Monthly Archives: November 2011

New LAH Course Added: LAH 350 Our Lives in Fiction

We’ve just added a LAH 350 “Our Lives in Fiction”, taught by our very own Dr. Carver!

Meets: T/TH 11-12:30, SZB 286

In this course we will explore the hypothesis that human beings have and continue to create and recreate themselves through the telling of stories.  While we tell stories for many reasons–pleasure, escapism, will to power, and so forth–one of the principal reasons, or so the course posits, is to find out what is significant, what is praiseworthy, what is it we should value and why.  As the infant Akhilleus sat on the lap of his tutor, Phoenix, “wet[ing] [his] shirt, hiccuping/wine-bubbles in distress,” the greatest of ancient Greek heroes was listening to stories “instruct[ing] [him] in these matters/to be a man of eloquence and action.”  Years later, Phoenix will seek once again to guide the actions of his extraordinary charge by telling him a story.  If you are like me, as a child and now an adult, you too heard and continue to hear stories; you too have sought and now continue to seek in these stories patterns of how to live.  It is this educative function of story that we will be exploring.  We will begin the course with two 20th-century coming of age novels, one about a young man, and one about a young woman. We will then turn back to read four great novels of our literary history.

Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote

Charles Dickens, Great Expectations

Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov

Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary

Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye

Grades will be based on the following:  (1) regular class attendance, careful preparation of the readings, and active participation in the class; (2) short papers responding to the day’s reading; (3) timely submission of all work; and (4) a final examination, which will ask you to identify and tell the significance of selected passages from the semester’s reading.

Grades on writing will make up 35% of the grade; class participation will constitute 35%; and the final examination 30%.

The complete syllabus: LAH 350 Our Lives in Fiction

Student Environmental Lobby Day, Wednesday, Nov. 16

Let’s move past occupying city hall and onto occupying the offices of our represented officials in the name of clean energy!  Please join the Lonestar Chapter of the Sierra Club as we host Student Environmental Lobby Day on Wednesday, November 16.

The Sierra Club will be organizing students from campuses Austin-wide to meet with local, state, and federal representatives to move Austin beyond coal and towards clean energy.  Student Environmental Lobby Day will be a two day event, with a training session on the night of the 15, and Lobby Day on the 16.  Food will be provided.

For more information email Ben Wollam at benwollamsc@gmail.com or visit their Facebook page

Event for Honors Students (plus free books!) Nov. 10, 7:00pm

Next Thursday, the Joynes Reading Room will host novelist and short story writer Anthony Doerr, who will read from his new story collection, Memory Wall. Doerr is the prize-winning author of two collections of short stories, a novel, and a chronicle of his year in Rome. He is also a science columnist for the Boston Globe. We have a small number of free books by Doerr, which we will give away to honors students who plan to attend the reading. To claim the free books, students can inquire at the Joynes Reading Room front desk.
“These stories come from all over, from South Africa, Germany, Lithuania, China and several parts of the United States, and the local detail is always scrupulously and vividly rendered, but Doerr’s method in every one is to take us away from our usual lives and then slowly, insidiously, bring us back closer to home.” —from Terrence Rafferty’s review of Memory Wall in the New York Times

When: 7PM Thursday, Nov 10
Where: Joynes Reading Room, Carothers building, 2501 Whitis Ave on the UT Campus
Public Parking: UTSAG garage at the corner of 25th street and San Antonio Street
For more information, call 471-5787