Sunday, December 20, 2015

Book Review of Ex Libris: Confessions of a common reader


Anne Fadiman’s book Ex Libris contained eighteen exquisitely crafted essays which chronicled the author and her family’s dedication to their books and bibliomania. The first impression the book left me is its Latin title and its lists of low frequency words which conveyed the author’s erudition on reading and writing. Indeed, it is only natural that Fadiman would have an excellent command of Latinate words, with a long pedigree of writing in the family (a renowned television personality father and World War II correspondent mother). Fadiman (1998) wrote her family “viewed all forms of intellectual competition as a sacrament” (p. 14) as she and her family would complete for the now defunct weekly television program “G.E. college”, a show where two teams of four students representing different universities went against each other for scholarship money. Self-described as Fadiman U., she confessed they only lost to Brandeis and Colorado College in six years of competition.

            This is definitely a book for people who cherish books and like to read a book about books as Fadiman (1998) recounted her family’s unbridled love to books and editing. Specifically, “Insect a Carrot” described about one time when the Fadiman sat down in a restaurant for dinner, they could not help but fervently start proof-reading the menu as if the act of editing would have satiated their appetite. Or in “The Catalogical Imperative”, where Fadiman confessed her love of reading and editing Nordstrom catalogues even though she should have no business receiving those catalogues. Another topic which may interest bibliophiles is Fadiman’s description of other famous authors’ book collections in “My Odd Shelf”. For example, George Orwell collected ladies’ magazines from the 1860s and he enjoyed reading them in his bathtub. Moreover, Fadiman’s classification of carnal and courtly book lovers would definitely bring a smile to many people interested in underlining, making marginal notes, tearing pages out or continuing reading books until they fall apart.

            Despite these accolades, there are still some limitations to this book. First of all, this book reads more like a collection of autobiographical essays whose purpose is to present a bibliomaniac’s life-long love affair with her husband, her children and her books. Therefore, readers who are specifically looking for guideline on writing will definitely be disappointed because the only tip they can get is to mimic Anne Fadiman’s style, which is helpful to some extent, but nevertheless is not the same as to read a writing guide. In addition to its content, some of the essays are commissioned pieces that Fadiman wrote in a column called “The Common Reader” in Civilization Magazine (Lehmann-Haupt, 1998). Although Fadiman did bring some age-old topics such as secondhand books, reading aloud and plagiarism a new life, lack of a central theme make these chapters disjointed. Finally, readers not familiar with Western literary works would find some part of the book unreadable due to lack of prior knowledge on the subject. Although more familiar authors like George Orwell or John Updike were mentioned, authors like Ernest Thompson Seton and Father O’Reilly are less familiar to the general public. The unfamiliarity may impede comprehension of what Fadiman (1998) was trying to get across in those passages.

            Overall, Fadiman provided witticisms and entertaining details on a seemingly mundane subjects like editing and reading. If you are an avid reader who enjoys Western literature and are undaunted about the sometimes trifling task of looking up some esoteric words that you have never before encountered in your life, this is the right book for you.


翼鵬
德州農工大學
乙未年仲冬書於潛龍齋

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Linearity of Time and Education
Lo thy dread empire, Chaos is restored;
Light dies before thy uncreating word:
Thy hand, great Anarch lets the curtain fall
And universal darkness buries all.
(as cited in Doll, 1993, p. 86)
Introduction
   As an international student pursuing a doctorate in a foreign country, my friends constantly asked me whether they should go for a doctoral degree after they receive their master’s. Their concern is that the time spent on getting a Ph.D. degree will not be worth the investment. It is as if an educational process is a linear timeline, which you start from your bachelor’s degree and end in the culmination of Ph.D. Their thinking always baffles me but the above quote from Pope helped me put their thinking in perspective. In essence, as Slattery (1995) has argued, the philosophy of modernity has resulted in a rejection of chaos by emphasizing the manipulation of time through expert time management and quantifying the achievements through finishing “assigned tasks” (e.g., finishing your Ph.D. degree in three years with a number of good publications). This concern for racing through your life courses has resulted in popular metaphors such as time flies and carpe diem, as if time is an entity that can be controlled. Or alternatively as Huebner (1975) opined that the belief in the linearity of time exerted pressure on educators to establish clear and verifiable goals. In this paper I attempt to first describe a linear perspective on time and what postmodern perspective on education can offer an alternative understanding of time.
Modernist Perspective on Time
   According to Slattery (2013), the modern mechanistic view of time has its origins from the Seventeenth century and the Newtonian vision of the universe as a giantclock system with time marching forward like a stream in a trajectory that is irreversible. Thus because time is conceptualized as never-ending and irrevocable, there is also an incessant motivation for a goal-oriented constraints because you simply cannot waste your time. Slattery (1995) opined the solution to this constant constraint on time for educators is to develop technology and organizational structures that will allow for more efficient allocation of time. However, these technological innovations did not fundamentally solve the problem of the thinking that human progress can be conceptualized as linear sets of events which can be broken down, segmented, isolated and then evaluated. This perspective as culminated in the policy of No Child Left Behind (NCLB), which stipulated observable students’ progress through standardized tests.
   However, as Dewey (1938) wrote, we are always living in a historical present and it is the present moment that is the focus of our experience. The Buddha also cautions in Diamond Sutra that you cannot own hearts of past, present and future because they are all illusions and has nothing to do with your Buddha nature. Happily, postmodernism has offered us a way out of this impasse by integrating the fusion of the past and the future into the existential present. In other words, the past and future are combined when we are living at the present. The following section elaborates on how a postmodern perspective on time can offer us a way out of current deadlock.
Postmodernist Perspective on Time
   Slattery (1995) has explained that a rejection of the assumption of concrete, historical time in favor of a process-oriented view of education, or in Deweyean sense, experience. As Hueber (1975) emphasized so convincingly “The very notion of time arises out of man’s existence, which is an emergent. The future is man facing himself in anticipation of his own potentiality for being” (p. 244).
   The implication for post-modernist perspective on time is Doll’s (1993) vision of curriculum as a process and learning and understanding results from dialogue and reflection. Alternatively, Pinar (2013) conceptualized curriculum as consisting of four stages, the regressive moment, the progressive moment, the analytic moment and the analytic moment. Or as Slattery (2013) argued, “Reconceptualized curriculum theory understands time and history as proleptic- that is as the confluence of past, present and future in the synthetical moment” (p. 68). The implication for educators is a focus on learners’ autobiographical experience and the interconnectedness of all experiences. It rejects the strict adherence on quantifiable results and linear progression of time with an eclectic celebration of chaos. As Doll (1993) has explained, chaos is not purposeless and destructive but quite complex and orderly. It is a complexity best exemplified by the butterfly effect, which M.I.T. climate scientist Edward Lorenz discovered in his simulation of weather patterns. As Slattery (2013) argued, this dynamic pattern exists in the classroom and every teacher recognizes this reality. Therefore we have to lament that we are trying to use an unfit model to a reality that only exists in our imagination.
Conclusion
   So what is the response that I gave to my friends worrying about whether a doctoral education is worthy of investment? I used my personal experience as a reference point. Being a career A-minus student, I am not so brilliant that I entered the doctorate program straight out of college. I have applied and been rejected by graduate programs of linguistics, in which my passion lies. It took some twists and turns and some fortune on my part to finally land a spot working on linguistics in an education department. However, the time lapses actually did not affect my study. In fact, I not only gained more experience with linguistics by reading papers by myself but also gained practical work experience when I spent two years working as a English teacher in Taiwan. Therefore my advice to them is think long and hard before you make a decision, and if you decide to pursue your doctorate, dedicates yourself to your study. If you work hard enough, the time lapses actually would not harm you!

翼鵬
德州農工大學
乙未年仲夏書於潛龍齋


Friday, April 17, 2015

Prosody of Multiple Englishes

Prosody of Multiple Englishes Lecture Notes
Guest Lecture by Lucy Pickering at Language Matters Working Group, April 17, 2015

Prosody: Suprasegmental features of sounds such as stress, intonation and tone

Multiple Englises (Kachru, 1992): The recognition that English comprises of three different circles used by people of different ethnicities

Inner circle: Native Speaker Model (e.g., American English, English English)

Outer circle: Institutionalized varieties of English (e.g., Indian English, Singaporean English)

Expanding Circle: Emerging varieties (e.g., China English, Japanese English)

Functions of Intonation in English

Rising—Inclusive, shared understanding (e.g., The pope is Catholic?)
Falling---Assertive (e.g., Time is up)
Level----Neutral (e.g., The assignment is due on Monday night)

The problem of prosodic cues in the speech of international teaching Assistants
No use of rising intonation for rapport-building similar to Gumperz’ (1982) study of Indian waiters

No Contrastive stress

E.G.,
Zhuo: The phone number is 979 4225143
Wei: 9794224143?
Zhuo: No 979 4225143

The lack of contrastive stress led to linguistic penalty (Roberts & Campbell, 2006)

翼鵬
德州農工大學

乙未年孟夏書於潛龍齋