Archive for the 'Good Work' Category

English Majors (Redux)

I wrote this post fourteen months ago.  As we start a new semester at Mankato I think it’s worth throwing out there again. Biggest thing I’d add: actually loving stories is a prerequisite for success. English isn’t a good throw away major at all.  It takes love and work!

(TEXT FROM NOV. 2010) Tonight, I’m giving a little address to the new members of Minnesota State’s chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the international English Honor Society.  It’s caused me to pause for a moment and consider the value of studying English.  Back when I was in school, the degree, if I remember correctly, did serve as sort of a catch for kids who weren’t sure what to do with themselves.  Early on, I attended giant Shakespeare lectures half full of dudes in backwards baseball caps who breathed alcohol poisoning.  To their credit, they did attend class.  We English people were always a little bashful about claiming the major.  Why?  The responses we’d get from peers, parents, distant cousins… “Oh, yeah, that’s marketable… what are you going to do, write books? Hahahahaha… Smoke some opium?”  Hm.  I guess so.

Former English major sits in coffee shop during work week writing books, mother effers.

But, in thinking about the bee hive of lit and philosophy majors I knew and loved back in college, I have been seriously struck not by how much they’ve struggled with their “unmarketable” degrees, but rather how they’ve seriously succeeded in a thousand different ways.  Among my English pals there are not only writers and professors and editors, but lawyers, politicians, corporate managers, school principals and the like.  I don’t know a single lit major who has been put out of work by the bad economy.  From this crew (all in or approaching our forties), I don’t know a single one who works at a video store and spends free time smoking weed in his or her mother’s basement.  Even if they’re working in a field far away from writing or literary analysis, they tend to have full lives that include an appreciation for the arts, that include lots of travel, that include tons of smart friends, that include a commitment to loving and raising great kids.  We learn from analyzing stories.  These pals of mine, most of whom were angsty hipsters with marginal attitudes back in college, live lives that to me define what a good life should look like.

What is it about studying lit that contributes to the lives of good people?  What do we learn to do?

First, we learn to deal with complexity: Literature presents us with multivariate worlds where human psychology comes into contact with history, economics, geography, technology, etc.  Causal relationships are often subtle.  Absurdity often reigns, where there is no causality, at least at the individual level — large scale forces impact lives for no seeming reason.  We get good at deciphering intention and meaning in wild circumstances (reality is wild, by the way).

Second, because we read about the psychology of human suffering from many perspectives, we learn to feel empathy for people who are not even remotely like us.  Do I cry for young, rich-boy, tennis playing, Hal Incandenza in Infinite Jest?  Yes, I do.  Do I cry for old, smelly, delusional Leo Gursky in The History of Love?  Uh huh.  Do I fear for powerful but vulnerable little Lyra in The Golden Compass?  Enough to make me almost sick.  The English majors I know have read a thousand lives, both the domestically real and the fantastical, and they are prone to understanding rather than deriding other people.

Third, novels are long.  There are few constructed to be read and understood non-sequentially.  To understand, we have to stick with them from start to finish, often over days or weeks.  This trains us to concentrate.  Feeling anxious from the constant surf between CNN, ESPN, Facebook, Huffington Post, New York Times, gmail, The damned Rumpus, The Local Paper, etc.?  Get into a novel an hour or two each night.  You’ll find yourself thinking straighter.  We lit majors are trained to pay attention over long periods.

Four, we’re open to being moved by deep beauty.  Yes, I am a jack ass.  I am easy.  I can see a nice little story in a Thomas Kinkade Mall Hall cottage painting, little lights in snowy windows.  But what really kills me is Leopold Bloom at the end of the dark night coming home to that cheating Molly and having her say yes a thousand times.  Real lives are filled with contradiction and sadness and also lovely moments that are not disconnected from contradiction and sadness.  We learn to see those moments again and again.  And, we become open to them in our own lives.  We experience that connectedness with our friends, our parents, our children.  This is rich stuff.

And, five, we learn to interact with multivariable texts by analysis and communication.  We make arguments based on complex evidence.  Mathematics is abstract.  It provides a way of simplifying the complex world.  It is one way to analyze.  The kinds of math most people need in the real world is pretty simple (not scientists or engineers, of course — but business people, lawyers, leaders of organizations who have number crunchers to provide that limited means of analysis).  In real life, the kinds of decisions we have to make and the kinds of communicating we have to do after making decisions is dependent on subtler understandings of human psychology and how it interacts with history, economics, geography, technology, etc.  We English majors practice doing this kind of analysis and communication for years.  Think of all human behavior as a text.  We can deal with it.

This is not an exhaustive list by any means.

So, I look across the wide swath of pals I had back in the day.  I see their ability to function in dozens of different domestic and occupational configurations.  And, I think, yeah, I write books, I profess my love for the written arts, but we English majors are set-up to do a helluva lot more.  I am seriously looking forward to talking about our powers with Sigma Tau Delta tonight.

Slacker!

Steph and I are in Austin, TX for Austin Teen Book Fest.  There are a wagon load of excellent authors here.  But, what am I most psyched about?  Taking pictures of Steph that look vaguely like Slacker, a movie that nearly caused me to drop out of life entirely and stay in my dirty apartment debating everything from 19th Century European Philosophy to the TV Show Good Times with all-comers (like three other dudes who were similarly predisposed).  We ate beans and drank cheap beer and talked and talked and talked about almost nothing.  Beautiful days.  They couldn’t last (bad smelling house).  I’m going to do my best to remember!

Slacker.

Back to School

Suddenly, I’m walking around campus with a purpose.  I’m stuffing stuff in my syllabi.  I’m plugging numbers and passwords into various software packages.  I’m monitoring my voicemail.   I’m answering email.  My calendar is full of business.

A couple of days ago, I sat staring at Burger King from across the street for over an hour, because I had the time.  Staring at Burger King helps me.  Lots of people going through the drive thru.  What do they all want?  To feel full.  Of burger?  Probably not.  They don’t know what they want or they wouldn’t be at Burger King.  They’d be growing vegetables or spinning alpaca into wool for their sister’s new sweater. They’d be biking out on that trail that goes to that dam.  No good comes from Burger King (unless you own Burger King).

Now I’ve got to make my calendar make sense.  Those of you who are still on a break of some kind… pause… remember… you don’t have to be anywhere.  Isn’t that terrific?

Thankfully, I do like my job a whole lot.  The change of season takes getting used to.

Prepping

 

How to Succeed in Business? Play Harry Potter

In a few minutes Leo and I will go to the final Harry Potter.  I tried to get tickets to midnight shows in New York, but had no luck.  Check out the line!

Potter fans on 84th and Broadway

So, we’re hitting a 9:30 a.m. show.  This will be a big moment for me and the boy (I read the whole series to him except the last one — he actually read the book in London at a kind of Harry Potter camp with my mom).  Strangely, he’s sort of outgrown it.  I have not.  I am a total fanboy.  And so, when we saw How to Succeed in Business on Broadway the other day (starring Daniel Radcliffe), I was all bent out of shape.

Harry Potter and Leo

So, too, were the throngs of thirteen-year-old geek-girls, who were having their own nerdy Justin Bieber moment beside me.  I have never been at a show with this much energy.  So crazy.

First, Daniel Radcliffe is good.  Not the greatest singer in the world, but a huge presence, super athletic, great comic timing, and Harry Potter.

Second, the show is about an uneducated window washer who, through charm and luck, rises to the top of a corporation, falls in love, and defeats a waspy, snobby, blue-blood nephew of the CEO named Frump (not Malfoy). Frump actually delivers some of the funniest lines in the show, but he was unloved by the audience (Malfoy!).

Third, during a Wednesday matinee, during the week the final Harry Potter is being released, the crowd was very young, and was thinking as much about Harry as they were about the experience in front of them.  This was a meta-Potter-1960s musical happening.

Fourth, Radcliffe wasn’t cocky. He didn’t show boat.  He didn’t milk the love.  And, you could tell that the amazing, excellent, very tall, so hilarious, John Larroquette, who is a legend himself, but not Harry Potter, and who plays the CEO in the show, actually really likes Radcliffe.  Larroquette deferred.  Radcliffe wouldn’t allow it.  They both totally sparkled sparkily.  Great comic chemistry.

Fifth, in this Justin Bieber world, thirteen-year-old girls do a lot of screaming and celebrating of those they love.  I have never seen a standing ovation in the middle of a show.  After a big (really, really, really cool) dance number in this one, however, the screaming drove the audience to leap from their seats and weep.

Before the end of the final number the audience was on its feet again, clapping along, screaming like crazy.  I realized at that moment I was seeing Madonna in her prime or The Beatles or Michael Jackson.  Radcliffe’s success is a bit like his character’s in How to Succeed: there’s a lot of luck involved.  But, he’s Harry Potter, now.  He got his icon status from J.K. Rowling not from his own talent (although he is talented). But, here he is.

No matter.  It was awesome.  We all saw Radcliffe/Harry Potter in a musical defeating all comers with pizazz.  And, me and the thirteen-year-old girls screamed with joy.

(My son? Not so much.)

The Crazy Weeks Begin

Steph and I move into this log cabin, which we get on June 1st, although the other Mankato lease doesn’t run out until June 30, which is good, because I’m in New York for BEA with Class of 2k11 for the whole week, which doesn’t give a lot of time for packing and moving, even though Steph and I need to pack up that Dinkytown office and the other Minneapolis apartment and move that stuff into another apartment in  another part of Minneapolis (and some of the stuff has to go to the log cabin in Mankato, because that cabin is huge), which has nothing to do with Sam and I going over to Times Square and renting that Crown Vic to drive over to that library in Huntington on Long Island (nice library).  Yes, I said Crown Vic.

Steph is blurry in cabin because it is so big.

Sam is in the foreground in Midtown where we got our Crown Vic

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