Shrewsbury International School blogging network

Archives for ENGLISH STUFF

WINNER

By the Veiling of the Sun

You asked me once if I was truly happy.

My dear child.

There are many things I want you to comprehend.

Life is short.

A cliché sentence that has been is widely used on accounts that are inappropriate and thus, has been reduced to merely, YOLO. In many ways the usage of ‘you only live once’ nowadays, does not convey the message. ‘Life is short’ is a sentence that evokes thoughts that enable us to transcend into a more philosophical view of life. It is a risk that we are taking, using phrases for granted, neglecting its true meaning, do you understand?

 

Can I expect you to understand?

You are still young.

But your life is used and, I hope not wasted.

 

This is why such risks in this world should not be attempted, or so they say. Such risks could result in disastrous outcomes, and not to mention the impact of the aftermath. Which means a portion of life sacrificed to endure a punishment in exchange for a period of enjoyment. We now turn our attentions to whether that lapse of time is worth the risk.

 

My child, the happiness we receive during a span of time, you will find, that it is not easily shaken once bestowed. It is a risk to indulge,  the simplest of risks but one without a doubt. These moments we keep above all interruptions as memories. No matter what happens, happiness when granted is forever secured and we do not think less of it in the time to come. Within any moment in life, we do as we are told, know that. We do as we imagine right however the delights that greet us we cannot foresee. Some occurrences may fade away from us out of memory and time but do we remember the smiles? I am certain that I remember yours. To our feelings during any significant time at all, it is extended, never-ending like sand in an hourglass that flows into a bottomless chasm.

 

An eternity to what we are doing.

It is only when we glance back upon the time spent will we realise that the activity we just engaged in was just a part of a long strand of history that travels back to an inevitable beginning. It also draws ahead into the days that have not yet come. How precious are the memoirs of the hours handled but how small as well. Everything we do is a risk, I hope you realise that.

 

Live in the moment, child.

No.

Live in the moment and store it in the safest recesses of your mind.

You see a glint of sun shimmering of the grass and you followed it because you were intrigued by the way the rays are casted upon specially selected patches of grass. Do you know that this is the product of the tree loomed over you? No. You are carefree, never seeking explanations. Idly you pick yourself up. I can tell that you will allow the alluring of nature to overcome you.

 

“No wandering into the wild alone,” I had obstructed you one day…so you are choosing to defy me?

 

It seems as if you have made your choice. You notice how the showers of sun alters the shade of green in the leaves. Not minding the shards of the sun that would otherwise pierce your eyes, you welcomed it into your world.

 

Just as I did once.

 

Starting at a little pat of the feet you jump to touch a branch. You are not able to now but you will very soon my dear, very soon.  The cold wind of early autumn caress your face while it mingled with your laughter, along with it your legs moved faster into rhythm. The same rhythm as the swooping birds. All the colours in your world slides into one another with ease in your vision. Greens into blues, reds into browns , who knows what other pigments you saw. With it you run like blown dandelions, drifting to no specific destination. Why do you run so? Gusts of air play in your tresses whipping then upwards. In your ears I am sure the wind howled but only if you had the heart to stop would you know that the wind never howls. I was captivated with this image.

 

I think I now finally grasp the fruit of my risk. I risked bringing you into this world. What if I could not raise you up the proper way? Despite how agitated I felt, you arrived safely but more importantly you laughed. In that instant I changed from a woman facing emptiness to being filled with purpose and my wistfulness diminished.

 

I want you to be happy but I wonder if, in your small eyes you saw that your happiness is stemmed from a risk? You ask me if I am happy. For you I am happy. I was happy ever since that fateful day I saw you run into the veiling of the sun.

By Pornvarath Komolrochanaporn (Frang)

 

RUNNER UP

 

Taking Risks

 

 It’s snowing here. It always snows on my birthday. I’m turning 9 tomorrow. I’ve always wanted a dog .Every year when I ask my dad for a dog he says, “In your dreams’’.

I’ve dreamt about dogs forever, about dogs sleeping on my feet, a pack of dogs sleeping on me as a blanket.

“You can’t have a dog because, you know they leave paw prints all over the floor, the beds, the tables!’’

“You still can’t have a dog because it’s going to eat all of our money. A dog? In your dreams!’’. He always refuses. Never a yes.

It’s 6 a.m., I look out the window and the garden is like a flat, white piece of paper. “Time for school!’’ my dad barks and growls. I look out the window again and see a pack of little holes in the snow, heading from the gate to the half open door of the shed – my dad’s shed. They look too big for bird prints, not squirrel and not the neighbor’s cat because it’s too lazy and too fat to climb over the fence. As quick as a road runner, I get dressed and woosh downstairs. I’m not rushing so that I can go to school on time, I’m rushing so that I can go out and see what is in the shed.

I take my first step on to the flat white piece of paper and my foot crackles down into the snow. The wind starts to whine around the house. I wish I had the dog pack blanket wrapped around me just like the one in my dream. I’m about to go back inside the house to get my scarf, but curiosity is driving me out and into the snow. I follow the line of dalmatian spot prints into the shed.

    

“Hello? Is anyone in here?” , no answer. “Excuse me, if there is anyone in here? You’re taking a risk because my dad is going to be angry.’’ I hear tapping from the dark corner, like a metronome beating fast. I start creeping towards the sound. I’m scared that it might be a ghost or the monster from under my bed. I find the source of the sound. It’s a box. I move it with my foot and I see a furry, brown neck tie wagging around. Next I see a black muzzle and the pointy ears of a German Shepard pup. I’m staring at it as if it was a ghost. It doesn’t have a collar or a lead. It jumps and licks me like I’m a giant lollypop.

I should keep it. Can I keep it? What do I do? But dad will say no. But I can’t just leave it in the shed, it will die in the cold. But dad will just dump it out of the house. But I can’t leave it here; I’ll take a risk.

  

“Here boy!”  “come on!”, it follows to the door and suddenly stops. It’s afraid of the snow. It yips and yelps when it pokes the cold ground with it’s nose. I’ll pick him up. He feels as heavy as a birthday cake, but I still have to carry him to my room. Ew! He smells like a rotten sponge!

Slowly and quietly I tip toe inside with the dog, feeling like I’m falling off a 500m cliff. Careful as a surgeon I walk up the stairs, trying not to collapse backwards. This reminds me of climbing the high ropes on my last school trip. I feel I’m climbing to a rocky summit, and then I reach the very top of the stairs. The dog jumps from my arms and blasts into my room. Trouble! Did dad hear that? I gust into the room and close the door quietly. I’m waiting for his shout but I don’t hear anything except the sound of the dog tearing my bedsheets. “My dad is going to kill me!”.

  

“Hey, get out of my house!”, thunders my dad! Oh no, he knows my secret! The dog starts to bark ad growl like an arctic wolf. “Shush!” I hiss. It won’t stop barking! “Get out of here! Get out of here! Help! ” Wait, but he can’t know it’s here, there’s something wrong! I rip open the door to see what is going on with my dad, but the dog rushes out of my room and down the stairs. I take off after the black muzzled beast which disappears into the living room. I follow.

 

My dad is still shouting, but he isn’t  shouting at the dog. I’m standing as still as a slug while he is struggling with a man wearing a black balaclava. The dog rushes like lighting and claws the man’s arm. It bites his leg. The mystery man screams furiously and my dad kicks him as he is struggling to get his leg out of the dog’s mouth. He trips and falls towards the door. He clumsily crashes out and falls faces down in the snow. He then gets up and runs away.

  

“ Dad, Dad are you ok? What’s going on?”He doesn’t answer. He is looking at the dog and the dog is staring back. “Where did this dog come from?” Dad looks confused.

“I found him in the shed. Can we keep him?”

“No, we can’t keep it”

“But it just saved your life”

The dog proudly comes and puts its paw up to shake hands.

“Can we keep him?”

“But I’ve always said…”

“But dad he saved your life!”

Dad looks confused, and his face starts to melt into kindness. “What’s his name?”

“His name is Risk”

“Well, ok then, maybe we should take a risk. Happy Birthday!”

by Katrina Cobain Y7SB

 

RUNNER UP

Adventures in Africa

So THIS is one of Earth’s seven natural wonders – the mighty Victoria Falls, on the Zambezi River which borders Zambia and Zimbabwe.

There I stood gaping in wonder on the Zambian side of the Falls. The roar of the water filled my ears.  There was no need for any conversation.

I was anxious to see the Devil’s Armchair, a natural infinity pool that sits on the lip of the Victoria Falls over 100m high, but the only way to get there would be to cross the border illegally into Zimbabwe then find someone local to guide me.

For hours, I tracked through streams, shallow rapids and waded against strong currents.  In the end, I would have no alternative but to leap off a cliff straight into the pool. Exhausted, excited yet fearful of getting caught, I closed my eyes, held my breath and jumped!

It seemed as though time stopped and I was suspended midair. Moments later, I sat contemplating the risks I took to get here, just inches away from torrents of cascading water.  It was exhilarating! I never felt more alive and I would do it all again.

I was certain nothing else could ever exceed this experience, but I was wrong.

As the glow of sunset enveloped the campsite, I sat under a Baobab tree eagerly waiting for darkness to approach. It seemed to take forever.

When the last hue of yellow disappeared behind the horizon, I stomped out the campfire, hastily gathered my belongings and made tracks for Nunu – my trusty 4 X 4.  It was time.

Time for a 2 hour drive through the African bush in Botswana to the famed Makgadikgadi salt pan.

I read that the pan is all that remains from the enormous Lake Makgadikgadi which once covered an area larger than Switzerland, but dried up many thousands of years ago.

I knew that navigating the bush and visiting the salt pan without a guide was dangerous and illegal.  Night visits were strictly prohibited. There were no roads.  Only the sounds of the wilderness, the smell of the jungle and a thick cocoon of darkness that sent my pulses racing.

Nunu bashed through the treacherous terrain. Headlights struggling against the dark, she seemed to groan as she crunched her way through the dry, bumpy under growth, stopping abruptly to avoid the odd mud hut, wild dog, leopard or other creatures of the night.

“Please God, don’t let Nunu fail me now or no one will know to come to my rescue”.

That’s when I spotted the bull elephant with legs the size of tree trunks.  I knew that elephants foraged more than 14 hours a day eating as much as 300 kg of food and drinking over 150 liters of water. I stopped so as not to disturb it.  I was cautious yet fascinated being this close to the world’s largest land mammal.   When I thought it had finished eating, I tried to ease Nunu away from a safe distance.  I was so focused on the bull elephant I accidentally startled the mother and her calf elephant hidden in the bush. The bull elephant started charging, its tusks aimed directly at Nunu, the ground shaking from its heavy pursuit.  I hit the accelerator so hard Nunu surged forward like a rocket. I never stopped to look back.

Thankfully, it wasn’t long after that I felt the ground beneath me change as I charged past the scattered bush and onto the hard, dry, barren salt pan.  All sight and sound of the wilderness ceased. The only sounds left were the roar of Nunu’s engine and that of my heart still pounding from a mixture of fear and excitement.

I needed to catch my breath so I finally brought Nunu to a halt in the middle of nowhere.  The silence was deafening as I observed the vastness of the salt pan. When my feet touched the ground, I suddenly felt small and insignificant.  The view took my breath away. I was no longer of this earth but could reach out and touch the Milky Way.  I felt like I was living among the countless millions of stars – above me, around me and reflected beneath me. Space was tangible.

I stood awestruck and momentarily forgot the cold.  As I turned to admire the view from every direction, my skin tingled and I could see the warm vapour of my breath. Senses heightened, I started to shiver from the cold and possibly from the fear of getting caught by the police.  If I was found, I knew I would be fined a great deal of money, or worse, sent to an African prison.

I knelt beside Nunu and lit a small fire for warmth. I would sleep among the stars tonight, be at one with the universe and dream of the constellations.

Then suddenly, from just above the horizon, I spotted a tiny red dot that appeared among the stars. It seemed to be approaching, slowly but steadily.

My first thought was

“Police, they’ve found me! Quick, get in the car. Leave. Now!”

I looked again at the unfamiliar red dot and it seemed to be growing in size.

“Whatever could it be?”

I scampered onto the top of Nunu to get a better view, my eyes transfixed by the blood red dot.  The dot continued to grow larger and larger.   I watched it creep above the horizon and muscle its way through the blanket of stars.  Soon, it became obvious what it was.  The dot, now a perfect sphere, shed its blood red coat and took its throne high in the sky.  It was the Moon, illuminating the night sky in all its glory. I fell back onto the ground speechless.

For such surreal once in a lifetime experiences in Africa, it was definitely worth TAKING RISKS!

Lauren Storah 7AT

 

How to write by Stephen King

In our final extract from his new book, On Writing, Stephen King reveals six key rules for writing a bestseller. Take note, as this is your chance to have a story published in the paperback version and to meet the master storyteller himself

  1. The basics: forget plot, but remember the importance of ‘situation’

I won’t try to convince you that I’ve never plotted any more than I’d try to convince you that I’ve never told a lie, but I do both as infrequently as possible. I distrust plot for two reasons: first, because our lives are largely plotless, even when you add in all our reasonable precautions and careful planning; and second, because I believe plotting and the spontaneity of real creation aren’t compatible.

A strong enough situation renders the whole question of plot moot. The most interesting situations can usually be expressed as a What-if question:

What if vampires invaded a small New England village? (Salem’s Lot).

What if a young mother and her son became trapped in their stalled car by a rabid dog? (Cujo).

These were situations which occurred to me – while showering, while driving, while taking my daily walk – and which I eventually turned into books. In no case were they plotted, not even to the extent of a single note jotted on a single piece of scrap paper.

  1. Similes and metaphors – the rights, the wrongs

When a simile or metaphor doesn’t work, the results are sometimes funny and sometimes embarrassing. Recently, I read this sentence in a forthcoming novel I prefer not to name: ‘He sat stolidly beside the corpse, waiting for the medical examiner as patiently as a man waiting for a turkey sandwich.’ If there is a clarifying connection here, I wasn’t able to make it.

My all-time favourite similes come from the hard-boiled-detective fiction of the 40s and 50s, and the literary descendants of the dime-dreadful writers. These favourites include ‘It was darker than a carload of assholes’ (George V Higgins) and ‘I lit a cigarette [that] tasted like a plumber’s handkerchief’ (Raymond Chandler).

  1. Dialogue: talk is ‘sneaky’

It’s dialogue that gives your cast their voices, and is crucial in defining their characters – only what people do tells us more about what they’re like, and talk is sneaky: what people say often conveys their character to others in ways of which they – the speakers – are completely unaware.

Advertisement

Well-crafted dialogue will indicate if a character is smart or dumb, honest or dishonest, amusing or an old sobersides. Good dialogue, such as that written by George V Higgins, Peter Straub or Graham Greene, is a delight to read; bad dialogue is deadly.

  1. Characters: nobody is the ‘bad-guy’

The job boils down to two things: paying attention to how the real people around you behave and then telling the truth about what you see. It’s also important to remember that no one is ‘the bad guy’ or ‘the best friend’ or ‘the whore with a heart of gold’ in real life; in real life we each of us regard ourselves as the main character, the protagonist, the big cheese; the camera is on us , baby. If you can bring this attitude into your fiction, you may not find it easier to create brilliant characters, but it will be harder for you to create the sort of one-dimensional dopes that populate so much pop fiction.

  1. Pace: fast is not always best

Pace is the speed at which your narrative unfolds. There is a kind of unspoken (hence undefended and unexamined) belief in publishing circles that the most commercially successful stories and novels are fast-paced. Like so many unexamined beliefs in the publishing business, this idea is largely bullshit… which is why, when books like Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose suddenly break out of the pack and climb the bestseller lists, publishers and editors are astonished. I suspect that most of them ascribe these books’ unexpected success to unpredictable and deplorable lapses into good taste on the part of the reading public.

I believe each story should be allowed to unfold at its own pace, and that pace is not always double time. Nevertheless, you need to beware – if you slow the pace down too much, even the most patient reader is apt to grow restive.

  1. Do the research, but don’t overdo it for the reader

You may be entranced with what you’re learning about flesh-eating bacteria, the sewer system of New York, or the IQ potential of Collie pups, but your readers are probably going to care a lot more about your characters and your story.

Exceptions to the rule? Sure, aren’t there always? There have been very successful writers – Arthur Hailey and James Michener are the first ones that come to my mind – whose novels rely heavily on fact and research. Other popular writers, such as Tom Clancy and Patricia Cornwell, are more story-oriented, but still deliver large dollops of factual information along with the melodrama. I sometimes think that these writers appeal to a large segment of the reading population who feel that fiction is somehow immoral, a low taste which can only be justified by saying, ‘Well, ahem, yes, I do read [fill in author’s name here], but only on airplanes and in hotel rooms that don’t have CNN; also, I learned a great deal about [fill in appropriate subject here].’

The Observer

 

Writing Advice: by Chuck Palahniuk

In six seconds, you’ll hate me.
But in six months, you’ll be a better writer.

From this point forward—at least for the next half year—you may not use “thought” verbs. These include: Thinks, Knows, Understands, Realizes, Believes, Wants, Remembers, Imagines, Desires, and a hundred others you love to use.

The list should also include: Loves and Hates.
And it should include: Is and Has, but we’ll get to those later.

Until some time around Christmas, you can’t write: Kenny wondered if Monica didn’t like him going out at night…”

Instead, you’ll have to Un-pack that to something like: “The
mornings after Kenny had stayed out, beyond the last bus, until he’d had to bum a ride or pay for a cab and got home to find Monica faking sleep, faking because she never slept that quiet, those mornings, she’d only put her own cup of coffee in the microwave. Never his.”

Instead of characters knowing anything, you must now present the details that allow the reader to know them. Instead of a character wanting something, you must now describe the thing so that the reader wants it.

Instead of saying: “Adam knew Gwen liked him.” You’ll have to say: “Between classes, Gwen had always leaned on his locker when he’d go to open it. She’s roll her eyes and shove off with one foot, leaving a black-heel mark on the painted metal, but she also left the smell of her perfume. The combination lock would still be warm from her butt. And the next break, Gwen would be leaned there, again.”

In short, no more short-cuts. Only specific sensory detail: action, smell, taste, sound, and feeling.

Typically, writers use these “thought” verbs at the beginning of a paragraph (In this form, you can call them “Thesis Statements” and I’ll rail against those, later). In a way, they state the intention of the paragraph. And what follows, illustrates them.

For example:
“Brenda knew she’d never make the deadline. was backed up from the bridge, past the first eight or nine exits. Her cell phone battery was dead. At home, the dogs would need to go out, or there would be a mess to clean up. Plus, she’d promised to water the plants for her neighbor…”

Do you see how the opening “thesis statement” steals the thunder of what follows? Don’t do it.

If nothing else, cut the opening sentence and place it after all the others. Better yet, transplant it and change it to: Brenda would never make the deadline.

Thinking is abstract. Knowing and believing are intangible. Your story will always be stronger if you just show the physical actions and details of your characters and allow your reader to do the thinking and knowing. And loving and hating.

Don’t tell your reader: “Lisa hated Tom.”

Instead, make your case like a lawyer in court, detail by detail.

Present each piece of evidence. For example: “During roll call, in the breath after the teacher said Tom’s name, in that moment before he could answer, right then, Lisa would whisper-shout ‘Butt Wipe,’ just as Tom was saying, ‘Here’.”

One of the most-common mistakes that beginning writers make is leaving their characters alone. Writing, you may be alone. Reading, your audience may be alone. But your character should spend very, very little time alone. Because a solitary character starts thinking or worrying or wondering.

For example: Waiting for the bus, Mark started to worry about how long the trip would take…”

A better break-down might be: “The schedule said the bus would come by at noon, but Mark’s watch said it was already 11:57. You could see all the way down the road, as far as the Mall, and not see a bus. No doubt, the driver was parked at the turn-around, the far end of the line, taking a nap. The driver was kicked back, asleep, and Mark was going to be late. Or worse, the driver was drinking, and he’d pull up drunk and charge Mark seventy-five cents for death in a fiery traffic accident…”

A character alone must lapse into fantasy or memory, but even then you can’t use “thought” verbs or any of their abstract relatives.

Oh, and you can just forget about using the verbs forget and remember.

No more transitions such as: “Wanda remembered how Nelson used to brush her hair.”

Instead: “Back in their sophomore year, Nelson used to brush her hair with smooth, long strokes of his hand.”

Again, Un-pack. Don’t take short-cuts.

Better yet, get your character with another character, fast.
Get them together and get the action started. Let their actions and words show their thoughts. You—stay out of their heads.

And while you’re avoiding “thought” verbs, be very wary about using the bland verbs “is” and “have.”

For example:
“Ann’s eyes are blue.”

“Ann has blue eyes.”

Versus:

“Ann coughed and waved one hand past her face, clearing the cigarette smoke from her eyes, blue eyes, before she smiled…”

Instead of bland “is” and “has” statements, try burying your details of what a character has or is, in actions or gestures. At its most basic, this is showing your story instead of telling it.

And forever after, once you’ve learned to Un-pack your characters, you’ll hate the lazy writer who settles for: “Jim sat beside the telephone, wondering why Amanda didn’t call.”

Please. For now, hate me all you want, but don’t use thought verbs. After Christmas, go crazy, but I’d bet money you won’t.

(…)

For this month’s homework, pick through your writing and circle every “thought” verb. Then, find some way to eliminate it. Kill it by Un-packing it.

Then, pick through some published fiction and do the same thing. Be ruthless.

“Marty imagined fish, jumping in the moonlight…”

“Nancy recalled the way the wine tasted…”

“Larry knew he was a dead man…”

Find them. After that, find a way to re-write them. Make them stronger.

IMG_8887fusion1fusionresizersz_img_0708fusion27fusion24allan bennett talking headsfusion31IMG_2138rsz_img_3870The History Boys Film stripsIMG_5274fusion10412yearsgracefusionrsz_img_0748fusion101fusion12IMG_1911[1]simonstevejoshstujecastHBTG English at Shrewsbury

Twelve Years a Slave (oops, we mean Stage)

Twelve years is (almost) the length of time the school has been open (2003 – 2015) and the time Ms. Wallace and I have been working in the school. She was very young when we first met, and now….*

Our first production was “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, not a particularly ambitious choice as far as school productions go, but we ambitiously chose to stage it in the garden by the river, not realising we’d be in competition with speakers from passing tourist boats, the noise from the construction of the Chatrium building, and the rain, which insisted on arriving mid-performance, even though it was December and the rainy season should have been long gone.

Since then there have been more plays, exhibitions, magazines than we can even count, and more highlights than we could ever mention. They are all now on show, in one way or another, in the exhibition called ‘Twelve Years a Stage’, currently in the space in front of the library: thirteen computers showing past productions, a slide show of the best pictures, from Mark and Art as Oberon and Puck, to Deryn and Grace as Top Girls Marlene and Joyce, and posters from productions going way back, the best designed by Khun Peh.

We chose the photo of Yash, Simon, Ben and Jamie as the title poster (from ‘Master Harold and the Boys’) to show a less-than-glossy behind the scenes view, students tired from rehearsing, wolfing down Mars bars to regain energy.

Twelve years is a long time. In 2003, Vegas was in Year 1(in Ms. Snow’s class), I didn’t wear glasses, and Ms. Wallace spoke in an Irish rather than an American accent.  A great deal of creativity has taken place during that time. Thank you to all those who have taken part in all aspects of extra-curricular English during this time, students and staff.

And thank to those who helped in setting up the exhibition: Khun Pornsawan and his team; Khun Mon and the IT team; Khun Peh; Ms. Proctor, James Mulhern, and all in the English Department. Love you dahlings, love your work!

John Grime and Kathy Wallace

*Two sentences have been omitted here at the insistence of Ms. Wallace

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IMG_9946[1] IMG_9954[1]  IMG_9952[2]IMG_1921[1]IMG_9902[1]See The English Department’s work over the past 12 years outside the library.

 

david  Carr  nelson New ZealandMaster Harold And The Boys poster

https://thoughtsofawannabethesp.wordpress.com/2015/03/02/not-really-a-review-not-ifootfallsrockaby/

Shakespeare ‘a cultural icon’ abroad

William Shakespeare is the UK’s greatest cultural icon, according to the results of an international survey released to mark the 450th anniversary of his birth.

Five thousand young adults in India, Brazil, Germany, China and the USA were asked to name a person they associated with contemporary UK arts and culture.

Shakespeare was the most popular response, with an overall score of 14%.

The result emerged from a wider piece of research for the British Council.

The Queen and David Beckham came second and third respectively. Other popular responses included JK Rowling, Adele, The Beatles, Paul McCartney and Elton John.

Word cloud of cultural icons Word cloud: a look at some of the names from the British Council research

Shakespeare proved most popular in China where he was mentioned by 25% of respondents. The lowest score – 6% – was in the US.

Other events to mark Shakespeare’s birthday on Wednesday include a launch event for Shakespeare’s Globe theatre’s two-year world tour of Hamlet.

The tour aims to visit every country in the world. Venues will include Wittenberg in Germany, the Roman theatres of Philippopolis in Bulgaria and Heraclea in Macedonia, the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington and the Mayan ruins of Copan in Honduras.

The poet Michael Rosen wrote a celebratory poem for BBC Radio 4’s PM programme in which he picked out his favourite insults from Shakespeare’s works for use by people on social media.

It includes the lines:

“Thou cream faced loon

There’s no more faith in thee than in a stewed prune

Thou art baser than a cutpurse.”

A bugler plays a fanfare for Shakespeare in Stratford-upon-Avon

There will also be a firework display from the top of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon after the evening performance of Henry IV Part I.

Shakespeare died on 23 April 1616 at the age of 52. His actual birth date in 1564 is unknown but it is traditionally celebrated on 23 April.

The British Council – which promotes British culture around the world – is planning a major international programme of events for 2016, the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death.

“The 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death is the biggest opportunity to put UK culture on the world stage since London 2012,” said Sir Martin Davidson, chief executive of the British Council.

“As the most widely read and studied author in the English language, Shakespeare provides an important connection to the UK for millions of people around the world, and the world will be looking to celebrate this anniversary with the UK. We hope that the UK’s cultural organisations will come together to meet these expectations and ensure that 2016 is our next Olympic moment.”

From The BBC

Shrewsbury International School’s entry into the 4th FOBISEA Short Story Competition 2014

Listen

By Miu Miu Chanya Leosivikul

“Do you believe in magic?” she asks, turning to me, her wide green eyes watching me intensely.

We were sitting on a grassy hill. The sky arched high above us. “Yeah.” I say, smiling. I thought she was just playing around when I turned to her, but she was dead serious. “Can you hear it then?”

“Hear what?”

“The magic, the songs.”

“What do you mean?”

“It’s hard to explain. I don’t know, just listen.” I strain my ears.

“I can’t hear anything,” I say. “What does it sound like?”

“It’s different, everything has its own song,”. I glance sideways to look at her, she was absently picking at the grass, her eyes bright, a faraway expression on her face.

She was a unique child. Clever, observant and wise beyond her years. I liked spending time with her.

“Like the wind, for example, it’s song can vary but today its lively and fun. It makes me want to dance.” she says, a smile in her voice. I didn’t really know what she was talking about. “And the trees,” she continues. “Their song is slower, starting low but getting higher. Like it’s growing taller. I like the sky’s song best. It’s clear and light. Makes me think of the clouds.” She was watching as the trees swayed side to side. Graceful dancers moving to a song I couldn’t hear.

I look at the sky, searching for clouds but there were none. The sky is the bluest I’ve ever seen. It’s endless. It is the perfect shade, not the washed out blue of winter or the crisp cerulean of autumn. But a clear blue with the slightest hint of turquoise. The kind of sky you only had in summer.

“What about the birds, up there?” I ask.

“Well, their song is quite energetic and fun. I know you’d love it,” She sighs, a frown tugging on her features. “I wish you could hear them too.”

She smiles sadly at me, the wind whipping her blonde hair around her small face. She seemed so innocent, so tiny, so vulnerable.

Maybe once, I had been able to hear those songs too. Children always seem to be able to see and hear things better than those of us who have grown up. I envy her. I wish I could still believe in magic. I had stopped believing a long, long time ago.

“Maybe I can sing something for you!” She says and her eyes seem to light up. She tilts her head back, the sun kisses her blonde hair. I watch curiously as she takes a deep breath. And then, and then, a sound graces my ears. She hums softly. No words, just sound flowing out of her. It sounds wistful and longing.  She stops and says, “That’s your song.”

“Oh. Is that what I really sound like?”

“It depends. That’s what you sound like now but when you’re happy, it’s more lively.”

“Oh…” I wonder what her song sounds like.

“Shall I sing the wind’s song for you?”

“Okay.” She closes her eyes and the strange overwhelming sensation pours over me again as she hums. It sounds clear and pure. It might just be my imagination but the wind seems to grow stronger as she sings. I feel as if it could just lift me off the ground and just carry me away far, far away to some unknown place.

The melody is wild yet calm. I want to run a thousand miles. It’s beautiful.

I can imagine a whole orchestra accompanying her as she sings. All the animals coming out of the woods around to play for us. A trumpet, a harp, flutes and cellos. The drums, beating steadily, the violins sing. The notes flowing into the next, as bows danced over strings. The clash of a cymbal. The ring of a bell. The chimes, glittering in the background. The orchestra of nature.

All the different, beautiful sounds combining to be one. To be as one with the voice of the little girl. Her voice is enchanting. I feel as if the wind would whisk me up into the air, to the sky and we would soar over the treetops until the trees were ants and mountains were as small as the nail on your pinkie.

What I can see is only a small glimpse of the wind’s song. There’s so much more inside. So much beyond the music. It touches your emotions, it wakes you up, it triggers the old memories that you’ve long forgotten.

I could watch her sing forever, drowning all my fears, living in my dreams.

She stops abruptly and looks over at me worriedly. She’s afraid. Afraid of rejection. Her friends, her parents, not really ignoring her, but neglecting her all the same. No one understands her. I feel the pain she carries everyday because no one ever believes her. No one does, but I do. “I wish I could hear…” I whisper.

I thought she’d be upset but she grins at me instead. “Come on!” She says excitedly. “I’ll sing more, we can dance too! I can help you hear!” Maybe, maybe I could learn to believe again. Her smile is so wide and she looks at me like I’m her best friend not her babysitter.

She jumps up and grasps my hand. Soon we’re running together, hand in hand, down the hill. We tumble down to the bottom, laughing. She’s lying on the grass, giggling like mad and so am I. I close my eyes. Then, something melodic and quiet fills my ears. It’s her song. I open my eyes, a new wonderful world revealed before me and I could see it because I believed, because I believed in her.

 

Runner-Up

Molly 7SF

The Knife

Sokhem was ten when it happened. As was usual, he was making his way up to the hills to collect scrap metal to sell. The area was once a battlefield, so the treasure was ordnance left over from the Cambodian war. It sold for one dollar per 10 kilos. He had just arrived at a platform near the top when he heard the click.

Sokhem knew immediately that he was in trouble. He had seen and heard way too much to not know that there, at the bottom of his foot, lay a landmine.

He panicked on the inside and felt like screaming, yet he remained calm and still like a gravestone. He knew that if he moved there were two possibilities. He would either get blown to pieces, or at the very least lose his legs and bleed to death, alone, on the hilltop.

He scanned the platform. He felt sick to his stomach, and hopeless. He didn’t know that the situation was about to get worse, much worse. It begun when pain shot through his right leg and cramp set in. He felt strangely nauseous as he struggled to stay still.

He thought long and hard, as he forced himself to stop shaking. Tears slid down Sokhem’s face, and he couldn’t brush them off; just as he couldn’t slap the mosquito now sucking blood from his neck. Thoughts of his flesh and bone being torn to bits entered his mind. He knew death well, like an old foe, as he had lost his father and two brothers to that miserable war. Looking into the sky he then decided there was no point in waiting any longer to make his move.

He had heard from some of the older boys in the village that if you wedged an object tightly between your foot with some brands of mine, and no one he knew could verify this, it could lock the mechanism for a few seconds, and you had a chance.

In his belt was a small knife, it had been his father’s before his death. It had a silver rim, and a fire-breathing dragon had been carved into it.  When his father had died, this had been the only thing that remained in the crater. Ever since, Sokhem has kept it with him night and day.

He pulled it from his belt and ever so slowly bent down. Carefully, he slid the blade under his shoe feeling the hard metal underneath. He felt around for what seemed like forever, sweat dripping down his face, stinging his eyes as the mosquitoes feasted.

click

He waited.

The blade had found its spot and stuck hard.

He closed his eyes, clenched his fists and took his foot off the device…

He opened his eyes, unsure if he was dreaming or not. Sokhem made a break for it, taking refuge behind some rocks on the ledge.

A loud bang followed rocking the ledge and the strong smell of sulfur filled Sokhem’s lungs. He looked around and walked toward where he had been standing only moments before. There, lying in the center of the ledge, in perfect condition, as if it had never moved, was his knife…

 

Runner-Up

Maomi 8PD

The Believer, the Skeptic and the Follower

“Hey, do you see that tree? The big bodhi one.”

The two men stopped and looked to the side of the trail they were walking on. The surroundings were very unruly, with leaves and twigs scattered all over the place. Robert glanced up at the huge tree that loomed over them. It had long thick branches that stretched out high above, each one adorned with brilliant green heart-shaped leaves. There were several cloths of different colours tied around the trunk of the tree, flapping eerily in the wind.

“Yes. What about it?”

“You notice how there are lots of colourful cloths tied around the trunk? That’s because it’s considered a sacred tree. We Thai people are very superstitious, and we believe in spirits that reside in these trees.” Dang explained.

Robert shuddered. No wonder the bodhi had such a creepy sensation.

Dang paused for a moment. “Do you believe in the supernatural?” he asked.

Robert hesitated. “I’ve always been intrigued by the idea of it, but I have to say I’m quite sceptical about these things.” he decided.

Dang shrugged. “There are so many strange things in the world that the scientists are still yet to explain,” he said. “But that doesn’t mean they aren’t true. In fact, there was a very curious incident about this very tree that happened a few years ago.”

Robert was instantly interested. “Is that so? Please do tell me about it. I know very little about Thai culture.”

“It started when a man came to this exact spot to pray on this tree to get rich.” Dang said, gesturing to the place where they were standing.

“And did he get what he asked for?”

“Well, weeks passed, and still nothing happened. One night, he came back drunk and went over to the tree with an axe to cut it down.”

“But obviously he didn’t succeed.” Robert said.

“No and yes. While he was hacking at the trunk, a large branch fell from the tree and hit the man, crippling his hand, which was so badly mangled that it had to be amputated. This resulted in the man receiving a large sum of money from the insurance company, granting his wish.”

Dang paused, letting the story sink in.

“Excuse me,” said a voice at his shoulder. “What are you doing here in the middle of nowhere? This is a sacred tree, and you shouldn’t be snooping around.”

The two men turned around to see a man standing behind them. He appeared to have overheard their conversation.

“Oh, nothing,” Dang replied, seeming quite annoyed by the man eavesdropping on them. “This is a public path. We were just passing by. Why do you ask?”

“Just my curiosity,” the man said, shrugging. “I’m Pauno, by the way.” He extended out a hand, which Dang and Robert both shook. After the introductions were made, Pauno glanced behind him, and looked up at the tree warily.

“I don’t see many people around this area,” he said. “It’s isolated, and it’s risky. Only strange people come here. But I do know a few things about this place, and there’s something I would like to do here.”

“I see. What is it that you intend to do?” Dang inquired.

“It doesn’t matter,” said Pauno, waving off the question. “Just tell me; what do you think of the man in the story?”

“I think he was very foolish to come here in the first place,” Robert said. “Praying to a tree won’t help you get your wish. If you want something, you’ve got to work hard for it. And nothing comes without a price.”

Pauno looked at him levelly. “I take it that you are a non-believer, and I have no intention to convert people like you. It will just be a waste of time. But just because something has no logical explanation doesn’t mean it isn’t true. Remember that.”

There was a moment of silence. “You still haven’t told us why you are here yet,” Robert said finally, trying to divert the conversation away from him.

Pauno sighed. “Oh, very well. I came here because I wanted to see this tree again. I definitely believe it to have something paranormal, you know. I have to come and pay respect to the tree every once in a while, or I wouldn’t be able to sleep at night. If something terrible has happened here, then it is best to stay on the safe side.”

“Oh? And why do you think that?”

Pauno gazed at Robert for a while. Then, in answer to his question, he slowly lifted his wrist out of his pocket.

He had no hand.

In Defence of the Humanities

Humanities graduates do incredibly well professionally and it is time academia acknowledged this, argues Matthew Batstone
Plato

A love for Plato doesn’t preclude professional success. Photograph: Alamy

According to a recent piece of research from New College of the Humanities, 60% of the UK’s leaders have humanities, arts or social science degrees. The STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering, maths) account for only 15% of the sample. This might come as a bit of a surprise for some.

Somebody studying the politics or sociology of Britain might reasonably infer from government policy that only people with STEM degrees make a contribution to the prosperity of the nation.

Moreover the literature from academics in support of the humanities tends to reinforce that supposition. Supports tend to argue that the humanities are vital for society because successful societies need to understand their past, the history of ideas and their culture.

This is true, but it misses a key argument underpinning the value of the humanities, the fact that graduates of these disciplines do incredibly well professionally, including those who follow business careers. What’s more, this is a vital part of the argument in favour of continued support of these subjects.

The full Choose Humanities report can be found here, but the data is pretty clear. The study reviewed leaders across a broad range of fields in the UK, including FTSE 100 CEOs, MPs, vice chancellors of Russell Group universities, Magic Circle law firms, managers of creative businesses and so on. Dividing subject areas between STEM, humanities, arts, social sciences and vocational, leaders with degrees from the core humanities were the largest group. Even among FTSE 100 companies there are 34 CEOs with a humanities degree against 31 with a STEM degree.

If so many of the UK’s leaders have humanities degrees, is it possible to determine whether what they have studied contributes to their success?

A good starting point is the business lobbying organisation, CBI. The CBI says that what big business needs are graduates who can work in teams, who can problem solve and who are numerate. This may be the basis of the government’s preoccupation with STEM subjects and it is certainly true that any client would be concerned if their auditor could not add up.

However, these are the basic skills graduates must have. They can only take professionals so far up the ladder. They are not the capabilities that will generate ideas or create wealth and employment. Steve Jobs’ obsession was with calligraphy, not cash flow statements. The capabilities that the CBI talks about are the plumbing (without being dismissive – you wouldn’t want to live in a house without plumbing). The humanities provide a rich training in the skills underpinning leadership and innovation, regardless of whether that leader runs a government department, a school, a newspaper or a corporation.

To succeed in the humanities you need to build an argument and you need to be able to recognise the strengths and weaknesses of the contrary position. Moreover you need to be able to present your position in a compelling and charismatic manner (the tradition of 1:1 tutorials is fantastic training for this). Purely on a practical level, the weekly distillation of a huge amount of material is exactly the discipline required in many forms of work.

If you appreciate, for instance, Bleak House or Nostromo, you will appreciate the importance of human relationships and the fact that it is people, as well as organisations and how they are structured, that shape outcomes. Most importantly, however, at the centre of the humanities is an appreciation of ideas and the value of creativity.

If Britain is to have a future in the economic life of the planet, it is unlikely to be in low value manufacturing. We will stand or fall with our creative and information industries and where better to find the leaders of these industries than from graduates of economics, law, philosophy, English and history.

Matthew Batstone is a co-founder and director of New College of the Humanities.

Entry for the 2014 FOBISIA Short Story Writing Competition with the theme of ‘Magic?’ is now open.

Once again there are 2 divisions, running in the same format as previous years.

Primary (Year 3-6)  600 word limit

Secondary (open)  1000 word limit

Shrewsbury International School Senior entries are due on March 21st.

See your teacher for details.

See this Blog’s posts on last year winners. You can also download the  2010 and 2011 Ebook.

30 Tips for Short Story Writing

  1. Read good short stories by good short story writers. Ask a librarian or your teacher for suggestions.
  2. Write in the third person unless a really distinctive first-person voice is irresistible.
  3. Never use the passive where you can use the active. The man was bitten by the dog. (passive)The dog bit the man. (active). The active is better because it’s shorter and more forceful.
  4. Give your story a title sooner than later. Change it later if you wish. Consider a title that is surprising or creates mystery.
  5. Try to use fewer words than more when describing something. Don’t go into great detail. Make every word count. Don’t give detailed descriptions of characters, especially their physical appearance. You can reveal more about character in dialogue.
  6. Don’t open the story talking about the weather.
  7. Write about what you know, things you’ve experienced – but don’t be afraid to use your imagination to help bring the reader into your world.
  8. Don’t use anything other than ‘said ‘to carry dialogue or be very sparingly with alternatives. “Donna,” I said, “I’d better go.”
  9. It is vital that the opening sentence and paragraph grab the reader’s attention.
  10. Avoid overly long sentences, although variation in the length of sentences can be effective as well.
  11. Never modify ‘said’ with an adverb. For example ‘said admiringly’.
  12. Don’t use exclamation marks or if you do, use only one!
  13. Avoid clichés and common expressions such as ‘all hell broke loose’, ‘he went ballistic’ etc and words like ‘suddenly’ and ‘dramatically’.
  14. Use dialogue as a form of action and to advance narrative (the story).
  15. Read your story aloud to be sure of the rhythm of the sentences. Listen to what you have written. If it doesn’t catch your imagination, only your mum will want to read it. Write a story you’d like to read.
  16. Don’t edit until you have finished your first draft – just write it. Have a complete break between completion and editing.
  17. Reread, rewrite, reread & rewrite again. A well written story is seldom found in the first draft. Cut until you can cut no more Less is always better. Always. What is left often springs to life.
  18. Never use ‘then’ as a conjunction – use ‘and’. Don’t use too many ‘ands’.
  19. Interesting verbs and adjectives are seldom interesting.
  20. Use metaphors and similes sparingly. Use one you’ve never heard before.
  21. Trust your reader. Not everything needs to be explained.
  22. Try to capture the reader’s interest and, empathy for, your characters.
  23. Don’t repeat a distinctive word unless you want to create a specific effect.
  24. Pay attention to names of characters and places (Dolores Haze), although don’t make them improbable either (Renesmee).
  25. Try to build your story around a key question.
  26. Every sentence should do one of two things –reveal character or advance the action.
  27. Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water.
  28. Almost never use a long, technical, or obscure word if a short word will do.
  29. Take a notebook to somewhere public, like the library, a sports field or canteen: Listen to how people really talk, what they say. Write down your favourite sentences you hear and use them in your story.
  30. Follow all, some or none of the above. Have your own style.

For further information see this short video http://video.openroadmedia.com/b7ai/authors-on-writing-short-stories/

August 27, 2013

Why Teach English?

Posted by
english-majors-580.jpegWhence, and where, and why the English major? The subject is in every  mouth—or, at least, is getting kicked around agitatedly in columns and reviews  and Op-Ed pieces. The English major is vanishing from our colleges as the Latin  prerequisite vanished before it, we’re told, a dying choice bound to a dead  subject. The estimable Verlyn Klinkenborg reports in the Times that “At  Pomona College (my alma mater) this spring, 16 students graduated with an  English major out of a student body of 1,560, a terribly small number,” and from  other, similar schools, other, similar numbers.

In response, a number of defenses have been mounted, none of them, so far,  terribly persuasive even to one rooting for them to persuade.   As the bromides  roll by and the platitudes chase each other round the page, those in favor of  ever more and better English majors feel a bit the way we Jets fans feel, every  fall, when our offense trots out on the field: I’m cheering as loud as I can,  but let’s be honest—this is not working well.

The defenses and apologias come in two kinds: one insisting that English  majors make better people, the other that English majors (or at least humanities  majors) make for better societies; that, as Christina Paxson, the president of Brown University, just put it  in The New Republic, “ there are real, tangible benefits to the  humanistic disciplines—to the study of history, literature, art, theater, music,  and languages.”  Paxson’s piece is essentially the kind of Letter To A Crazy  Republican Congressman that university presidents get to write. We need the  humanities, she explains patiently, because they may end up giving us other  stuff we actually like:  “We do not always know the future benefits of what we  study and therefore should not rush to reject some forms of research as less  deserving than others.”

Well, a humanities major may make an obvious contribution to everyone’s  welfare. But the truth is that for every broadly humane, technological-minded  guy who contributed one new gadget to our prosperity there are six narrow,  on-the-spectrum techno-obsessives who contributed twenty. Even Paxson’s  insistence that, after 9/11, it was valuable to have experts on Islam around is  sadly dubious; it was   Bernard Lewis, a leading scholar on the subject, who  consulted closely with Dick Cheney before the Iraq War, with the results we  know.

Nor do humanities specialists, let alone English majors, seem to be  particularly humane or thoughtful or open-minded people, as the alternative  better-people defense insists. No one was better read than the English upper  classes who, a hundred years ago, blundered into the catastrophe of the Great  War.  (They wrote good poetry about it, the ones who survived anyway.)    Victorian factory owners read Dickens, but it didn’t make Victorian factories  nicer.  (What made them nicer was people who read Dickens and Mill and then  petitioned Parliament.)

So why have English majors?  Well, because many people like books.  Most of  those like to talk about them after they’ve read them, or while they’re in the  middle.  Some people like to talk about them so much that they want to spend  their lives talking about them to other people who like to listen. Some of us do  this all summer on the beach, and others all winter in a classroom. One might  call this a natural or inevitable consequence of literacy.    And it’s this  living, irresistible, permanent interest in reading that supports English  departments, and makes sense of English majors.

Bill James dealt with this point wonderfully once, in talking about whether  baseball is, as so many people within it insist, really a business, and not a  sport at all.  Well, James pointed out, if the sporting interest in baseball  died, baseball would die; but if the business of baseball died—which, given all  those empty ringside seats at Yankee Stadium, doesn’t seem impossible—but the  sporting interest persisted, baseball would be altered, but it wouldn’t die.    It would just reconstitute itself in a different way.

And so with English departments: if we closed down every English department  in the country, loud, good, expert, or at least hyper-enthusiastic readers would  still emerge.   One sees this happening already, in the steady pulse of reading  groups and books clubs which form, in effect, a kind of archipelago of amateur  English departments. The woman with the notebook and the detailed parsing of how  each love affair echoes each other in “Swann’s Way” is already an English  professor manqué.  (Or, rather, a comp-lit professor.)

If we abolished English majors tomorrow, Stephen Greenblatt and Stanley Fish   and Helen Vendler would not suddenly be freed to use their smarts to start  making quantum proton-nuclear reactor cargo transporters, or whatever; they  would all migrate someplace where they could still talk Shakespeare and Proust  and the rest.   Indeed, before there were English professors, there were… English professors.  Dr. Johnson was the greatest English professor who ever  lived—the great cham of literature, to whom all turned, Harold Bloom  plus-plus—and he never had a post, let alone tenure, and his “doctorate” was one  of those honorary jobs they give you, after a lifetime of literary labor, for  Fine Effort.   The best reading and talking about books was, in the past, often  done by people who had to make their living doing something else narrowly  related: Hazlitt by writing miscellaneous journalism, Sydney Smith by pretending  to be a clergyman.

So then, the critic Lee Siegel asks, quite pertinently, why don’t we  just take books out of the academy, where they don’t belong, and put them back  in the living room, where they do?  The best answer is a conservative one:   institutions don’t always have a good reason for existing, but there are very  few institutions that do exist that didn’t get invented for a reason. The space  between a practice and a profession is as wide as any social space can be.   And  what professions do that practices can’t is remain open to what used to be  called “the talents.”   To have turned the habits of reading and obsessing over  books from a practice mostly for those rich enough to have the time to do it  into one that welcomes, for a time anyway, anyone who can is momentous. English  departments   democratize the practice of reading. When they do, they make the  books of the past available to all. It’s a simple but potent act.

I am, let me add quickly, a living witness to this: my father is the son of a  Jewish immigrant butcher and grocer, a wise man but hardly a reader.   My  father, who loves to read, worked his way through Penn, back when you could, to  become… a professor of English, with a specialty in the eighteenth-century wits,  Pope and Richardson and Swift and Fielding. Without an English department and an  English major, he would never have had a chance to make that journey in so short  and successful a time—and, I feel bound to say, the practice of talking about  books would have been poorer for it.    (Mine would, certainly.) The best way  we’ve found to make sure that everyone who loves to talk about books have a  place to do it is to have English departments around.

The study of English, to be sure, suffers from its own discontents: it isn’t  a science, and so the “research” you do is, as my colleague Louis Menand has pointed  out, archival futzing aside, not really research.    But the best answer I  have ever heard from a literature professor for studying literature came from a  wise post-structuralist critic. Why was he a professor of literature?  “Because  I have an obsessive relationship with texts.”      You choose a major, or a  life, not because you see its purpose, which tends to shimmer out of sight like  an oasis, but because you like its objects. A  good doctor said to me, not long  ago, “You really sort of have to like assholes and ear wax to be a good general  practitioner”; you have to really like, or not mind much, intricate and dull and  occasionally even dumb arguments about books to study English.

The reward is that it remains the one kind of time travel that works, where  you make a wish and actually become a musketeer in Paris or a used-car salesman  in Pennsylvania. That one knows, of course, that the actuality is “fictional” or  artificial doesn’t change its reality.  The vicarious pleasure of reading is, by  the perverse principle of professions, one that is often banished from official  discussion, but it remains the core activity.

So: Why should English majors exist? Well, there really are no whys to such  things, anymore than there are to why we wear clothes or paint good pictures or  live in more than hovels and huts or send flowers to our beloved on their  birthday.   No sane person proposes   or has ever proposed an entirely  utilitarian, production-oriented view of human purpose.  We cannot merely  produce goods and services as efficiently as we can, sell them to each other as  cheaply as possible, and die. Some idea of symbolic purpose, of pleasure-seeking  rather than rent seeking, of Doing Something Else, is essential to human  existence.   That’s why we pass out tax breaks to churches, zoning remissions to  parks, subsidize new ballparks and point to the density of theatres and  galleries as signs of urban life, to be encouraged if at all possible.  When a  man makes a few billion dollars, he still starts looking around for a museum to  build a gallery for or a newspaper to buy. No civilization we think worth  studying, or whose relics we think worth visiting, existed without what amounts  to an English department—texts that mattered, people who   argued about them as  if they mattered, and a sense of shame among the wealthy if they couldn’t talk  about them, at least a little, too.      It’s what we call civilization.

Even if we read books and talk about them for four years, and then do  something else more obviously remunerative, it won’t be time wasted. We need the  humanities not because they   will produce shrewder entrepreneurs or kinder  C.E.O.s but because, as that first professor said, they help us enjoy life more  and endure it better.  The reason we need the humanities is because we’re human.  That’s enough.

Photograph by Riccardo  Venturi/Contrasto/Redux

Read more: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2013/08/why-teach-english.html?printable=true&currentPage=all#ixzz2m0uHeSyM