I simply loved Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time last year ! It was the first group reading experience of a large volume read and it was a MAGNIFICENT read ! Powell was wonderful and most say Proust is even better . I do not know how readers feel so far but that might be a good question to start with first .
Should we ask how many readers have participated in reading " Large Big Book Volume Reads" and if so which ones and how did you enjoy the experience ? Did you read as a group read ? Did you read alone ? What appealed to you most and what did not ?
If you tell me where to place this question , I will answer first and get some discussion started !
We may want some historical and author background to talk about first ! I was an English Literature major with an emphasis in the English Victorian period and a speciality in Dickens . I went back to University and received an emphasis in Southern Culture and Literary Studies along with Creative Writing . During this time I briefly touched a few French writers but mostly concentrated on poetry and Russian Literature because we did not have an expert in other foreign specialties at the time . I have consistently read on my own to satisfy my curiosity as I have been a freelance writer and editor of my own blog which not only concentrates on the light in which the literary arts brings to our bored minds but how all light or knowledge can cure the boredom for such passion for all . I feel myself , that the mysterious light that magically shines and illuminates in crevices of dark corners or in blinding dreamy darkness all over the world will always live in most of our minds as a never ending curiosity that will always keep our minds searching !
Dawn
Lover of Light


For example, when I was 10 I had memories of ways of thinking that I had at age 5 and those older thoughts would contribute to and modify the new thoughts. So we can write about our childhoods from multiple perspectives: we may have an old memory fixed in amber, so to speak, but with age our reflections upon that fossilized memory may be adapted.

In these early pages the influence of the female relations seem greater but perhaps that's because the women are expected to deal with the young children. Perhaps the beloved church with its spires represents a sort of masculine principle and the crumbling p'tit Madeleine a feminine one--it will collapse and lose its structure in the tea.
But this is all mere speculation: all I can say is that he does not seem to have siblings and his parents are not presented in any way contrary to what I might suppose late 19th century parents behaved in general.

And we, of course, have gone to the other extreme.

good point about ageless quality of narrator.


Each page is full of such richness that all of my comments have been quite a bit arbitrary. Also my edition does not line up with the page numbers here at all, so I never know where to place my comments.

that's how I feel. I'm reluctant to rely on study guides- just more reading. So I'll just take notes and well, still not sure what I'll post that's worth saying. Can't just say I love this, I love that...

What is your edition?

Folder ONE for general information: reading schedule, ancillary readings, how will discussions work
Folder TWO for specific topics about characters: Marcel's family, Verdurins, Swann etc
Folder THREE for weekly reading schedule discussions
I couldn't figure out how to do this.


I meant to say folders within folders, as there will be quite a few of them as we move along

Hum...giving a sensitive child the "silent treatment" for days at a time?
From the novel:
I saw in the well of the stair a light coming upwards, from Mamma’s candle. Then I saw Mamma herself and I threw myself upon her. For an instant she looked at me in astonishment, not realising what could have happened. Then her face assumed an expression of anger. She said not a single word to me; and indeed I used to go for days on end without being spoken to, for far more venial offences than this. A single word from Mamma would have been an admission that further intercourse with me was within the bounds of possibility, and that might perhaps have appeared to me more terrible still, as indicating that, with such a punishment as was in store for me, mere silence and black looks would have been puerile. A word from her then would have implied the false calm with which one addresses a servant to whom one has just decided to give notice; the kiss one bestows on a son who is being packed off to enlist, which would have been denied him if it had merely been a matter of being angry with him for a few days.
MP (SW)


I am just now realizing that this is really helping me. I was trying to comment as a week by week thing but it's far more helpful to keep notes on topics as they unfold. Thanks so very much for setting me straight, Natalie!