So there's that tweet floating around about bad academic writing in literature. I have thoughts. First: the text in question, I can almost guarantee, has never been assigned to an undergraduate. No one gets to lit-101 and opens up their book to that. 1/8
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Blog readers will remember we had a discussion of How Your History Gets Made (https://acoup.blog/2020/07/09/collections-how-your-history-gets-made/ …) where we noted that some kinds of history is field-to-public and some kinds are field-to-field (meaning academics talking to each other). 2/8
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Bret Devereaux uudelleentwiittasi Kurt Andersen
This https://twitter.com/KBAndersen/status/1373277502735585284 … is very clearly field-to-field communication. It's the literature equivalent of an experimental white paper in physics. (Also, pulling jargon-heavy passages like this out of context always renders them difficult to read) 3/8
Bret Devereaux lisäsi,
Kurt AndersenVarmennettu tili @KBAndersenI know, academic writing: fish in a barrel. But imagine a student eagerly signing up for a course on Middlemarch, Jane Eyre, Vanity Fair and Our Mutual Friend; starts reading the assigned book about them called The Novel As Event; and finds it filled with passages such as these. pic.twitter.com/QhMyP36kue1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 17 tykkäystäNäytä tämä ketju -
Now I will say that I cordially dislike that style of academic writing. I very much prefer arguments that can be put in plain language (but then again, that's part of why I don't do a ton of narratology). 4/8
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Vastauksena käyttäjälle @BretDevereaux
Great. Now I have to go look up " narratology."
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Vastauksena käyttäjälle @RichardFoxall1
The study of narrative. In a history context, it's how the nature of narrative shapes the telling of a historical event. E.g., the way that a narrative source (e.g. an account of the event) has to be linear, whereas events may not be (many things happening at the same time).
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Vastauksena käyttäjille @BretDevereaux ja @RichardFoxall1
But also the way the demands of the telling - story structure, genre conventions, etc. - might shape the narrative. Narratological approaches are often as interested in the process that creates the historical record as they are in the events they record.
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Vastauksena käyttäjille @BretDevereaux ja @RichardFoxall1
Which can be a very valid lens, especially in situations where the narrative has further influence - e.g. Herodotus' Greek/non-Greek binary in his composition of a history of the Persian Wars (inter alia) encouraging a greater sense of Pan-Hellenic identity.
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Or, in full academic jargon, we'd say, 'Herodotus' narrative uses the Persian Wars as a stage on which to construct Greek identity in contrast to the non-Greek Other.'
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Vastauksena käyttäjille @BretDevereaux ja @RichardFoxall1
OMG, is there a copy of my senior essay from 1987 on the internet?
0 vastausta 0 uudelleentwiittausta 0 tykkäystäKiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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