Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Entry on Sonnets pt. 2 (Aha...I knew that someday I'd teach EN 202)

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Did you know that poets continued to write sonnets after Shakespeare? The woman pictured above, Mary Robinson, an actress who became a writer and feminist, helped revive this type of poetry in the late 18th century (late 1700s).

Here's a link to some of her sonnets from her book, Sappho and Phaon. Sappho was the Greek poet (or poetess) who is now considered one of the lesbian foremothers. In Robinson's day, Sappho was more noted for her relationship with the young man Phaon. Robinson, in fact, encouraged an identification between herself and Sappho.

http://etext.virginia.edu/britpo/sappho/sappho-poems.html

Here is a link to another more political sonnet, "To Liberty."

http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/robinson/other/rmd-liberty.html

Below is a sonnet dedicated to Robinson's daughter, Maria:

http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/robinson/1791/1791-daughter.html

Another late 18th century poet/novelist Charlotte Smith also worked in this form. Below is a sonnet inspired by Goethe's phenomenally successful novel, The Sorrows of Young Werther.

http://www.engl.virginia.edu/enec981/dictionary/16smithM1.html

She was also known for writing about nature:

http://www.sonnets.org/smith.htm

Nineteenth-century poets wrote sonnets as well. You might recognize this one by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (who also wrote a novel in verse, Aurora Leigh):

http://www.amherst.edu/~rjyanco94/literature/elizabethbarrettbrowning/poems/sonnetsfromtheportuguese/howdoilovetheeletmecounttheways.html

Another poet was Christina Rossetti. Here is a link to her sonnet, "Sappho":

http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/crossetti/sapho.html

She also wrote a "Sonnet of Sonnets." The Great Poetess whom she refers to in her introduction is Barrett Browning. (By the way, you may recognize Christina Rossetti's last name because her brother translated Petrarch's sonnets into English. I think that I linked to some of his translations!)

http://celtic.benderweb.net/cr/cr90.html

Although male poets wrote sonnets at this time as well, like Rossetti, I wonder what Laura -- or Shakespeare's Dark Lady (whether or not she was Aemelia Lanyer) would have made of these later sonnets by women!

Questions on Heart of Darkness

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Hello again,

I thought I'd post three new quotes of the day from Joseph Campbell, author of Hero with a Thousand Faces and scholar of world mythology:

"A hero is someone who has given his or her life to something bigger than oneself. "

"I don't believe people are looking for the meaning of life as much as they are looking for the experience of being alive."

"What each must seek in his life never was on land or sea. It is something out of his own unique potentiality for experience, something that never has been and never could have been experienced by anyone else. "

How do these quotes from Campbell apply to Marlow and Kurtz?  How do these quotes apply to Conrad's character of the young Russian -- or to the character played by Dennis Hopper in Apocalypse Now?  Could Willard (Martin Sheen's character) be a hero?

And are we missing the point when we *don't* focus on Heart of Darkness as a quest with a hero--when we focus on Vietnam or the 19th century or colonialsm?  Alternately, are we missing the point when we don't talk about colonialism?  After all, Conrad's novella is set not only in the heart of darkness but also in the heart of the Belgian empire, and all of his characters (Marlow included) are shaped by their role in this empire.

Keep blogging & keep reading Heart of Darkness.  I think you'll find that part 1 is the hardest since it is so descriptive.

By the way, the picture above is from Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now, a film inspired by Heart of Darkness.  The actor pictured above is Dennis Hopper.  Hopper plays a photojournalist based on the questing young Russian in Conrad's novel.  By the way, Hopper was also in the trail-blazing 1960s movie Easy Rider.  Now we know him as the fellow in the financial services ads.

Here's a link to a trailer for Apocalpyse Now Redux:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qnfbekbSa0

Dr. Szlyk

Imagine Orson Welles' Heart of Darkness

While I was looking through a blog for another literature course that I had taught, I found an entry on filmmaker Orson Welles' adaptation of Heart of Darkness, one of his many projects that never reached completion for various reasons (political, economic, psychological). 

Welles was working on his adaptation of Heart of Darkness in 1939.  This would have been about the time that Germany attacked Poland, Great Britain entered the war, and the United States was officially neutral.  Even though many Americans were beginning to realize what Hitler was "up to," many others (like Charles Lindbergh, for example) did not believe that we should be involved in Europe's war.  And, yes, Welles' Heart of Darkness appears to have been "political," portraying Kurtz as a charismatic fascist, and, as Clinton Heylin suggests, this film was never made because of its politics.

I guess I had better look a little further for an apolitical Heart of Darkness! 

Until then, here is a link to a site about another of Welles' projects: The Mercury Theater, a radio program whereby he adapted a number of novels, plays, and short stories for performance on the radio.  Conrad's novella was one of the works that Welles adapted.  Oddly enough, it is paired with a lighter story, "Life with Father."

http://www.mercurytheatre.info


For more information about Welles' Heart of Darkness, see this article from The Guardian:

http://film.guardian.co.uk/features/featurepages/0,,1429851,00.html

Or this entry from a blog on Welles and his art:

http://www.wellesnet.com/?p=78