I love it when my students realize the power of language buried beneath its nuances without my teaching it. It is rare, but it happens. When it does, I'd like to think its a result of the 20 years of teaching that has made me so adept at delivering education to young minds I am not even aware I'm doing it. My students absorb knowledge just being in my presence. Or, teenagers are smarter than I give them credit for.
No, it's my genius.
My genius really shines when I teach
The Great Gatsby. I love, love, love this novel. Even before Baz Luhrmann. There's something about handsome, filthy rich, charming, and delusional men . . .
I focus heavily on character analysis with this novel. For the character of Tom Buchanan, my approached is to view him through the lens of his women: his wife, Daisy and his mistress, Myrtle. While going over the difference between Daisy and Myrtle, my students showed me they do understand the importance of spelling.
Yes, you read correctly. The importance of
spelling.
|
Mia Farrow and Carey Mulligan as Daisy Buchanan |
The women's physical appearance reflect characteristics of their personalities. Daisy is young, delicate with a face "sad and lovely with bright things in it, bright eyes and a bright passionate mouth." In contrast, Myrtle is older, aggressive "she carried her surplus flesh sensuously as some women can. Her face, above a spotted dress of dark blue crepe-de-chine, contained no facet or gleam of beauty, but there was an immediately perceptible vitality about her as if the nerves of her body were continually smouldering."
I find their difference in size relevant to character, but trepidation over my students translating "surplus flesh" into "fat" and therefore "ugly" tricks me into drawing attention to that particular detail as an attempt to divert the fat label.
"She is not fat," I always emphasize, with my hands planted firmly on my surplus hips. "She is what we call curvy or voluptuous."
Recently, a student, Isabel, added, "You mean she's thick?"
"Is that fat?"
"No, it means," Isabel looked to her neighbor, also a female, "how do you say it? She's just . . . thick."
"Is she thick because of fat or muscle?"
|
Neither Karen Black nor Isla Fisher have Myrtle Wilson's "surplus flesh" |
A few male students confirmed that "thick" is muscular. The young ladies in the room didn't quite agree. Knowing that it could take the rest of the class--hell, the rest of the week--to get my students to agree on a definition, I wrote "thick" on the board and tried to move on to "delicate" Daisy.
"It's two Cs," several students said. "T-H-I-C-C."
"Why two Cs?"
They look at each other and shrug.
"There must be a reason, otherwise why not just spell it T-H-I-C-K?"
No one seems to know. Or care.
I changed the spelling on the board to T-H-I-C-C. When I turned back around to face the class, I see Isabel curving the fingers of each hand to form the letter C. She whispered something to her neighbor who does the same with her hands and then they both burst out laughing.
"Figure something out back there?" I asked them.
Isabel holds up her Cs again, raising one hand higher than the other: "Boobs," she said about the higher C and "Butt" about the lower C.
Okay, so T-H-I-C-C isn't related to muscle but more the quantity of TNA (Tits and Ass, not Talula National Athletics clothing brand, nor Total Nonstop Action wrestling alliance, nor Texas Nurses Association).
I was satisfied with the two-Cs-symbol-for-TNA explanation for the spelling, but then one girl piped up: "We spell it that way, so it is ours. So that the definition belongs to our generation." Crossing her arms, she gave me a sharp nod to indicate the discussion was over.
Can we all say progeny? Reincarnated linguist? Reason I can retire? Her indignation at my academic approach only reinforced an academic approach. Paradox aside, I couldn't help but get goosebumps watching my students try to figure out language. It is one of the reasons I "beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past” (Fitzgerald).