10 Reasons Why I No Longer Study Literature

This semester, I’m enrolled in a class on using literature in the language classroom. Consequently, I’ve re-plunged, for the moment, into the theories and conventions and that marked my undergraduate degree in English.

And ick.

I’m taking my masters in second language teaching, a social science and welcome reprieve. The social sciences, I’m finding, are a disciplined, problem-based search for knowledge. The academic study of literature, in contrast, is generally a playground for politically-charged ideologies and obscurity.

This ought not to be.

Of course, not all branches of literature are so tangled. The literature as medicine movement, for example, has established some legitimacy, thanks to scholars like Arnold Weinstein. Cultural studies also have their virtues. Nonetheless, I decided to study literature no longer, and here are my personal reasons why:

10. I don’t care anymore about what Freud thought. Psychologists don’t, either.

9. If a novel, play, short story, or poem doesn’t speak to me, I maintain the right to stop reading.

8. Nietzsche was right — poets lie too much.

7. Hamlet was nuts. Must we beleaguer the point?

6. I don’t get Faulker.

5. Transcendental signifiers do exist. Sorry, Derrida.

4. The GRE subject test for literature is arbitrary, and the English professorship is super-saturated.

3. The literary present defies physics.

2. I’ve developed a horrible allergy to the prefix “post-.”

1. Reading’s supposed to be fun.

In short, I no longer study literature. I simply enjoy literature, and I hope my students will, too. We’ll read it, discuss it, respond to it, but study it? “Marry, heaven forbid.”


A comment on “Freelance writing’s unfortunate new model”

I think James Rainey is spot on: Short of work, writers and editors are now plying their talents for a pittance. As a result, there’s far too much “free” in freelancing. (Read the full article, which was published in the Los Angeles Times, here.)

This article struck a personal chord with me because, for the past three years, freelancing has been a primary source of income. And it’s been tough, at times. Currently, one of the content uber-websites foots my rent every month, and I pull down an average of $10.00 per hour. Much better, albeit fleeting, gigs have come from individuals and small businesses. I’m not making a killing, but I’m getting by.

Getting by has required diversification. When I first entered the freelance arena, I was a politics and fiction writer. That’s it. Of necessity, I later branched into education, public health, microbiology, nutrition, gardening, copy, and SEO, where jobs are more steady. Steady, of course, but also rife with competition from other, more experienced freelancers. Over the last two years, media outlets have axed some 31,000 reporters and editors. And because they’re looking for work, they’re working for cheap.

What to do? One commenter on Rainey’s article suggested this:

I think the better writers should start blogging, monetize their own sites, and stop giving their talent and experience away for peanuts. If you add it up, the chances are good that monetizing your own blogs (create MULTIPLE, themed blogs) will bring in more income. If enough good writers do this, the sites like Demand, Suite 101, eHow, etc. will have some decent competition. I noticed that several of them pay writers based on a percentage of AdSense, so why not bump out the middleman?

Where to start? Look at the huge content sites. Pick your favorite subject matters and start your own blog for each subject matter. (Try Google’s BlogSpot.com.) A mass effort by many solid writers could end up creating more quality content.

Some shy away from blogs because they lack the time or technical know-how. Nonetheless, subject-matter blogging, though not instantly profitable, might indeed provide a long-term solution. With enough traffic, writers would up their earnings, and web content would improve. It’s certainly worth a flutter.

But it’s a long e-road there.

Further reading: 52 Blog Tips to Kick Start Your Blog in 2010, from Problogger.net.


The ninth and final draft is in,

and the release is approaching. Look for Lady in White this spring.

Ann Coulter on Sarah Palin

Ah, the old-fashioned marketing plug, which aired on CBS News on November 13.

Writer’s tip: Get others, especially those with media prominence, to plug your stuff.


You Betcha! Sarah Palin’s Going Rogue

You can learn something about writing from Sarah Palin. Well, not writing actually, but marketing, which is tantamount in the boom-and-bust world of commercial book publishing.

Her plan of attack (or, as one editor rightly calls it, her “media blitz“):

Interview with Barbara Walters. Check.

Interview with Oprah. Check.

Stoke subdued outrage in the McCain camp. Check.

Counter the leak to the Associated Press. Check.

Voice outrage over a Runner’s World shot that became Newsweek’s front cover. Double check.

Complete month-long book tour that deliberately avoids big cities. Underway.

Sarah Palin’s not an author. She’s a brand–but a brand that sells.

Writer’s Tip: Be a brand.

A Post on the Inevitable Sarah Palin

CBS News on Going Rogue: An American Life (I apologize if there’s a commercial–it’s CBS’s financial opportunism, not mine):

Writer’s Tip: If you wanna be president in 2012, publish a book. Writing it optional.

Barbara Kingsolver: The Lacuna

Ms. Kingsolver’s thirteenth and latest novel, The Lacuna, has hit shelves, and its publicity campaign is full speed ahead.

It’s her least favorite part of the writing process. Though reportedly animated and engaging during interviews, Kingsolver shies away from limelight. She told The Age, an Australia-based publication,

”I’m much too shy to be a public person. But I think shyness goes with writing. I am the person standing by the wall, watching the person who is dancing with the lampshade on his head, and I am taking it all in and wondering, ‘What happened to him? I bet his mother didn’t love him.”

Writer’s tip: Observe your own environment shrewdly. Your eye for detail will transfer to your writing.

In that same interview, Kingsolver shares her views on novel writing, which must center around a big idea. That big idea may take years to incubate. She explains,

“It’s an audacious act to create something that you are going to ask people to take into their lives. It requires a degree of reverence. It also requires a lot from me… so I want to make sure it’s a big idea that I think is very important, that I think is worth my time and, more importantly, worth yours.”

Writer’s tip: Write about big ideas. Anything less is a waste of time.

How to Write an English Paper, and Well

Need help with your English paper? Turn to Jack Lynch.

Lynch is a professor at Rutgers University in Newark, and his specialty is eighteenth century literature–the era of Lord Byron, John Dryden, Samuel Johnson, and William Blake. However, after a battery of graduate work, a dissertation, and years of teaching college, he also knows how to help students spiff up their writing.

On his university webpages, Lynch has compiled a concise how-to guide on English papers. He says,

My audience is primarily undergraduates in college English classes, though of course some advice will be appropriate for high schoolers and graduate students. The idea is to collect all my advice on writing good English papers in one place.

The guide, entitled “Getting an A on an English Paper,” includes sections on Thesis, Research, Close Reading, Style, and Mechanics. Of course, Lynch can’t guarantee your grade, but he can offer insight into academic sentence-smithmanship.

Link to Getting an A on an English Paper here.

Life of Pi Gets Presidential Nod.

What’s President Obama reading these days? A prize-winning adventure novel about a boy living in a lifeboat, says Reuters. But it’s not your typical castaway story. The Swiss Family Robinson and Tom Hanks never had to share a lifeboat with a tiger, hyena, orangutan, and zebra.

“It’s a wonderful book,” Obama said of Life of Pi, which was penned by the Canadian author Yann Martel. “There are whole…chapters that really have to do with talking about Hinduism and Christianity and comparing it…”

Life of Pi snagged the Booker Prize for fiction in 2002. Its follow up, Beatrice and Virgil, will hit shelves this June.

More info on Beatrice and Virgil here.

May God bless our nation’s veterans.