Leave a note for your classmates. You can also point to someone in particular whose comments made an impression on you.
[And, if you happen to be around next semester, please stop by my office to say hello. I will be in WED and THU more or less the whole day. I am in Boylan 4304.]
Heritage Summer 18
Monday, August 13, 2018
Discussion n. 24: What do you remember? Aug 15
Pick the single piece of trivia you will remember after you will have forgotten everything else from this course.
It must be ONE piece of information, maybe a date, a name, or a factoid. Just ONE.
COMMENT and REPLY to someone's choice.
And enjoy this
Thursday, August 9, 2018
Discussion 23 - Two diametrically opposed reactions (Aug 13)
About La grande Guerra one of the questions was:
What single "error" by the Austrian officer turns
cowardice into courage? Does a moment of pride redeem the decision to be
traitors?
>>
The
Austrian officer is overwhelming
arrogant and confident the soldiers will tell him where the bridge is. In his
arrogance, He makes fun of their courage as Italians. He references that “all
the Italians know is the Venetian dish liver with onions“. As a result, the
officer underestimates the pride and courage of Busacca. I believe Busacca was
redeemed for his traitorous pledge by defending his courage and engaging in
telling off the Austrian General. He knew exactly what the outcome would be for
him. Oreste Jacovacci was witty in telling the General that only Busacca knew
where the bridge was. In the end, a moment of pride does redeem them of their
decision to be traitors because the end result was not traitorous. The irony is that no one will ever know of the courage they
displayed at the end of their lives.
>>
- The Austrian officer insulted
Giovannis pride by paying his debts in front of the two soldiers for losing a
bet that they would not have given the location of the bridge because they
seemed more courageous than they were acting. Giovanni had a sudden surge of
pride and since his ego had been insulted he decided to act out and refuse to
give the location of the bridge. Giovanni lost his life for refusing to give
the location, however, the heroic act is lost because his decision to do so was
based on a selfish impulse and not a selfless act for his country. I do not
believe that Giovanni’s moment of pride was redemption for their initial
betrayal. They were willing to give up the location of their fellow comrades in
order to save themselves and there is no way to redeem yourself for that
deception.
COMMENT and REPLY to a comment that caught your attention.
Tuesday, August 7, 2018
Discussion 22 Another sample from a student Aug 10
From KATHRYN with many thanks:
This video was immensely inspiring, but verges on
overwhelming for me personally. I have these thoughts and desires as well on
how to use art to lift up and inspire society for the better. But how to impart
this as a party of one? Does it start local? I also wonder if Italy still
follows the architectural codes from the Renaissance, and if these codes are
universal and timeless.
It feels to me that our current society has a lack of
ambition and understanding of what it will really take to heal our world, and
that we need a ‘mission’ again as was implemented in the Renaissance. But who
specifically had this vision, and who will step up to the plate now to lead the
new Renaissance? It’s interesting thinking about the idea of approaching
advertising in a new way to not just sell, but inspire a new code of
responsible, sustainable living. Perhaps it is the modern day artists’
responsibility to adjust their messaging in their technological media
platforms. It can start small and catch on like wildfire.
COMMENT and REPLY
This is my wishful thinking, but as a teacher and father of two millennial young women, I draw succor from hearing more and more young people expressing distaste for the current state of affairs, with a split-screen video script in front of their eyes when they think about the future and their role: technology and progress on one side; simplicity of life and ethical values on the other.
Will the millennials be able to reconcile those visions?
My generation has failed miserably at this task.
Discussion 21 Renaissance (from a student) Aug 10
I would list this mini-essay under the heading "self respect" more than "self reflection.'
Thank you, Ting Ting, for making it available to your classmates.
Thank you, Ting Ting, for making it available to your classmates.
COMMENT and REPLY as you see fit.
I gained intellectually from learning the meaning of the
Renaissance. In my self-reflection a few
questions came to mind. What is my mission in this world? What am I advertising in my life? Did I spend
and invest my time efficiently? As I am watching the video lecture, I am
constantly reminded to not only cherish what we have but to preserve it.
Although we cannot preserve time, we can invest time in things that put value
in our life. I appreciate more of my past (good or bad) and I am hoping to
redefine myself in this world.
Emotionally, I felt disappointment, resentment (I have an
impulse to act) and inspired. The meaning of the Renaissance gave me an
enlightenment and impulse to learn more about the greatness of the world. I
acknowledged that I have a sensitive personality and I seek inspiration for my
ideas from knowledge (information). I
want to continuously get closer to what the meaning of life is.
Discussion 20 About the Renaissance (from a student) Aug 10
This passage is pervaded with a sense of intellectual humility. It reveals how Rina
truly arrived at an understanding and, consequently, a sense of marvel at what s/he learned.
I find the subdued tone perfectly aligned with the content.
Thank you, Rina, for sharing it.
COMMENT and REPLY but - most of all - be honest in your assessment. I only pointed to a possible interpretation but there may be many more.
truly arrived at an understanding and, consequently, a sense of marvel at what s/he learned.
I find the subdued tone perfectly aligned with the content.
Thank you, Rina, for sharing it.
COMMENT and REPLY but - most of all - be honest in your assessment. I only pointed to a possible interpretation but there may be many more.
History of
ideas - The Renaissance
This a video
lecture, that provides an overview of Renaissance, the reasons it started and
how it impacted the world. It briefly states the purpose of studying history in
general and Renaissance in particular and provides description of key ideas of
that era.
Information
in this video lecture is an historical overview of the Renaissance with respect
of modern reality. It tells a story of how art was
created and knowledge was acquired. It draws parallel with today’s reality, for
example, when the wealth of the Medici family was compared to what Forbes’ list
members have nowadays. To me, the first thing, that caught my attention, was
the phrase, that the purpose of studying history is to use the lost and
forgotten knowledge and ideas in today’s world. It is exactly what Renaissance
is about. It was an era of going back to the values of ancient Greece and Rome.
To me, that knowledge means, that looking back and analyzing the past is
valuable. Sometimes people need to look back to move forward. Now, when I
studied some history of Renaissance, I feel like studying history makes more
sense to me. I think, that knowledge makes me more respectful of the past and
makes me want to reexamine some of the things I learned, and look for
inspiration in the past.
Discussion n 19 LEONARDO Aug 10
COMMENT : three separate paragraphs
1) What is the single most impressive talent Leonardo was gifted with, from your perspective? Why/
2) What is the gift, out of the many Leonardo had, you would like to possess in the same measure? What would you do with it?
3) We show disdain for sport figures who take "performance enhancing" substances. What if there was a (secret) miracle pill that miraculously allowed you to excel in the area you most care about? Would you take it? Would you do it to become the next Truman Capote? Or Frank Lloyd Wright? Or Einstein?
REPLY to the most intriguing answers.
Sunday, August 5, 2018
Discussion 18 A very well articulated opinion
I am writing anonymously to give you my honest feedback on this ITAL
1510 class. I spent a lot of money to be able to take this class and so
far I have wasted that and 95% of the time.
Here's why:
1.
You are very condescending, rude and disrespectful. It is as if you are
trying to make up for you sad, pathetic life. You take way to many
points for the most unnecessary things. Words are inadequate to describe
how foolish this is!
2. I have never taken a
class where it was demanded that I send a picture of myself as a
requirement. This is ridiculous and unnecessary! I believe that you care
about what we look like so you can place us in a box to judge us based
on your own ignorance. This is race based!
3.
Your video, the ones where you try to explain the lectures are not
helpful because for most of the lecture you ramble on and on with your
own personal opinion rather than providing an unbiased one. And a good
example of this is the videos that were included in the last
assignments. You raved on and on about how wrong the facts are in the
movie - a movie you requested us to watch! Then, you focused mostly on
the correct pronunciation of Michaelangelo's name. It pains my poor ears
to listen to you speak.
4. Have you ever
thought about how you can teach this class in a way where it might
actually educate us? 98% of this class is a waste of time because what
the fuck does "my intellectual curiosity" have to do with anything? How
do you foresee this as educating me?
5. Why do
we have to comment on a post of someone else? What if we don't find
anything on the post interesting enough to comment?
6.
The way the course is structured is very confusing. There are materials
on the course's homepage for some other class all thrown together.
Finding out what you need to do is like searching through a puzzle.
7.
I just don't understand what you asking when you post questions on that
ridiculous blog of yours. What exactly are you asking for in
Discussion 17? I bet only God can answer this. The same thing with the
aug 6th assignment, you ramble on on on and still didn't get to the
point. What exactly do you mean? What do you want!?
8.
How are you expecting adults with lives to watch 8 different videos for
one assignment? Have you ever thought about how these videos could
benefit your students?!
9. I wish I could be
refunded for this waste of time, money and energy! I'm so disappointed. I
don't understand how people like you get to educate other people. What a
waste!
10. Your instructions are never clear.
Maybe you should attempt to answer the questions in the current
assignment, you will understand what I am talking about!
11. I am so frustrated and I wish I hadn't taken this class or that I dropped it before losing so much money.
Saturday, August 4, 2018
Discussion 17 Intellectual curiosity part 2 (Aug 6)
It seems the topic aroused a lot of interest.
OK, let's go deeper, then
Leave aside your intellectual curiosity for a field you are already eager to investigate.
Do you think you nurture intellectual curiosity per se?
IF something unexpected crosses your path (a 'recommendation' in the right-side list of youtube videos) that opens the window on something complex -- not just the top 10 most obnoxious movie actors -- do you feel the thrill, a light zap in your brain, do your eyes light up? And, immediately after, the disappointment for 1) knowing nothing about it, 2) the resignation you will never know anything about it, 3) the resignation that there are only 24 hours in a day and 1 billion heart beats in your life.
You are probably aware of the metaphor "trying to drink water from a fire hose." Does it HONESTLY feel that way, or do you hardly get close enough to see that there is a fire hose open full blast?
COMMENTS AND REPLIES. I would recommend looking for the comment that is receiving the most replies and adding to it. This way, your collective thoughts will be concentrated rather than dispersed.
Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Discussion 16 Intellectual curiosity Aug 3
How do you define "intellectual curiosity?"
What field of human endeavor attracts your intellectual curiosity the most?
COMMENT and REPLY ad lib (ad libitum).
What field of human endeavor attracts your intellectual curiosity the most?
COMMENT and REPLY ad lib (ad libitum).
Discussion 15 Michelangelo's Agony Due Aug 3
The scratching you hear in the audio is caused by a hand-held microphone.
COMMENT
Was the film effective in rendering the atmosphere of the Renaissance? What is missing? What is the film's most valuable contribution to your understanding of the Renaissance?
REPLY to an insightful and original comment.
Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Discussion 14: Another Best July 30 - Due August 3
COMMENT and at least a REPLY.
Here is what Kathryn had to say about the meaty topic or self-reflection.
Same as discussion 13.
Here is what Kathryn had to say about the meaty topic or self-reflection.
Same as discussion 13.
1. I was expecting the course to provide
me with a cultural history of Italy. I had imagined history textbook-like
readings of wars and tensions, art and architecture, and societal advances for
which Italy is responsible . In reading that the course would be about the
‘ethnic experience’ I was expecting more modern readings and reports of life in
Italy and how the society now flows amongst/is influenced by it’s history.
2. I am now extremely curious about the
birth of Roman society and how ancient Greece influenced the very beginnings of
Italian culture. There was a glimpse of the overlap of worshipping many gods
that was implemented in Julius Caesar when they celebrated many
different gods and goddesses. I wonder if the belief that Emperors such as
Nero, being ‘divine sons’ and a conduit to the gods, was indeed true. Or was it
really just a ploy to stay in the most powerful position. Whatever the case,
the desire to be a dictator that plays god while simultaneously being the head
of state existed then as it does now. When a leader fears loss of power, they
limit the powers of government.
One
thing that came up for me these past two weeks has been a deepening of my
interest in the roots of Christianity. Though I would not
currently claim myself as a Catholic, I did spend the first 18 years of my life
being taught the church’s teachings. Quo Vadis spurred my emotional
memory with it’s portrayal of Christian beginnings being utterly idealistic
with it’s baseline belief in humans being giving and forgiving. There is such
beautiful simplicity in the desire to live a moral life. But when a group comes
into a belief system without any openness they become rigid and rejecting.
Perhaps this rigidity lent itself ultimately to the implementation of the
Inquisiton.
I
do feel a gap in my understanding of when Christianity was first starting and
how it infiltrated, eventually getting to the point of the takeover by the
Inquisition. From watching The Name of the Rose and
reading additional material, the Franciscans really come across as the good
guys to me that wanted to follow the moral compass. I took great interest in
learning about the roles of monks and their time spent in scriptoriums
recording knowledge so that it wouldn’t be lost forever. And the fact that the
use of astrology and astronomy was heresy further demonstrates the fear of
science disproving the church’s teachings. Were different orders and sects
using the establishment and it’s spiritual insurance policies to justify their
greed?
Because
of this deepening understanding of the history of Christianity and Catholicism,
it has brought about embarrassment for the corrupt nature within the church.
This was not my belief about the institution growing up. But embracing
Boccaccio’s low-brow tales and the simple realism of life’s base
desires in the Decameron completely flipped my experience. Nothing is
sacred and All is sacred. We, including those who choose to be clergy, are all
human animals. This positions me for a great release when entering the
Renaissance.
3. As a curious artist and builder with a
growing passion for science and inventions, I myself am in a Renaissance. Of
course I realize that one can only know that they living in a truly glorious
moment if it is accompanied by the experience of something devastating to which
it can be compared. Therefore, I am expecting the next phase of our learning to
unfurl majestically with the subject matter while being aware of the inevitable
downfall and corruption in history to follow.
Discussion 13: Best sample July 30 --- Due Aug. 3
COMMENT and at least one REPLY to a comment worth noticing.
compare your assignment JULY 30 to the work of Crystal.
How does your compare to this? If yours fell short of this standard, what are the reasons?
-
The film was amazing considering they
devised some of the special effects they used with no comparisons or experience
in full-length feature films. One of my favorite effects is when Virgil and
Dante find Farinata where the heretics are buried in piles of fire (27:00). I
enjoy everything about the scene from the red highlight, to the fire pits
burning, and the exhaust from the smoke, it is all very theatrical. All of the
combustibles that are exploding all around the three men create a fiery and
unsettled environment perfect for the place you would imagine the heretics
would be in hell. The moment when Farinata disappears in his pit and the whole
scene becomes burning flames is very visually captivating. I also very much
enjoyed the scene where Lucifer is eating the bodies of Brutus and Cassius
(1:03:00). I enjoyed the special effects of Lucifer specifically in the close
up shot where you can see him eating a man who is just flailing and kicking
around as his is being eaten. It was a particularly fun scene because I
understood the historical reference to betrayal that Brutus and Cassis
committed against Caesar. The effects that the production crew used to
manipulate the bodies was amazing considering the limited technology. There is
one scene that demonstrates the body manipulation very well where Mohammed has
his chest torn open (51:00). In the background you see men whose bodies parts
are detached from itself. There is one man who has no leg and is limping across
the screen and another man who walks into the scene carrying his own head! With
a modern eye the standard is quite low you can clearly tell where the black-out
method wasn’t 100% effective yet it still creates a vivid scene and it is still
quite remarkable considering it was one of the first major motion pictures with
limited resources comparatively speaking.
-
So far I am enjoying the course simply
because the material is interesting and most are topics that I haven’t studied
heavily before so it is all new for me. The movies have all been very different
from each other but I noticed a running theme of religion, politics, and
religious identity struggles in all of the films. For example in The Name of
the Rose there is a battle of religious righteousness between the
inquisition and any heretics. Any person who acted out against or believed
opposite of the Church was punished with death. The clergymen in this film are
supposed to act according to the word of God but some have sinned in
unacceptable ways. Similarly, the temptations in The DeCameron seduce
many of the characters in many episodes. For example, the young boy who
pretends to be a deaf/mute so that he can have sex with all the nuns
demonstrates the profane behavior of anyone stepping away from the Church.
Also, political strife is common in most of the films, consider Bernardo in DeCameron
and Brutus in Julius Caesar. Both characters have a great internal
politic battles that overwhelms them and misleads them down a narrowing path. I
would imagine that as we move forward we will continue to see the internal
political battles and religiosity of the Italian people reflected in the movies
and lectures. I am curious about what we will study going forward since the
semester is short I would assume we will study the most interesting aspects of
Italian history. The multi-platform structure of the class between the
combination of the movies, video lectures, response assignments, and blog posts
help to give the best understanding of the material. The interactiveness of the
blog posts helps to have ongoing conversation with other students on their
opinions and understandings of the material. Student’s perspective always gives
great insight because you're in the minds of people who are like-minded and
typically share the same understandings and if not can offer clarification or
deeper meanings to the material.
Friday, July 27, 2018
Wednesday, July 25, 2018
Discussion 12 DECAMERON July 27
About the video lectures.
I tend to expose my students to the original texts, with minimal guidance except for a few pointers and a few questions, to let them free to explore what they watch/read and their own reactions - responses (sort of a Socratic method.)
What do you honestly think? Would you preferred a more structured approach, with an outline of relevant issues to help you navigate areas you were not exposed to before?
And in that case, would you prefer video lectures or readings (textbook-like) as introduction to the topics?
COMMENT and REPLY.
I tend to expose my students to the original texts, with minimal guidance except for a few pointers and a few questions, to let them free to explore what they watch/read and their own reactions - responses (sort of a Socratic method.)
What do you honestly think? Would you preferred a more structured approach, with an outline of relevant issues to help you navigate areas you were not exposed to before?
And in that case, would you prefer video lectures or readings (textbook-like) as introduction to the topics?
COMMENT and REPLY.
Tuesday, July 24, 2018
Discussion 11 Videos on the Middle Ages -- due July 27
Thank you for your choices of videos on aspects of the Middle Ages. I put them on my playlist and, slowly but surely, I will go through them.
COMMENT
Where you happy with your choice or, if you could go back, would you choose something different? It was a shot in the dark and, I assume, some of you may have not picked the best to suite your interests.
OR, you lucked out and now you are curious to find out more about that specific topic, or venture out and expand research on other, related issues.
COMMENT
Where you happy with your choice or, if you could go back, would you choose something different? It was a shot in the dark and, I assume, some of you may have not picked the best to suite your interests.
OR, you lucked out and now you are curious to find out more about that specific topic, or venture out and expand research on other, related issues.
Discussion 10: A good example -- due July 27
I picked Melissa's answer to the July 19 assignment to show how she handled the challenge of question 2:
Task 2: Are
you capable of writing an essay defending Bernardo's and his motives?
I
am not capable of defending Bernardo and his motives in an essay because he is
immoral and does not care about the truth. He resorts to punishing anyone who
“disputes the verdict of an inquisitor” and deems them guilty of heresy.” The
Inquisition is supposed to guide not punish. Instead, he is using the
inquisition to further his own political and ideological agenda.
To
promote his plan, he murdered Remigio and Salvatore by burning them. His past
concerning William demonstrates the aforementioned political agenda.
The
impoverished girl is also a victim of Bernardo’s wrongful judgments and
eagerness for punishment. He does not care that she is unable to defend
herself. Instead, he is quick to punish what he perceives as “heresy,” devil worship,
and challenges to religious authority, using Remigio, Salvatore, and the girl
as scapegoats.
Based
on the past incident between Bernardo and William, where Bernardo accused
William of heresy for having defended a man whose only crime was “translating a
Greek book that conflicted with the holy scriptures.” William was put in prison
and tortured. He stated that he later recanted, and the man was burnt at the
stake.
COMMENT honestly.
Did you even consider answering the way she did, saying "no" I won't try to defend him...
Did you even consider answering the way she did, saying "no" I won't try to defend him...
Why?
What can this answer teach you (not the arguments themselves, but the kind of answer she gave?)
And REPLY to a sharp observation.
INTERLUDE (My apologies, I cannot resist)
I saw someone mention the infamous Da Vinci Code. Infamous, because it perpetrated several crimes on the history of culture.
First and unforgivable, it caused people to believe that da Vinci is Leonardo's last name. What horror.
Leonardo has always been Leonardo and nothing else. "Da Vinci" means "from the town of Vinci," the village where he was born. He was the out-of-wedlock son of Messer Piero da Vinci, a wealthy merchant, and one of his servants (name unknown.) This was not a rare event in those days. Leonardo, since he was "illegitimate" did not inherit his father's name, therefore he was only known as "Leonardo di Messer Piero da Vinci." Whenever I see Leonardo mentioned simply as Da Vinci, my blood boils. I must have written half a million messages to newspapers and other publications to correct their mistakes. Waste of time. The sad, sad thing is that even in Italy now, I keep seeing the use of the spurious last name instead of the only correct name.
Amen.
Two: As someone acutely wrote, the Code is inarguably the most profitable novel ever written by a semi-literate author. The entire background story (Jesus, Mary Magdalene etc.) is stolen from a kooky book Holy Blood, Holy Grail by two British researchers/ authors.
The whole story, and its correlates with the history of the Knight Templars etc. is my favorite mental chewing gum. I roam used book stores looking for books about this subject. I have an impressive collection and I keep adding to it, although I don't have the time to read them all.
In the same vein, I am a rather serious semi-scholar of the period of the early Christianity, and in particular the process that led a branch of Judaism into transforming into a new religion.
I know some of the most reputable scholars in this area. One of them Elaine Pagels, at Princeton, worked very closely with a friend of mine, Marvin Mayer (died of skin cancer,) one of the world's greatest scholars of ancient Coptic language and texts. If you are interested in this subject, Elaine's books are the perfect starting point.
An aside: In Rose, the topic of the debate may appear superficial and vapid: dispute whether Jesus owned his clothes or not.
Yet, I remember years ago when, to show patriotism after one of our frequent military ventures, all college basketball teams started wearing an American-flag pin on their uniform (it was in the spring, no football) to show "support for our troops." A foreign student playing for some New Jersey team refused to do it. In short order, he could not stand the heat and packed his bag to go home.
I don't know how many hours of TV were wasted discussing this case in its most intricate symbolic significance. Wearing or not wearing a pin? It sounded like the foundation of the Republic itself depended on this existential question.
Friday, July 20, 2018
Discussion 9: The Name of the Rose -- July 23
The Name of the Rose was originally a novel by philosopher and intellectual Umberto Eco whose specialization was symbolism and the Medieval period (he wrote his Ph.D. dissertation - a monumental tome -- on the aesthetics of Saint Thomas Aquinas.)
COMMENT
Did you like the film? How likely is it that you may have liked the book? What is the most intriguing aspect of the film?
REPLY reply to the person who posted a comment immediately AFTER your (you will have to come back.)
Add other replies if you find something particularly interesting.
COMMENT
Did you like the film? How likely is it that you may have liked the book? What is the most intriguing aspect of the film?
REPLY reply to the person who posted a comment immediately AFTER your (you will have to come back.)
Add other replies if you find something particularly interesting.
Discussion 8 The Dark Ages -- due July 23
The assignment required you to search for a video online that discussed some particular topic related to the Dark Ages.
I hope you didn't all choose religion as a theme.
COMMENT
Tell your classmates what you found and at least one important piece of information that made you think and revealed something new and impressive.
REPLY: pick the comment that sounds most interesting and captivating.
I hope you didn't all choose religion as a theme.
COMMENT
Tell your classmates what you found and at least one important piece of information that made you think and revealed something new and impressive.
REPLY: pick the comment that sounds most interesting and captivating.
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Discussion 7: grading policy -- July 19
Your COMMENT is required. REPLIES are welcome but not required.
Do not address me directly: you are talking to your classmates, not me.
To All:
I am committed to fairness to all and treating everyone by the same standards.
This is the fundamental reason why I don't make exceptions to the rules I set out.
In the Western culture, in general ,negotiating with and challenging authority is
considered a valuable skill and a sign of character.
By negotiating I mean requests such as: "Could you please?"
By challenging I mean reactions such as: It's unfair to take away points for this little mistake";
and: "What does that have to do with learning the content?"
There are many students who come from cultures where this is simply unthinkable.
Moreover, because of different social codes, women in particular
are discouraged from advocating for themselves,
even when they have a legitimate case.
I am committed to fairness to all and treating everyone by the same standards.
This is the fundamental reason why I don't make exceptions to the rules I set out.
In the Western culture, in general ,negotiating with and challenging authority is
considered a valuable skill and a sign of character.
By negotiating I mean requests such as: "Could you please?"
By challenging I mean reactions such as: It's unfair to take away points for this little mistake";
and: "What does that have to do with learning the content?"
There are many students who come from cultures where this is simply unthinkable.
Moreover, because of different social codes, women in particular
are discouraged from advocating for themselves,
even when they have a legitimate case.
As a teacher living in the XXI century in multicultural USA
I am ethically required to be mindful of this WONDERFUL
NEW reality and opportunity to do my part to educate the future
leadership of the country.
Second, and less important but still relevant:
if I were to accept excuses and grant exceptions,
I would never see the end of it. I would spend the rest
of the semester dealing with a shower of messages
with all sorts of requests for delays, make-ups, revisions,
second versions, better versions, correct versions, etc.
The situation is even worse in online courses.
I am not, however, unreasonable or infallible.
If you have a legitimate case that you can document,
just provide proof right from the beginning.
Do not force me to ask you to prove that your grandmother
or cousin really died (surprisingly I never never had one single
grandfather die in decades of teaching.)
Nobody likes to be put in the position to sound callous
and insultingly uncaring.
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Discussion 6: Nero - July 19
Isn't Nero a fascinating character?
(Repulsive, of course, with his megalomaniacal
malignant narcissism, but at the same time perversely irresistible.
Can you get over your
disgust and find in yourself the fascination and curiosity for this pathological psychopathic personality?
COMMENT and REPLY to an intriguing comment.
Discussion 5: Christianity in Quo Vadis - July 19
Screen the video and COMMENT.
Choose a detail or piece of information that piqued your curiosity and you may want to know more about, just for the sake of satisfying your interest. It doesn't have to be a major theme, indeed a small detail would be even better.
Do not repeat something that has already been chosen by classmates before you. Find something new.
REPLY to a comment about a different topic, especially the topic you wanted to choose but that was already taken.
WARNING
Do not post as Unknown or with a handle (Everything Relevant, who are you?)
I need to see your names to evaluate your contribution to the discussions.
I need to see your names to evaluate your contribution to the discussions.
Discussion 4: What can you learn from this example? July 19
Here are the notes on Julius Caesar by your classmate Nick (thank you, Nick.)
I haven't gone through all the assignments yet, so there may more that are just as good.
I am posting them here for you to comment on what you can learn from them.
COMMENT
How does your note taking FOR THIS SPECIFIC TASK compare to this example? What kind of improvements (if any) can you make for the next assignment?
REPLY to a comment that brings up an interesting point you had not thought about.
I haven't gone through all the assignments yet, so there may more that are just as good.
I am posting them here for you to comment on what you can learn from them.
COMMENT
How does your note taking FOR THIS SPECIFIC TASK compare to this example? What kind of improvements (if any) can you make for the next assignment?
REPLY to a comment that brings up an interesting point you had not thought about.
●
Cassius is jealous of Caesar, him being treated
like a god
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Brutus agrees with Cassius
●
Mark Antony tells Caesar that Cassius is
dangerous
●
Casca tells Brutus and Cassius about Caesar
denying the crown multiple times and then fainting
●
Casca joins Cassius to bring down Caesar
●
Brutus joins Cassius believing the only way to
save Rome is to kill Caesar
●
Cassius wants to kill Mark Antony
●
Brutus decides against it
●
Caesar's wife has a dream that he will die
●
Caesar will not go to the senate
●
One of the conspirators convinces Caesar to go
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They stab caesar
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Mark Antony finds them around Caesar
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Mark Antony shakes all their hands
●
They agree to let Mark Antony speak at Caesar’s
funeral
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Mark Antony vows to avenge Caesar
●
Brutus addresses the crowd outside the capital
●
Brutus tells the crowd he loved Caesar but he
loved Rome more
●
Brutus says they either die slaves as Caesar
lives or they live free as Caesar dies
●
Mark Antony praises Caesar for how much he
cared about Rome while making it sound like Brutus made a mistake for killing
him
●
Mark Antony reads Caesar’s will which reads
that Caesar left his wealth to the people of Rome
●
The crowd has turned against the conspirators
●
The crowd riots and go to push Brutus and
Cassius from the city
●
Brutus and Cassius are now out of Rome with
armies of men
●
Rome is under the control of Marc Antony,
Octavius, and Lepidus
●
Brutus and Cassius fight
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Brutus reveals his wife has killed herself
●
Caesar’s ghost tells Brutus he will see him in
Philippi on the battlefield
●
Mark Antony and Octavius lead troops to
Philippi
●
Cassius’s troops lose and Cassius orders
someone to kill him with the dagger he used to kill Caesar
●
Brutus throws himself onto his sword and kills
himself
●
Mark Antony standing over Brutus’s body praises
him for his dedication to the welfare of Rome
Friday, July 13, 2018
Discussion n. 3: YOUR cultural heritage Due July 16
WARNING: You cannot participate in the blog discussions until you complete the
preliminary requirements.
In two separate paragraphs:
In two separate paragraphs:
COMMENT
1) What is the aspect of YOUR cultural heritage you are most proud of?
2) And what aspect of you cultural heritage makes you most uncomfortable?
REPLY: reply to the comment that had the deepest effect on you, and explain
why.
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Discussion n. 2: some adjustments on the fly
1) Do not post as anonymous or with handles. Nobody will know who you are and I will not be able to give you credit for your comment.
2) I am and I will keep deleting comments that do not address the topic at hand. Read the prompts carefully and think before you start writing.
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
Discussion 1: Intellectual Autobiography (due July 12)
Write your mini intellectual autobiography (two paragraphs, unless you have much more to say.)
AVOID anything that has to do with your "academic" work (major, courses, professors etc.) and "the-most-important-person-in-my-life" type of rhetoric. Most of all, stay away from "achievements" and self-adoration.
Focus on the experiences that contributed to shape your mind such as-- if you want - personal struggles; travels; books or other forms of art that forced you to think about yourself in relation to your life.
Every good writing is about the meaning of life. But there is a difference between "the meaning of life" and "the meaning of your life".
COMMENT and REPLY to one of your classmates.
The first 2 comments will earn 1 extra credit equivalent to 1 assignment.
REPLIES: pick a comment that has not received a reply yet.
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