Week 1 Who is Ross

Hello all,

I’m Ross obviously a second year English Lit student from the frozen wasteland that is Edmonton. I would consider myself a fairly well read person but I have not really expanded my horizons from traditional American/English literature and am I’m really excited to do so. As far as personal readings go I’m a huge Ursula K Le Guin fan and love most if not all fantasy.

As far as my expectations go I am very excited to work within a discipline that has very few boundaries. Although the so called romance world is such a broad geographical category I would say that one thing it is not is centered around North American cultural and literary norms. I am really excited to explore the differing cultures of the romance world and see these differences highlighted in the texts. With other literary studies that I have done the worst part to me is being constrained to a certain genre or location for the texts. Even though obviously Romance literature is a category it is fluid and I am excited to learn about its commonality and just how diverse the prose really is.

In response to the lecture and these so called mongrel fields I believe the most important starting point is a discussion of our ideas of categorization. Are all categories and our attempts to divide expression, specifically within this instance literary expression, inherently arbitrary? How can we effectively divided context from theĀ  unnecessary stratification of our world? Honestly I am not entirely sure, with the Romance world’s unifying characteristic being their languages evolved from a common empire who’s heyday was almost 2000 years ago, the scoreboard is showing Arbitrariness 1, Categorization 0. Yet I have not read any of the texts so to continue the previous metaphor were still in the first quarter got a lot of game left to see if this whole Romance world thing isn’t just some made up hoopla.

3 thoughts on “Week 1 Who is Ross

  1. Hi, Ross fellow Albertan here! Like you, I am also looking forward to learning more about the Romance world and I find its diversity intriguing. After listening to this week’s lecture it made me think about the fairness of categorizing the worlds together just because they all evolved from a common language. It almost seems too broad of an assumption to make but I’m looking forward to finding some commonality in the texts. What’s your favourite Ursula K Le Guin novel? My brother just read The Left Hand of Darkness over the summer!

  2. Hello Ross, great post! I connected to your observation about the Romance World having a lack of boundaries. There is something intriguing about stories that are told outside the North American perspective. Especially as a fellow Canadian, I’m looking forward to exploring new literary techniques and perspectives which vary depending on the location; I agree that it is a very diverse genre.

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