Friday, May 1, 2009

Final Exam Review

So the final is Thursday, May 7, at 6 p.m. and here is what you need to know.

Group Questions:
  1. Group 1: Maps - All did project without knowing what other was writing
  2. Group 2: Boundaries - Rabbit Hole
  3. Group 3: Dreams - Dreams are remembrance
  4. Group 4: Complimentarty - Ch. 7 in Ong. (Orality and Literacy are Complimentary)
  5. Group 5: Tradition - Stories are the history and memory of the culture
  6. Group 6: Context - If you remove the context you remove the essence (Ch. 7 Ong)

Individual Questions:

  1. Keen Kenning Ben: Information not seperable from vessel.
  2. Checkmark Parker: Not text bound, walked around class

Ong

  1. Subtitles in Ch. 7 (Read whole chapter carefully)
  2. Plea for literary history
  3. Identify these forms of literary criticism (new criticism, structuralism, deconstruction)

Yates

  1. p. 320, 329, 352, 364
  2. Read Kevin Luby's blog (gone over the edge)

Remember that you also need to check out Chris' blog and MEMORIZE US!!!!

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Final Blog

So to join the crowd, I am writing the very cliched yet essential final farewell to this class. Although this semester has been quite hectic, this class has offered a sort of comedic escape thanks to all of the personalities as well as a very educational experience as a result of a very influential professor who knows his stuff. Therefore I sign off, at least for now so as not to dissapoint Tai, with a very gratuitous thanks to everyone for making this class what it was: the ski class where time flew by.


Word of Advice!!!!!


Everyone, remember that your blogs are due by noon on Wednesday so it is about that time to start wrapping them up, dotting all the i's and crossing your t's.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Simply the Best

Perhaps One of my Favorite Passages in All of Our Books


"It is in her voice - I cannot say precisely how it is in her voice - the music of humanity at peace with time, and with the earth, and with mortality. In places where this book breathes more deeply as it tells a story, or when it makes a point in the half-said way of the storyteller, that is where the spirit of a distinguished teacher and teller of myth is present." Kane, p. 24

I don't know why but this passage just struck me. I am unsure whether it is in the way Kane expressed this idea or whether it is the actual point he is making about the storyteller. Whichever it is, the idea of her voice as music and the books breathing is in its simplest form as beautiful as the picture I have chosen to accompany it. There is nothing more beautiful than children gathered around a teacher or storyteller anticipating her first breath that sings the story and breathes life into the book she is reading.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Classes Transcending Their Boundaries

It seems almost as if I can never escape my class on metafiction this semester. As I was researching some of my additional texts for my paper, I came across a passage in Orhan Pamuk's The Black Book that as much as I wanted to, I just could not seem to fit it into my paper. However, I was really compelled by the ideas it presented and their connections with oral traditions.


"'Once upon a time,' began Galip, 'there lived in our city a Prince who discovered that the most important question in life was whether to be, or not to be, oneself.' As he spoke, he felt the Prince's anger rise up in him and transport him to some other body. Who was this other person? As he described the Prince's childhood, he was returned to the Galip he had been during his own childhood. When he went on to describe how the Prince had struggled with his books, he felt as if he were the authors of those books. When he spoke of the days the Prince spent alone in his hunting lodge, he saw himself as the hero in the Prince's own stories. When he described how the Prince dictated his thoughts to his Scribe, he felt himself the author of those thoughts. Because he was telling the Prince's story in the same way he told Celal's stories, he felt himself to be one of Celal's heroes. As he described the Prince's last months, he told himself, This is just how Celal would have told this story - and he hated the others in the room for not knowing this, His fury was eloquent, for the English film crew seemed to understand what he was saying before Iskender translated it. After describing the Prince's end, he went straight back to the beginning: 'Once upon a time, there lived in our city a Prince who discovered that the most important question in life was whether to be, or not to be, oneself.' His voice has lost none of its conviction.

It was only four hours later, when he was back in the City-of-Hearts Apartments, that he realized what set the two tellings apart: The first time he'd told the Prince's story, Celal had still been alive; the second time he'd told it, Celal was lying dead on the floor of the Tesvikiye police station, just a little way down the road from Alaaddin's shop, under a blanket of newsprint. When he was telling the story the second time, he stressed sections he had failed to notice the first time; when he told the story for the third time, it became clear to him that he could be a different person each time he told it. Like the Prince, I tell stories to become myself. Furiously angry at all those who had prevented him from being himself, and certain that it was only by telling stories that he would come to know the mystery of the city and the mystery of life itself, he brought the story to a close for the third and final time, to be met with a white silence that spoke to him of death." p. 416-7

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Expansion Past the Classroom

More on Boundaries
After giving our presentation, as I sat in my room in reflection, I realized that had I not simultaneously been battling with the lines of Shakespeare, memorizing our lines would have created for a more impactful and memorable performance, especially in a class on oral traditions. However, that seems trivial in comparison to how it seemed semi confusing as to what exactly we had to say about boundaries. So here is a brief compilation of some of my favorite sections from the chapter that pertain to not only what we said but also perhaps what we wished we had managed to say.
"Always, the mythtellers speak of a boundary between the Otherworld where life has its source and this world where life has its manifestation. And they speak of how this boundary may, and may not, be crossed." p. 102
"Boundaries are the magic points where worlds impinge." p. 103
"If one thinks of the human body as a bounded entity, one has an idea of what boundary permits and does not permit." p. 103
"Boundaries can also be crossed invisibly. They can be crossed by words, by thoughts, and by spirits." p. 103
"This verbal power makes mythtelling a sacred art, in which the listener is virtually transported by language into the invisible world." p. 104
"Boundaries are marked differently in different mythtelling traditions, but they are always explicit." p. 105
"In this way a central boundary makes other boundaries possible in myth, often creating a complicated hierarchy of realms." p. 106
"Where two worlds come together at a boundary, the point is sacred, often becoming in later ages the focal point of organized religion." p. 107
"The care is necessary: Otherworld personalities resemble human beings in their thinking and behaviour, and they burst spontaneously into the normal world, just as human individuals are always stumbiling into the otherworld. Partly to differentiate these encroaching worlds further, the mythtellers emphasize a change that happens to whoever crosses the boundary between two realms. This change is an important and almost universal event in mythtelling." p. 110
"That change is, at the very least, a physical transfomation; at the most, a death in one world and rebirth in the other." p. 110
"That is because transformation implies, not an existence in one world and then in another; rather it implies existence in both realms simultaneously." p. 110
"One of the dangers is to be trapped in a realm which the traveller does not belong to." p. 111

Saturday, April 18, 2009

My Term Paper

Literary Continuations;

or How Literature Still Remembers Oral Traditions


More so than any other semester, my classes this time around seem to be interconnected in a way that proves almost inescapable. Oral traditions are found in the metafictional books that talk to the reader and instruct them, Tristram Shandy from eighteenth century British literature is discussed in terms of a “cock and bull” story in oral traditions, and the memorization techniques of storytellers that reveal their necessity through implementation aided in remembering countless lines of Shakespeare. However, what compels and intrigues me the most, for I am still very much interested in the subject, was revealed in not only the required literature from my classes, but also in the very limited reading I attempted for my own pleasure. It seemed as if I would never be able to escape the author telling me how to read their story or the never-ending interpretations and application of memory and its importance. For that reason, I am here to ponder the influence of the oral culture and its traditions on literature from the onset of the novel in roughly the eighteenth century until the present day as well as the treatment of memory in this context with the help of Walter Ong and his work Orality and Literacy, The Art of Memory by Frances A. Yates, and Sean Kane’s Wisdom of the Mythtellers. I encourage that the reading of this essay be done in a memorably comforting place so the reader does not impose any negative feelings on the text and its reading prior to completion.
Henry Fielding’s Joseph Andrews, Paul Auster’s Travels in the Scriptorium, Laurence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy, Orhan Pamuk’s The Black Book, Stefen Merrill Block’s The Story of Forgetting, Markus Zusak’s The Book Thief, Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland. These represent a small fraction of the books relevant to my discussion that I have encountered this semester alone. Yet they are perhaps some of the strongest in their application of either the traditional oral “tools” as laid out by Walter Ong and Sean Kane or the treatment of memory as found in The Art of Memory. As I examine these, I hope to enrich your own experience in realizing just how many books rely on the foundations of “oral literature” to convey their message.
Nearly every one of the books I will be using reiterates that writing very rarely and only after sometime, manages to be “put together without the feeling that the one writing is actually speaking aloud” (Ong 26). That is to say that through the incorporation of the author seemingly guiding the reader through the use of asides in his narration or even by simply posing a question, the interpersonal experience of hearing the story from the mouth of the teller proves to be a connection that remains desired. Instead, when writing in the print culture, the author is isolated and alone, forced to imagine his audience and his audience the same in imaging the author (Ong 100-1). Perhaps this may account for what seems like a conversation between the author and the reader.
In Orality and Literacy, Walter Ong reveals nine elements that are maintained or exhibited by primary oral cultures; thoughts are additive rather than subordinative, aggregative rather than analytic, redundant, conservative, close to the human lifeworld, agonistically toned, empathetic, homeostatic, and situational (Ong 37-49). Using the aforementioned texts, I am sure that nearly all of these predominantly oral characteristics can be applied to the print culture in a very effective and compelling manner. Also, at least four of these novels demonstrate the notion of boundaries found in chapter three of Wisdom of the Mythtellers. I will illustrate the way in which some of the books that I have chosen pose as exemplary models of written literature that is additive and aggregative.
In Tristram Shandy, Laurence Sterne succeeds in incorporating the first of Ong’s elements of primary oral cultures into the world of secondary orality. When Ong discusses the use of additive rather than subordinative structure in sentences, he is referring to the less grammatically shaped style with “and” as an integral introductory sentence starter instead of an essential part of a compound sentence (Ong 37-8). The sentences in Sterne’s novel are also very much additive in that they continue on and on and on and on in such a way as this: “To my uncle Mr. Toby Shandy do I stand indebted for the preceding anecdote, to whom my father, who was an excellent natural philosopher, and much given to close reasoning upon the smallest matters, had oft, and heavily complained of the injury….” (Sterne 3). Thoughts are strewn together with little to now subordination.
Thoughts that are aggregative rather than analytic, or to say more cliché than original, appear in oral traditions constantly through both epithets and formulas (Ong 38). Ong reveals that these help cement characters into their roles much like Henry Fielding employs particular names and gestures for certain characters to emphasize their personality differences and their purpose in the work. One such character, Lady Slipslop, is so rightly named not only because of her mismatched appearance, having a nose too long and eyes too small, but also in her poor choice and use of words as when she refers to her lady returning to London very “concisely” (Fielding 7). The gestures of the characters, however, more than the names add to the aggregative style as those practicing some of these in the novel do so nearly every time they are discussed. In this way, the actions of the characters act as the formula by which they are remembered.
As I stated previously, a lot of the books that I have read this semester also incorporate elements from Sean Kane’s chapter on boundaries in his book Wisdom of the Mythtellers. As Kane reveals how “boundaries are the magic points where worlds impinge” he opens up the possibility for my argument that these books themselves can be boundaries (Kane 103). When reading a book, there are two worlds in action, the one in the book and the one the reader is literally in. These books then can act as boundaries, much like the books for a young girl named Liesel Meminger in The Book Thief that allow her to escape the world around her and open up new possibilities for her as she transforms into a stronger version of herself upon reading them. This transformation of sorts is a key element found in this chapter as a life altering experience is most often a result of transcending one boundary (Kane 110).
However, there are boundaries within books as well, one of the most recognizable being the white rabbit hole from Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. After Alice passes through, she enters a dream world where everything becomes topsy-turvy. Upon exiting, she can’t remember if it were a dream or reality. All she knows is that she prefers it more than the reality she wakes up to again. Steffen Merrill Block’s The Story of Forgetting also discusses the concept of boundaries that are life-altering as it opens with the affirmation that “alongside this world there’s another. There are places where you can cross” (Block 3). This other world he is talking about, Isidora, offers a fair transition as it is a land where memory does not exist and nothing can be lost.
The notion of memory and the methods for retention of information expressed by Frances Yates in The Art of Memory also appeared in my readings. As we were instructed in class to create a memory palace, I came across in Orhan Pamuk’s novel The Black Book the idea that memory is a garden (Pamuk 3). This reminded me very much of Yates call for the use of an unfrequented church as a memory palace and made me instead desire to find an unfrequented garden with flowers for which I could name. However, with further reading of the book and deeper thought into the notion, I became disheartened. “’When the garden of memory begins to dry up,’ Celal had said, ‘a man cannot but dote on its lingering rosebuds, its last remaining trees. To keep them from withering away, I water them from morning until night, and I caress them too: I remember, I remember so as not to forget!’” (Pamuk 21-2) Even though this reveals that perhaps the withering tendencies of the flowers in a garden would not serve the best purpose as a memory palace, they do offer quite a lovely yet saddening depiction of the loss of one’s memory, a recurring theme in much of the literature I have read. Travels in the Scriptorium reveal a man, in literary reality an author, that willing chooses to have his memory clouded by medication so as to forget the many crimes he has committed through his writing. The Story of Forgetting centers around the disease that makes loved ones forget their most precious memories. In a class that is all about strengthening the memory, I was left pondering the complexities of the reverse far more deeply.
On page seventy eight of Orality and Literacy, Walter Ong refers to Plato’s Socrates who “urges, writing destroys memory. Those who use writing will become forgetful, relying on an external resource for what they lack in internal resources. Writing weakens the mind.” Sadly, I would probably have to agree with Plato on this one. That is not to say that simply because someone reads they can’t remember anything. It means that in comparison to the memory capabilities of cultures of primary orality, those that rely on the print world have far less impressive capabilities.
In conclusion, as trite and cliché as it is, to say that the oral traditions have died and been fully consumed by the written and print cultures would be a lie. As Ong put it, “without writing, human consciousness cannot reach its fuller potentials, cannot produce other beautiful and powerful creations. In this sense, orality needs to produce and is destined to produce writing” (14). For that reason, many of the same themes and elements of oral “literature” can be found in literature in both its youngest forms and its most recent, which I hope I have managed to convey through this discussion. As much as I would like to think that this is all something new and innovating, I am channeling more conservative or traditionalist oral practices as “the formulas and themes are reshuffled rather than supplanted with new materials” (Ong 42). However, I do hope that what I have given you is at least memorable.



Works Cited
Block, Stefan Merrill. The Story of Forgetting. New York: Random House Trade Paperbacks-The Random House Publishing Group, 2008.
Fielding, Henry. Joseph Andrews. Mineola: Dover Publications, Inc., 2001.
Kane, Sean. Wisdom of the Mythtellers. Orchard Park: Broadview Press, 1998.
Ong, Walter J. Orality and Literacy. 1982. New York: Routledge, 2002.
Pamuk, Orhan. The Black Book. Trans. Maureen Freely. New York: Vintage Books, 2006.
Sterne, Laurence. The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. Mineola: Dover Publications, Inc., 2007.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Who We Were!

9 Muses
Thalia - James
Terpsichore - Kevin
Euterpe - Carly
Melpomene - Tai
Caliope - Chris
Urania - Brie
Clio - Kayla
Erato - Rich
Polyhymnia - Danielle

Thursday, April 16, 2009

The Classroom Doors

Group 2: Boundaries

As a group of nine, we accidently happened upon the notion of emboding the nine muses we have been studying since the first day of our class in Oral Traditions. Thanks to Shaman Sexson, we managed to create a skit that I feel embodied the very essence of the chapter on Boundaries found in Sean Kane's Wisdom of the Mythtellers. We called upon boundaries found in familiar children's literature to send us to carefully thought out places that portrayed the combination of the three muses that ventured there. In the end, I think our product was both pleasing and enjoyable while maintaing the ever important instructional qualities we were asked to convey. I don't know, what do you think?




Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Call For HELP!!!!!

Advise Column (I guess it is more of a paragraph form though)

So I have finally figured out what I am going to write my paper about: how literature really is not that far removed from oral traditions. As of yet, I only have my introduction complete and was wondering if it even sounded plausible or compelling or made sense. Please read and offer any feedback, positive or negative. I am a big girl! I can take it.

More so than any other semester, my classes this time around seem to be interconnected in a way that proves almost inescapable. Oral traditions are found in the metafictional books that talk to the reader and instruct them, Tristram Shandy from eighteenth century British literature is discussed in terms of a “cock and bull” story in oral traditions, and the memorization techniques of storytellers that reveal their necessity through implementation aided in remembering countless lines of Shakespeare. However, what compels and intrigues me the most, for I am still very much interested in the subject, was revealed in not only the required literature from my classes, but also in the very limited reading I attempted for my own pleasure. It seemed as if I would never be able to escape the author telling me how to read their story or the never-ending interpretations and application of memory and its importance. For that reason, I am here to ponder the influence of the oral culture and its traditions on literature from the onset of the novel in roughly the eighteenth century until the present day as well as the treatment of memory in this context with the help of Walter Ong and his work Orality and Literacy, The Art of Memory by Frances A. Yates, and Sean Kane’s Wisdom of the Mythtellers. I encourage that the reading of this essay be done in a memorably comforting place so the reader does not impose any negative feelings on the text and its reading prior to completion.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Epiphany

So I know that everyone always leaves their classes pondering the question, When am I ever going to use this?

Well, I have learned that what we are learning about memory and memory palaces in oral traditions really can be applied to not only the real world, but also other classes to allow for success.

While memorizing my lines for "The Winter's Tale" by William Shakespeare, I found it much easier to learn them not when we were all sitting around a table stoically reciting the same thing over and over. Instead, with the help of gestures and movements and places visited during the scene, I found it much easier to retain the required information. For that reason, I wanted to extend a big thank you out to you Professor Sexson for teaching me the ways of the memory palace.

Monday, April 6, 2009

More Important Quotes From Ong

"Orality needs to produce and is destined to produce writing." p. 14


"Saussure takes the view that writing simply represents spoken language in visible form." p. 17


"Oral poets do not normally work from verbatim memorization of their verse." p. 21


"The meaning of the Greed term 'rhapsodize'...'to stitch song together'...became ominous: Homer stitched together prefabricated parts. Instead of a creator, you had an assembly-line worker." p. 22


"There was no use denying the now known fact that the Homeric poems valued and somehow made capital of what later readers had been trained inprinciple to disvalue, namely, the set phrase, the formula, the expected qualifier - to put it more bluntly, the cliche." p. 23

Thursday, April 2, 2009

The Residue of Words

"Written words are residue. Oral tradition has no such residue or deposit. When an often-told oral story is not actually being told, all that exists of it its the potential in certain human beings to tell it." p. 11 in Ong's Orality and Literacy

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Important Thoughts From Ong

"The orality treated here is primary orality, that of persons totally unfamiliar with writing." p. 6


"The basic orality of language is permanent." p. 7


"A grapholect is a transdialectal language formed by deep commitment to writing." p. 8


"Oral expression can exist and mostly has existed without any writing at all, writing never without orality." p. 8


"As noted above, I style the orality of a culture totally untouched by any knowledge of writing or print, 'primary orality'. It is 'primary' by contrast with the 'secondary orality' of present-day high-technology culture, in shich a new orality is sustained by telephone, radio, television, and other electroinc devices that depend for their existence and functioning on writing and print." p. 11

Monday, March 23, 2009

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Wheelless Automobile

"Thinking of oral tradition or a heritage of oral performance, genres and styles as 'oral literatre' is rather like thinking of horses as automobiles without wheels. You can, of course, undertake to do this. Imagine writing a treatise on horses (for people who have seen a horse) which starts with the concept not of horse but of 'automobile' built on the readers' direct experience of automobiles. It proceeds to discourse on horses by always referring to them as 'wheelless automobiles', explaining to highly autmobilized readers who have never seen a horse all the points of difference in an effort to excise all idea of 'automobile' out of the concept 'wheelless automobile' so as to invest the term with a purely equine meaning. Instead of wheels, the wheelless automobiles have enlarged toenails called hooves; instead of headlights or perhaps rear-vision mirrors, eyes; instead of a coat of lacquer, something called hair; instead of gasoline for fuel, hay, and so on. In the end horses are only what they are not." p. 12

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Kane

"No longer constrained by the checks and balances of survival in nature, populations are now controlled by social class. A class system arises out of the necessitites of agriculture. For agriculture to work, you need to have a concept of property. For a concept of property to work, you need to have a state. For a state to work, you need to have armies to defend it. Consequently, developed agricultural societies evolve a new mythology featuring three classes of deities-deities who stand respectively for the functions of priest, farmer, and warrior." The Art of Memory p. 21-22

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Friday, February 13, 2009

Memory, Imagination, Soul

Yates, p. 33: "Memory, he continues, belongs to the same part of the soul as the imagination; it is a collection of mental pictures from sense impressions but with a time element added, for the mental images of memory are not from perception of things present but of things past."

That one is able to remember leaves the question are the memories imagined more than memory. Most stories of when someone was younger are often told so many times, people think they remember them when in reality they are often simply imagining what is being told to them.

Yates, p. 45: "A power able to bring about such a number of important results is to my mind wholly divine. For what is the memory of things and words? What further is invention?...Assuredly nothing can be apprehended even in God of greater value that this...Therefore the soul is, as I say, divine, as Eruipides dares say, God..."

Yates, p. 45: "The soul's remarkable power of remembering things and words is a proof of its divinity; so also is its power of invention, not now in the sense of inventing the arguments or things of a speech, but in the general sense of invention or discovery."

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Children Amaze Me

Brown Bear, Brown Bear What Do You See?


So I work at a daycare and am constantly amazed by the children I work with there. However, one little girl the other day who is about seven years old was sitting there playing and talking to herself. So I went over and asked her what she was doing to which she replied "Telling a story." I asked her if she could share thinking it would be some product of her imagination that she was throwing together haphazardly on the spot. She knocked my socks off however when she started reciting Eric Carle's Brown Bear, Brown Bear What Do You See line by line word by word knowing each animal that came after the former without missing a beat. To say the least I was impressed and inspired by this young girl sitting in front of me. That night I went home and started working on my fifty children's books, the inspiration for my choosing this subject being the little recitor.

Impossible! Sexson Thinks Not!

Here are two assignments that Sexson has given out that I find troubling however he did assure us that the task was not impossible.

  1. Memorize 6 Languages Before Next Week
  2. Go Learn All the Names of All the Books in the Library

My compliments go out to whoever thinks they can accomplish this;)

Friday, February 6, 2009

Locations of the Muses That Have Taken Over

Their Positioning
  1. Erato - Thermostat (Because she is HOT!)
  2. Clio - Chalkboard (Cause she is all about the history lecture)
  3. Urania - Screen (Cause she is above us all in the universe)
  4. Thalia - Quiet Desk (Because the desk is just plain funny)
  5. Polyhymnia - Overhead Projector (Cause hymns were put on there to be sung at church)
  6. Terpsichore - Old Desk (Because there is a little person dancing under it)
  7. Caliope - Bulletin Board (Cause it is epic?)
  8. Uterpe - Snowman (Seriously- "Frosty the Snowman, was a jolly happy soul,...."
  9. Malpomene- Weird F (Because it looks like the Nazi symbol)

And there you have it.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Memorizing your 50!!!!!

Alex mentioned in class the other day that he was afraid that you are just getting into too much when you are foced to use a tool to memorize something instead of just simply memorizing it. To counter this, I turn to Frances A. Yates.

Chapter 1
"The artificial memory is established from places and images." p. 6
"Those who know the letters of teh alphabet can write down what is dictated to them and read out what they have written. Likewise those who have learned mnemonics can set in places what they have heard and deliver it from memory." p. 7
"It is essential that the places should form a series and must be remembered in their order, so that we can start from any locus in the series and move either backwards or forwards from it." p. 7
"If these have been arranged in order, the result will be that, reminded by the images, we can repeat orally what we have committed to the loci, proceeding in either direction from any locus we please." p. 7
"But the loci remain in the memory and can be used again by placing another set of images for another set of material." p. 7
"In order to make sure that we do not err in remembering the order of the loci it is useful to give each fifth locus some distinguishing mark." p. 7
"It is better to form one's memory loci in a deserted and solitary place for crowds of passing people tend to weaken the impressions. Therefore the student intent on acquiring a sharp and welldefined set of loci will choose an unfrequented building in which to memorise places." p. 7
"Memory loci should not be too much like one another, for instance too many intercolumnar spaces are not good, for their resemblance to one another will be confusing." p. 7
There is also a big long set of rules for images but I will let you use your book and turn to pages 8 and 9 for further explanation. Thanks to all of these, the memorization of fifty things seems far less daunting and more achievable.

Friday, January 30, 2009

"Flyting"

As Chris stated in class the other today, an excellent example of flyting or verbal assults appears in the movie Hook where Peter Pan and Rufio go head to head with some fairly comical insults towards each other. This also brought up the subject of rapping as poetry where you don't copy someone unless your a beginner: improvisation as variation. This idea comes up in Walter Ong's book as he says only the basest of storyteller's would never try anything new. But back to flyting. It is now apparent that one can witness flyting on playgrounds and between siblings. However, I have to agree with Sexson that the best insults around are Shakespeare's. For example Kent talking about one of the most disgusting characters Oswald. I mean come on. You can't get much better than that.

Here is the Homework for today: If you did not flyt when you were a child, flyt today!

Simonides' Memory

I found an awesome website on Simonides http://www.ababasoft.com/mnemonic/tech09.htm
Simonides mnemonic technique

This memory trick was invented after a grisly event in ancient Greece. Back in around 500 BC, a Greek who won a wrestling match in the Olympic games celebrated by having a feast at his house. A man named Simonides gave a speech praising the wrestler, then he left the banquet hall. While he was out, the roof collapsed, crushing everyone inside. though the bodies of the guests were mangled beyond recognition, Simonides could remember where each person had been seated. By doing that, he could name all of the people who were at the feast. Knowing where each person was sitting helped him remember who was there.

Simonides realized that he could use his imagination and a set of locations to help him remember other things. The trick you just learned is the same as Simonides's trick -- but you used places in your house instead of seats at a banquet table.

This trick helps you remember for the same reasons that telling yourself a story about the pictures helped you remember. You are connecting all these different things and you are picturing them in your mind.

With this trick you are doing one more thing: you are giving yourself a hint that helps you pull out the memory of something. Sometimes all you need to help you remember something is a little hint. When you think "bathtub," that tells you to remember "duck" (or whatever you put in your bathtub).

First, walk through your house and find 10 different places where you could put something. For instance, you could put something on the couch in the living room, the top of the TV set, on the counter in the kitchen, the refrigerator, the bathtub, your own bed, and so on.
Choose any 10 places you like, but make sure that you can walk from one to the next easily and in the same order every time. Spend a little bit of time imagining yourself walking from one place to another, looking at each one. Make sure that you can remember all 10 places.
Next, look at the pictures you are want memorize for two minutes. When you look at the pictures, imagine each object in one of the places in your house. The sillier the picture you imagine, the more likely you are to remember it.

Do the same thing for every other item on the list. Imagine yourself walking from one place to another in your house and seeing the things you've imagined.

Any time you need to remember a list, you can use the same set of locations in your house. One warning: creating a new list usually wipes out the old one. So if you need to remember more than one list you need to have more than one set of locations.

Try these tricks when you have to remember a list of things -- whether it's stuff you need to buy at the store or vocabulary words for school -- and see how your memory improves!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here, the notion of the memory palace is not only reiterated, it is actually created. Yates elaborates on this and even expounds upon this.
"Simonedes' invetion of the art of memory rested, not only on his discovery of the importance of order for memory, but also on the discovery that the sense of sight is the strongest of all the senses." p. 4
Also, I am greatly intrigued by the idea expressed in The Art of Memory that there are "two kinds of memory. ...The natural memory is that which is engrafted in our minds, born simultaneously with thought. The artificial memory is a memory strengthened or confirmed by training. A good natural memory can be improved by this discipline and persons less well endowed can have their weak memories improved by the art." p. 5

The Song of the Place to Itself

"The myth teaches that these sacred places are to be respected for their own sake, not for what human beings can make of them. Myth, in its most ecologically discreet form, among people who live by hunting and fishing and gathering, seems to be the song of the place to itself, which humans overhear.

Wisdom about nature, that wisdom heard and told in animated pattern, that pattern rendered in such a way as to preserve a place whole and sacred, safe from human meddling: these are theconcepts with which to begin an exploration of myth. Of these, the notion of the sanctity of place is vital. It anchors the other concepts. the stories remembered by the mythtellers were pictures of the flow of life and information most keenly. Once the power of the place is lost to memtory, myth is uprooted; knowledge of the earth's precesses becomes a different kind of knowledge, manipulated and applied by man." p. 50

Losing a Library

Kane's chapter on patterns continues further to talk about the importance of mythtelling. He reiterates the notion of conservatism expressed by Ong for respect for the old focusing on the tried and true as he states: "No wonder the natives say losing an elder is like losing an entire library." p. 38 Kane also informs how these mythtellers use their tales for purposes of practicality as well. "In traditional cultures much of this practical knowledge is conveyed by mythtelling. It is conveyed by stories." p. 39. I don't know about you but when I was a kid, I most definately listend better when it was in the form of a story and not a lecture accompanied by a pointed finger. Perhaps one of my favorite stories that demonstrate the very real purpose of some practical myths appears with the story of the white berries.

"This is something I was told as a child. If you're hungry, don't eat the white berries. But I never knew the story of Nanabozo who made that mistake one day, and had to climb a tree to escape from his mounting pile of diarrhea. Nanabozo is the trickster god of the Algonkians. His name is heard in the Algonkina greeting"Bozo!" I is a kind of "God bless you!"...Nanabozo teaches by negative example. He teachers by telling you what not to do. 'Nobody eats me! Nobody eats me!' the berry tree screamed at Nanabozo one day. Perverse as always, Nanabozo ate the berries on the white berry tree. Even the birds knew better than he did. soon enough, he was squatting on the lower limb of a tree. But the stuff came higher-it just kept coming and coming. He moved higher, then higher, until he was sitting on the very top of the tree trying to escape the mountain of diarrhea that was rising up to meet him. No, it is not a good idea to eat white berries." p 39

Kane Chapter One and Patterns

"Myths-stories about gods. That is the truncated definition which has been kept alive through the ages by literature." p. 32

"Because a people coevolve with their habitat, because they walk the paths their ancestors walked, mythtelling assumes that the stories already exist in nature, waiting to be overheard by humans who will listen for them. Such stories have a semiwild existence; they are just barely domesticated and so are free to enact the patterns of the natural world." p. 33

"This, then, is prehistory's definiton of myth. The definition directs us towards an emotional and philosophical language of coevolution with nature, a language that allows all life, not just human life, to participate in the ecology of the earth." p. 33

"The proper subject of myth is the ideas and emotions of the Earth." p. 34

"The mythtellers speak of the powers in relation to each other, and with an eye to the whole ecology, not separable functions of it. They know that each being has a partner, and each works off the other to its own gain, and in the end forms a pattern." p. 36

My understanding of the first part of the chapter in Wisdom of the Mythtellers entitled Patterns is that myth and nature are essentially linked in a way that if you seperate one, you lose the others purpose if not its entirety. This made me think of the stories of creation and journeys that many native tribes tell that use the land around them as their guide. The mention certain rivers and mountains and other landmarks to either reference their story or inspire their story. The notion that the earth is the proper subject of myth is also intiguing in that mythical creatures in my mind are often more of a supernatural nature. However, one has to take a step back and reexamine the definition of myth in that instance. Myth as stories of gods who created the earth and rule it seems to reconnect this thread for me.

The Muses Have Taken Over

System of Locations

  1. Thermostat
  2. Blackboard
  3. Screen
  4. Quiet Desk
  5. Overhead Projector
  6. Old Desk
  7. Bulletin Board
  8. Snowman
  9. Weird F

Our goal is to now place a muse with each of these symbols around the room to help cement them in our own memory palace.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Ong, Plato, Socrates, and 9/11

Abstract Thought of the Day: All of our days should be 9/11's (not literally) - in the sense that you remember everyday like the days history "forces" you to remember.
Ong Orality and Literacy ch. 4: "The author might be challenged if only he or she could be reached, but the author cannot be reached in any book. There is no way directly to refute a text. After absolutely total and devasting refutation, it says exactly the same thing as before. This is also one reason why books have been burnt. A text stating what the whole world knows is false will state falsehood forever, so long as the text exists. Texts are inherently contumacious."
Also in this chapter is perhaps one of my favorite parts wherein Ong discusses Plato and his Socrates.
"Writing, Plato has Socrates say in the Phaedrus, is inhuman, pretending to establish outside the mind what in reality can be only in the mind. It is a thing, a manufactured product. ...Secondly, Plato's Socrates urges, writing destroys memory. Those who use writing will become forgetful, relying on an external resource for what they lack in internal resources. Writing weakens the mind....Thirdly, a written text is basically unresponsive. If you ask a person to explain his or her statement, you can get an explanation; if you ask a text, you get back nothing except the same, often stupid, words which called for your question in the first place."
I love Plato's argument, especially how text is unresponsive and there is no way to question what the author is trying to say. I know that when I am often reading Yates, it would be helpful for me to be able to ask her what it was she is trying to say with some of her sentences.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

What do you Know Today that you didn't Know Tomorrow?

Question of the day: Why is memory a focus in a class on oral traditions?



So we have been instructed to go against what all of our mothers taught us from the ripe old age of 3: don't talk to strangers. We should talk to people on the street and eavesdrop on their conversations. Enevitably, unless you are a real creeper, after they notice you eavesdropping, you will probably be more than likely obligated to strike up some sort of explanation. However, I think the whole strangers things expires at least when you enter the realm of high school.



Also, we have written down a very meaningless conversation that I had with my roomate about a cooler of mine.

My roomate: "Have you emptied the cooler by the window yet?"

Me: "No cause there is nothing really important in it."

Now that we have indeed written it down, it is no longer ephemeral!



Yet another assignment we have been given is to fondle The Art of Memory and learn to appreciate it like the playboy centerfold.?????


Oh and a very intriguing quote for the day: Norman Marler believes that one of the worst things that has ever happened to the U.S. is indoor plumbing. This was very similiar to the argument against writing.


Once again to the Important Stuff:


Walter Ong Orality and Literacy p. 7:

"language is so overwhelmingly oral that of all the many thousands of languages - possibly tens of thousands - spoken in the course of human history only around 106 have ever been committed to writing to a degree sufficicnt to have produced literature, and most have never been written at all. Of the some 3000 languages spoken that exist today only some 78 have a literature."


Also, the invention of the printing press was one of the most influential inventions in the past 1000 years.




Friday, January 16, 2009

Keep it Esoteric

As Sexson said the very first day of class, this class is esoteric, for elite people so we have to keep the information inside. He also informed us that we have entered the ski class because time flies while we are discussing. More importantly, lets get down to business.



The Important Stuff:


The Art of Memory p. 113 - Peter of Rivena and The Phoenix


"Peter gives practical advice. When discussing the rule that memory loci are to be formed in quiet places he says that the best type of building to use is an unfrequented church. He describes how he goes round the church he has chosen three or four times, committing the places in it to memory. He chooses his first place near the door; the next, five or six feet further in; and so on. As a young man he started with one hundred thousand memorised places, but he has added many more since then."






With this we have been instructed to find our own unfrequented church by which to aid or memorization and we were introduced to two methods of memory: location and image.

The Nine Muses and their mother Mnemosyne (memory):


1) Calliope (heroic or epic poetry)
2) Clio (history)
3) Erato (lyric or love poetry)
4) Euterpe (music or flutes)
5) Melpomene (tragedy)
6) Polyhymnia (sacred poetry or mime)
7) Terpsichore (dancing and choral song)
8) Thalia (comedy)
9) Urania (astronomy)