Fine-yet-stressed-by-the-news, thanks, Kat. Can't work properly as a result (well, that's pretty much the whole country, not just me), so I'm thankful that there are summer classes I'm going to start to TA soon, because I'll have to concentrate on them, standing in front of students and all. You?
Natter 45: Smooth as Billy Dee Williams.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I'm good, Nilly, thanks for asking. I still have to revise a paper for a Shakespeare class I'm taking (which I am loving!) and then write my thesis proposal for the committee. Not to mention I must also start reading for next semester's classes as I will be SWAMPED then.
Cindy, don't get me wrong. I am glad I lost weight and I want to keep it off for competely vain reasons. But my wake up call was feeling like I couldn't do some things I should have been able to do in yoga. That and having someone in my life who was much bigger, like almost by 100 lbs, than I say something about how "big girls like us" should do things. Us, I thought!
So plenty of vanity.
a paper for a Shakespeare class I'm taking
What's it about? I'm so embarrassingly ignorant when it comes to Shakespeare.
write my thesis proposal for the committee
Would I understand what it's about? Can it be explained in a few short sentences?
When does the next semester start? Here we aren't finished with the exams of the former semester yet.
We aren't finished with this semester yet. The next one starts in September, but I'm taking a class on Victorian Literature and Science and another on Chaucer. Both reading intensive.
My paper on Shakespeare is looking at the plays that came immediately after the last minute save from an attempt on the King's life (called the Gunpowder Plot) including Macbeth and seeing the effect that the Plot had on the language of Jacobean theater with an eye toward what makes Macbeth different... it's a combo of history and lit analysis, with work on 2 plays that are rarely read in addition to Macbeth.
My thesis? I'm looking at cookbooks and housekeeping manuals from the 16th and 17th century to see if and how they had an impact on women's literacy. As women became more literate, they published more of these books so I want to see the impact on literacy and, ultimately, on culture. Though the time period might change, given the availability of early modern cookbooks.
That's a fantastic thesis topic, Kat!
Kat, that sounds fascinating!
In shallower news, apparently Lance Bass has confirmed the Reichen thing too.
Victorian Literature and Science
The conncetions between them? How each of them affected the other? Or am I far far away from what it's really supposed to be about?
seeing the effect that the Plot had on the language of Jacobean theater
Oh, that reads interestting, but way way over my hmm-that's-English-and-that's-all-I-can-figure head.
But the thesis reads fascinating! I've never thought of the connection, too - do you already have assumptions that you're going to check?
[Edit: amych - when reading Kat's topic, you were the first person I thought about!]
thanks, amych. It's a little tricky to find source material, but I've been sort of obsessed with this journal Gastronomica. I'd love to do a doctorate in cultural studies with an eye towards food, but I need to find the right program.
I know Boston University does an MA in Gastronomy that I'd love to do, but won't.
The irony, of course, is the less I eat the more I think and write about eating.
The conncetions between them? How each of them affected the other? Or am I far far away from what it's really supposed to be about?
Nope that's it, succinctly even!
I think that the big assumption that i'm checking with my thesis is that cookbooks were (and are still) transmitters of culture because they outline food taboos and regulations and tastes. That as women became more literate, they moved into more positions to be in charge, as it were, of culture transmission and less as culture receivers. Also, cookbooks were the first area where women were invited to practice literacy and it is these books that show when and how women became increasingly literate.