10.29.08
The Date for the 2nd Take Home!!
examination has changed. We have agreed that it will be due on Monday, November 10th.
famous not so long ago
examination has changed. We have agreed that it will be due on Monday, November 10th.
Send them to your friends. Send them to your family! Treasure them in your in-box forever:
I’ve scanned through this quickly and think it’s advisable reading for a generally medieval-reading audience: http://www.nerve.com/regulars/datingadvicefrom/medievalhistorians/.
I’ve decided to study sonnet sequences next semester. Lovely material. You can learn more here: http://titania.stockton.edu/sonnets/.
Below is a link to the second take home examination, due November 3rd.
On Thursday, October 16th, I spent the day at Atlantic City High. I had been invited by a Stockton alum and friend Mr. Kearney to introduce middle English pronunciation to 4 of his English classes. The students are starting to read The Canterbury Tales, and he thought it would be useful if they learned some approximation of Chaucer’s language. So, I worked with each class on reading the first 18 lines of the “General Prologue” aloud. You can hear the results of about 35 minutes explanation and practice below.
Here is a link to the November 7th symposium I mentioned last time. The blurb reads in part: “Please join us for the inaugural event of the GW Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute (GW MEMSI), a symposium on Touching the Past. The symposium begins at 1:30 in the fourth floor conference room of Phillips Hall (Academic Center, 801 22nd St NW) and lasts until 5.” Think about this.
Folks, I woke up under the weather today and decided that the better part of valor was not to come to school and infect all of you with my disease.
Please keep reading and thinking about the Wife of Bath’s prologue and tale. I had an excellent reading of both yesterday, and am sorry to miss today’s class. You might spend some time practicing your reading aloud — I did about 20 minutes of that yesterday, too. See if you can start dreaming in middle English.
We’ll catch up when we can.
Tom Kinsella
PS. If you haven’t already done so, skip down two messages and read about medieval cats. I was going to have you do that during class today.
Here are a few references on Medieval Cats. “Pangur Ban” at the bottom is a favorite. The page was forwarded to me by Professor Tompkins.