Experimental Teaching, Experimental Learning

losttime

Parts of this post come from my introduction to Eva-Lynn Jagoe’s plenary lecture – The Linda Hutcheon and J. Edward Chamberlin Lecture in Literary Theory – at the annual conference at the Centre for Comparative Literature.

I recently had the great pleasure of studying and learning in an experimental setting.  The goal of the course – Proust and Modernity – was to read Proust in relation to Modernity alongside various theoretical texts.  The theory texts consisted of the usual suspects: Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Fredric Jameson, Jacques Lacan, Kaja Silverman, Julia Kristeva, Malcolm Bowie, and Carol Mavor. The course itself consisted of response papers, presentations, and a term paper.  Nothing, so far, out of the ordinary.  Well, let me introduce the first oddity: only one of the students had read Proust previously, and the professor like the rest of the students was reading Proust for the first time.  We ultimately, toward the end of the class, called this “virginal reading.”

Most readers of this blog will likely have never encountered Eva-Lynn Jagoe, the author (currently at work on “the long novel”) or the professor, so let me briefly indulge here in giving some account of her as instructor.  In the classroom, Professor Jagoe’s central goal is always to test ideas and question students and their ideas.  Her classroom is a laboratory for readers.  The first thing to know is that Eva-Lynn often seeks to break down the institutional walls of the structure: we ultimately tossed the syllabus.  In its place, each student agreed to offer commentary, work through Proust, and decide with Professor Jagoe (I’m oscillating between the professorial and the personal precisely because blurring of lines is so important, and to show that students ultimately did recognise there was a professor in the room) how we would be evaluated – but evaluation, as a university requirement, takes on a new role in her classroom.  Throughout the course on Proust, we experimented with a new pedagogy and a new classroom experience (or, perhaps, just new to me, but something felt novel).  The classroom always has food, always has drinks, always had laughter: these were the requirements.  Additionally, we were to read and discuss the novel from personal, subjective, and confessional starting points – which, naturally, makes Proust the near perfect subject of study. It is in this space that we, students and professor, began to experiment with modes of teaching, modes of learning, modes of reading.

Initially, we had set upon reading a series of theorists in addition to Proust and we had agreed to follow Roger Shattuck’s plan of study for reading Proust. However, as we began to read, we realised that something was not working; we were not able to do what we had wanted to do, which was read Proust’s In Search of Lost Time.  Thus, the critical readings became optional and then later they became obsolete.  In addition to tossing the theory, we added an extra hour to our Friday sessions.  One of our meetings lasted over five hours, we left around 6 pm on a Friday, we began at 1, and the discussion continued over email.  In the classroom, Professor Jagoe managed to create something of a utopian space in which Proust was read, discussed, and in many ways dreamed into the living.  In these moments, Proust became real, or we became Proustian and from here the text was no longer studied in and of itself, but in relation to the greater problem of the imagination.  Proust, of course, will teach this very lesson in the last volume of the novel, he writes: “In reality, every reader is, while he is reading, the reader of his own self.  The writer’s work is merely a kind of optical instrument which he offers to the reader to enable him to discern what, without his book, he would perhaps never have expressed himself.  And the recognition by the reader in his own self of what the book says is a proof of its veracity.”

Of course, as many readers of this blog will have, perhaps joyfully realised, the academic year has come to a close.  But for those of us in the Proust class, it felt like one of the most violent endings to a course and an academic year – we have not completed our work on Proust.  It felt violent, despite the class dinner and party held at Professor Jagoe’s home.  The meal was a meal that Proust would have approved of, over-the-top, decadent, and most importantly, indulgent.  Something was not fair about this situation: the end of a magnificent class.

Thus, in the spirit of experimental learning and experimental teaching, we took it upon ourselves to decide how we could complete this project.  Those of us who wanted to continue were invited to a meeting at the Centre to decide how we could complete this project.  We tossed many ideas around trying to see if we should read other pieces of fiction or if we should return to theory or should we just re-read Proust.  To these ends, we have decided to continue reading Proust – finish parts we didn’t read, re-read parts we felt we haven’t fully understood – and we will now also read theory.  Additionally, thanks to technology, we have also opened a blog where we are tracking our ideas each time we read Proust.  In essence, a course has turned into a research group that works through the challenges of reading Proust while recognising the limits of the classroom experience.  For the summer, each person has also been assigned a theorist who they will read through carefully and bring to class for our continued discussions – we meet three times over the summer.  Each person has a theorist to read: Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Fredric Jameson, Gilles Deleuze, Julia Kristeva, Walter Benjamin, Carol Mavor, and Kaja Silverman.  Of course, in addition to this, we are not suppressing our own theoretical trainings, in my own case: Northrop Frye; other people will bring in their own theorists: Marx, Hegel, Althusser, Freud, Lacan, Derrida, Barthes, Irigaray, etc.

When we meet in August – our final meeting (well, who knows if it will really be the final meeting) – we will present completed work to one another that draws upon our readings of Proust; the challenges we have addressed and hopefully overcome; and where we intend to go with Proust.  It seems to me that this experience of reading Proust taught me a great deal about not only Proust, but also, about teaching and learning – a skill that will seem all the more important as I enter the last year of the PhD and thus the first year of the job search.

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One thought on “Experimental Teaching, Experimental Learning

  1. Ramiro Armas

    I really wish I had taken this course. It sounds great! I hope I will take it next time and engage in a theoretical face-off with Deleuze and Proust.

    Reply

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