Classics and the Western Canon discussion
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Planning our Second Read of 2022

Silas Marner, read it, loved it, want to read it again.
Madame Bovary, same.
Dead Souls, isn't this the one without an ending?
To the Lighthouse, don't know enough to comment.
When are we going to read Middlemarch?


To the Lighthouse is beautiful in my opinion and, with her stream of consciousness technique, certainly complex enough to spur deep discussion. I imagine that not everyone will like it though. Woolf is not to everyone's taste. Personally, I love it. And I would love to re-read it slowly, with deep discussion.
Silas Marner was a great book (as is pretty much everything by George Eliot).
Madame Bovary is a masterpiece with rich and deep characterization. I imagine it generating good discussion too.
As far as Dead Souls, I haven't read that one yet, though Gogol's "The Overcoat" and "The Nose" were interesting and quite unique in approach. I'd love to read Dead Souls!
I can't comment on the Arendt one because I only know her work by reputation.

"
It is unfinished as Gogol envisioned it, and Part One ends mid-sentence, which makes it appear even more unfinished than it actually is. Gogol designed Dead Souls along the same lines as the Divine Comedy, but only Part One was really completed. The second part exists in fragments, which some editors leave out entirely.

Jen, does that mean that you don't consider any of the others worthy of re-reading? (I ask in memory of the years of Eman "teaching" me the values of reading again.)




No, it's amazing how much is packed into a short, not simple novel. Virginia's brilliance shimmers through the glass.

One of the books I wonder whether is "classic" enough to consider here sometime is Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature (1942) by Erich Auerbach. I found his analysis of To the Lighthouse , in his last chapter, to be particularly insightful about what VW is accomplishing with words and how that differs (and is continuous with) from what came before in literature. I know reading Auerbach may be somewhat contrary to St. John's read "the originals", but somehow Mimesis also seems to me to an "original" in its own ways.


Re: Gogol, sort of. Another Ukrainian writer, though his language was Russian, was Bogolyubov.
The White Guard is set in Odessa. (They spell it now "Odesa".) My grandfather, as well as many other grandfathers, to avoid conscription, emigrated from there ca. 1900. It had a large, vibrant Jewish community.

https://www.goodreads.com/poll/show/2...
Voting started on: Mar 23, 2022 12:00AM PDT
Ends at: Mar 30, 2022 11:59PM PDT

https://www.goodreads.com/poll/show/2...
The poll ends: Mar 30, 2022 11:59PM PDT




I'm sticking with Virginia too, though I wouldn't mind reading either one. :)


R W W% Book
8 19 40% To the Lighthouse
7 12 26% The Human Condition
7 12 26% Dead Souls
2 4 9% Silas Marner

I am delighted that a woman-authored novel has won the poll. I am even more delighted to welcome Susan as our guest moderator for To the Lighthouse.
Susan has been an active member of this group since 2014 and has consistently contributed to discussions with her comments and observations. I’m sure she will do a wonderful job moderating the discussion. She will be posting the reading schedule some time next week. The discussion of To the Lighthouse will begin on April 20.
It has been years since I last read the novel and am looking forward to re-reading it. I have no doubt I will get a lot more out of it this time around since the quality of the discussions from the members here is always enlightening. I hope all of you will consider participating even if you didn’t vote for the novel.
Our sincere thanks go to Susan. We wish her every success and look forward to the discussion. Please join me in welcoming Susan as our guest moderator.


Susan -- welcome to moderating on Western Canon and thank you for taking on this group and To the Lighthouse. So glad to see the group explore Woolf together. I know that Eman would cringe at this, but I will definitely go back to Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature and take a look at Erich Auerbach's comments about the complicated lenses through which Woolf invites the reader to view the elements of the story being told, lenses that explore how humans process the information around them that informs their thoughts?
I also hope we reconsider Arendt and Gogol in the reads to follow. I don't know Arendt's work, but I perceive it can inform the times in which we live. I don't happen to "like" Gogol's Dead Souls , but I would hope to do what I see other seemingly astute readers suggesting: preface reading with some of his other short stories. Somehow, I feel as if those "Russian minds" record the world from perspectives uniquely different than "English minds," but maybe I have just been watching too many episodes of "The Crown" recently (in a period of reading supplanted by video ). Still, that was definitely one of my feelings in our last sequence of Dostoevsky and Austen.
In the meantime, time to find that copy of Woolf....and to be brought close to what is forged in the intimacy of family dynamics.

To The Lighthouse is on my reading list since time immemorial. I'm not sure why I've never picked it up, maybe I am just afraid of Virginia Woolf...


We have two weeks of short interim reads beginning April 6 when I will post a link to the short story. And the discussion of To the Lighthouse will begin on April 20. You're welcome to jump in with your comments and thoughts any time.

Runners-up in the polling should automatically go on the following ballot. The votes for them clearly show more interest in them than in a random selection from the to-read list.

That logic probably often holds, but doesn't always suggest what will emerge as the choice from this rich list of possibilities....at least my sense of watching these through the years.

I like this idea!


If you decide to try again with us, here are a couple suggestions that might be of use.
1) Make a list of the characters as you read. Woolf plunges the reader into a busy house with the ten members of the Ramsay family, their guests, and servants, and it can be a challenge to keep everyone straight.
2) Try listening to an audio version along with/instead of reading. I find this very helpful with complex books to listen and read. There are a couple different narrators available; I like the Juliet Stevenson version.

I think my difficulty lays in the fact that my mind isn't nearly as chaotic as Woolf portrays consciousness. I have no reference point at all. The characters jump all over the place in disjointed thoughts and impressions in rapid succession with little or no focus. It's like a film going on hyper speed with the result of making you nauseated. I have to admit I never made it past page 30. It was way too disorienting.
I'll follow the discussion a bit and see how others react.

James Joyce said anyone could understand Finnegans Wake if it were read aloud (preferably in an Irish accent.) That's a wee exaggeration, but I've tried it and it does in fact help!

@Thomas I'm looking forward to the discussion regarding Woolf's vs. Joyce's approach to the stream of consciousness.

I second that. Mimesis on Woolf is a great aynergy.

The original English. As a rule I only do German translations if the work was originally written in a third language, for example when we've read Dostoevsky. Though oddly enough, I've found the English translation of the Aeneid more intelligible than the German...which I still have to finish, lol...


It wasn’t me, since I’ve never read that chapter, but I’ve put it on my list to read once we finish reading To the Lighthouse together.

Susan -- Thx for catching that I was busting Sam's reading chops! Like Sam, I'll be so bold as to suggest reading that chapter of Mimesis as one STARTS TTL! Especially since you have read the Welty comments. (I haven't been able to find that edition so far in my library system.) And especially after having looked at Auerbach after reading The Decameron. The evolution over time of humankind observing/recording the world with words? And I do still agree with the St. John's College "just read the text" attitude towards tackling any book.

As Virginia Woolf says herself about literary critics in her essay “How to Read a Book,” “But they are only able to help us if we come to them laden with questions and suggestions won honestly in the course of our own reading.” So maybe we should call it the St John’s College and Virginia Woolf “just read the text” attitude ;)
Hope you can find a copy of the Eudora Welty foreword. I’m surprised your library doesn’t have a copy of the standard text from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, which should have it. BTW, I checked, and that foreword is not included in Welty’s book of essays “The Eye of the Story,” although the collection contains several other short essays on Woolf.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Decameron (other topics)Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature (other topics)
Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature (other topics)
To the Lighthouse (other topics)
Dead Souls (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Erich Auerbach (other topics)Erich Auerbach (other topics)
Erich Auerbach (other topics)
George Eliot (other topics)
Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol
Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
Silas Marner by George Eliot
The Human Condition by Hannah Arendt