These are the new prompts for Tuesday/Wednesday. See just below for some words on the oral presentation, and just below that if you are B-day and want the prompts that are due Monday for you.
Journal Entry 6
Part VI
1. Define kitsch in three ways as derived from Kundera’s novel. Are you a fan of kitsch, or do you aspire to something else in your life?
2. What is kitschy about Franz’s burial? About Tomas’s burial?
3. Franz, the western intellectual, has left his wife and daughter, found a true love in his student with big glasses, and gone on a political quest because of his image of Sabina’s regard. Has Tomas, the Czech doctor, done the same thing? What are the key similarities between Franz and Tomas? What is the most important difference?
4. What is Franz’s conception of the Grand March? How do you think Sabina would regard it?
5. What do rumblings in the stomach, the body, communism, marches, hidden sewers, and kitsch have to do with each other?
6. Is “United We Stand,” like “the barbarity of communism” and “our traditional values” and “President Carter” or “President Bush,” an example of American kitsch? How would Kundera place this phrase in his system of unusual dichotomies?
7. One of Kundera’s methods is to take opposing poles of existence, like lightness and weight, and toy with that oppositional relation. One way he toys with oppositions is to suggest alternative oppositions. We tend to think of two primary poles of good and evil, of God and the devil. Kundera reformulates this opposition into the sacred and the scatological. First, explain the effect of this reformulation on your understanding; then do it yourself: reformulate an accepted opposition into a new one. For instance, a common dichotomy is love and hate, but I might, based on a different understanding of the primacy of love, reformulate the opposition into love and apathy. Do it yourself with a commonly assumed set of opposites and consider the difference it makes in your understanding of one of the terms.
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