Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Small Things

A few little things that I'm happy about right now...

- the free tickets I got from work for a Fringe play & the fact that Fringe Fest is coming up soon and I should have the money to see a bunch of plays

- getting to talk about the Bible and debate the gospels this week in class (I might even bring my JW Bible in tomorrow)

- Elliot's post about his awesome Folk Fest experiences (I wasn't there myself but its nice to share happiness)

- Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix comes out today (in which Helena Bonham Carter plays Bellatrix Lestrange)

- I've started watching the Godfather movies for the first time ever and so far they're amazing

- I have an overabundance of good books to read (The Man Who Was Thursday; Tender is the Night; The Other Boleyn Girl; I, Claudius)

- tomorrow is my registration day at the UofW and I might sign up for an English class called Fairytales and Culture and possibly another called Art & Ideas

- the"High A" I received on the season-myth/story/research paper that I wrote for my Religious Studies class

I think that last one is the most satisfying for me. For the assignment, we had to write our own myth story on how the seasons came to be. We had to show a "why" for the seasons and we had to back-up our mythology with scholarly, researched footnotes. I didn't have that much trouble coming up with the story but after I'd written it I started to wonder whether I'd really followed the assignment well enough or if I'd gone off on a different track. Plus, I stupidly left the writing of my footnotes until the last minute and then ran out of time to add in all of the great stuff that I'd wanted to say/reference.

Then to make things worse, our prof prefaced the passing out of the papers with this long spiel about how they had found three papers that had been plagiarized and would the people with special notes on their papers please come up and see him after class.

Of course, I hadn't plagiarized anything. But one of my paranoid fears when I write something fictitious is that I'm unintentionally going to rip off something that's been thought of or written already. So when he said that, I started to panic and mentally ran through all of the stuff in my story trying to think of whether I might have subconsciously grabbed ideas from a real myth or from something I'd read. (Gene Wolfe's The Knight was probably my main inspiration in that I went with a medieval-esque setting, but I don't think anyone would ever think my writing was anything like his.)

Anyhow, finally my name was called and I went up and looked at my paper and saw the High A (a.k.a. A+ - I don't know why, but in this class they call the grades 'low' or 'high'). I think I probably had an appalled expression on my face that was actually just shock/disbelief/relief.

Another bonus to this grade is now that now I'm not going to bother doing the make-up assignment (I missed two of the "pop quizzes") - my grade is so high right now that if I do well on the final exam I should pass with at least a B+/A-. Yay!


P.S. Sometimes when I contemplate the idea of me teaching junior or high school I find myself wondering whether someone like me will ever be able to relate to kids who don't care what kind of marks they get... *sigh*

5 comments:

Clemens said...

Congrats on the paper! And about the footnotes ... that's my biggest problem. I write a great paper, and then have to go back and try to figure out where I actually got that info and what page it was on.

I am trying to add the footnotes now to a paper I read in May and now want to get published. So if a bad example is the best example ... take me for instance.

Ian said...

The first Godfather is one of my favorite movies ever. It has been scientifically proven to be 8.5 trillion times better than the book (which I'd regret reading if it didn't leave me with so much more respect for Coppola's achievement with The Godfather).

If you want to be a completist nerd (and why not, I ask you?) I think movie village has The Godfather Saga on VHS. That's the first two movies edited together chronologically. I've never seen it. Pretty sad for a completist nerd, huh? — and I haven't even seen Godfather 3 yet.

Elliot said...

And why not, indeed!

Don't bother watching Godfather 3. Sofia Coppola appears and ruins it.

I'm glad you have lots of good books to read!

And I think you'll find redaction criticism, after a certain point, can be like debating how many angels can fit on the head of a pin. We just don't have enough information to make some of those judgements, but that hasn't stopped scholars from making a living doing it.

Anactoria said...

Thanks, Clemens! :)

"I write a great paper, and then have to go back and try to figure out where I actually got that info and what page it was on. "

See, I have a system for that! :)

As I read the article, I highlight potential quotes that I want to use. And then as I add my footnotes I also add the author and the page number - it makes it much easier then going back afterwards and figuring out where I got the quote from.

(Actually, sometimes I obsessively type up ALL OF MY *POTENTIAL* QUOTES so that I have pages and pages of them and then I pick and choose from there which ones I want to actually use in my paper. The nice thing about that is then I have all of my quotes in Word and can search within them by keywords for what I'm looking for. But it takes hours and is probably a real waste of time.)

Anactoria said...

"The first Godfather is one of my favorite movies ever. It has been scientifically proven to be 8.5 trillion times better than the book (which I'd regret reading if it didn't leave me with so much more respect for Coppola's achievement with The Godfather)."

I believe you - I can see how the book might be kinda cheesy to read. But the movie makes everything seem so intense and dramatic! :)

"If you want to be a completist nerd (and why not, I ask you?) I think movie village has The Godfather Saga on VHS. That's the first two movies edited together chronologically. I've never seen it. Pretty sad for a completist nerd, huh? — and I haven't even seen Godfather 3 yet."

That's funny! We were just watching the 1st one with our Italian friend (which was very convenient because our *cough* downloaded version is missing the Italian subtitles so he did the translations for us) and he was saying how he thinks the 2nd Godfather movie should have come first because it has all of these flashbacks to stuff that occurs before the 1st one. I'll have to tell him that his dream has come true! :)