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What is World Literature? - A book by David Damrosch | Review & Explanation
In this video, we explore David Damrosch's book "What is World Literature?" and critically analyze the concept of world literature and its various definitions. Damrosch suggests that world literature is a product of globalization and reflects the modern world's cultural and economic interconnectedness. He highlights the importance of translation in producing and disseminating world literature. He argues that world literature is not a monolithic category but a diverse and complex field encompassing various genres and forms. Ultimately, Damrosch's book emphasizes the importance of critical engagement with world literary texts and the need to recognize the dynamic and fluid nature of the world literary field.
published: 22 Apr 2023
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The birth of world literature
Professor Martin Puchner explores how the concept of World Literature came into being, describing the conversations of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Peter Eckermann.
From our free online course, “Masterpieces of World Literature”:
https://www.edx.org/course/masterpieces-of-world-literature?utm_source=social&utm_medium=partner-marketing&utm_content=youtube-harvardx&utm_campaign=harvardx
— Subscribe to our channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKJyv_uNh3LhYFKmwaB63bA?sub_confirmation=1
— Sign up for emails about new courses: https://harvardx.link/email
— HarvardX courses on edX: https://www.edx.org/school/harvardx
— Harvard University's online courses: https://online-learning.harvard.edu/
HarvardX empowers the faculty of Harvard University to create high-quality online courses in ...
published: 19 Apr 2017
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Introduction to World Literature
Professor April Van Camp and Professor Steven Knapp IRSC
published: 12 Jun 2018
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How Literature Can Change Your Life | Joseph Luzzi | TEDxAlbany
In my talk, I hope to change the way people feel about literature. My aim is to show that literature is not just an elitist collection of “classics, something you are “supposed” to read or have to study in school, but which are difficult, remote, and otherwise disconnected from everyday life. Rather, I will propose that audience members can and should make literature a part of their everyday. I will go ever further and say that, when you are facing extraordinary difficulties and challenges, literature can save your life.
I will base my talk on a personal experience. On November 29, 2007, I left my home in upstate New York at 8:30am to teach a class at Bard College, where I am a professor. Around 10am, as I was settling into my classroom and joking with my students, a security guard showed ...
published: 07 Jan 2020
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Introduction to World Literature
published: 14 Nov 2018
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What is World Literature
published: 11 Dec 2019
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Reading World Literature
Weltliteratur, Translation, Goethe, Euro-centrism
published: 06 May 2019
-
The Great Books of the Western World: Bookshelf Tour
📚 Read the Great Books with Hardcore Literature: https://www.patreon.com/hardcoreliterature/about
————————————
🎙️ https://open.spotify.com/show/70IZA24... (Subscribe to the Hardcore Literature Podcast on iTunes & Spotify)
🏫 https://hardcore-university.teachable... (Hardcore University, Exam Preparation Courses)
✍🏼 https://benjaminmcevoy.com My Personal Website
————————————
Hardcore Literature Lecture Series
————————————
📔Contents Page: https://cutt.ly/CmNhRY3
🎖️ War and Peace: https://cutt.ly/U3nzGma
🎭 Shakespeare Project: https://cutt.ly/B3nxHH7
🐳 Moby Dick: https://cutt.ly/K3nzVKf
☄️ Blood Meridian: https://cutt.ly/P3nz6Qp
🍂 Wuthering Heights: https://cutt.ly/N3nxxYt
🇮🇪 Ulysses: https://cutt.ly/x3nxQmN
🚂 Anna Karenina: https://cutt.ly/vmNhAWv
💀 Crime and Punishment: https://cutt.ly/rmNh...
published: 04 Apr 2022
-
🌱 ⌚dystopian novels #ytshorts
https://youtube.com/shorts/aoq_2xrpB-s?si=hEYsruoaUf-mbJR9
https://youtube.com/shorts/OiaKuBOveV0?si=kky-Exuk9I1fnC7I
dystopian books for 6th graders
dystopian novels 1960s
dystopian novels for 6th graders
6 elements of dystopian fiction
6 dystopian novels
dystopian novel after ford
dystopian novel 1984
dystopian novel by kafkadystopian novel set in the year 2540
dystopian novel specifying example in detail
soma dystopian novel
short dystopian novel
synopsis of recruitment a dystopian novel
scythe dystopian novel
the dystopian novel
the first dystopian novel
the wall dystopian novel
the road dystopian novel
the handmaid's tale as a dystopian novel
the 1985 dystopian novel by margaret atwood
the government in a dystopian novel is typically
the power dystopian novel
pages
dystopian books u...
published: 07 Dec 2024
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What's Literature? The full course.
I spent 4 months working on this video, so if you want you can support me:
► e-Book version here: https://ko-fi.com/s/4e5cd474c8
► Buy me coffee: https://ko-fi.com/fictionbeast
► Join my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fictionbeast
If humans were computers, the hardware is animal and the software? I say stories. Our animal body has seen very little change in the last few thousands years, but our software has changed a bit. With each generation the narrative changes. New stories replace the older ones. So the biggest difference between humans and animals is our ability to tell stories. But also our ability to believe in fictional stories. So our hardware is ape but our software is storytelling.
In this video, I will tell you the story of literature encompassing an incredible 4000 years...
published: 10 May 2023
4:15
What is World Literature? - A book by David Damrosch | Review & Explanation
In this video, we explore David Damrosch's book "What is World Literature?" and critically analyze the concept of world literature and its various definitions. ...
In this video, we explore David Damrosch's book "What is World Literature?" and critically analyze the concept of world literature and its various definitions. Damrosch suggests that world literature is a product of globalization and reflects the modern world's cultural and economic interconnectedness. He highlights the importance of translation in producing and disseminating world literature. He argues that world literature is not a monolithic category but a diverse and complex field encompassing various genres and forms. Ultimately, Damrosch's book emphasizes the importance of critical engagement with world literary texts and the need to recognize the dynamic and fluid nature of the world literary field.
https://wn.com/What_Is_World_Literature_A_Book_By_David_Damrosch_|_Review_Explanation
In this video, we explore David Damrosch's book "What is World Literature?" and critically analyze the concept of world literature and its various definitions. Damrosch suggests that world literature is a product of globalization and reflects the modern world's cultural and economic interconnectedness. He highlights the importance of translation in producing and disseminating world literature. He argues that world literature is not a monolithic category but a diverse and complex field encompassing various genres and forms. Ultimately, Damrosch's book emphasizes the importance of critical engagement with world literary texts and the need to recognize the dynamic and fluid nature of the world literary field.
- published: 22 Apr 2023
- views: 7536
3:37
The birth of world literature
Professor Martin Puchner explores how the concept of World Literature came into being, describing the conversations of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Peter Ecke...
Professor Martin Puchner explores how the concept of World Literature came into being, describing the conversations of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Peter Eckermann.
From our free online course, “Masterpieces of World Literature”:
https://www.edx.org/course/masterpieces-of-world-literature?utm_source=social&utm_medium=partner-marketing&utm_content=youtube-harvardx&utm_campaign=harvardx
— Subscribe to our channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKJyv_uNh3LhYFKmwaB63bA?sub_confirmation=1
— Sign up for emails about new courses: https://harvardx.link/email
— HarvardX courses on edX: https://www.edx.org/school/harvardx
— Harvard University's online courses: https://online-learning.harvard.edu/
HarvardX empowers the faculty of Harvard University to create high-quality online courses in subjects ranging from computer science to history, education, and religion.
https://wn.com/The_Birth_Of_World_Literature
Professor Martin Puchner explores how the concept of World Literature came into being, describing the conversations of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Peter Eckermann.
From our free online course, “Masterpieces of World Literature”:
https://www.edx.org/course/masterpieces-of-world-literature?utm_source=social&utm_medium=partner-marketing&utm_content=youtube-harvardx&utm_campaign=harvardx
— Subscribe to our channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKJyv_uNh3LhYFKmwaB63bA?sub_confirmation=1
— Sign up for emails about new courses: https://harvardx.link/email
— HarvardX courses on edX: https://www.edx.org/school/harvardx
— Harvard University's online courses: https://online-learning.harvard.edu/
HarvardX empowers the faculty of Harvard University to create high-quality online courses in subjects ranging from computer science to history, education, and religion.
- published: 19 Apr 2017
- views: 30811
12:31
Introduction to World Literature
Professor April Van Camp and Professor Steven Knapp IRSC
Professor April Van Camp and Professor Steven Knapp IRSC
https://wn.com/Introduction_To_World_Literature
Professor April Van Camp and Professor Steven Knapp IRSC
- published: 12 Jun 2018
- views: 29395
19:13
How Literature Can Change Your Life | Joseph Luzzi | TEDxAlbany
In my talk, I hope to change the way people feel about literature. My aim is to show that literature is not just an elitist collection of “classics, something y...
In my talk, I hope to change the way people feel about literature. My aim is to show that literature is not just an elitist collection of “classics, something you are “supposed” to read or have to study in school, but which are difficult, remote, and otherwise disconnected from everyday life. Rather, I will propose that audience members can and should make literature a part of their everyday. I will go ever further and say that, when you are facing extraordinary difficulties and challenges, literature can save your life.
I will base my talk on a personal experience. On November 29, 2007, I left my home in upstate New York at 8:30am to teach a class at Bard College, where I am a professor. Around 10am, as I was settling into my classroom and joking with my students, a security guard showed up at the door and asked, “Are you Professor Luzzi?” The smile disappeared from my face, as I sensed something had gone horribly wrong; that intuition was confirmed when I saw a dean and vice president of the college come tearing up the stairs to fetch me and deliver the news: my wife, Katherine, had had a terrible car accident. I raced to the hospital, but it was too late: Katherine died that morning. She was 8 1/2 months pregnant. Forty-five minutes before her death, our daughter Isabel was miraculously delivered by emergency cesarian. I had left the house at 8:30am; by noon, I was both a widower and a father.
At noon, I had also entered what the poet Dante called “the dark wood,” that universal space of suffering that unfortunately all of us, at one point in our lives, must enter. For my TEDx Albany talk, I would like to speak of how literature in general, and Dante’s poetry in particular, helped save my life during the years of grief and mourning that followed Katherine’s death. Joseph Luzzi (PhD, Yale) is Professor of Comparative Literature at Bard College. His books include “My Two Italies,” a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice, and “In a Dark Wood: What Dante Taught Me About Grief, Healing, and the Mysteries of Love,” which has been translated into Italian, German, and Korean. Luzzi is a frequent contributor to publications including the New York Times, Chronicle of Higher Education, Times Literary Supplement, and American Scholar. His work has also appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Review of Books, Bookforum, and Times of London.
Dr. Luzzi is the founder of DeepRead, which offers a radically new approach to leadership and business education by basing its teaching and “test cases” on the great ideas of literature, history, and philosophy. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
https://wn.com/How_Literature_Can_Change_Your_Life_|_Joseph_Luzzi_|_Tedxalbany
In my talk, I hope to change the way people feel about literature. My aim is to show that literature is not just an elitist collection of “classics, something you are “supposed” to read or have to study in school, but which are difficult, remote, and otherwise disconnected from everyday life. Rather, I will propose that audience members can and should make literature a part of their everyday. I will go ever further and say that, when you are facing extraordinary difficulties and challenges, literature can save your life.
I will base my talk on a personal experience. On November 29, 2007, I left my home in upstate New York at 8:30am to teach a class at Bard College, where I am a professor. Around 10am, as I was settling into my classroom and joking with my students, a security guard showed up at the door and asked, “Are you Professor Luzzi?” The smile disappeared from my face, as I sensed something had gone horribly wrong; that intuition was confirmed when I saw a dean and vice president of the college come tearing up the stairs to fetch me and deliver the news: my wife, Katherine, had had a terrible car accident. I raced to the hospital, but it was too late: Katherine died that morning. She was 8 1/2 months pregnant. Forty-five minutes before her death, our daughter Isabel was miraculously delivered by emergency cesarian. I had left the house at 8:30am; by noon, I was both a widower and a father.
At noon, I had also entered what the poet Dante called “the dark wood,” that universal space of suffering that unfortunately all of us, at one point in our lives, must enter. For my TEDx Albany talk, I would like to speak of how literature in general, and Dante’s poetry in particular, helped save my life during the years of grief and mourning that followed Katherine’s death. Joseph Luzzi (PhD, Yale) is Professor of Comparative Literature at Bard College. His books include “My Two Italies,” a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice, and “In a Dark Wood: What Dante Taught Me About Grief, Healing, and the Mysteries of Love,” which has been translated into Italian, German, and Korean. Luzzi is a frequent contributor to publications including the New York Times, Chronicle of Higher Education, Times Literary Supplement, and American Scholar. His work has also appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Review of Books, Bookforum, and Times of London.
Dr. Luzzi is the founder of DeepRead, which offers a radically new approach to leadership and business education by basing its teaching and “test cases” on the great ideas of literature, history, and philosophy. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
- published: 07 Jan 2020
- views: 203633
32:28
Reading World Literature
Weltliteratur, Translation, Goethe, Euro-centrism
Weltliteratur, Translation, Goethe, Euro-centrism
https://wn.com/Reading_World_Literature
Weltliteratur, Translation, Goethe, Euro-centrism
- published: 06 May 2019
- views: 21338
17:17
The Great Books of the Western World: Bookshelf Tour
📚 Read the Great Books with Hardcore Literature: https://www.patreon.com/hardcoreliterature/about
————————————
🎙️ https://open.spotify.com/show/70IZA24... (Subs...
📚 Read the Great Books with Hardcore Literature: https://www.patreon.com/hardcoreliterature/about
————————————
🎙️ https://open.spotify.com/show/70IZA24... (Subscribe to the Hardcore Literature Podcast on iTunes & Spotify)
🏫 https://hardcore-university.teachable... (Hardcore University, Exam Preparation Courses)
✍🏼 https://benjaminmcevoy.com My Personal Website
————————————
Hardcore Literature Lecture Series
————————————
📔Contents Page: https://cutt.ly/CmNhRY3
🎖️ War and Peace: https://cutt.ly/U3nzGma
🎭 Shakespeare Project: https://cutt.ly/B3nxHH7
🐳 Moby Dick: https://cutt.ly/K3nzVKf
☄️ Blood Meridian: https://cutt.ly/P3nz6Qp
🍂 Wuthering Heights: https://cutt.ly/N3nxxYt
🇮🇪 Ulysses: https://cutt.ly/x3nxQmN
🚂 Anna Karenina: https://cutt.ly/vmNhAWv
💀 Crime and Punishment: https://cutt.ly/rmNhFt5
⚓ Persuasion: https://cutt.ly/amNhX7b
☕ In Search of Lost Time: https://cutt.ly/5mNh8oD
⚔️ The Hero’s Journey: https://cutt.ly/UmNjrE3
🌸 Siddharta: https://cutt.ly/YmNjuzi
🎠 Don Quixote: https://cutt.ly/cmNjoK4
❤️Shakespeare’s Sonnets: https://cutt.ly/nmNlW7V
🇫🇷 Les Misérables: https://cutt.ly/J3YixoA
🕯️ The Turn of the Screw: https://cutt.ly/nToAQQ3
🖋️ Dickens Seasonal Read: https://cutt.ly/9ToAybt
📖 Middlemarch Serial Reading: https://tinyurl.com/45rv965c
————————————
0:00 the Great Books of the Western World
0:30 Mortimer Adler’s How to Read a Book
1:10 recommendation for sourcing a set
2:00 the value of a deep-reading program
4:00 the great conversation
5:00 the areas I’m excited to explore
6:30 showing you the colour-coded set
7:15 Melville’s Moby Dick
8:00 Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Shakespeare
8:40
Aristotle, Gibbon, Aquinas
9:00 Cervantes’ Don Quixote
9:20 Milton, Pascal, Darwin, Homer
10:00 the translators of the set
10:30 Aeschylus’ Prometheus Bound
11:00 how to read the great books
12:20 speed-reading vs slow-reading
13:20 taking a long-term approach
14:00 the benefit of a curated program
14:30 the works of science I’m reading
15:20 the illustrations in Darwin
15:30 who made it into the great books?
16:00 my scriptural reading approach
https://wn.com/The_Great_Books_Of_The_Western_World_Bookshelf_Tour
📚 Read the Great Books with Hardcore Literature: https://www.patreon.com/hardcoreliterature/about
————————————
🎙️ https://open.spotify.com/show/70IZA24... (Subscribe to the Hardcore Literature Podcast on iTunes & Spotify)
🏫 https://hardcore-university.teachable... (Hardcore University, Exam Preparation Courses)
✍🏼 https://benjaminmcevoy.com My Personal Website
————————————
Hardcore Literature Lecture Series
————————————
📔Contents Page: https://cutt.ly/CmNhRY3
🎖️ War and Peace: https://cutt.ly/U3nzGma
🎭 Shakespeare Project: https://cutt.ly/B3nxHH7
🐳 Moby Dick: https://cutt.ly/K3nzVKf
☄️ Blood Meridian: https://cutt.ly/P3nz6Qp
🍂 Wuthering Heights: https://cutt.ly/N3nxxYt
🇮🇪 Ulysses: https://cutt.ly/x3nxQmN
🚂 Anna Karenina: https://cutt.ly/vmNhAWv
💀 Crime and Punishment: https://cutt.ly/rmNhFt5
⚓ Persuasion: https://cutt.ly/amNhX7b
☕ In Search of Lost Time: https://cutt.ly/5mNh8oD
⚔️ The Hero’s Journey: https://cutt.ly/UmNjrE3
🌸 Siddharta: https://cutt.ly/YmNjuzi
🎠 Don Quixote: https://cutt.ly/cmNjoK4
❤️Shakespeare’s Sonnets: https://cutt.ly/nmNlW7V
🇫🇷 Les Misérables: https://cutt.ly/J3YixoA
🕯️ The Turn of the Screw: https://cutt.ly/nToAQQ3
🖋️ Dickens Seasonal Read: https://cutt.ly/9ToAybt
📖 Middlemarch Serial Reading: https://tinyurl.com/45rv965c
————————————
0:00 the Great Books of the Western World
0:30 Mortimer Adler’s How to Read a Book
1:10 recommendation for sourcing a set
2:00 the value of a deep-reading program
4:00 the great conversation
5:00 the areas I’m excited to explore
6:30 showing you the colour-coded set
7:15 Melville’s Moby Dick
8:00 Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Shakespeare
8:40
Aristotle, Gibbon, Aquinas
9:00 Cervantes’ Don Quixote
9:20 Milton, Pascal, Darwin, Homer
10:00 the translators of the set
10:30 Aeschylus’ Prometheus Bound
11:00 how to read the great books
12:20 speed-reading vs slow-reading
13:20 taking a long-term approach
14:00 the benefit of a curated program
14:30 the works of science I’m reading
15:20 the illustrations in Darwin
15:30 who made it into the great books?
16:00 my scriptural reading approach
- published: 04 Apr 2022
- views: 62883
0:18
🌱 ⌚dystopian novels #ytshorts
https://youtube.com/shorts/aoq_2xrpB-s?si=hEYsruoaUf-mbJR9
https://youtube.com/shorts/OiaKuBOveV0?si=kky-Exuk9I1fnC7I
dystopian books for 6th graders
dystopian ...
https://youtube.com/shorts/aoq_2xrpB-s?si=hEYsruoaUf-mbJR9
https://youtube.com/shorts/OiaKuBOveV0?si=kky-Exuk9I1fnC7I
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dystopian books for 6th graders
dystopian novels 1960s
dystopian novels for 6th graders
6 elements of dystopian fiction
6 dystopian novels
dystopian novel after ford
dystopian novel 1984
dystopian novel by kafkadystopian novel set in the year 2540
dystopian novel specifying example in detail
soma dystopian novel
short dystopian novel
synopsis of recruitment a dystopian novel
scythe dystopian novel
the dystopian novel
the first dystopian novel
the wall dystopian novel
the road dystopian novel
the handmaid's tale as a dystopian novel
the 1985 dystopian novel by margaret atwood
the government in a dystopian novel is typically
the power dystopian novel
pages
dystopian books under 200 pages
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uglies dystopian novel
unwind dystopian novel
ugly dystopian novel
utopian and dystopian novel
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us dystopian novel
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which novel offers a dystopian view of a totalitarian regime
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- published: 07 Dec 2024
- views: 21
4:01:40
What's Literature? The full course.
I spent 4 months working on this video, so if you want you can support me:
► e-Book version here: https://ko-fi.com/s/4e5cd474c8
► Buy me coffee: https://ko-fi....
I spent 4 months working on this video, so if you want you can support me:
► e-Book version here: https://ko-fi.com/s/4e5cd474c8
► Buy me coffee: https://ko-fi.com/fictionbeast
► Join my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fictionbeast
If humans were computers, the hardware is animal and the software? I say stories. Our animal body has seen very little change in the last few thousands years, but our software has changed a bit. With each generation the narrative changes. New stories replace the older ones. So the biggest difference between humans and animals is our ability to tell stories. But also our ability to believe in fictional stories. So our hardware is ape but our software is storytelling.
In this video, I will tell you the story of literature encompassing an incredible 4000 years of storytelling history. By the end of this video, you will know all the great works of literature, literary movements, as well as some of the most literary minds from around the world. The video has 3 major parts and 11 sections.
In part 1, I will answer the most fundamental question. Why are humans the only species who tells stories? What functions do stories have in our evolution? I will also highlight some important events in history that shaped the way we tell stories, and the literary movements of the last 4,000 years.
In part 2, I will look at the origin of storytelling and how it is rooted in nature. The most fundamental event in a human life is death or the awareness of it. So in this part, I will discuss storytelling in four segments each on the topic of death, wars, sex and laughter. In other words, humans woke up to the realisation of death, so the first stories are stories of mortality and immortality. Then we humans moved to wars and wrote epics that lamented the demise of an empire or celebrated their triumphs. Since the victors got the spoils and we moved to tell stories of sex and mating, romance became an important topic of storytelling. In other words, how boys meet girls. With sex came laughter, so storytelling entertained us through comedy.
In part 3, we move away from nature-inflicted tales towards human-centred stories, as in when storytelling meets rationality and humanism. So instead of gods and nature, we humans became in charge of our own destiny. The age of reason also resulted in a counter-enlightenment movement of romanticism which took us back to nature. Then came realism, in which ordinary people became the heroes of stories, not some king or general. Then we moved to naturalism in which evolutionary biology became the window through which stories are told. This was followed by modernism in which we told stories through psychology. And finally magical realism which took us back to the early humans when gods and demons interfered with our stories.
In part 4, we again move away from humanism into what’s termed as post-humanism. Here the whole idea of truth telling is questioned. If humanism tried to clarify and solidify things that humans are the only gods on earth, posthumanism, and postmodernism partly fuelled by quantum physics, muddied the water so we no longer know what’s going on, despite our scientific and technological advancement, or in some cases because of that.
In this video, the real hero is not a human or demon or a beast, but the real hero is literature or storytelling itself. Human mortality gave birth to storytelling. Conflicts gave it its fuel and energy. Sex added flavour. Laughter made it reflective. Then came reason to dominate storytelling, through physical reality, biological truths, psychological depth, and finally quantum magical thinking. And today literature seems a bit muddled as it has questioned truth-telling. You could say literature is suffering from old-age Alzheimer. So the question is can literature and storytelling survive robots?
WHERE TO FIND ME:
► Website: https://fictionbeast.com
►Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fictionbeastofficial/
►Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@fictionbeast?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc
► E-mail: fictionbeastofficial {at} gmail.com
► Audio Podcast: https://redcircle.com/shows/c101a9a1-0e79-4515-bdb8-935f669f8c05
Timestamp
00:00 Introduction
04:15 Why Literature?
27:54 Tales for Immortality
45:14 Tales of Wars
01:04:47 Tales of Mating
01:23:24 Tales of Laughter
01:43:11 Storytelling meets rationality
02:06:27 Back to nature
02:23:43 Storytelling meets reality
02:39:52 Storytelling meets Biology
02:55:57 Storytelling meets Psychology
03:13:22 Storytelling meets Quantum Physics
03:34:00 Storytelling meets Postmodernism
03:52:12 Future of Storytelling
#fictionbeast
#literature
#storytelling
https://wn.com/What's_Literature_The_Full_Course.
I spent 4 months working on this video, so if you want you can support me:
► e-Book version here: https://ko-fi.com/s/4e5cd474c8
► Buy me coffee: https://ko-fi.com/fictionbeast
► Join my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fictionbeast
If humans were computers, the hardware is animal and the software? I say stories. Our animal body has seen very little change in the last few thousands years, but our software has changed a bit. With each generation the narrative changes. New stories replace the older ones. So the biggest difference between humans and animals is our ability to tell stories. But also our ability to believe in fictional stories. So our hardware is ape but our software is storytelling.
In this video, I will tell you the story of literature encompassing an incredible 4000 years of storytelling history. By the end of this video, you will know all the great works of literature, literary movements, as well as some of the most literary minds from around the world. The video has 3 major parts and 11 sections.
In part 1, I will answer the most fundamental question. Why are humans the only species who tells stories? What functions do stories have in our evolution? I will also highlight some important events in history that shaped the way we tell stories, and the literary movements of the last 4,000 years.
In part 2, I will look at the origin of storytelling and how it is rooted in nature. The most fundamental event in a human life is death or the awareness of it. So in this part, I will discuss storytelling in four segments each on the topic of death, wars, sex and laughter. In other words, humans woke up to the realisation of death, so the first stories are stories of mortality and immortality. Then we humans moved to wars and wrote epics that lamented the demise of an empire or celebrated their triumphs. Since the victors got the spoils and we moved to tell stories of sex and mating, romance became an important topic of storytelling. In other words, how boys meet girls. With sex came laughter, so storytelling entertained us through comedy.
In part 3, we move away from nature-inflicted tales towards human-centred stories, as in when storytelling meets rationality and humanism. So instead of gods and nature, we humans became in charge of our own destiny. The age of reason also resulted in a counter-enlightenment movement of romanticism which took us back to nature. Then came realism, in which ordinary people became the heroes of stories, not some king or general. Then we moved to naturalism in which evolutionary biology became the window through which stories are told. This was followed by modernism in which we told stories through psychology. And finally magical realism which took us back to the early humans when gods and demons interfered with our stories.
In part 4, we again move away from humanism into what’s termed as post-humanism. Here the whole idea of truth telling is questioned. If humanism tried to clarify and solidify things that humans are the only gods on earth, posthumanism, and postmodernism partly fuelled by quantum physics, muddied the water so we no longer know what’s going on, despite our scientific and technological advancement, or in some cases because of that.
In this video, the real hero is not a human or demon or a beast, but the real hero is literature or storytelling itself. Human mortality gave birth to storytelling. Conflicts gave it its fuel and energy. Sex added flavour. Laughter made it reflective. Then came reason to dominate storytelling, through physical reality, biological truths, psychological depth, and finally quantum magical thinking. And today literature seems a bit muddled as it has questioned truth-telling. You could say literature is suffering from old-age Alzheimer. So the question is can literature and storytelling survive robots?
WHERE TO FIND ME:
► Website: https://fictionbeast.com
►Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fictionbeastofficial/
►Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@fictionbeast?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc
► E-mail: fictionbeastofficial {at} gmail.com
► Audio Podcast: https://redcircle.com/shows/c101a9a1-0e79-4515-bdb8-935f669f8c05
Timestamp
00:00 Introduction
04:15 Why Literature?
27:54 Tales for Immortality
45:14 Tales of Wars
01:04:47 Tales of Mating
01:23:24 Tales of Laughter
01:43:11 Storytelling meets rationality
02:06:27 Back to nature
02:23:43 Storytelling meets reality
02:39:52 Storytelling meets Biology
02:55:57 Storytelling meets Psychology
03:13:22 Storytelling meets Quantum Physics
03:34:00 Storytelling meets Postmodernism
03:52:12 Future of Storytelling
#fictionbeast
#literature
#storytelling
- published: 10 May 2023
- views: 621062