Childrens Learning in Montreal, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Childrens Learning in Montreal,

Description:

friendship and support p. 36. Maxie's learning process. Business world: ... Two 'autobiographical fragments' four short stories about the character Carrier ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:59
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: engFj
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Childrens Learning in Montreal,


1
Childrens Learning in Montreal,
  • a world of poverty and conflictual race relations
  • Piety by Irving Layton P
  • North by Clark Blaise N
  • Snakebite by Ann Diamond -- S

2
Common Themes
  • Montreal in the first part of the 20th century.
    Piety 20s, Maxie at 13 North Snake
    Bite -- 50s, Phil in junior high Julia 5 years
    old.
  • Race Relations
  • European Immigrants -- P p. 35 (? Italian) N
    p. 212 S (? Jewish) S immigrants in post-war
    surburbs. 245-46
  • French against English (American English) S p.
    245
  • Poverty
  • Religions Schooling textbook pp. 43-44
  • Love and Sex

3
Irving Layton the man
  • In 1913, when Layton was only one year old, his
    family emigrated to Canada. They settled into
    Montreal's Jewish ghetto and a life of grinding
    poverty.
  • Throughout his life, Irving has believed that his
    mother's presence protects and guides him, and so
    when he learned that Anna (Annette) Pottier was
    born the day of his mother's death in 1959, he
    took it as a sign to commit to Anna, who became
    his fifth and last wife.
  • Born in Romania 12 Mar 1912 to Jewish parents.

Source http//www.library.utoronto.ca/canpoetry/l
ayton/bio.htm
4
Irving Layton the poet
  • Layton was one of a nucleus of young Montréal
    poets who believed they were effecting a
    revolution against insipid romanticism and
    published their poems in First Statement
  • A controversialist His satire was generally
    directed against bourgeois dullness, and his
    famous love poems were erotically explicit.
  • Nominated for Nobel Prize in 1980s.

Source http//www.tceplus.com/layton.htm
5
Piety Starting Questions
  • What kind of immigrant community is presented in
    this story? How do they deal with their enemies
    and friends?
  • Maxie and his family
  • Why does Maxie decide to stop school?
  • Why does Maxie refuse to go to the synagogue at
    the end?
  • Why do his family respond so violently, esp. his
    mother?
  • Is this a story of initiation? (Does Maxie
    learn and grow in it?)

6
Piety the Karpals and immigrant community
  • Poverty p. 35.
  • the Karpals, the poorest their personalities p.
    36 38
  • Jews a negative sign East Europeans vs. South
    Europeans p. 35
  • friendship and support p. 36

7
Maxies learning process
  • Business world
  • Mr. Grosnick finicky, wants everything tidy p.
    40 cares a lot about money pp. 40-41
  • takes M. to synagogue every night
  • Maxies response p.
    41-42
  • The Adults world laughter and cruelty pp. 42-43
    dream p. 43
  • Love Ms. Applebaum p. 43

8
Maxies learning process (2)
  • Religion vs. Business
  • Maxies views of God p. 44 exist or not,
    imprisoned or not.
  • Growth getting higher pay, feel more important
  • His discovery a decision against the
    whole family, turning the mother into something
    he always fears, cruelty.

9
Clark Blaise the migrant writer
-- at 10, after one of his father's frequent
business failures
  • Born to Canadian parents in North Dakoda, 1940.
  • French-Canadian father handsome, extroverted,
    charming, and untrustworthy English-Canadian
    mother upright, resolute and intelligent.
  • Went to Canada for refuge
  • -- at 5, following an assault charge against his
    father in Pittsburgh

10
Clark Blaise the migrant writer
  • Started moving at the age of 6 month He moved 30
    times before the 8th grade and attended 25
    different schools. He spent his childhood in
    Alabama, Georgia, and central Florida, later in
    the American midwest, Cincinnati, and Pittsburgh,
    but always returned to his mother's family in
    Winnipeg whenever his father "ran out of work, or
    was run out of work, or town" (RA 167).
  • Montreal 1966 1978 13 years, the longest of
    his stay in one place (with his wife Bharati
    Mukherjee).

11
Clark Blaises self-creation in his fiction
  • His work is usually half-autobiographical and
    half fictional.
  • Anyone who led a life as tenuous as I did,
    fraught with almost daily evidence of
    evanescence, is obviously going to be concerned
    with establishing a place and a name and an
    identity for himself that he could not have
    established in life. I did not ever have a sense
    of place, or belonging, in my life. So I had to
    create it, fabricate it, in my art.
  • e.g. "I was born in Fargo, North Dakota, in
    1940. from the autobiographical fragment
    "Memories of
  • Unhousement" in Resident Alien.
  • Source http//www.ucalgary.ca/library/SpecColl/bl
    aisbioc.htm

12
North Resident Alien
  • "This book is a journey into my obsessions with
    self and place not just the whoness and whatness
    of identity, but the whereness of who and what I
    am." (RA 2).
  • Two "autobiographical fragments four short
    stories about the character Carrier/Porter.

13
North Starting Questions
  • How are different races or different nations set
    against each other?
  • What is Phils position regarding these
    conflicts?
  • What makes him change?
  • What does the ending mean?

14
North Races or Places
  • Phil in between different conflicting forces and
    opinions
  • the U.S. vs. Canada
  • English vs. French
  • Mick Fortins looking for comrades p. 210
  • Phils father and mothers argument over Phils
    schooling p. 212 213-14
  • Pittsburgh vs. Papineau pp. 214
  • Therèse vs. American teenagers p. 215

15
North Catholic school
  • Phils experience of Catholic education
  • punishment pp. 213 14 shame
  • The societys conformity and dullness p. 218
  • Therèse as tutor as a parole from solitude
  • apologetics searching for nuns and monks as if
    they were wildlife

16
Phil and Therèse
  • Therèse interested in English names American
    cultures pp. 216-17
  • Find common interest with Therèse

17
Mother against French education
  • Eaton Center, scones and lemon curd, speaking
    English
  • McGill University
  • Meeting with Ella, which means a separation
    between the mother and the son.
  • Ending insecurities, constraints vs. youthful
    love learning

18
Snakebite
  • a powerful sequence of short stories set in
    contemporary Montreal.
  • Through a series of female protagonists she
    delineates, with irony and
    self-mockery, delicately etched stages of
    growth and degrees of loss.

19
Starting Questions
  • What causes the narrators(Julias) sense of
    isolation?
  • The more isolated the Adlers p. 246
  • Symbols and Dreams meanings?
  • photograph
  • snakebite 247
  • the girls imagined sceneries p. 248
  • Why is this girls growth a moment of loss or
    fear?

20
Snakebite
  • Julia between the mother and Marilyn Adler
  • Julias and Marilyns appearance p. 250
  • Julias respect for Marilyn
  • Julias love and respect for her mother 247
    249 250
  • Marilyns lie --further establishes Julias
    trust of her
  • death Ms epilepsy
  • Julias conversion at the end.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com