Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Marginalia in DQ

I just happened to notice this quote from Chapter IX of Part I. The fictional author has just found Cide Hamete Benengeli's manuscript. Is this Cervantes making fun of early modern reading practices?
...anduve mirando si parecía por allí algún morisco aljamiado que los leyese; y no fue muy dificultoso hallar intérprete semejante, pues aunque le buscara de otra mejor y más antigua lengua le hallara. En fin, la suerte me deparó uno, que diciéndole mi deseo, y poniéndole el libro en las manos le abrió por medio, y leyendo un poco en él se comenzó a reír: preguntéle que de qué se reía, y respondióme que de una cosa que tenía aquel libro escrita en la margen por anotación. Díjele que me la dijese, y él sin dejar la risa dijo: está, como he dicho, aquí en el margen escrito esto: esta Dulcinea del Toboso, tantas veces, en esta historia referida, dicen que tuvo la mejor mano para salar puercos que otra mujer de toda la Mancha.
Or is "mano para salar puercos" a double-entendre?

Friday, October 10, 2008

Women Poets

I'm teaching a course in Golden Age lyric this semester, and I've come to the conclusion that it is shockingly lacking in women poets. Anyone have any names for me? Other than Sor Juana.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

A good buy

I, too, picked up an interesting find at a library book sale recently. Leather bound, published in 1875, written by one O.S. Fowler. Here's the title:
Creative and Sexual Science: Manhood, Womanhood, and Their Mutual Interrelations; Love, its Laws, Power, Etc.; Selection, or Mutual Adaptation; Courtship, Married Life, and Perfect Children; Their Generations, Endowment, Paternity, Maternity, Bearing, Nursing and Rearing; Together with Puberty, Boyhood, Girlhood, Etc.; Sexual Impairments Restored, Male Vigor and Female Health and Beauty Perpetuated and Augmented, Etc., as taught by Phrenology and Physiology.
Apparently mutually applied friction is very important in the generative function.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Small Pleasures in a Bad Economy

Today I happened across a book sale at the Santa Clara University Library and came away with a couple of steals. The first was Volume I of Fernand Braudel's The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II (I already own Vol. II). This work is a broad-ranging classic -- sorry for the dirty word -- reference for anyone interested in the Spanish Empire and its context from cultural, geopolitical and economic standpoints. I also found a hardcover edition of The Collected Dialogues of Plato (Bollingen Series). Not the greatest translations in the world, but, once again, a solid reference work, since it contains ALL of Plato's dialogues.
Total amount spent: $3.00.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Going negative

Anyone feel their job is in jeopardy in these uncertain times? This totally sucks, and I hope you'll forgive me if I'm not up to my usual eloquence (¿?) when I express myself that way. Not only is the "Compact" not being honored, though by now that's old news, but California is borrowing 7 billion dollars or it won't make payroll. What the hell? I thought this was supposed to be a safe and sane career where the only adventure was of the intellectual kind. We eschewed business for a reason, at least I did, only to find myself a) not reaping the pecuniary benefits of a business career, b) thrust all the same into a financial cesspool created by greedy, unprincipled boors who, as I read recently, were the guys you rarely talked to in college, but occasionally did step over on sunday mornings sleeping in a pool of their own vomit, and c) doing a mediocre bureaucratic shuffle exactly the opposite of the life of the mind. How to maintain some optimism under such circumstances is the question I'm grappling with.

Monday, October 6, 2008

What to Make of Student Evaluations

See article in the NY Times mAgazine.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/21/magazine/21wwln-evaluations-t.html?scp=3&sq=student%20evaluations&st=cse

Near the end, the writer, reflecting on the viability of these evaluations wonders something I myself have been wondering: "After all, when students report having learned a lot, how do we know to trust them?"

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

The seeds of a new study abroad idea

I’m currently reading a book called Bastard Tongues: A Trailblazing Linguist Finds Clues to Our Common Humanity in the World’s Lowliest Languages. The author, Derek Bickerton, studies creole languages. In defending his bar-hopping field research technique, he describes how he learned Spanish:

“Most of the Spanish I speak was learned from drunks in bars. In fact, drunks are the world’s most underrated language teaching resource. The stereotypic drunk speaker slurs his speech to the point of unintelligibility, but in real life this happens only in the final, immediate-pre-collapse phase of drunkenness. Prior to that, drunks speak slowly and with exaggerated care, because they know they are drunk but don’t want other people to know. Moreover, since they’re already too drunk to remember what they just said, they repeat themselves over and over, and don’t mind if you do the same. If you’re gregarious and a drinker, it’s by far the easiest way to learn a new language” (p. 29).

Not that I approve, or anything, but I think I smell the kernel of a new study abroad program.