Friday, February 10, 2012

Russell's Relevance Today: "Education and Discipline" - A Critique

Call it sheer coincidence, or what you may, but, today, even as i was preparing for this essay by Bertrand Russell on Education and Discipline, given in 1935, little did i realise that it would have such a huge relevance to today’s academic environment. Even as chennaiites woke up this morning to the gory news of a teacher stabbed to death by a 15-year old boy who was upset because of the written remarks on his poor performance, The Hindu came out with an article that screamed “It’s time that school managements learnt a lesson!”.

The question is, who should teach the lesson? And at whose expense?

Well, let's have a peek into the great social critic Russell’s views on Education, which is part of my lesson plan for my II year Part II class.

According to Russell, the purpose of education is to civilize the individual, which is partly individual and partly social.

Apart from imparting general knowledge, technical skill etc which are intellectual qualities, and
Impartiality, kindliness, and self-control which are moral qualities, students should also be imparted the physiological quality of zest and joy of life.

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

Civil Services/NET/SLET Coaching

The UGC Sponsored Coaching Classes for Civil Services/NET/SLET exams have been a huge hit with students, going by preliminary attendance statistics. Indeed, it is a powerful indicator of the commitment latent within students, coupled with their zeal to excel, when provided with a chance. Compared to the strength in the first class, we thought, the strength would dwindle in the coming days. But, that wasn't the case to be. Rather, it has been growing from strength to strength over the days... Kudos to the students and the organisers.
Hope the enthusiasm remains...

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

National Seminar @ MCC


UGC Sponsored NATIONAL SEMINAR on Monday, 12 March 2012
in Post-Independence Indian Writing in English: Theory and Praxis
Organized by PG & Research Department of English
MADRAS CHRISTIAN COLLEGE (Autonomous)
CHENNAI – 600059, TAMIL NADU


ABOUT THE DEPARTMENT

One among the oldest departments in the country, the Department of English offers wide range of specializations under the credit based system. The syllabus under the credit system has integrated the conventional approach of exposing the student to period/genre based texts, literature of contemporary relevance and career based papers. The special papers offered at UG and PG levels are Women's Writing, Literary Theory and Criticism, Myth and Literature, Indian Theatre, Shakespearean Criticism, European Classics in Translation, ELT and Eco-literature.

PEER-REVIEWED JOURNAL

We are happy to announce the publication of the second issue of our literary journal, Eclectic Representations in February 2012. [In Print]. Eclectic Representations ISSN 2231 - 430 X is a peer-reviewed biannual journal, which covers English literature from the time of Chaucer to the present day. It features scholarly essays on diverse literatures like British, American, and Indian

Happy Birthday to a Legend

Image courtesy: SeattlePi
Born in 1812, today is Charles Dickens' 200th birthday. No other writer with the exception of Shakespeare could have marshalled such a host of dramatis personae, as does Charles Dickens in his marvellous fictional creations. Indeed, every fictional character in Dickens has a marked individuality that is at once distinct and engaging, revealing the richness of his prolific creative genius. Indeed, Michael Slater, in his profound study entitled Dickens and Women describes Charles Dickens as the greatest creative genius in English literature of the last three hundred years. In short, he is called the greatest inventor of character after Shakespeare. In 1833, he began writing a series of sketches under the pseudonym of Boz. Soon, he started work on Pickwick Papers and a host of other unforgettable novels.  As much read, admired and loved as always, Dickens remains unrivalled in his style and diction, and will remain so in the years to come.
Happy Birthday Charles Dickens..!

I stumbled upon Claire Tomalin's beautiful letter to the master story-teller on his bicentennial celebrations, today, in The Guardian. btw, Tomalin is Dickens' biographer.
My dear Mr Dickens,

Happy 200th birthday! You yourself were not much given to celebrating anniversaries, but you did go to Stratford-upon-Avon in April 1864, with Robert Browning, Wilkie Collins and John

Saturday, February 04, 2012

Commemoration Day Service

The Commemoration day thanksgiving service to commemorate the 175th year celebrations of the College, got off to a grand start with the audience rising to the song "O God Our Help in Ages Past.." The Principal welcomed the host of luminaries who adorned the Anderson Hall, which included past Principals, distinguished members of the alumni and Chairman of the MCC Association Dr.Besant C Raj.

In his commemoration address that followed, Dr.Besant Raj stressed the need for helping students to think on their own rather than to disseminate information from text books. Citing the example of Harvard Business School, his alma mater, he said that, at Harvard, not even a single lecture is delivered. The whole programme is taught only through the case method, where a real business situation is brought to the classroom in the form of a case study and the students have to play the role of managers and solve the problem. Each day a student solves three such business problems. The thrust is on developing analytical skills in their students to solve business problems than to provide them a lot of information on theories of business, he added.

India's institutions including IITs and IIMs do not find a place in the list of 200 top institutions of higher learning in the world, because of the fact that most Indian institutions of higher learning see themselves as disseminators of knowledge - from text books and lecture notes. 

He also stressed on the challenge from e-education, and wanted MCC to develop courseware in e-education in several disciplines. 

Going back to the time when he was a student at MCC, he spoke of his association with Dr.Alexander Boyd, then, the principal of the College. While a student, a resident of Selaiyur Hall, he was stricken with measles, a highly contagious disease. Hence the warden moved him to the isolation ward. While even his best friends would not visit him for fear of catching the disease, Dr.Boyd would come to the isolation ward - where he was the lone occupant, every morning without fail. He would sit on a stool beside his bed and chat for at least ten minutes before leaving for his day's work. This happened on all the  20 days in which he was in isolation. This action by Dr.Boyd deeply touched him and inspired him, he said.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Hamara Shakespeare..:

Five centuries after his demise, William Shakespeare (1564-1616) continues to symbolize the fullest exploration of theatre to represent the gamut of human experience and capture its heights and depths. No playwright in history has been rendered into other languages as often, or been appreciated by an audience as widespread, as Shakespeare has been, particularly in the twentieth century.   
Prakriti Foundation’s commitment to theatre brought inevitably to Shakespeare’s work, except that we were interested in exploring the Indian twist – how have Indian individuals and groups, actors and directors chosen to interpret Shakespeare? The result of this thought process is Hamara Shakespeare, a festival of 3 plays derived from Shakespeare, performed every February in Chennai.

Day I: Friday, 3 February 2012
4 Seasons of Shakespeare by Vayu Naidu Theatre Comany
Directed by: Dr.Vayu Naidu, UK.
Kalakshetra Foundation at 2 PM (Special show for School and College Children) and 7 PM.
Students who are desirous of participating in the first day's event, may report to any of the following Professors: (KG Sir,  David Sir, Rufus Sir, or Abitha ma'm) 

Songs of Kabir - An Aesthetic Delight..:

I just finished reading SONGS OF KABIR, and to put it briefly, every song was a gateway to self-realisation. If revelations came to Lalla 'like a moon flowering in dark water,' For Kabir, revelations are like a fish taking to water- so spontaneous, so candid and so evocative... One can instantly feel the appeal and the zeal of the songs reverberating in our hearts, and enamouring the senses alike.

Wendy Doniger's Preface is profoundly panoptic in its presentation and Arvind Krishna's Introduction is earnestly effulgent in its ebullience. 

Prompts me to go ahead and quote a few lines from the Preface and from the Introduction.

In his Preface, Wendy discusses the conflicting thoughts from Hinduism and Islam on Kabir's birth, and their claim over him [akin to the 14 the century Kashmiri poetess-saint Lal Ded] after his death. 

I quote: The story that Arvind Krishna Mehrotra tells, of the Muslims wanting to bury him and the Hindus to cremate him, may have been inspired by the poem in which he says:
Cremation turns you to ashes, 
Burial into a feast
For an army of worms.
Your athlete's body's only clay, 
A leaky pot, 
A jug with nine holes.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Tree Walk @ MCC

All ears... to the Voice of Nature...
"There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it," goes a famous axiom. Indeed, all our hearts were quietly attentive to the music of the trees, in the sylvan surroundings of Asia's second largest scrub jungle - MCC, on a vivacious weekend. The occasion was the much awaited Tree walk, that got off to a grand start this morning at the boxing ring at 8.15 am. Students and nature lovers alike joined in the walk which was an enlightenment cum eco-entertainment of sorts. Dr.K.Ganesh welcomed the gathering and introduced our guide to the fellow participants.

Dr.D.Narasimhan, (D.N) Professor of Botany, was our guide all the way through, whose lively illustrations and commentaries were appealing, entertaining and ennobling at the same time, making our "tree-walk-the-talk" a memorable one by all means.

Tracing the history of planting trees at MCC post 1937, Dr.D.N said that much of the greenery that we find today in Campus was a result of the planned efforts of illustrious nature lovers, apart from the enormous "tree-contributions" from birds and bats. Most of the trees in Campus today owe their existence to the first curator of the campus Prof. Edward Barnes, who took upon himself the noble task of planting trees and maintaining the biodiversity in campus, which happens to host the second largest scrub jungle in Asia. He is therefore rightly called the green visionary (or the green architect) of the campus. Under his stewardship, the entire campus was fenced to avoid cattle grazing and firewood cutting. More a Botanist than a chemist, he planted trees and also made a record of them systematically. Thus, MCC was able to contribute to the Chennai botanical directory, 36 new species of plants which were hitherto not recorded in the archives. Moreover, Dr.D.N added that, our forest type at MCC is unique because it is a tropical dry evergreen forest in a region where we get 1000 to 1200 mm of rainfall per annum.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Like to Read............? Proceed.............!

Reading is an art. Yes, an art. Good and effective reading is an art that requires a considerable degree of creativity, receptivity and imagination. In short, a creative eye/ a receptive eye/ an imaginative eye..!

Let’s take a cursory look at our tryst with reading down the years when we were in school.

During those good ol' days of our primary schooling, we were all initiated into the world of Oral Reading. Those were indeed the 'good old' days unaffected by most of the trendy gizmos of today! Sigh!!!!!!!! :-)

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Join us for a Tree walk

Th
English
Department,
MCC, invites you
to join in a Tree Walk
- a highly interactive, joyful
educational experience for the
staff and students alike, to appreciate
and enjoy the biodiversity-rich campus. 
A great opportunity indeed to identify, observe
and appreciate the various species of trees, the rich flora
and fauna in this, our wonderful tropical dry evergreen forest, 
 at MCC, 
Asia's II
largest
 scrub
jungl

Pic of MCC Scrub Jungle - Courtesy: TOI
Date: Saturday, 28 January 2012
Starting Point: Selaiyur Hall Indoor Theatre
Time: 8 am SHARP

Friday, January 13, 2012

'Bioethics is the Love of Life' - Dr.Darryl R.J.Macer

Dr.Darryl engaging the delegates in a group activity...
On the third day of the International Conference on 'Science, Society and Sustainability' today, Dr.Darryl R.J.Macer gave the first plenary on Bioethics. He traced the concept to human heritage thousands of years old, and defined it as the concept of love, balancing benefits and risks of choices and decisions. Although there exists various definitions for bioethics, the simplest would be consideration of the ethical issues raised by questions involving life, like: 
"What food should I eat?
How is the food grown?
Where should I live and how much disturbance of nature should I make?
What relationships should I have with fellow organisms including human beings?
How do I balance the quality of my life with development of love of my life, other's lives and the community?"
Stating that we have the power to remodel whole ecosystems of the planets, he observed that, a fundamental

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Shared Stewardship Towards Nature - Dr.Peter Vujakovic

A Case for the Planet...
The second day of the International Conference on Science, Society and Sustainability at Lady Doak College, Madurai, saw two plenaries in the forenoon session. The first speaker Dr.Hilconda P.Calumpong, Institute of Environmental and Marine Studies, Silliman University, Philippines, spoke on the various initiatives of Silliman University in which she had participated, and highlighted pioneering researches, the results of which have led to initiatives that have influenced the national and local government units' policies on CRM as well as Coastal communities' behaviour in caring for and managing their coastal resources.

Dr.Peter Vujakovic, Head of Geographical and Life Sciences at Canterbury Christ Church University (CCCU), UK, gave a talk on 'Shared Stewardship of Nature - Past, Present and Future'.

His talk focussed on the 'Biodiversity' initiative currently being developed at CCCU, in the English county of Kent - known as the 'Garden of England' for its landscape and its fruit cultivation. The initiative is focused on the Canterbury UNESCO World Heritage Site (including Canterbury Cathedral, St.Augustine's Abbey and St.Martin's Church - the oldest Church in the English speaking world still used for worship).

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

International Conference on Science, Society and Sustainability - A Report

A View of the Delegates at the Conference
The International Conference on Science, Society and Sustainability, got underway today with the Welcome address by Dr.A.Mercy Pushphalatha, and prayer by Dr.Synthia Mary. The Inaugural Address was by Mr.N.Ram, Editor-in-Chief, The Hindu. The Key-Note address was by Dr.Robin Gottfried, Director, Center for Religion and the Environment & Professor of Economics, Sewanee: The University of the South, US.

Excerpts from Mr.N.Ram's Inaugural Address:

Citing an Opinion Article in today's 'The Hindu,' by Justice Markandey Katju, Chairman of the Press Council of India, he said,
Some 80 per cent of its people live in poverty, with unemployment, sky-rocketing prices, problems of healthcare, education and housing, and so on. Forty-eight farmers commit suicide on an average each day. And 47 per cent of the children are malnourished. Our national aim must be to abolish these evils and make India prosperous for all.
This stresses the need for the pursuit of accessibility, particularly focusing on those who have

Monday, January 09, 2012

International Seminar on Culture Studies

The UGC-Sponsored International Seminar on Culture Studies was inaugurated by the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Madras, Col.Dr.Thiruvasagam. Dr.Mark Harbold, University of Elmhurst, Chicago, gave the key-note address. Dr.P.Ajay Kumar, Director, Institute of Distance Education, University of Kerala spoke on Culture Studies. The first day [Monday, 09 January] of the two-day Seminar saw more than forty authors presenting their papers chaired by eminent Professors in their respective fields of study.

Dr.Armstrong addressing the delegates (Photo Courtesy: Prof.Dinesh Kumar)
Dr.P.Ajay Kumar, dwelt at length on the transition from literary studies to culture studies, in most of the English/Language departments across the world, and its wide-ranging applications and/or ramifications today. Touching upon theories from Structuralism to Poststructuralism, he said that, Marxism and poststructuralism are different kinds of philosophies with different aims. While Marxism is political, poststructuralism is not. The poststructuralist suspicion is that all forms of politics are equally suspect. In a sense, the rise of postmodernism and poststructuralism are attributed to the crisis in Marxism. 'Post-structuralism,' he said, 'is marked by a rejection of totalizing, essentialist, foundationalist concepts.'

Speaking on Marx's concept of the consciousness and its relation with political economy, he quotes Marx: "It is not the consciousness of men that determines their being, but, on the contrary, their social being that determines their consciousness."He then proceeded to talk about the significance of language, language and meaning, Ideology etc in Culture Studies. Explicating further on Ideology, he discussed Louis Althusser's concept of Ideological State Apparatuses, that shape our perceptions and attitudes.

Sunday, January 08, 2012

Every perceiver's method of perceiving can be shown to contain an inherent bias which affects what is perceived to a significant degree. 

A wholly objective perception of individual entities is therefore not possible: any observer is bound to create something of what he observes. 

Accordingly, the relationship between observer and observed achieves a kind of primacy. It becomes the only thing that can be observed ... 

In consequence, the true nature of things may be said to lie not in things themselves, but in the relationships which we construct, and then perceive, between them. 

This new concept, that the world is made up of relationships rather than things, constitutes the first principle of that way of thinking which can properly be called 'structuralist'.

- Terence Hawkes in Structuralism and Semiotics

Saturday, January 07, 2012

Celebrating 175 years of Madras Christian College

A thanksgiving service was organized on Saturday, 07 January 2012 to mark the College's 175th year. Rev.Robert Willis, Dean of the Canterbury Cathedral, took part in the Service. As part of the service, the Principal gave the Welcome and Introduction, excerpts from which are given below: 

The Very Rev.Robert Willis, Dean of Canterbury Cathedral, UK; the Very Rev.Canon Ivor Smith-Cameron, Former Chaplain to the Queen of England and an alumnus of our College; Dr.Besant Raj, Chairman, MCC Association, Board of Directors, Bursar, President of the Alumni Association, former Principals and Bursars, Deans, Heads of Departments, Teaching, Administrative and Support Staff, former staff, alumni, student-friends, invitees, press, Ladies and Gentlemen, 

On behalf of the MCC family, it is my great privilege and pleasure to welcome you all to the Thanksgiving Service organised by the Madras Christian College for having rendered 175 years of dedicated service to humanity.

Sunday, January 01, 2012

Monday, December 26, 2011

Lookin' Back..!

This month, we celebrate eight fruitful years of blogging, and we've completed more than 8oo posts till date. Looking back, I just wonder at the pace at which Time flits by, on the wings of the whole wide web... 

Indeed it looks like, I wrote my first blog post just yesterday!! What started off as a log/record of class activities for my students, expanded over a period of time to accommodate posts on general awareness, Educational scholarships, Association Activities, Recruitments, acknowledging Student achievers, etc.

Herein i would like to present memorable highlights of my blog:

The cream of the blog, if at all there is, would be, Student Assignments and students’ answer scripts, which speak volumes to the creative abilities latent within every student. ‘Inspirational posts’ which are the lighthouse to the blog, serve to motivate students towards their goals, and they have also got rave reviews at times. Posts on ‘General Awareness’ have become a huge hit with netizens, going by indications, and I am sure convinced that they help students a lot.

I would also like to say, with all humility, that we have got requests for lesson plans/lesson help/ lesson ideas/ lesson summaries from more than 200 netizens (students and/or researchers and/or fellow teachers) from across the world,  and, thanks to my illustrious staff friends, we have been able to help out everyone who has asked us for academic help, totally free of cost.

Now for the acknowledgements:

Friday, December 23, 2011

Topics for Oratory.:

Dear Students of II BA English Literature, 
Please find below the topics you've opted for, as part of your obligations towards your Paper on Rhetoric.
Your names are displayed against the topics you have chosen. Students who have not yet chosen your topic, may do so at the earliest. You can send me an email to rufusonline@gmail.com and confirm your topics. You may also start preparing for your Speech rightaway, by collecting data for the same. 
Criteria on what makes a good speech, will be displayed shortly. 
All the very best!
Regards, 
Rufus, Course Teacher
Topics for Oratory:
1.        Alcohol should be illegal. - ANTONY
2.        Children should provide room and board for their aging parents.
3.        Studying grammar is more important than practising conversation skills.
4.        Television is the leading cause of violence in today's society. - JENILA
5.        Dogs make better companions than cats.
6.        Smoking should be permitted in public places. - JEON
7.        Females are better students than males. - LOGESWARI
8.        Reading English is more difficult than writing English.
9.        Summer is the best season of the year. - SANDHIYA
10.     College students should wear uniforms.
11.     21 should be the legal driving age around the world.
12.     Rock and Roll is the best kind of music.
13.     "Is being happy connected with having a lot of money?" – JEEVAN / CHRISTINA GEORGE
14.     Beauty is only skin deep.
15.     The Olympics are a waste of money.
16.     Does violence in television and movies influence the way children behave?

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Poetry Fest @ MCC

Our Principal, at the release of 'Cornucopia'
The First day of the Prakriti Poetry Reading Fest @ MCC saw eminent poets from across the globe, congregating at the sylvan surroundings of Selaiyur Hall, under the shades of the mighty trees of yore, on Saturday, 10 December 2011. 

French Lebanese poet and essayist of international renown, Salah STÉTIÉ  and Giuseppe CONTE, Italian poet, novelist, and translator who constitute the “Mediterranean Poets” panel, read out from their poems. They, along with Tamil poets Anand KRISHNAN, Kavitha MURALIDHARAN and Sivakami IAS, read out from their works and explored the Mediterranean - south Indian i.e. the South-South parallel.

The Second Poetry Reading on Monday, 12 Dec, saw eminent poet Ranjit Hoskote read out a few of his translations of Lal Ded, a forerunner of Sufism in the Kashmir Valley. He read out from his translation of Lal Ded - a selection of 146 poems from the circulating corpus of Lalla's utterances and rendered them freshly into English. 

An excerpt from his rendition on Lal Ded:

I'm towing my boat across the ocean with a thread.
Will He hear me and help me across?
Or am I seeping away like water from a half-baked cup?
Wander, my poor soul, you're not going home anytime soon.

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Bringing Poetry Closer to You...

Poetry with Prakriti @ MCC

The festival brings together eminent and emerging poets,
featuring readings to small, intimate audiences.
So,
 if there’s a poet in you waiting to come out,
Don’t miss out...!

The Schedule:

@ MCC

On Saturday, 10 December, 10 am – Mediterranean Poet Panel @ SH, MCC
On Monday, 12 December, 1 pm – Noted poet Ranjit Hoskote @ SH, MCC
On Tuesday, 13 December, 11.30 am – Rabindranath Tagore Panel @ SH, MCC
On Friday, 16 December, 11.30 am – Arjun Bali @ SH, MCC

Monday, November 28, 2011

Deborah Parsons on Modernism

The beginning of the twentieth century witnessed an international revolution in the arts, as a wide range of cultural groups, aesthetic movements and individual writers and artists sought to extend and transform their relationship with and representation of reality. 

The word ‘modernism’ represents the retrospective fusion of these very diverse aesthetic experiments into the comprehensive style or social and psychological temper of a ‘modern’ age typically dated between 1910 and 1930. In their now classical guide, Bradbury and McFarlane describe Modernism as ‘an art of a rapidly modernizing world, a world of rapid industrial development, advanced technology, ubrbanisation, secularisation and mass forms of social life’, but also ‘the art of a world from which many traditional certainties had departed, and a certain sort of Victorian confidence not only in the onward progress of mankind but in the very solidity and visibility of reality itself has evaporated’ (Bradbury and McFarlane, 1976:57).

This double condition results in a central contradiction: depending on context and perspective, modernism can be seen as a vigorous creative impulse to ‘make it new’, through a determined break with the stultifying artistic conventions of the immediate past and an embrace of the modern, or as a literature of crisis and dislocation, desperately insisting on the power of art to give shape to a world that has lost all order and stability.

Because modernism connotes a cultural sensibility rather than a particular period in time, however, it is not simply interchangeable with strictly historical references such as ‘the early twentieth century’ or ‘the 1920s’, even though it overlaps with them.

The label ‘high modernism’ refers specifically to the canonical account of Anglo-American literary experimentation  between the world wars, characterised by a turn away from direct modes of representation towards greater abstraction and aesthetic impersonality and self-reflexivity. Such aesthetic formalism is typically identified with the canonical figures of Ezra Pound and T.S.Eliot, as well as Joyce and Woolf.

As a result of the insights of post-structuralist, feminist and post-colonial critics, however, the concept of modernism is now widely recognised to be open to much broader interpretation and redefinition than this reading previously acknowledged. 

Work Cited: Parsons, Deborah. Theorists of the Modernist Novel. New York; Routledge, 2007. Print.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Rhetoric Lesson feed - Reg

Dear Students of II BA English Literature,
Hope you've got your textual notes for your IV Semester Paper on Rhetoric.
In case you haven't, please find it uploaded in a easy-to-download and printable format at the link here:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/80768479/Practical-Elements-of-Rhetoric

Regards and all best wishes,
Rufus
Course teacher

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Oratory Topics..:

Dear Students of II BA English Litt.,
Your topics for Oratory as part of your Paper on Rhetoric, are given below. You may opt for any one from among the options given. Moreover, kindly check back for updates on the Lesson Plan for the Paper.
1.   Alcohol should be made illegal.
2.   Children should provide room and board for their aging parents.
3.   Studying grammar is more important than practising conversation skills.
4.   Television is the leading cause of violence in today's society.
5.   Dogs make better companions than cats.
6.   Smoking should be permitted in public places.
7.   Girls are better students than boys.
8.   Reading English is more difficult than writing English.
9.   Summer is the best season of the year.
10. College students should wear uniforms.
11. 21 should be the legal driving age around the world.