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Alliteration: pure and pristine , mud and muck (pa 5) ... The humorous tone with an omnisciently erudite touch (?????????) Philosophically ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Course Title Advanced English Reading


1
Course TitleAdvanced English Reading
  • Course Book
  • Advanced English Reading Modern Prose
  • Unit Thirteen
  • Philosophers among the Carrots

2
Teaching Procedures and Focus
3
  • Intensive Study of the Text

4
Philosophers among the Carrots
5
Questions on the title
  • Philosophers among the Carrots
  • What does the title mean ?
  • What is a philosopher ? What are carrots ?
  • In what way does a philosopher have anything to
    do with carrots?
  • Keep the questions in your mind while reading
    and we will come back to them.

6
  • 1. As I was cleaning the refrigerator the other
    day and thinking deep thoughts about Women's Lib,
    I asked myself if it was still permissible to
    take pleasure in the profession of housewife and
    not be a traitor to the cause. Am I really making
    use of my college education? What good did
    Introduction to Philosophy, IA do me, for
    instance? Then I recalled Socrates' saying that,
    The unexamined life is not worth living, and
    decided that maybe it was time to examine mine.

7
Comprehension Questions
  • What reminds the author of Womens Lib and
    Socrates?
  • Why does the author decide that it is time to
    examine her own life ?

8
  • 2. As I stood eating apples, oranges and brown
    bananas and gazing into the depths of my
    refrigerator while considering college educations
    and housewives, I saw the manifestation of a
    great, metaphysical truth. Like energy, matter
    simply descends in scalefrom roast to stew to
    soup to cat food. I muttered eruditely to the
    cat as I paused in my own eating long enough to
    pour a bit of soup into his bowl. Where are the
    string beans of yesterday? But of course, they
    are the vegetable soup of today. If I hadn't been
    to college, I wouldn't have seen that significant
    analogy, I thought smugly, depositing an orange
    pit in the sink as I finished the salad (or did I
    learn that in high school?).

9
Language Points
  • metaphysical truth
  • philosophical truth
  • eruditely
  • very knowledgeably, quite scholarly
  • analogy
  • a comparison between two things that are
    similar in some way, often used to help explain
    something or make it easier to understand

10
  • 3. Then, as I eyed a bowl of cooked carrots
    speculatively, sizing them up for carrot cake or
    marinated vegetable salad and opting for the cake
    which I knew would be seconded by my husband and
    three sons, I followed the train of my thoughts
    which was chugging off into philosophical realms
    led by Archimedes who said, Any object placed in
    a fluid displaces its weight an immersed object
    displaces its volume, and with that principle to
    guide me I immersed the lumpy carrots in the milk
    called for in the recipe and found they made
    almost exactly the one cup called for. Muttering,
    along with Emerson, that A foolish consistency
    is the hobgoblin of little mindsI dumped in a
    couple of spoonfuls of applesauce to make it come
    out right.

11
Language Drills
  • Make sentences with the following phrasal verbs
  • 1. opt for 2. chug off 3. call
    for
  • 1. He opted for early retirement.
  • 2. The train chugged off into distance.
  • 3. Study calls for patience and diligence.

12
  • 4. With the cake in the oven I went into the
    bathroom-laundry room carrying my new found
    illuminations about housewives and philosophy
    with me (Buddha had his Bo tree, I have my
    refrigerator) and there I faced the endless river
    of dirty tee shirts, sweat socks, pajamas and
    underwear, with a quote from Heraclitus. You
    can't step twice in the same river, I assured
    myself as I picked up a pair of jeans and emptied
    the pockets of bubble gum wrappers, pencils and
    pennies, and I saw about me the variety in unity
    and unity in variety spoken of by my aesthetics
    professor.

13
  • 5. Then, having started the wash, and reflecting
    on the symbol of the lotus in Oriental philosophy
    which rises, pure and pristine from the mud and
    muck, I walked proud and untouched among the gym
    trunks and sweatshirts and out into the rest of
    the house to tidy it up. There I indulged in
    aggressive fantasies against my dear family as I
    picked up a necktie draped on a lamp, a pair of
    tennis shoes under the couch, a cache of peanut
    shells beneath a newspaper and, remembering
    William James' comment that Even a pig has its
    philosophy, I wondered angrily what theirs was.

14
  • 6. After several days of such virtuous, domestic
    behavior scrubbing, ironing, cooking, and making
    yeast dough that blossoms and rises under my
    fingers like the miracle of life itself, I got up
    one morning and, with a wave of willfulness,
    remembered the philosophy of Rabelais' renegade
    abbe, Do as you will. In my present state of
    mind I found this the quintessence of good sense
    and I walked out of the house and into the car,
    leaving the breakfast dishes on the table. When
    my husband came home he said, This place is a
    mess!

15
Comprehension Questions
  • When did the housewife leave home? Where did she
    go ? What did she do after she left home? What do
    wives usually do when they are angry with their
    husbands ?
  • When did the housewife return home ? Why did her
    husband complain ? If you were in the position of
    the housewife, how would you react to the
    husbands complaint ?

16
  • 7. I smiled enigmatically as I continued to stir
    the chicken soup and quoted Alexander Pope, All
    chaos is but order misunderstood, then added
    with composure that I had purchased a new a
    dress.

17
  • 8. A new dress! You just bought one last week!
    he shouted in an unseemly manner. But, without
    becoming the least bit ruffled, I replied, in the
    words of Pascal, Ah, but the heart has its
    reasons the mind knows not of, and I moved off
    into the kitchen to cut up some cheese and fruit
    and put the bread into the oven. Next I went into
    the bedroom, put on my new red dress, combed my
    hair and sprayed some My Desire cologne on it.

18
Comprehension Questions
  • What did the housewife do after she quoted Pascal
    as a retort on her husbands complaint ? Why do
    you think the housewife put on her new red dress
    and perfumed her hair despite the husbands
    unseemly and loud complaint?
  • How did the housewife expect her husband to
    respond to her deliberate make-up? What do women
    usually expect from their husbands/boy friends
    under such circumstances?

19
  • 9. My husband looked at me eyes growing wide
    as an approving smile spread over his face. But
    the bread, with its tantalizing aroma was
    competing with me his affections and the bread
    won for the time being. I sat there smiling
    content amid my four men who were happily and
    heartily eating and I reflected that the
    philosophy of Boethius for me, at this time,
    seemed right and that Whatever is, is good.

20
Critical Analysis
21
Assignments
  • Translate the text into Chinese and discuss with
    your classmates the strategies in translating the
    philosophical quotations (mottos) in the text.
  • Surf the Internet to search for some references
    on feminism and then write a composition either
    for feminist ideas or against them.

22
Sayings about Wife Housewife
  • Wives are young men's mistresses, companions for
    middle age, and old men's nurses.

  • Francis Bacon
  • The most dramatic thing is that, even when you
    look at women who are working full time outside
    the homeas full time as their menwhen it comes
    to ironing and cleaning, 60 or 70 per cent of
    that work is still done by the women.

  • Malcolm Wicks
  •  

23
  • To the old saying that man built the house but
    woman made of it a 'home' might be added the
    modern supplement that woman accepted cooking as
    a chore but man has made of it a recreation.
  • Emily Post, 1872-1960, U.S. writer and
    columnist
  • O! men with sisters dear,
  • O! men with mothers and wives!
  • It is not linen you're wearing out,
  • But human creatures' lives!
  • Thomas Hood, 1799-1845, British poet and
    humorist

24
  • In the late 1960s women began to work for equal
    rights. They wanted to end discrimination against
    women at home and work. To accomplish this, women
    began taking part in marches, working for the
    passage of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), and
    generally speaking out against inequality. The
    women in this photograph participated in the
    Womens Strike for Equality held in August 1970
    in New York City.

25
  • Socrates (????, 469-399 BC), Greek philosopher,
    who profoundly affected Western philosophy
    through his influence on Plato. Born in Athens,
    the son of Sophroniscus, a sculptor, and
    Phaenarete, a midwife, he received the regular
    elementary education in literature, music, and
    gymnastics. Later he familiarized himself with
    the rhetoric and dialectics of the Sophists, the
    speculations of the Ionian philosophers, and the
    general culture of Periclean Athens. Socrates was
    reportedly unattractive in appearance and short
    of stature but was also extremely hardy and
    self-controlled. He enjoyed life immensely and
    achieved social popularity because of his ready
    wit and a keen sense of humor that was completely
    devoid of satire or cynicism.

26
  • To live an aware life, the individual must begin
    with an awareness of self. He must conduct a
    running examination and periodic reexaminations
    of the self in language, the medium of
    furthest reaches, deepest diving, most
    labyrinthine windings. The sorting through might
    well begin with the ordinary, everyday
    experiences of life. A diary or journal enables
    one to sift through and evaluate experiences, as
    well as to come to understand them and their
    significance or insignificance. Most of us do
    this sifting and evaluation in moments of reverie
    or in that state of mental vagabondage just
    before sleep. There is some (even great)
    advantage, however, in subjecting ourselves to
    the discipline of written language, in which the
    vague and the mushy and the muddled must give way
    to the specific, the firm, the clearly
    formulated.

  • ----James E. Miller, Jr

27
  • Compare the Following Chinese
  • ?????????????,?????????,??????,????

  • ?? . ??
  • Master Zeng said, Every day I examine myself on
    three points in acting on behalf of others, have
    I always been loyal to their interests? In
    dealings with my friends, have I always been true
    to my words? Have I lived up to the ethical
    precepts that have been handed down to me?

28
  • A housewife with a college education, the author
    is aware that she owes Women's Lib some loyalty
    for giving her the right to equal educational
    opportunities, and that she should not betray the
    cause, which demands that woman be no servant to
    man. She therefore feels a bit guilty for
    remaining a housewife. On the other hand, she
    cannot escape the situation as a housewife. In
    fact, she feels at the bottom of her heart she
    loves her present life. She is thus caught in the
    conflict between her uneasy conscience for not
    meeting the demands of Women's Lib and her
    enjoyment of the housewife "profession".

29
  • She expresses her dilemma precisely in the
    sentence "I asked myself if it was still
    permissible to take pleasure in the profession of
    housewife and not be a traitor to the cause", in
    which the words "still permissible to take
    pleasure" show her strong sentiment for her
    present condition and her wish to take
    guilty-free pleasure in being a housewife.
  • "To relieve her guilty feelings, and also to
    fulfill her education, she recalls Socrates
    saying and decides to apply her philosophical
    knowledge to the mundane concerns of a
    house-keeper, as if saying "So let's see if I
    can use my college education in the kitchen."

30
  • Empirical observation in the 19th century led to
    the conclusion that although energy can be
    transformed, it cannot be created or destroyed.
    This concept, known as the conservation of
    energy, constitutes one of the basic principles
    of classical mechanics. The principle, along with
    the parallel principle of conservation of matter,
    holds true only for phenomena involving
    velocities that are small compared with the
    velocity of light. At higher velocities close to
    that of light, as in nuclear reactions, energy
    and matter are inter-convertible (see
    Relativity). In modern physics the two concepts,
    the conservation of energy and of mass, are thus
    unified.
  • (????,??????)

31
  • It is an alteration of the quotation from the
    poem by the French poet Francois Villon Where
    are the snows of yesterday? Where are is a
    motif used in many poems which lament the
    transitory nature of life (the fleeting of time)
    and beauty. In W. B. Henleys Ballad of Dead
    Actors, for instance, we read
  • Where are the passions they essayed,
  • And where the fears they made flow?
  • In the text, however, the author makes jocular
    use of the motif to convey in a straight way the
    following meaning
  • What has happened to the string beans?
  • (Of course, they have become the vegetable soup
    of today.)

32
Archimedes
  • Archimedes made extensive contributions to
    theoretical mathematics. In addition, he is well
    known for applying science to everyday life. For
    instance, Archimedes discovered the principle of
    water displacement while taking a bath. He also
    developed simple machines such as the lever and
    screw into useful tools for war and irrigation.

33
  • An object is subject to an upward force when it
    is immersed in liquid. The force is equal to the
    weight of the liquid displaced. The apparent
    weight of a block of aluminium (1) immersed in
    water is reduced by an amount equal to the weight
    of water displaced. If a block of wood (2) is
    completely immersed in water, the upward force is
    greater than the weight of the wood. (Wood is
    less dense than water, so the weight of the block
    of wood is less than that of the same volume of
    water.) So the block rises and partly emerges to
    displace less water until the upward force
    exactly equals the weight of the block.

34
  • American intellectual and author Ralph Waldo
    Emerson helped lead the transcendentalism
    movement, a 19th-century school that looked to
    individual intuition, rather than scientific
    rationalism, as the highest source of knowledge.
    In Self-Reliance (1841), one of Emersons most
    important works, he expressed his optimistic
    faith in the power of individual achievement and
    originality. He also considered the overarching
    need to discover and develop a relationship with
    nature and with God.

35
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little
minds, adored by little statesmen and
philosophers and divines. With consistency a
great soul has simply nothing to do.
  • A foolish consistency means an inflexible
    observance of a rule, a law, etc. A hobgoblin is
    an abominable thing or quality, a mischievous
    devil. Little minds refer to people without
    intelligence. So the quotation means to observe
    a rule rigidly is an abominable quality of
    unintelligent people.

36
Buddha had his Bo tree
  • This Buddha figure carved out of sandstone is
    from Mathura, a city in northern India that was
    at the center of Buddhist sculptural activity
    from the 2nd century bc to the 6th century ad.
    Buddha is shown seated on a lion throne with a
    large halo behind his head and attendants at his
    side.

37
Just as Buddha received heavenly inspiration to
found Buddhism under the Bo tree, so I got new
understanding about housewives and philosophy
beside my refrigerator.
  • The bo tree is an Indian fig tree also known as
    bohdi, pipal, or peepul. It is sacred to
    Buddhists because Buddha is said to have received
    enlightenment while sitting under a bo tree. The
    trees can grow to a height of about 30 m (about
    100 ft).

38
You can't step twice into the same river.
  • Everything flows and nothing stays.
  • The foundation of the world is at rest, the world
    itself is in motion.
  • We both step and do not step into the same
    rivers we both are and are not.
  • ???????,
  • ????????
  • ????????
  • Even if the clothes I wash every day appear to be
    the same, what I wash today is certainly quite
    different from what I washed yesterday, because
    every time I wash them they will surely have
    different stains, tears, smells and whats not
    different features that bring to me different
    fantasies and pleasures.

39
  • This is an aesthetic principle, which means to
    see uniformity in difference and see difference
    in uniformity.
  • Think of it in terms of the Marxist philosophical
  • principle we are familiar with
  • ?????????????

40
Literal interpretation
  • Works of art have long been regarded by
    aestheticians as a combination of unity with
    variety. When diverse and various parts are
    combined onto a whole, the unity of the parts in
    the whole is immediately perceived, for man has
    natural inclinations to seek harmony from chaos,
    and unity from variety. At the same time,
    however, the human mind constantly needs to seek
    variety as relief from the dullness and monotony
    of oneness. Thus, variety in unity and unity
    in variety become inseparable from, and
    complementary to, each other.

41
Contextual Interpretation
  • Applied to the authors case, unity means that
    all the clothes she has to wash are dirty
    clothes, and variety means that every piece to
    be washed is different from each other. More
    importantly, unity means that all the clothes
    she washes have one unified quality they are all
    worn by her dear family members she is always
    ready to serve and each piece is something
    special to her (variety) because each of her four
    men appeals to her in particularly different
    ways.

42
Further Implications
  • The author, possibly believing in the old saying
    Variety is the spice of life, takes this
    quotation to cheer herself up from the monotony
    of doing the laundry day in and day out.
  • Also, it is very clear that the author takes much
    pleasure in doing the seemingly tedious laundry
    because every time she washes the various dirty
    clothes, they would appeal to her with a fresh
    new feature and even a tantalizing aroma which
    is unique and special and precious to her.
  • So we may draw from her example here a somewhat
    philosophical conclusion that happiness has much
    to do with how one feels rather than what one
    does or possesses.

43
Think of this in terms of the following Chinese
sayings
  • ???????
  • ?????,???????
  • ????,?????
  • ????,?????
  • ????????

44
? ? ?
  • ??????,?????????????????,?????????????????,?????
    ?,????,????,????,????,?????????????,????????,????
    ???,????????!???,????????,?????????,?????
  • ( ??? 1017-1073 )

45
Contextual Implications
  • While washing the dirty clothes, the
    college-educated housewife was consoled and even
    proud of herself through mere imagination of
    herself as the lotus flower in Oriental
    philosophy, which rises, pure and pristine from
    the mud and muck.

46
William James
  • American psychologist and philosopher, William
    James helped to popularize the philosophy of
    pragmatism with his book Pragmatism A New Name
    for Old Ways of Thinking (1907). Influenced by a
    theory of meaning and verification developed for
    scientific hypotheses by American philosopher C.
    S. Peirce, James held that truth is what works,
    or has good experimental results. In a related
    theory, James argued the existence of God is
    partly verifiable because many people derive
    benefits from believing.

47
Francois Rabelais (14941553)
  • French writer and priest who for his
    contemporaries was an eminent physician and
    humanist and for posterity is the author of the
    comic masterpiece Gargantua and Pantagruel. The
    four novels composing this work are outstanding
    for their rich use of Renaissance French and for
    their comedy, which ranges from gross burlesque
    to profound satire. They exploit popular legends,
    farces, and romances, as well as classical and
    Italian material, but were written primarily for
    a court public and a learned one.

48
Alexander Pope (1688-1744)
  • English poet, who, modeling himself after the
    great poets of classical antiquity, wrote highly
    polished verse, often in a didactic or satirical
    vein. In verse translations, moral and critical
    essays, and satires that made him the foremost
    poet of his age, he brought the heroic couplet,
    which had been refined by John Dryden, to
    ultimate perfection. He first earned fame with
    the work An Essay on Criticism (1711), in which
    he wrote the now famous line, To err is human,
    to forgive divine.

49
Please read the following Chinese
  • ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
  • ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
  • ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
  • ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

50
All chaos is but order misunderstood.
  • Literally, the saying means All chaos is in fact
    not chaos, but is order which has been mistaken
    for chaos. In this context, the author means to
    say My house is always very clean and tidy and
    you just take for granted a housewifes hardship.
    Even today, without much cleaning, our house is
    still clean and tidy with everything in its
    place. You simply dont know Housework is never
    done.

51
Blaise Pascal (16231662)
  • French philosopher, physicist and mathematician.
    He is generally ranked among the finest French
    polemicists, especially in the Lettres
    provinciales, a classic in the literature of
    irony. He affects his readers by his use of logic
    and the passionate force of his dialectic. His
    motto is We know the truth, not only by the
    mind, but also by the heart.

52
The heart has its reasons the mind knows not of.
  • The heart is often related with feeling, emotion,
    intuition, instinct and impulse, which are
    usually identical with women, while the mind
    stands for reason, ration, logic, synthesis and
    composure, which are generally assumed to be
    characteristic of men. The quotation means that
    sometimes we do something out of emotion which is
    not based on reason. It may also be taken to mean
    that sometimes women do something men can not
    understand at all.

53
Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus
  • Boethius, (AD 470-524), Roman philosopher and
    statesman, he wrote De Consolatione Philosophiae
    (The Consolation of Philosophy, c. 523), a
    philosophic work that, although not explicitly a
    Christian text, contained so many elements of
    Christian ethics that it was highly regarded in
    Europe during medieval times. Many translations
    of the work were made, notably (in England) by
    King Alfred the Great and by the poet Geoffrey
    Chaucer. Boethius also wrote treatises on logic
    that profoundly influenced the terminology of
    medieval logic translations and commentaries on
    the works of Aristotle, from which medieval
    scholars largely derived their knowledge of the
    Greek philosopher and works on music,
    arithmetic, and theology.

54
Whatever is, is good.
  • Written nearly 13 centuries earlier, this
    quotation is not related to Hegels (German
    philosopher, 17701831) much quoted saying
    Whatever exists is reasonable. By this Hegel
    means that the task of philosophy is to
    comprehend the rationality of what already
    exists.
  • Literally, the quotation means that whatever
    exists is good. Reality is good because
    everything is created by God.

55
  • The author quotes this to show that she is
    satisfied with everything because nothing could
    bring greater satisfaction to a mother and wife
    than being amid her own dear and beloved ones,
    especially seeing them heartily eating.
  • Thus the question (I asked myself if it was still
    permissible to take pleasure in the profession of
    housewife and not be a traitor to the cause.)
    raised at the beginning of the essay has found
    its positive answer yes, it is not only
    permissible, but also practical and preferable,
    and even reasonable and philosophical to take
    pleasure in the profession of housewife because
    Whatever is, is good.

56
Heracleitus ( BC 540480 )
  • Greek philosopher remembered for his cosmology,
    in which fire forms the basic material principle
    of an orderly universe. Little is known about his
    life, and the one book he apparently wrote is
    lost. His views survive in the short fragments
    quoted and attributed to him by later authors.

57
PHILOSOPHERS AMONG THE CARROTS
  • What is a philosopher?
  • somebody who studies philosophy the branch of
    knowledge or academic study devoted to the
    systematic examination of basic concepts such as
    truth, existence, reality, causality, and freedom
  • somebody holding particular beliefs somebody who
    believes in a particular system of thought or
    doctrine and thinks and acts accordingly
  • thinking person a thinker who deeply and
    seriously considers human affairs and life in
    general
  • calm and rational person somebody who calmly and
    rationally reacts to events, especially adversity

58
What are Carrots?
  • common name for a plant (see Parsley) native to
    Eurasia and northern Africa and widely
    distributed throughout the North Temperate Zone
    the name is also applied to the root of this
    plant. The wild variety, popularly known as Queen
    Anne's lace, has a tough, woody root, unsuitable
    for food. The cultivated variety is the popular
    table vegetable.

59
In what way do philosophers have anything to do
with carrots ?
  • At first sight, the title of the text presents a
    collocation clash, for it places two things
    together which are scarcely associated in real
    life. A close analysis, however, may reveal that
    the title reflects the contrastive structure
    (between housewife and college education,
    housework and philosophy) of the text in the
    largest possible measure of neatness.
  • Along this line, sufficient justification can be
    found for the title, which is in effect not a
    semantic incongruity, but vividly illustrates the
    message of the text -- the writer's application
    of philosophy to the banalities of her life for
    the purpose of satisfying her conscience and
    consoling herself in household chores.

60
  • The text may well be turned visually into a table
    with two columns. In the left-side column we may
    enter all the philosophical quotations or sayings
    from the text, and in the right side column are a
    housewife's domestic activities in one-to-one
    correspondence to the philosophical ideas on the
    left. Thus, the author's meditation on the tricky
    relation between an educated housewife and
    Women's Lib during her cleaning of the
    refrigerator, leads to the recall of Socrate's
    saying that "The unexamined life is not worth
    living" (pa 1). This prompts all the humorous
    details of her reassessment of life following
    this introductory paragraph.

61
Philosophers Among the Carrots
  • doing housework
  • examining life
  • eating apples, oranges
  • preparing for cake
  • adjusting the cake recipe
  • narrator and refrigerator
  • faced with dirty clothes
  • washing sweaty clothes
  • becoming angry
  • leaving home
  • protest against complaints
  • defending for new dress
  • feeling content with life
  • Womens lib
  • Socrates
  • Matter descends in scale
  • Archimedes
  • Emerson
  • Budda and Bo tree
  • Heraclitus
  • Symbol of Lotus
  • William James
  • Rabelais
  • Alxander Pope
  • Pascal
  • Boethius

62
The juxtaposition of philosophic terms which are
all of Latin origin, alongside common core
Anglo-Saxon household words to form a lexical
contrast, thus matching the overall contrastive
structure and theme.
63
The repetition of sentence structures
  • The writer repeats the sentence structure As I
    dynamic verbs (describing domestic activities
    such as clean, cut, eat, pick up, spray, etc.),
    I stative verbs (denoting perception or
    cognition such as eye, gaze, find, know, recall,
    reflect, remember, see, understand, wonder,
    etc.), thus connecting the two otherwise
    incompatible sets of activities in a very neat
    form. (pas 1, 2, 3 )

64
Contrastive Essay Structure
  • Right from the title the essay runs through an
    alternating contrast between a common housewife
    and college education, daily housework and
    orthodoxy philosophy.
  • Started with an internal conflict between taking
    pleasure in the profession of housewife and not
    being a traitor to the cause of Women's Lib, the
    essay reflects the narrators contemplation of
    the tricky relation between an educated housewife
    and Women's Lib.

65
Figures of speech
  • Alliteration pure and pristine , mud and muck
    (pa 5)
  • Metaphor the train of my thoughts which was
    chugging off ( pa 3 )
  • Analogy Buddha had his Bo tree, I have my
    refrigerator. ( pa 4 )
  • Abundant philosophical allusions knitted very
    naturally into the texture of the entire essay
  • The humorous tone with an omnisciently erudite
    touch (?????????)

66
Philosophically
  • Philosophy (view of life), rather than
    physical possessions, decides the quality of
    human life. That is, a healthy life attitude
    guarantees a happy life.

67
Sociologically
  • Personal fulfillment is achieved as long as
    the individual social role is played well.

68
Educationally
  • The ultimate function of education is not to
    make the educated useful (utilitarian) but to
    bring the potentialities of the educated into
    full play, that is, to make the educated a full
    person with a liberal mind and a healthy body.

69
Ideologically (Feminism and Feminist Ideas)
  • Every detail of the authors application of her
    philosophical knowledge to the mundane concerns
    of a house-keeper eventually goes from the
    sublime to the ridiculous, creating a series of
    comic situations in which profound idealism is
    faced with the dull daily work of a family
    manager. The fact that she seems able to make
    any of her domestic situations justifiable by one
    philosopher or another is also satirical in
    itself. The jocular effects she produces are only
    intended to amuse the reader and to poke fun at
    the ideals held up by Women's Lib.

70
Politically (Womens liberation, Equal Rights)
  • The bitter irony comes at the end of the essay,
    when she finally decides to rebel against Womens
    Lib, for which she used to be an advocator, using
    the philosophy she has learned "Whatever is,
    is good" (pa 9). This quotation shows that she is
    perfectly happy with her present life, and that
    she is somewhat saying go to hell" to the
    Women's Liberation Movement.

71
Literarily (creative writing)
  • ???????,
  • ????????
  • ???

72
Further Study
  • Womens Rights
  • Feminism
  • Equal Rights Amendment
  • Anti-ERA

73
Womens Rights
  • Womens Rights mean to establish the same social,
    economic, and political status for women as for
    men. Womens rights guarantee that women will not
    face discrimination on the basis of their sex.
    Until the second half of the 20th century, women
    in most societies were denied some of the legal
    and political rights accorded to men. Although
    women in much of the world have gained
    significant legal rights, many people believe
    that women still do not have complete political,
    economic, and social equality with men.

74
Feminism
  • Feminism is a collective term for systems of
    belief and theories that pay special attention to
    womens rights and womens position in culture
    and society. The term tends to be used for the
    womens rights movement, which began in the late
    18th century and continues to campaign for
    complete political, social, and economic equality
    between women and men.

75
Feminists
  • Feminists are united by the idea that womens
    position in society is unequal to that of men,
    and that society is structured in such a way as
    to benefit men to the political, social, and
    economic detriment of women. However, feminists
    have used different theories to explain these
    inequalities and have advocated different ways of
    redressing inequalities, and there are marked
    geographic and historical variations in the
    nature of feminism.

76
Anti-ERA
  • In the 1970s and early 1980s, Schlafly campaigned
    against the proposed Equal Rights Amendment
    (ERA). The amendment called for men and women to
    be given equal treatment under the law. Schlafly
    opposed the ERA because it would require women to
    serve in combat, and because she believed it
    would take away legal rights of wives and would
    negatively influence family life. Schlafly also
    argued that the amendment would lead to unisex
    restrooms. She became a leading opponent of the
    ERA through her lobbying organizations, Stop ERA
    and Eagle Forum, and by testifying against the
    ERA before 30 state legislatures. The ERA was
    defeated in 1982, and Schlafly continued to lead
    her Eagle Forum organization in campaigns
    advocating conservative issues. She has written
    several books, including A Choice Not an Echo
    (1964), which was an endorsement of the
    presidential campaign of Senator Barry Goldwater
    The Power of a Positive Woman (1977) and
    Pornography's Victims (1987).

77
Phyllis Schlafly
  • American political activist Phyllis Schlafly has
    long opposed the womens liberation movement.
    She is a proponent of traditional roles for women
    as wives and mothers.

78
  • A housewife with a college education, the author
    is aware that she owes Women's Lib some loyalty
    for giving her the right to equal educational
    opportunities, and that she should not betray the
    cause, which demands that woman be no servant to
    man. She therefore feels a bit guilty for
    remaining a housewife. On the other hand, she
    cannot escape the situation as a housewife. In
    fact, she feels at the bottom of her heart she
    loves her present life (She is taking pleasure in
    the profession of housewife). She is thus caught
    in the conflict between her uneasy conscience for
    not meeting the demands of Women's Lib and her
    enjoyment of the housewife "profession". She
    expresses her dilemma precisely in the sentence
    "I asked myself if it was still permissible to
    take pleasure in the profession of housewife and
    not be a traitor to the cause", in which the
    words "still permissible to take pleasure" show
    her strong sentiment for her present condition
    and her wish to take guilty-free pleasure in
    being a housewife.

79
  • "To relieve her guilty feelings, and also to
    fulfill her education, she recalls Socrates
    saying and decides to apply her philosophical
    knowledge to the mundane concerns of a
    house-keeper, as if saying "So let's see if I
    can use my college education in the kitchen."

80
Sayings about Wives
  • A good wife is the joy of life.
  • A man without a wife is like a horse without a
    bridle.
  • A wife is sought for her virtue, a concubine for
    her beauty.
  • If the wife wears the breeches, the husband must
    rock the cradle.
  • If you take a wife from hell she will bring you
    back.
  • The first wife is matrimony, the second company,
    the third heresy.
  • When husband and wife agree with each other, they
    can dry up the ocean with buckets.
  • A woman's work is never done.

81
Quotations on Women
  • Wives are young men's mistresses, companions for
    middle age, and old men's nurses.

  • ----Francis Bacon
  • The most dramatic thing is that, even when you
    look at women who are working full time outside
    the homeas full time as their menwhen it comes
    to ironing and cleaning, 60 or 70 per cent of
    that work is still done by the women.
  • ----Malcolm
    Wicks (1947  )

  • British sociologist, 1990.

82
  • For a woman to get a rewarding sense of total
    creation by way of the multiple monotonous chores
    that are her daily lot...as irrational as for an
    assembly line worker to rejoice that he had
    created an automobile because he had tightened a
    bolt.
  • ----Edith Mendel Stern
    (19011975)
  • U.S. writer and
    social critic.
  • "Women are Household
    Slaves"

83
  • O! men with sisters dear,
  • O! men with mothers and wives!
  • It is not linen you're wearing out,
  • But human creatures' lives!
  • Thomas Hood (1799 - 1845)
  • British poet and humorist
  • "The Song of the Shirt"

84
  • Here lies a poor woman who always was tired,
  • For she lived in a place where help wasn't hired
  • Her last words on earth
  • Dear friends I am going
  • Where washing ain't done nor sweeping nor sewing,
  • And everything there is exact to my wishes,
  • For there they don't eat and there's no washing
    of dishes.
  • Don't mourn for me now, don't mourn for me never,
  • For I'm going to do nothing for ever and ever.

  • Anonymous

  • Spectator (London), Letter  

85
  • To the old saying that man built the house but
    woman made of it a 'home' might be added the
    modern supplement that woman accepted cooking as
    a chore but man has made of it a recreation.
  • ----Emily
    Post (18721960)
  • U.S. writer and
    columnist, Etiquette
  • The whole process of home-making, house-keeping
    and cooking, which ever has been woman's special
    province, should be looked on as an art and a
    profession.
  • ----Sarah Josepha
    Hale (17881879)
  • U.S. editor and poet.
    Godey's Lady's Book

86
  • Goodbye
  • Best wishes to you all !
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