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Today's Nobel Prize Odds Update + The Coolest Class Ever

So, following on yesterday’s post on the forthcoming announcement of the Nobel Prize in Literature (supposed to happen on Thursday) and the current odds at Ladbrokes, I just want to point out that the big mover today is Bob Dylan, who shot up from 50/1 to 10/1. Interesting . . .

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More interesting though is which Three Percent fan and University of Alabama employee Richard LeComte brought to my attention yesterday:

Students in English 411, Dr. Emily O. Wittman鈥檚 Advanced Studies in Comparative and Multicultural Literature class, don鈥檛 just sit and read. They judge.

Wittman has arranged her class of about 20 University of Alabama undergrads as a prize committee, mimicking the panels that select the Nobel, Booker or Pulitzer prizes in literature each year. Her class will pick the winner of the coveted Druid City Brick Award from among some of the great contemporary authors of world literature. In the process, the students will experience life as an awards judge and critic.

鈥淚 wanted to do something that would allow the students to understand the problems and the stakes of world literature as a contested field,鈥 said Wittman, assistant professor of English at UA. 鈥淗ow do we describe what鈥檚 great?鈥 [. . ]

鈥淲e talk about translation,鈥 Wittman said. 鈥淲e talk about gender. We talk about how politics figure into the awards.That doesn鈥檛 mean that in our community that鈥檚 how we want to honor our prize-winners. But we learn about what prize committees are and what they do.鈥

This semester, Wittman鈥檚 class started with Canadian author Margaret Atwood鈥檚 Oryx and Crake. Other books on the class鈥檚 short list include Life and Times of Michael K. by South African writer J.M. Coetzee; Changeling by Japanese author Kenzabur艒 艑e; The Bad Girl by recent Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa; and The Goalie鈥檚 Anxiety at the Penalty Kick by Austrian author Peter Handke. One of the goals of the class is to expand students鈥 knowledge of 20th century world literature, an area many members of the American reading public tend to overlook. [. . .]

When the votes are in 鈥 Wittman stresses that she鈥檚 a nonvoting member of this awards panel 鈥 the class will enshrine the name of the winning author on a brick outside UA鈥檚 Ferguson Student Center. And Wittman鈥檚 students will be much more aware of how to think critically about the quality of the literature they read.

This is a fantastic idea, one that would be a lot of fun for everyone involved, would draw out a lot of interesting themes, and would probably spark really good in class conversation. Half-tempted to adopt some aspects of this for my spring World Literature & Translation class. Maybe use some of the titles from this year’s BTBA longlist . . .



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