Modern Language Association of America
Approaches to Teaching Lessing's the Golden Notebook
Approaches to Teaching Lessing's the Golden Notebook
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When The Golden Notebook was published in 1962, Irving Howe called it "the most exciting piece of new fiction" produced in the decade. Throughout this complex novel, Doris Lessing invites the reader to contemplate the fragmentation of modern life, to grapple with conflicting elements in order to see the world anew. The novel touches on a variety of themesincluding African history, leftist politics before Stalin's death, trends in psychoanalysis, the effects of war, male-female relations, and madnessand has attracted a wide range of critical and pedagogical approaches. This volume, like others in the MLA's Approaches to Teaching World Literature series, is divided into two parts. The first, "Materials," evaluates the corpus of scholarly and critical material published on the novel and recommends background reading. In the second part, "Approaches," seventeen essays place the novel historically, politically, philosophically, and aestheticallyexamining it in such contexts as Lessing's life, Jungian psychology, modernism and postmodernism, feminism, film theory, and musical formsand discuss the teaching of The Golden Notebook in different times, circumstances, and classrooms.
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