Thursday, December 19, 2013

Whale-Whole

Knowledge
Rapunzel
Steam
Whale-Whole
Common Law
Imperial
Frank Lloyd Wright: Pulgarcito-Tom Thumb-David and Goliath
Thicker than water

Col.2:14
"Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross;"




Refuge at the tower. Fantasy.




Rapunzel  


William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905) - The Wave (1896)



Falling Water - Kaufman House, by Frank Lloyd wright

Chess: "Knowledge" "Rapunzel" "Steam" "Whale" "Whole" "Common Law" "Imperial" "Frank Lloyd Wright: Pulgarcito-Tom Thumb-David and Goliath" "Thicker than water"



Tally, Robert T., Texas State University-San Marcos, Dept of English

Moby-Dick is perhaps the best known novel in American literature, yet it is generally considered a daunting read, even for English majors in advanced courses. However, I believe that Moby-Dick is a text well suited for introductory courses, not merely in literature but in general education courses. The real subject of Moby-Dick is knowledge itself, and the novel can help introduce students to the educational mission of colleges and universities. Moby-Dick also emphasizes the lasting power of literature in one’s life-long education

Introduction

On the first page of Herman Melville’s whaling masterpiece, before anyone has asked to be called “Ishmael” and before any hint of the mad Captain Ahab’s pursuit of the White Whale has been introduced,

Moby-Dick

opens with a chapter called

“Etymology” and includes an odd quotation: “When you take it in hand to school others, and to teach them by what name a whale-fish is to be called in our tongue, leaving out, through ignorance, the letter H, which almost alone maketh up the signification of the word, you deliver that which is not true” (7).

Attributed to Richard Hakluyt, this caveat is less about the etymology of the word whale than it is about problems of education, of knowledge, of language, of what Melville elsewhere calls “the great Art of Telling the Truth” (“Hawthorne and his Mosses,” 224). Indeed, with this starting point,

Moby-Dick can be viewed as a novel that specifically invites thinking about the role of knowledge and education in our lives. The mission of the novel thus affirms that of college or university education as a whole: to expand knowledge, to acquire and hone critical skills, and to better understand the world and our roles in it. Far from being a daunting old tome relegated to senior-level seminars and graduate courses, this novel provides an apt point of departure for entry-level college students by exploring the power of literature in making sense of the world.

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