100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Class notes

Lecture notes Making Sense of Europe (Y)

Rating
-
Sold
4
Pages
39
Uploaded on
22-05-2025
Written in
2024/2025

Lecture notes Making sense of Europe 2025 (Y).

Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
May 22, 2025
Number of pages
39
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Dr. josephine hoegaerts
Contains
All classes

Subjects

Content preview

Introduction - 7 april 2025

Storytelling
★​ Telling stories: making connections, remembering the past, imagining the future;
★​ Analyzing stories: analyzing cultural ways to make sense of the world;
★​ Telling stories about stories: recognizing tropes, drawing intertextual connections, making
analysis relevant.

Lisabetta da Messina
★​ Text → plot, style, genre, medium, themes, characters, tropes;
★​ Context → author, time, place, economic, social, political;
★​ Intertext → quotations, cross referencing, retellings, mediatization.

What’s the story?
★​ What happens?
★​ What is the atmosphere? → genre?
★​ How is it written? → literary style
★​ What are important themes, tropes, objects, characters?

Definition of the Canon
★​ A canon refers to a collection of texts, objects, or artworks considered important and
representative of a particular culture;
★​ Examples:
○​ European literary canon: a set of books representing European literature.
○​ French cinematic canon: key films representing French cinema.
○​ The criteria for inclusion are often vague or unspoken. Members of a culture may share a
general sense of what belongs in the canon, even without formal reasoning.

Historical Origin of the Term
★​ Originally from church law: A text is canonical if deemed sacred and part of an authorized
religious collection.
★​ Broader modern use: Canonization is the process by which works gain cultural importance, often
through scholarly or popular recognition.

Prescriptive Nature of the Canon
★​ The canon can serve as a guide for what newcomers should learn or read.
★​ Example: Canon of the Netherlands – a curated list of important texts, events, and people for
education.
★​ Canons are enforced culturally through:
★​ Reading lists
★​ Rankings of "best" works
★​ Cultural anxiety over declining familiarity with certain works

,The Canon in Practice
★​ Most cultural canons are informal, but their influence is widespread.
★​ Internalization: Many people adopt canonical values without realizing it.
★​ Cultural examples include:
○​ Lists like “201 books one should read before dying”
○​ Classical music collections
○​ Headlines about concerns over schools dropping canonical authors like Shakespeare

Criticism of the Canon
★​ Critiques:
○​ Reductive: Oversimplifies and narrows culture.
○​ Assumes universality: Implies a shared cultural standard where none may exist.
★​ However, canons can also have emancipatory potential:
○​ Alternative canons can uplift underrepresented voices and histories.
○​ Can help marginalized groups assert cultural identity.

Case Study: Dorothy Sayers and Lord Peter Wimsey
★​ Sayers wrote during the “Golden Age” of detective fiction (early 20th century).
★​ She was one of few financially independent women authors at the time.
★​ Key question: Is Sayers’ work part of the European canon?
★​ Consider historical, literary, and cultural significance.
★​ Weigh the influence of genre, gender, and national context.

Canon vs. Heritage
★​ Heritagization: Recognizing something as heritage implies historical value and a need to preserve
it.
★​ Canonization: Elevates a work as essential cultural knowledge.
★​ Increasingly, the European canon itself is treated as heritage—valuable historically, but not
always seen as relevant or living culture.

, STORYTELLING

Lecture 1 - 9 april 2025
Questions for Interpreting a Text
★​ To begin understanding a poem or narrative, consider:
○​ What kind of text is this?
○​ Analyze its style and genre.
○​ How would you summarize or describe it to someone else?
★​ What is the context of this text?
○​ Who wrote it, when, and where?
○​ Consider what kind of person the author might have been.
★​ How would you interpret the text?
○​ What is its main message?
○​ What ideas or emotions is it trying to communicate?

Why Stories Matter
★​ What do stories do?
○​ Help us understand the world and connect events or emotions.
○​ Are used to remember the past and imagine the future.
○​ Are cultural tools for understanding social norms, beliefs, values, and behaviors.
○​ Act as frameworks to make sense of experiences like suffering, illness, or injustice.

Case Study: Lisabetta da Messina (from Boccaccio's Decameron)
★​ Textual Analysis
○​ Central symbol: the basil pot
○​ Interpretations:
■​ Love endures beyond death
■​ Mourning as a form of care
■​ Obsession and madness
■​ Cultural mourning rituals
★​ Context
○​ Part of The Decameron, written by Giovanni Boccaccio in the 14th century.
○​ Set during the plague; group of 10 young people isolate themselves and tell stories (early
example of quarantine literature).
○​ Reflects a world where social class affected who could escape disease.
★​ Intertextuality
○​ Draws on classical sources (e.g. Ovid), folk tales, and Dante’s Divine Comedy.
○​ Inspired later retellings:
■​ John Keats’ poem
■​ Romantic paintings by artists like Waterhouse
■​ Pasolini’s film adaptation
■​ Modern reinterpretations, like a Netflix series during recent quarantine periods

, Stories and Suffering
★​ Stories help explain suffering across history. Examples include:
○​ Jean de La Fontaine’s Fable: "The Animals Sick of the Plague"
■​ 17th-century fable using animals to critique social injustice.
■​ Structure: moral fable with satire, ending in a clear maxim.
■​ Themes:
●​ Injustice in the judicial system (the weak are punished, the strong are
excused).
●​ Reinforces prevailing religious beliefs (e.g. plague as punishment for
sin), while questioning fairness.
○​ Moral: "Thus human courts acquit the strong, / And doom the weak, as therefore wrong."

Literary Genre Comparison
Genre Features

Fable Uses animals;clear moral; often satirical

Fairy tale Implicit moral; conformity to social norms

Naturalism Focus on realism and determinism; reflects harsh
social realities.


Example of Naturalism: Las medias rojas by Emilia Pardo Bazán
★​ Context: Spanish, late 19th to early 20th century.
★​ Style: Naturalist – portrays grim realities with scientific observation.
★​ Plot: Story about a young woman’s hope, followed by violent loss of opportunity.
★​ Themes:
○​ Determinism (fate is unchangeable)
○​ Gender roles and domestic violence
○​ Migration and poverty
★​ Links to journalism and social realism of the time.
$12.56
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
noortjewent
3.0
(1)

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
noortjewent Universiteit van Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
8
Member since
8 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
16
Last sold
2 weeks ago

3.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions