教学时间:时间想象与亨利·詹姆斯晚期小说

Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1632/s0030812922001031
K. Case
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克里斯汀·凯斯是缅因州法明顿大学的英语教授,她在那里教授美国文学、环境写作以及文学与哲学的交叉课程。她著有《美国诗歌与诗歌实践:从爱默生到苏珊·豪的逆流》(卡姆登出版社,2011)和两本诗集。她是梭罗的日历:亨利·大卫·梭罗物候手稿的数字档案的负责人。几年前,我了解到一个关于阅读的事实:当我们在一个句子中遇到一个单独的单词时,我们会立即激活这个单词的所有可能的含义和联想,打开这个单词可能暗示的所有语义可能性的范围,直到句子的语法缩小了意义的范围。我把这个过程描绘成一种波:每一个词都在它可能的意义范围内爆发,然后又逐渐稳定下来,每一个可能性的小爆发紧跟着另一个,在一个正在进行的节奏展开的重叠间隔中保持活跃。我住在缅因州西部的一个小镇上,那里的八月格外宜人。虫子不见了,五分钟之内,到处都有湖泊、河流和池塘可供游泳。孩子们在外面跑来跑去直到晚上九点;冰淇淋摊一直开到十点。留在城里的大学生只能做一些季节性的工作,总的来说,他们有一种富足、充实和可能性的感觉。到秋季学期结束时,缅因州的冬天已经来临。11月的某个时候,教堂开始在工作日开放,为那些负担不起日夜取暖费用的老年人提供服务。这所大学的教室和走廊因车辆来往而泥泞不堪。学生们开始没钱了,有些人不再来上课了。他们买不起修车的钱,或者老板不给他们休息时间,或者他们付不起学费。到了十二月,四点钟天就黑了。把“金碗奖”列入我今年秋天的文学和哲学高级研讨班的教学大纲,从各个方面来说,都是我8月份做出的决定。后来,我记得我粗略地计算了一下我的学生们读一百页詹姆斯的散文需要多少小时,而我在脑子里想着“难”这个词的时候
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Teaching Time: Temporal Imagination and the Late Novels of Henry James
KRISTEN CASE is professor of English at the University of Maine, Farmington, where she teaches courses in US literature, environmental writing, and the intersections of literature and philosophy. She is the author of American Poetry and Poetic Practice: Crosscurrents from Emerson to Susan Howe (Camden House, 2011) and two books of poetry. She is director of Thoreau’s Kalendar: A Digital Archive of the Phenological Manuscripts of Henry David Thoreau. A few years ago I learned this fact about reading: when we encounter an individual word in a sentence, we activate all possible meanings and associations of that word at once, keeping open the whole range of semantic possibilities that word might suggest, until the syntax of the sentence narrows the field of meaning. I picture this process unfolding in time as a kind of wave: each word flaring out into its range of possible senses before gradually settling down again, each little explosion of possibility immediately followed by another, remaining active for overlapping intervals in an ongoing rhythmic unfolding. In the small town in western Maine where I live, August is exceptionally pleasant. The bugs are gone, and there are lakes and rivers and ponds to swim in five minutes away in any direction. Kids run around outside until nine at night; the ice-cream stand is open till ten. The college students who stay in town get seasonal work, and in general there is a feeling of plenty, of fullness and possibility. By the end of the fall semester, Maine winter has set in. Sometime in November the churches start opening during weekday hours for older people who can’t afford to heat their homes all day and night. The university’s classrooms and hallways are muddy from boot traffic. The students start to run out of money, and some of them stop showing up. They can’t afford to fix their car, or their boss won’t give them the hours off, or they can’t pay their tuition. By December it’s dark by four o’clock. Putting The Golden Bowl on the syllabus for my senior seminar on literature and philosophy this fall was in every way an August decision. Later on, I would remember loosely calculating the hours it would take my students to read one hundred pages of James’s prose, and while I held in my head the word difficult while making
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