I like Narrative Inheritance too. That was all my brother.
What do we think about this one? I forgot to list it...
"Oral History through the Lens of Literature: A Case Study"
That was actually my parents' favorite, apparently.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I like Narrative Inheritance too. That was all my brother.
What do we think about this one? I forgot to list it...
"Oral History through the Lens of Literature: A Case Study"
That was actually my parents' favorite, apparently.
"Oral History through the Lens of Literature: A Case Study"
Nope (no offense to the parents, of course). "Through the lens of" feels like student-desperate-to-pad-a-paper writing, and I have a burning hate-on for just "A [genre]" as a subtitle.
I blame way too many years of bookselling, and failing to move endless variations on Blah Blah Pretentious Literarycakes: A Novel. At a certain point, I wanted to send them all back with a note saying "if I can't tell it's a novel, you're not doing your job".
"Oral History through the Lens of Literature: A Case Study"This is okay, but...
Narrative Inheritance: A Case Study in Oral LiteratureI like this best of all.
...so, the times last night when I wasn't jumping out of bed and running to the loo?
I was dreaming about going to the loo. Or trying to find a loo. Often the loo then turned into a lift, with glass walls, and started moving, thus exposing my plight to the world.
I'm'a stay home today. Sorry, kidlets! (But they're having a half-day, which consists of: watch assembly, do spelling test, have snack and break time, spend remaining hour splashing in pool to celebrate Songkran and shooting each other with waterpistols, eat lunch and/or go home. Easy day.)
(It's my first day off so far, in a year and a half.)
Narrative Inheritance: A Case Study in Oral Literature
My only problem with this is that part of what I'm arguing is that, at least in this case, oral literature and literature shouldn't be separate things. So, it feels misleading.
Narrative Inheritance: Oral History As Literature
Ha! That's exactly what I was just thinking. Too funny.
That's exactly what I was just thinking.
Sounds like a winner, then!
(Incidentally, I'm very excited to see you heading for home on this project.)
Incidentally, I'm very excited to see you heading for home on this project.
You and me both! I'm going to finish it on time! Nothing will stop me! (Nobody will believe it!)
I blame way too many years of bookselling, and failing to move endless variations on Blah Blah Pretentious Literarycakes: A Novel.
See, this I can live with if and only if the title confuses the issue without the "A Novel" bit. Like, if my WIP was called The Autobiography of Napoleon Bonaparte (which it is not, and Napoleon is not my personal Dead Guy, either--that would be Wellington), maybe I'd need the "A Novel" so no one would think it was N's actual memoir. But otherwise? So pretentious that it's almost enough to make me not buy the book all by itself.