Why we read, part 2

 

remembrance-of-things-past

Have you ever found yourself disagreeing with a fictitious character’s actions based on your experiences and or culture? Or judging their decisions because it is something you would never do?

While I shouldn’t say this is wrong for the everyday reader (but I think it is) I will say it is wrong for those of us who have chosen the path of higher education, at least as it pertains to the humanities. We humanities majors have committed ourselves to studying more about the world so that we may learn among other things, empathy and understanding. We have committed ourselves to not just learn about people and events, both past and present, but from other people as well. We are not to sit in our ivory towers tossing our chamber pots over the heads of anyone passing that we find culturally unappealing or acting in ways that do not fit our understanding of the rules of social engagement.

Sadly, not everyone who decides to earn a humanities degree understands this. Yet this lack of understanding keeps them from the beauty and heartbreak of those different from themselves.

I am currently taking a class titled “Non-western lit”. The name says it all. We are reading a novel a week (which is why my blogs have been few and far between) from authors outside of our western culture and cannon, with the understanding that we are to read from their point of view. In other words, we are to drop our Orientalist and post-colonial views, and see the world through the eyes of the characters presented to us.

There is a woman in my class who, despite being a self professed world traveler, refuses to see the non-western world as it is but instead comments on behavior that disgusts her. She sits in judgment as if all people walk the same path and have the same life experiences as her.

Take for instance, Jhumpa Lahiri’s Pulitzer Prize wining, interpreter of maladies. In this beautifully written but heart wrenching collection of short stories there are people who make decisions or do things that may not make sense if we look at them from the western perspective. Some of the stories contain characters that we can identify with even if we do not agree with their behavior.  But just because we do not agree with them does not mean we in a position to judge them. Yet, at every turn this woman will blurt out, “My husband would never do that”, or, “my husband would never act that way”.

The story When Mr. Pirzada comes to dine”, is a perfect example of what this woman is missing as she sits in judgment. Mr. Pirzada (a professor we assume) comes to America to study botany on a government scholarship.  While he is in America an Indian couple and their daughter befriend him. While he is in America the Pakistani army invades Mr. Pirzada’s home country of Dacca. The couple and Mr. Pirzada sit night after night watching the news for any signs of hope as they watch teachers being dragged out of their homes and shot in the streets. Mr. Pirzada clearly cannot safely return home to his wife and six children.

The theme of this story is family. The ones we have and the ones we make. This unnamed Hindu couple takes in Mr. Pirzada, a Muslim, in because they share a cultural heritage.  And, even though Hindus and Muslims have been at each other’s throats for hundreds of years, the couple become his surrogate family in a time when he needs family the most.  This is what we were supposed to get from the story.

What did my aforementioned classmate complain about? That Mr. Pirzada did not return home to his real family! She asserted, “Her husband would never do that!” When I asked if her she and her husband had ever lived a country that was ravaged by war, she admitted they had not but held firm in her conviction that her husband would return to her if  he found himself in this situation. When our professor asked her how Mr. Pirzada was supposed to fly home during an invasion, she became silent but unconvinced that Mr. Pirzada did the right thing by staying in America until it was safe to return. My classmate was focused on the theme of family responsibility, but her absolute stance on what her husband would do, blinded her to beauty of the story.

A part of me understands why my classmate talks about her husband so often. He passed on two years ago, and clearly there is a hole she needs to fill. By remembering him as the perfect husband, she can cling to her past, as the present may be too painful for her. I don’t know. I feel for her, yet there are days I want to shake her and remind her of our commitment to grow, not from the experiences we have had, but from the ones we haven’t. What stops me is my willingness to step back and try not to judge her too harshly. As bad as I feel bad for her loss, I feel equally as bad for what she is continually loosing; a chance to grow as a person.

The next time you find yourself at odds with a character’s behavior, remember the author is not asking you to sit in judgment, rather you are being asked to understand based on the information you are being given. Allow you to learn and grow. After all, isn’t this why we read?

5 things you may not know about the cold

Greetings from the icy depths of hell. That’s Dante’s 9th circle of hell for you literary types. How cold is it here you ask? It’s so cold my garage door froze to the pavement! I had to manually lift it tonight. No small feat for someone who is seeing a physical therapist twice a week for a bad left shoulder and neck pain. Which reminds me, I have to sit up straight, pull my shoulders back and down while typing. It’s not as easy as it sounds. You try it. Damn it that hurts.

The temperatures have not gotten above freezing since Saturday. This corner of the world is not used to these frigid days and nights. My house is not insulated for anything under 50 degrees Fahrenheit  It’s western Nevada for goodness sake! My poor pellet stove it trying, but so far I’ve only managed to hit 70 degrees in the house.

You’d think I’d get a reprieve from the cold while working. Normally our office is at least 72. But no. Two days ago a pipe burst in our ceiling causing the heat to go out. So there we were, all Bob Cratchit like, huddled in front of our monitors hoping to catch the warmth our computers put out. All of this got me thinking about ice, the cold, snow and unicorns (okay the unicorns may have been hallucinations setting in right before hypothermia took over).

So this week our list is 5 things you may not know about the cold.

Cold enough for you?

Okay, okay, I know I shouldn’t be complaining. The high was 2 on Monday and truth be told, I lived in Montana were winter highs reached -16. But, and I cannot stress this enough, is western Nevada! Did you know the coldest recorded temperature happened in Antarctica on Aug. 10, 2010, when it dropped to -135.8?

Really want to lose weight? Work out in a cold room

When we think of weight loss we think sweating is the best way to reach our goal when in fact our body tends to burn more calories when it is cold. While it is not really good to work out in a cold room (our muscles tense up) it is good to know that while you are shoveling snow or trying to open a frozen garage door you are burning more calories than briskly walking on a spring day. This is why we tend to crave protein-based meals in the winter. Case in point: my usual lunch consists of an apple, string cheese and some nuts. But by lunch on Tuesday I was ready to pounce on a unicorn and eat it raw. Between shivering at my desk and walking the hallways I had burned far too many calories for an apple as a reward.

Ice isn’t just cold it is strong

At a thickness of two inches ice will support a man. At a thickness of four inches it will support man on horseback. A thickness of six inches will support a team of horses with a with moderate loads and a thickness of ten inches, will support 1,000 pounds to the square foot. This would explain why it took a large hammer and a lot of pounding to knock four-inch blocks from my drainpipes. Don’t tell my therapist.

It froze what?

We’ve all seen the pictures of skaters the Thames during the Little Ice age. But did you know that in March of 1847, Niagara Falls froze? The local paper of the time, The Niagara Mail, stated that, “Ladies and gentlemen rode in carriages one-third of the way across the river towards the Canada shore, over solid rock as smooth as a kitchen floor”. Now that would have made a great Instagram photo!

 

Snow as a literary device

So you are all curled up reading a novel, not quite knowing what to expect and it starts to snow. What does this indicate? A light dusting could mean someone is attempting to cover up a crime, or possible fairy enchantment (if you are reading a fantasy) but deep heavy snow means doom. As Thomas C Foster, author of How to Read like a Professor puts it,’ “Tt’s never about the weather”. Heavy snow in a book could mean isolation, madness or death. The more it snows, the worse it’s about to get. This is why the readers of George R R Martin’s series A Song of Ice and Fire (I am now one of them) should not be surprised by all the deaths in the series. After all, he warned us over and over again ,“Winter is coming!”

Now it’s time for me to pry my hands from the cold keyboard and head of to bed. Oh, which reminds me of another good cold fact. Fleece is the best material to wear on winger nights like these. I have a fleece blanket to go along with my fleece sleepwear. I just recently found this out after living here for 10 years, because, once again, this is western Nevada, I shouldn’t have to wear layers to bed! Winter is coming? Winter is here my friends and she’s a cold bitch.

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