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| Backyard Blogging |
Apologies for not posting. At all. Life suddenly got incredibly busy and I had trouble finding time in the day to sleep, much less to post. And unfortunately, I don't have any more pictures for you. But hopefully some good stories!
Our seminars finished up last week. I suppose that's why everything got so busy; we had some major research papers due. For some reason, several of these professors have been assigning papers with midnight on Saturday deadlines. Being the terrible procrastinator I am, this means that I'm working all day Saturday on these papers. And I greatly dislike writing up until the deadline. Watching the clock turn 9, 10, 11 creates quite a sense of panic. I think I would prefer like...8 am Sunday; I doubt that the professor would begin grading essays at one in the morning. But the good thing is that there are generally multiple seminars with those deadlines, which means that the whole house works incredibly hard up until midnight and then we can relax and have fun, despite the fact that it's pretty late. Sunday mornings are correspondingly late :)
This coming week we're starting tutorials, which means that I'm picking up entirely new courses. The four week seminars were...odd. On one hand, we covered so much. I think at the end of this post, I'll leave a quick list of the books I've read to date and you can just gawk. I'm to the point of being sick of the printed word. (Well, that may be extreme. I sill am quite the bibliophile). And class discussion was always fascinating. On the other hand, it felt quite truncated. As if we had been working and just getting to the point of some epiphany, and then the seminar is over. But then I think that tutorials are twice as long and twice as intense. Perhaps it will all lead to us solving world hunger. Or at least figure out exactly what Shakespeare was thinking when he wrote Henry V :)
One of my seminars was a historiography of Tudor/Stuart England with Dr. Southcombe. It's listed as history, but it involved quite a lot of English. I was incredibly fortunate to sign up for this seminar; if I stay an academic, this could be exactly what I want to do. One of my tutorials (Politics, Society, and Literature in Tudor England) is with him as well and we will be looking not only at the history aspect, but also Shakespeare and Marlowe and Kyd and how they interacted with the history that was going on around them. I'm am unbelievably excited, but also terrified. Dr. Southcombe is insanely smart. One of those people you meet and think "I could carry a conversation with him" and then he starts talking and you think "What am I doing here? I should have gone to a community college...." Which I suppose didn't scare me as much when there were 10 of us in the seminar, but tomorrow afternoon, it will be just me and George. And if I don't know something, it will be unbelievably obvious. He gave me a question ("What was the relative contribution of native heresy, humanism, and continental reform movements to the Reformation up to 1553?") and a reading list to help me find the answer(s). Tomorrow at 4:30 we meet and I present my answer, which will be in loads of notes, and then we discuss it. Most weeks, I will turn in a paper and my presentation can be me reading my paper, but he said I should wait until the second week to start the papers. Unfortunately, my reading list for Tuesday (and just Tuesday) is two pages of books with a smattering of articles. I need to learn how to read multiple texts at once :)
My other tutorial is also on Tuesday (Shakespeare Selected Works), which is both good and bad. In registering for next semester, I'm considering taking four courses on Tuesday/Thursday, which would be difficult but completely possible. Here, the idea of taking two one-hour tutorials in one day makes me tired even in theory. Those collective two hours will be intense, and preparing for them (as the two page book list indicates) will be just as intense. But the best part is, I have a six day weekend to plan whatever I want :) I haven't been able to travel much yet; seminars met too often to get around much and we were so busy on weekends with our typical midnight paper rush.
So that was the academic portion of the blog. I was looking at my facebook page and noticed that a lot of my status updates in the past few weeks have been very negative in tone (i.e. my head is about to burst, tired of midnight deadlines, writing another paper, writing yet another paper, sick of writing papers, should go to a community college). I think that's because I'm not much of a facebook aficionado; the only time I really frequent Facebook is when I'm avoiding a paper :) I really am having a wonderful time. I can't imagine going back and the fact that I'm coming on my halfway point just utterly depresses me.
Some things I've noticed in England that are different from the States:
Things close very early, especially on Sundays. McDonald's and the kebab stand are the only source for late night food. I've taken to trying to memorize schedules because we've often been surprised by a closed grocery store at 7 on Sunday. There are no Walmarts, and often to get the best items, you have to go to different stores. For example, the meat sections of our local grocery stores are terrible. The best option is to walk to the butcher's in the covered market which, unfortunately, is in the opposite direction. Also, the grocery stores seem geared towards single people. Finding meals that are easily made for four or five of us requires ingenuity.
Oxford is a very pedestrian city, but there are plenty of drivers. I think they trust their drivers more than we trust our drivers. For one thing, crosswalks all have a button that pedestrians push when they wish to cross. Most of the time, the light will immediately switch to yellow and then red, giving the pedestrian an opportunity to cross. However, after like five seconds the light begins flashing yellow and the drivers can go as long as nobody is there; they don't have to wait for the green light. It makes so much more sense than the stupid intersections at home (particularly in Athens) where you can sit for minutes with nobody coming in either direction.
There was something else I was going to write about, to complete my list at the epic number three, but I have now forgotten.
One exciting thing I've found is that the bookstores here have books that aren't in the states. Of course, I knew this theoretically. The UK has numerous publishing houses that put out books every year that never make it to the states, but still, it was an exciting revelation. Especially here in Oxford where there is more of a market for the nerdy history books I like. For example, they have David Starkey's new book Monarchy which I have been looking for this past year. (Side note, David Starkey is a bit of a popular historian, less respected here in Oxford. I think part of this is because he's a better writer than a researcher, which they would notice more than I would. I just like the way he writes; and it's my time period. But as a result, David Starkey has become somewhat of an guilty pleasure...I'm a nerd.) I also bought a book that's about Wordsworth and Coleridge and their friendship. Ahhh...being in bookstores is quite dangerous to my purse.
Speaking of historians, this morning I went to a lecture. I felt like a true Oxford student. The lecture was on the English Reformation after the Elizabethan settlement, but the best part is it was given by Diarmaid MacCulloch who is quite the authority on the subject. That two page reading list I talked about earlier has like five or six of his works. Sitting in that room taking notes from him only affirmed my desire to be an authority on something. And to do it in Oxford. It's just so impressive. I just...can't even express my desire to go to grad school here. I hope I'm accepted somewhere and that I can get the loans and that everything works out. I don't know when I've wanted something so much.
And on that longing note, I should cut this short. Maybe I will come back and edit in my books. I don't have the list with me; I've been sitting outside on the patio writing. Oh! I can take a picture of this! Well, I suppose disregard what I said about no pictures. Now you can experience this somwhat chilly (14 deg. C) afternoon in the backyard with me!
Edit:
Woolf's A Room of One's Own, To the Lighthouse
Austen's Pride and Prejudice, Emma, Persuasion
More's Utopia
Shakespeare's Richard II, Julius Caesar, Coriolanus
Marlowe's Edward II
Massinger's The Roman Actor
Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre
Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights
Anne Bronte's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Milton's selected prose and poetry
Marvell's selected prose and poetry
Countless critical articles, well if I had to count, around 25
And now I begin again with new books! I love the printed word...yes, I do....




