[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] talking about it.
We are all vulnerable to powerful rhetorics at the moment. I had thought that talking and/or writing about the attacks in class would be a bad thing because of a potentially generalized tendency to go with the flow of anti-muslim, pro-massive retaliation sentiments. Then again, I figured that students might be talked out (I did not meet w/ classes on Tuesday and assumed that they may already have been having discussions in various classes since then). However, when I asked students if they had been discussing the attacks in other classes, they seemed disgusted that they had not. One teacher told them that they were perfectly capable of "putting the world aside for an hour." YIPES. Another showed a film on the history of Osama Bin Laden (ill-advised, IMO). We talked. And I was amazed at how strong my students are in the face of various questionable yet powerfully suggestive theories. On the whole, I was curiously surprised about the sophisticated thinking my students exhibited today. We just talked ,and, yes, they expressed some serious concerns about terrorists from "the middle east" (few specified any particular country or regime). But most were VERY cautious about indicting anyone one or any group, and many questioned the speed w/which "evidence" is being amassed. Some questioned the validity of the video shown repeatedly of Palestinians dancing in the streets; they seemed to think that not all the people were jubillant and that perhaps if they were, we might see other similar video; some wondered what rhetorical function the video serves in terms of American sentiment. Others made connections to the film we'd recently seen (Twelve Anrgy Men), suggesting that we may be guilty of reaching conclusions too rapidly and subsequently scapegoating ( the more troubling issue for many students) anyone who appears to be Muslim, Islamic, Arab, or any version of what we recognize as "middle eastern." The discussion focused upon our tendency to want a "target," and then Keyser Soze reared his mythical head (some mentioned The Usual Suspects and urged me to show the film). I agree with Tom that we should be talking, analyzing ideologies of power, fear, and force. Still, I feel now very strongly that we should not frontload these discussions in any way but simply invite students to talk. Whether or not they *recongize* that we are talking about ideologies of power, fear, and force in ways that resonate with any sort of "lesson" is, IMO, irrelevant. Do you have to know it's metadiscourse to benefit from it? I am also myself kind of freaked about the concept of intellectualizing this in a classroom at this time. Still, my classes today felt important, and they were for me somewhat healing (I have been internalizing fear like never before). peace, Bonnie Lenore Kyburz, PhD Assistant Professor of English=20 English & Literature Department Utah Valley State College
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