Tuesday, September 17, 2019
The Great Gatsby in the American Classroom :: Great Gatsby Essays
The Great Gatsby in the American Classroom     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   In determining why  The Great Gatsby is so frequently assigned at various education levels, my  thoughts reverted to our discussion on the Vendler text and the premise that  teachers may be attempting to seduce their students into learning. In connection  to this discussion, I reflected on my own classroom and what I hope to achieve  with my students. I find the "seduction" of students to be an integral component  in teaching students to appreciate the learning process. Not all learning is  "fun," but I attempt to teach my students that it can at least be an interesting  process.     Ã       Do I teach Gatsby in my own classroom? No. Do I think it is a significant  text to be taught? Yes. Do I think Gatsby should be included in the literary  canon? I think that question is irrelevant. This is because teachers, if  educated well, should be able to determine the needs of the classroom Sometimes  these needs go beyond or outside of the literary canon. I understand the  relevance of the literary canon to English studies, but I also perceive the  canon primarily as a tool or resource for the teaching of English. The canon  also helps to preserve works of literature, but mere usage also helps to  preserve. If works of literature are continually used in the classroom because  of their relevance and usefulness, then there is not truly a need to encapsulate  that work of literature in the canon to preserve it. That preservation occurs  through popular use. Being exposed daily to the challenge of engaging minds in a  discourse on literature, I believe it is possible, and sometimes    necessary, for  teachers to structure their material to fit the needs of their students. Gatsby  is one such novel that appears to be filling this role.      Ã       In the preface to The Great Gatsby, Matthew J. Bruccoli asserts that     Ã       The Great Gatsby is a classic-a novel that is read spontaneously by  pleasure-seekers and and under duress by students. A popular classroom fallacy  holds that classics are universal and timeless. Literature has staying power,  but it is subject to metamorphosis. (vii)     Ã       The Great Gatsby is pushing its way into more and more classrooms, because it  is interesting as a literary work and, moreover, because it remains relevant to  issues in modern society.  					    
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