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Lecture notes Making Sense of Europe (Y)

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Lecture notes Making sense of Europe 2025 (Y).

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Subido en
22 de mayo de 2025
Número de páginas
39
Escrito en
2024/2025
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Notas de lectura
Profesor(es)
Dr. josephine hoegaerts
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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.
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