Friday 28 September 2012

The Elephant in the Classroom

"How can we deconstruct the singular vision that is represented by one story? And how can we extrapolate from that single tile of vision to the mosaic of other human experiences and perspectives?"

-Deborah Appleman, Critical Encounters in High School English, 21

These questions clearly articulate the central task of critical reading. It is a two twofold task: First, critical reading requires the reader to take off her own glasses, to deconstruct the singular lens through which she views the text. Second, critical reading is a process of moving from this limited vision to postulate the perspectives of others in order to better understand the human experience.

However, Appleman's description stops short of what it looks like to "deconstruct the singular vision." What happens afterward? Does the reader arrive at an understanding of the true ideas behind the text? If so, then critical reading is like the old story of the blind monks and the elephant. Each one feels a different part of the elephant and comes to a conclusion about what the object is, a spear (the tusk), a pillar (the leg), a brush (the tail), yet each perspective falls short of truly identifying the thing itself. Everyone else knows that the monks are touching an elephant, but blindness makes the monks' perspectives very limiting. If an authoritative meaning does exist, if there is an elephant in the room, then any other lens is invalidated and a philosophical deconstruction of the text, including a careful consideration of each more limited perspective, becomes the lone pathway to the truth. 

On the other hand, maybe reading literature critically is more like chemistry than it is like feeling elephants. Maybe each perspective mingles with the text to make something entirely new. If this is the case, then literature is meant to teach us more about each other than it is meant to acquaint us with universal meaning.

In either case, an openness and awareness of other people's views is essential to reading, and I am glad for the chance to discover a means of teaching these concepts to adolescents  through Appleman's book.

Itcho Hanabusa - Blind Monks Examining an Elephant

"O how they cling and wrangle, some who claim
For preacher and monk the honoured name!
For, quarrelling, each to his view they cling.
Such folk see only one side of a thing."

                                           -Siddhartha Gautama