How to Read Literature Like a Professor study guide
What does it most likely mean if a meal goes poorly?
A bad sign for the community
How does Foster define "myth"?
A body of a story that matters/ the ability of story to explain ourselves to ourselves in ways that logical things (math, science, etc) can't.
What does Foster give as an example of a journey that is not a quest?
A daily drive to work and back home
Foster defines Archetype as what?
A pattern by which a story comes into being
Foster explains that Shakespeare is pervasive and that we should look at his work as what?
A sacred text or ever adapting and ever changing
Foster defines the word "envoi" as what?
A sending off/ sending off on a mission
What does Summer represent?
Adulthood
Foster says that which two words are rarely a part of his vocabulary of literary study?
Always and never
Foster claims that the first response of a normal reader to a text is what?
An emotional response
How many things can a symbol represent?
Any number of things
Foster claims that, until proven otherwise, literature professors see everything in what way?
As a symbol
Which of the three sorts of myths, according to Foster, seems to cover the greatest range of human situation?
Biblical
What does Spring represent?
Birth
Foster mentions that in stories the seasons spring, summer, fall and winter often represent what?
Birth, adulthood, middle age and death
What does Foster say is the question of a "last-chance-for-a-change" story?
Can this person be saved?
What are two categories of violence in literature?
Character (stabbing, bombing, shooting etc) and authorial (death introduced by the author)
Drowning is a symbolic baptism, but if the character does not come back up it represents what?
Choosing to enter a new life while leaving behind the old one
What does Winter represent?
Death
What does Foster give as an example of an action that would have different significance in previous years?
Eating a meal
What is the significance on Job?
Facing disasters not of the characters fault or making, suffers from it but remains strong
Foster says that physical blindness mirrors what?
Figurative seeing and blindness are a work or physiological, moral, intellectual, mental blindness
What does flight often symbolize?
Freedom
Foster points out that the use of a Christ figure can often create what type of effect?
Ironic effect
According to Foster, what "trumps everything"?
Irony
Foster points out what about Baptism?
Is a symbolic death and rebirth as a new individual
Why is political writing not good writing?
It is one dimensional, it does not travel well of time and place, and it is programmatic and pushes a single cause
What is the significance of the apocalypse?
It symbolizes death, the four horsemen and the end of the world
What is the significance of Garden of Eden?
It symbolizes losing innocence
What is the significance of David and Goliath?
It symbolizes overcoming overwhelming odds and lots of faith
What is the significance of Jonah and the whale?
It symbolizes running away from a problem and end up having really bad consequences from it
In this Chapter, Foster repeats himself by pointing out what?
Literature repeats itself and there is only one story
Foster claims that the professional reader is separated from others by what?
Memory, symbol and pattern
What does Fall represent?
Middle age
What is it that Foster primarily deals with in this chapter (Chapter 24)?
Not reading with your own eyes- putting yourself in the situation of the character and take the work as it was meant to be taken
Which is the most famous example of a mark of greatness?
Oedipus Rex
What viewpoint is one Foster says we should specifically NOT read from?
Our own
What is it that "high" places often symbolize?
Purity, isolation, life, death, clean and cold
what is the significance of the flood?
Rain as destruction, rainbow as restoration
Survival of a flight crash most likely symbolizes what?
Re-birth or a miracle
Foster claims that many people often accuse literature teachers of what?
Reading too much into the text
What makes the reader's experience of literature richer, deeper and more meaningful?
Recognition of a myth in modern work
Foster says that Peter Pan is a symbol of what?
Refusing to grow up
What does Foster say rain often symbolizes?
Restoration, misery, cleansing, and fertitily
Foster says that, "there comes a point in anyone's reading where watching for pattern and symbol becomes" what?
Second nature
Foster states that since the fall of man in the garden, evil has always been about what?
Sex
The breaking of bread is a symbol of what?
Sharing and peace
Literary violence is rarely what?
Straightforward
Foster points out that both Alice in Wonderland and The Wizard of Oz represents what?
Supernatural powers and entering a world that operates under different rules
What is the main source of tension in the story "The Garden Party"?
Tension based on social class
What does the heart usually symbolize in literature?
The center of all emotion
How does Foster define "intertextuality"?
The ongoing interaction between poems and stories/ the idea that everything within a work is connected to something else
In which elements of literature is geography relevant?
Theme, plot and symbolism
If a character is not emotionally sound, you shouldn't be surprised when what happens?
They develop a heart condition
Foster says the real reason for a quest is always what?
To gain self-knowledge
Richard III in Shakespeare's tale has scoliosis. For what purpose?
To show he is as spiritually and morally twisted as his back
Foster says we do not have to accept the "what" of a culture to be able to understand the mindset?
Values
According to Foster, when an evil man violates a young woman and steals her innocence, it is an example of what?
Vampirism
Foster points out that 20th century fairy tales are different than traditional fairy tales in that women sometimes do what?
Women sometimes save men