Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Monday, March 26, 2007

How to Read

Alan Jacobs in “How to Read” in Books & Culture, March/April, 2007, page 12, reviews The Things That Matter: What Seven Classic Novels Have to Say About the Stages of Life, by Edward Mendelson. Mendelson sees Frankenstein, Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, Middlemarch, Mrs. Dallow, To the Lighthouse, and Between the Acts as representative of the seven stages of life: birth, childhood, growth, marriage, love, parenthood, and “the future”. Jacobs believes that “the rise of the novel from an uncertain, fumbling, and generally despised form of cheap popular entertainment to the central and dominant genre of Western literature, all in little more than a century, is one of the more remarkable events in the history of human sensibility.”

When you read a novel and identify with the characters, you are, according to Mendelson, “performing one of the central acts of literary understanding.” If we do this poorly, the answer is not to abandon this way of reading, but to learn how to do it better.

Mendelson tries to show how each of these seven novels signifies one of the seven stages of life. For example, Frankenstein signifies birth as Dr. Victor Frankenstein gives life to his creature. However, Victor Frankenstein’s traits show that his is not only an abortive father but also incapable of becoming a husband. Thus, as we read great literature, it opens up to us the great themes of life, and opens up a variety of interpretations of the life stage we are going through, showing us how we might live our lives or how we shouldn’t. How we read is a moral and emotional exercise and should be done with passion.


You can read this article at: http://www.christianitytoday.com/bc/2007/002/6.12.html

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Women Intellectuals

Rosalie de Roseset, a professor at Moody Bible Institute, wrote a very interesting article, “Minding Your Mind,” in Christianity Today, posted online at: http://blog.christianitytoday.com/giftedforleadership/2007/02/minding_your_mind.html

She challenges women to get beyond the touchy-feely and learn to discipline their mind in order to become healthy, mature Christians. Women need to spend time in serious Bible study and reading deep, profound books. This is not a very popular topic today, especially for women, but it is right on.

Here is her conclusion:

“When people—in this case, women—neglect the use of their minds, they may get caught up in idle activities, too many activities, silly reading and leisure habits which lead, finally, to a shallow understanding of what it means to live the Christian life. Their faith may also be too thin to sustain them in the hardships that invariably accompany the average existence.

Their Christian understanding, undeepened by knowledge, may become boring whether they admit it or not. As J.I. Packer says in his popular book Knowing God, “The world becomes a strange, mad, painful place, and life in it a disappointing and unpleasant business for those who do not know about God. Disregard the study of God, and you sentence yourself to stumble and blunder through life, blindfold, as it were, with no sense of direction, and understanding of what surrounds you. This way you can waste your life, and lose your soul” (pp. 14-15).”