Sunday, February 17, 2013

Tea Ducks and Construction Paper: The Continuing Adventures of the Kindergartners of Bigelow 365

Hello, everyone and a belated Happy Valentine’s Day to you all!

Classes continue at an alarmingly rapid pace (have I really only been back for three weeks?!), with major projects already approaching. I have my first big test next week and a big paper due soon. Besides which, of course, my study abroad proposal is due a week from Tuesday and I need to turn in my study abroad application (to the program itself, instead of to Macalester) and my self-designed major proposal by mid-March. *NEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP* is the sound my anxiety makes. So yes, things are crazy and stressful and fast-paced already—but also surprisingly awesome. And at least I have my hoard of stolen fruit to get me through each week.
Including, of course, the oranges Charmaine and I decorated because we are, in fact, five years old and generally far too easily amused.

A quick overview of my classes so far:
Art of the West II (10:50-12:20, MW): Continues to be awesome, even if Joanna is at times a little overenthusiastic. Which is the best fault for a professor to have, but it means that we occasionally have an extra hour-and-a-half of class in a week (keeping in mind that classes (other than studio arts and lab sections) are generally three hours per week) and we always run over. On Friday (during one of our extra class sessions), the guest lecturer asked if she still had time to discuss Botticelli’s Primavera as the minute hand clicked over to the exact time class was supposed to end and Joanna said, “Oh, yes, definitely!” *sigh* It’s still been pretty amazing, though, and I love getting to study Renaissance art.

19th Century British Literature (2:20-3:20, MWF):  I love Professor Warde so much. Seriously, the man is awesome. He is the quietest professor ever, but always has complete command of the class’ attention. And, to my great glee, the class is not just a literature course. We’ve studied history and culture and, best of all, art and architecture. We’ve looked at train stations, engravings, photography of Glasgow slums, paintings, and schematics for the spinning jenny—all while also doing a careful and close reading of Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary Barton (which we’re to finish for Monday) and several Victorian opinion pieces. This is probably my favorite class (even if I’m not a huge fan of Victorian non-fiction prose) because of the wealth of information we’re getting and the way Professor Warde gets us to look at tiny moments in Mary Barton that end up having fascinating connotations for the novel as a whole. Favorite topics right now? The narrator as a character in Mary Barton and Gaskell’s comparison of the lower classes to Frankenstein’s creature (who she mistakenly calls Frankenstein) and what this signifies as to her political opinions.

British Youth Subcultures (1:20-2:50, TR): This class has an absolutely horrifying amount of reading (one night we had more than a hundred pages of a theoretical analysis of an ethnographic study—oof!) and it’s forcing me to work much harder than most of my previous classes, which is excellent. Dr. J also has us mixing disciplines in a fascinating way—we have a Sunday night movie screening every week, we read a substantial amount of cultural theory, and almost always start out class listening to at least one song. And, of course, we’re reading plays and novels and short stories as well. The downside of this class so far is that it has a several annoying senior theater majors in it who rather dominate the classroom and that we tend to spend a little too much time re-reading passages from the readings and re-watching clips from the movies we watched. And while I definitely understand the benefits of renewing our memories of these moments so that we can better discuss them, I fear that we do it to the detriment of our class discussion time.

Shakespeare Studies (3:00-4:30, TR): We have the same problem here, although to a much greater extent. Honestly, we’ve never yet had a discussion in this class. Mostly, it’s the professor lecturing in a sort of haphazard way (like the way professors sometimes do a little lecture/intro to kick off discussions, except without the discussion part) and students reading out loooong passages from whatever play we’re reading at the moment.  Although Professor Krier clearly has a great deal of interesting and stimulating things to say, they’re kind of scattered among the ‘translations’ and unnecessarily simplistic questions (“Why would Hamlet hesitate to kill Claudius?” MAYBE BECAUSE DECENT PEOPLE DON’T JUST AUTOMATICALLY COMMIT MURDER ON THE ADVICE OF VENGEFUL GHOSTS WHO MAY OR MAY NOT BE DEMONS?!). Honestly, this class is frequently boring, but at least I’m in a situation where I’m being required to read and consider these plays (many of which I’ve been intending to read for years). And being in a classroom setting forces me to think academically about them, not just read them quickly and without enough attention to detail. So even while I’m ‘listening’ to an explanation of the concept of a metaphor (in a 300 level English course!!), I can be simultaneously half-writing inside my head an essay on prophecy in Richard III or on whether/when Hamlet goes mad.

[Side note: the downside to having perpetually shaky hands is that not only do I have no chance of being a surgeon (because that’s clearly something I was planning on doing) or ever winning the board game Operation, but I have now spilled recently-boiling water on my hand while making tea for the third time this week. OUCH.]

In other news: Charmaine and I have decided to become exercise buddies and we’ve started going to the gym three times a week. Although I’ve always really hated running, it’s actually been really nice to have an hour or so to turn my music up a little too loud and turn my brain down a little too low and just run. And the “Couch to 5K” running program I’m doing has made slowly ramping up the actual running time pretty bearable. After Charmaine and I run, we do various other exercises and then wander around trying various exercise machines. One of these days we’re going to have enough time to play ping-pong on the special Kofi-Annan-autographed ping-pong table (This is not a thing that I am making up. Macalester actually owns a ping-pong table that has been signed by Kofi Annan in honor of a table tennis championship he won while at Macalester. You can tell how proud we are to have him as an alum—apparently we think even his ping-pong skills are impressive.) as a reward for all of our hard work, although we haven’t managed it yet.

Thank you all for the ridiculous amounts of tea I received for Christmas this year! I had to clear out a drawer to be designated my “tea drawer”, since my previous storage place (on top of my desk) was rapidly making it impossible for me to do my homework or use my computer on the piece of furniture constructed for that purpose. This is a photograph of that lovely drawer—the source of much of my joy:
I also got to try out my brand new tea duck (from Grandma Tschudi) recently (it’s a container for loose-leaf tea that is also adorable), so I took a picture of that too because LOOK HOW CUTE IT IS.

In our continuing quest to be the least stereotypical college students of all time, Charmaine and I stayed up extremely late last Saturday night making Valentines for our friends and family. We gathered all of our craft supplies and stickers (a surprising amount, put all together, considering that we’re supposedly adults),
and made lots and lots of Valentines. Most of mine were absurdly dorky puns and most of Charmaine’s were gorgeous paper cranes with notes inside. I’m concerned about what this says about our respective characters. Here are some of the ones I made:
Then, on Thursday, we went on an expedition to all of our friends’ rooms to surreptitiously tape them to their doors and then dash away, madly giggling. Campus has never seemed as big as when it was way below freezing and the wind was blowing like crazy and we had to walk across its entire length on our quest. Without hats. Brrr!!

I also received these fantastic Valentines,
and a care package from my parents, so all-in-all it was a pretty fantastic Valentine’s Day.

It’s mostly just been cold lately, without a lot of snow, although we did have one of those gorgeously light snowfalls the other day that coated all the trees and covered up some of the ugly grey slush that had accumulated on the sides of the road. Although living here has taught me about a lot of downsides of snow that I’d never considered as a kid (snow is supremely ugly when mixed with dirt. snow can be really sharp and unpleasant on your face. snow makes you wet!), I still have moments where I’m just completely struck by the wonder of it all. Even if I live somewhere warmer for the rest of my life, I’m so glad to have had this experience, nose freezes and all.

And, as a last little note—I finally managed to memorize T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.” This is something I’ve been meaning to do for a while, but before other (shorter) poems have managed to knock it further down the list. Now it’s the eleventh poem I’ve got memorized and I’m so glad to have it knocking about inside my head (even if it will be another week before I really want to think about it again).

That’s all I’ve got to tell you guys for now, but I’m sure to be back in two weeks with more excitement/chaos/anxiety/childish-pranks-with-my-roommate/adventures.
Love you all!

P.S. I forgot to show you this last time, but I’m too proud of it not to share it anyway. This is the whiteboard I made when Charmaine and I went to the midnight premier of The Hobbit. I think it’s pretty good, considering the (rather fiddly) medium of whiteboard markers.

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