Showing posts with label teacher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teacher. Show all posts

The Teacher's Story, by Gita Mehta


Gita Mehta at the Wikipedia




Gita Mehta, The Teacher’s Story, by Elisa Sola

 

Gita Mehta, biography

 

Gita Mehta is an Indian writer and documentary filmmaker. She was born in Delhi in 1943 into a well-known Odia family. She’s alive, and she’s 79 years old.

Odia people are native to the Indian state of Odisha, which is located in Eastern of India, and they have their own language, Odia, which is one of the classical languages of India. India is an independent republic since 1950, and Odisha, formerly Orissa, became independent into the republic of India on April 1936.

Gita’s father, Biju Patnaik, was an Indian independence activist and a Chief Minister in post-independence Odisha, and her brother, Naveen Patnaik, is the Chief Minister of Odisha since 2000. In 2019 Gita Mehta was nominated for one of the highest civilian awards in the field of literature and education, the Padma Shri, but she declined, because the general elections were coming and she didn’t want to harm her brother.

She was educated in India and in the University of Cambridge, United Kingdom. In her professional career, she has produced and/or directed 14 television documentaries for UK, European and US networks. During the years 1970–1971 she was a television war correspondent for the US television network NBC.

She is the widow of Sonny Mehta, former head of the Alfred A. Knopf publishing house, whom she married in 1965. She has one son, Aditya Singh Mehta. Her books have been translated into 21 languages and been on the bestseller lists in Europe, the US and India. Her fiction and non-fiction writings focus exclusively on India - its culture and history - and on the Western perception of it. Her works reflect the insight gained through her journalistic and political background.

She has published 5 works: Karma Cola in 1979, a non-fiction book about India and its mysticism; Raj, her first novel, in 1989, which is and colourful historical story that follows the progression of a young woman born into Indian nobility under the British Raj. In this novel, she mixes history and fiction. The next work is A River Sutra, published in 1993, a collection of short stories, including our story, “The Teacher’s Story”. Her latest work was Snakes and Ladders: Glimpses of Modern India, in 2006, which is a collection of essays about India since Independence.

Mehta divides her time between New York City, London and New Delhi.

 

The Teacher’s Story

 

Gita Mehta is an Indian writer that she has written about Indian culture and society. In this short story, the author shows us how the life in India is. We know the paanwallah, the paan leaves, betel leaves, the samosa, the paisa, the Quawwali singers of Nizamuddin, the tanpura, the raga, the street hawkers, the goats and shepherds in the marble mausoleum of the Victoria Memorial…

The Teacher’s Story is one of the six stories that make up the novel A River Sutra. These stories are: “The Monk’s Story", “The Teacher’s Story”, “The Executive’s Story”, “The Courtesan’s Story”, “The Musician’s Story” and “The Minstrel’s Story”.  Every main character of the novel represents a particular community.

These six stories are presented by a nameless narrator who is in dialogue with his close friend Tariq Mia. In this novel, Gita Mehta uses not only one narrator, but sub-narrators. For instance, in the Monk’s Story the narrator is the nameless narrator, but in The Teacher’s Story the narrator is Tariq Mia, an old Muslim Mullah who is the best friend of that narrator. Therefore, the story is told from third person point of view and makes the narration omniscient. The technique of the novel is similar to the epic Mahabharata because these narrators aren’t involved in the novel as a character. However, they know omnisciently everything that happens, because they have been told or witnessed.

The kind of narration, very simple on the surface level, with flat characters, seeks to give moral lessons to the people, and it roots with the ancient Indian tradition of story-telling. In ancient times' story telling was a skill, and Gita Mehta wants to tell a traditional story with its moral message.

The main character of The Teacher’s Story is Master Mohan, a very sensitive person who sees broken his dream to become a famous singer when he was child because of his tuberculosis. Due to that, he became a teacher’s music like his father, who couldn’t see his dream come true. However, Master Mohan, despite not having fulfilled his dream and being blamed for it by his wife and children, is not a bitter man and continues to look for a way to live with his goal. On this path, he meets Imrat, a blind and poor boy with a great ability to sing: good voice and good hearing, and they both immediately make a bond.

Master Mohan teaches little Imrat to turn him into what he couldn’t be: a splendid singer, and they both form a family, the sweet family that they don’t have, because they both are orphans in some way (Master Mohan is rejected by his family and the boy is abandoned by his sister because she can’t raise him).

In the end, the boy achieves fame in the form of a record contract, but his voice is so pure that he is murdered out of envy, in an act of much cruelty that has a moral explanation: “such voice is not human. What will happen to music if this is the standard by which God judges us?”

If I had to compare this little story with a piece of music, I would do it with de Ravel Bolero, because it rises in tone to the final ecstasy: the pure voice of Imrat who can’t survive in this world of evil and is silenced with a sword.

QUESTIONS

Talk about the characters

-Master Mohan

-His wife

-His father

-His children

-Mohammed-sahib

-The paanwallah

-Imrat

-Imrat’s sister

What are the Quawwali singers of Nizamuddin?

Why did Mohan keep Imrat?

Can you tell us about the attacks from Mohan’s wife and children against Imrat?

What do you know about the taboo against eating pork? What other taboos you know that are strange for us?

What do you think about children’s cruelty? Is it something biological, or something that they learn from society, family, school?

Try to make a description of the Victoria Memorial Park in Calcutta.

What’s the Ochterlony’s Needle?

Who was Amir Rumi?

What kind of song did the boy sing? I mean, what was the topic of the songs?

Tell us adjectives for Imrat voice.

What is Tansen’s tamarind tree?

When did the miracle of an offer for a recording contract happen?

Don’t you think there is a contradiction singing for God and at the same time singing for a recording contract?

In your opinion, what happened to Imrat at the end? How do you know?

 

VOCABULARY

paanwallah, paan, betel, sahib, yoked, taunts, paisa, muffling, drilling, relishing, struts, tablas, sheikh, prodded, welling, pimp, puffed up, clumsiness, greed, drone, tanpura, raga, hawkers, samosa, pandering


The Fall of the Idol, by Richmal Crompton

 

Richmal Crompton at the Wikipedia

Audiobook

Videos

RICHMAL CROMPTON, by Josep Guiteres

BIOGRAPHY

She was born in Bury, Lancashire in 1890, and died in 1969. She was an English writer, specialized in children’s books and horror stories.

She was the second child of Edward John Sewell, a protestant pastor and parochial school teacher, and his wife Clara; her older brother John Battersby was also a writer under the pseudonym John Lambourne.

Richmal Crompton attended St Elphin’s school and won a scholarship to classical studies at Royal Holloway College London, where she graduated Bachelor of Arts, and, in 1914, returned to teach classical authors at St. Elphin’s until 1917. Then, when she was 27 years old, went to Bromley High School in South London, teaching the same subject until 1923. Having contracted polio, she lost the use of her right leg. In 1923 and from then on, she spent her free time to write.

In 1924, she created her famous character William Brown, the protagonist of thirty-eight books of children’s stories in the naughty William saga that she wrote until her death.

She is also the author of a collection of stories about ghosts, the horror novel Dread Dwelling, in 1926, and Bruma, in 1928. As a writer of horror stories, she is eminent.

She never married and had no children; she was an aunt and a great-aunt.

 

THE FALL OF THE IDOL

The Fall of the Idol corresponds to chapter 4 of Just William with her famous eleven-years-old character William Brown.

In this chapter the writer tells us the adventures of William narrating his falling in love with his teacher, Miss Drew.

William, as a good student, sat in the back row. Being in love, he changed his seat to one in the front row. While the teacher explains the lesson, William has his fantasies with the teacher, but she constantly asks him questions about what she explains, and so he is forced to study.

Every day the teacher arrived at class, she used to find some small detail on the table of some admirer, but that morning the table and the chair were full of greenhouse flowers, evidently left by the lover. When William got home, he found his sister and two policemen who were looking for the flower thief.

The next day, Miss Drew was talking to another teacher. William, who was nearby, understood that Miss Drew liked lilacs; so, William got lilacs by stealing them from the window of a house with the subsequent uproar of the owner.

When Miss Drew entered the classroom, she said: “William, I hate lilacs”. Disappointed, his love vanished, and, as a good student, he sat again in the background.

My opinion: I liked this story because it is simple, short, entertaining and written with the fabulous typical English humour.

QUESTIONS 

Talk about your school days: were they happy or boring?

What is your opinion of this saying: “Teach anything at school and, funny it may be, at once it becomes boring”? (Remember the example of sexual education in the film by Monty Phyton “The Meaning of Life”.)

William caught a lizard and kept it in his pocket during the class. Do you have an anecdote to explain about your school days?

What happened to William’s lizard?

Who is the “malicious blind god”?

William starts giving presents to his teacher. What is your opinion about giving presents to your teacher… or to anybody?

What things you don’t do by halves? Do you always finish the book you are reading or the film you are watching?

Could William be married by the Pope? Why?

What do you think of helping your children with their homework?

“He hugged his chains”: what does it mean? Can you give more examples?

What do you imagine William wanted to do with the pipe in the garden?

Can you describe a “guelder rose” and a syringe”?

Explain the adventure of the syringe.

What is the meaning of “the idol has feet of clay”?

What do you think William felt like at the end: angry, happy, or disappointed?

 

VOCABULARY

figures, mug, 3 ½ d, mouth organ, putty, obliging, blood-curdling, outshine, hothouse, riot, soulfully, nonplussed, hubbub, conservatory, week’s mending, babbling, leading article, beaming, ole, ornery, rent, jarred, literal


The Red-Haired Girl, by Penelope Fitzgerald


Penelope Fitzgerald at the Wikipedia: click here
Julian Barnes on Penelope Fitzgerald: The Guardian
Penelope Fitzgerald at The Paris Review
Penelope Fitzgerald at Sidney Review of Books
Penelope Fitzgerald's Archive: click here
Obituary at The New York Times
The Means of Escape at the Wikipedia: click here
The Red-Haired Girl at The New Yook Times

The Bookshop trailer



Presentation, by Àngels Gallardo

Biography

Penelope Fitzgerald was born in Lincoln in 1916 and died in 2000. She was a novelist, poetess, essayist, English biographer, and she won the Booker Award in 1979 with The bookshop.
She was the daughter of a publisher and her uncle was a theologian, a writer and a Bible scholar.
In her family, there were men of the Bible with a good academic education, so that it impacted her dedication to her writing. She began to write later in life, and she published her first book in 1975.
She was married to an Irish soldier and they had three children.
She worked in a dramatic art school until she was seventy years old.
A library and a boat house inspired her to write two of her novels.
Another thing was that she used to write early in the morning or very late at night.

The Red-Haired Girl

The story explains the life of five people who had studied in the atelier of Vincent Bonvin.
In 1882 they organized a party to go to Brittany because they wanted somewhere cheap and characteristic types, natural, busy with occupations and in plein air.
They were poor and they brought only the necessary luggage.
When they arrived there, they decided to begin with Sant-Briac-sur-Mer because somebody had recommended it to them.
After that, they went to Palourde on the coast near Cancale.
They didn't wanted to spend time as tourists, they only wanted to paint because they were artists.
They made reservations in the Hôtel du Port and their rooms and food were very simple.
In the kitchen of the hotel was working a red haired girl named Annik. She worked all day but she had a short time every day.
One of them, named Hackett, thought that this girl could be his model.
He asked her if she could be his model an hour a day and only when he finished he would pay her.
He asked her to borrow a red shawl because he wanted her to wear it while he was painting her.
During the next three days Annik stood with her crochet on the back steps of the hotel.
He looked for the contrast between the copper coloured hair and the scarlet shawl, and he accepted that she never smiled.
One of the artists received a telegram from Paris; it said that their professor Bonvin will come on a day to the hotel because he would be delighted to see his pupils in Palourde, and he wanted to look at their portfolios, but them were bad for him and he went away.
At the end of this story, Annik disappeared because she had been dismissed.

QUESTIONS

What can you tell us about art and artists at the end of the 19th century?
What information can you give us about Brittany?
Why did this group of artists decide to go to Brittany?
Describe Palourde.
Talk about the main characters:
            Hackett
            Annik
                        appearance (What did she look like?)
                        personality (What was she like?)
            Bonvin (and his relationship with Palourde: “Palourde was indifferent to artists, but Bonvin had imposed himself as a professor.”)
What was Hackett’s saying about catching a cough and what does it mean?
How did the group of artists accommodate (room, meals) themselves in Palourde?
Describe the Hôtel du Port.
What do Palourde people usually do after lunch?
What happened with the shawl for Annik?
Tell us about Annik’s portrait / painting.
“Oh, everybody wants the same things. The only difference is what they will do to get them.” What do you think about this?
“Once a teacher, always a teacher.” What’s your opinion?
Why, according to Bonvin, are Hackett’s paintings bad?
“It’s only in the studio that you can bring out the heart of the subject...” Do you agree?
When you paint, what do you want to paint: what you see, or the soul of what you see?
Faces are soul’s mirrors?
Who was Chateaubriand?
“Boredom and the withering sense of insignificance can bring one as low as grief.” Is this true?
In the end, what do you think Hackett is going to miss?
Is he going to become an artist? Why?

VOCABULARY

knickerbockers, wideawake, sightseer, intended, digs, down, taxing (tax), gibbering, small hours, boredom

Love, by William Maxwell

As you can read on the Wikipedia, William Maxwell wasn't a typical celebrity with a lot of entries on Google. We know he was a fine scholar, editor and writer. There are no adaptations of his books for the cinema, so he's not a "celebrity" in the current sense. But the most important things for a writer are his writings, so let's read his short story and enjoy it.


QUESTIONS TO HELP YOU WITH THE READING

Who was the protagonist? What did she do?
What was she like and what did she look like?
How do you know she was a good teacher?
What mischief by the pupils did the text mention?
What present did the pupils give her for her birthday?
How did they celebrate it?
Why didn't she come to school one day?
Who was the substitute?
How did the pupils behave with the new teacher?
What did Miss Brown home look like?
What is the meaning of "She belonged to the illness"?
And what does it mean: "The angel who watches over little boys (who know, but they can't say it) saw to it that we didn't touch anything"?
What did the teacher died of? How old was she?
How did the boy find Miss Brown tomb?


TOPICS TO DEVELOP

What were your school days like? Anecdotes, mates, teachers, subjects...


VOCABULARY

flawlessly = perfectly

< oval Palmer method

call the roll = read out the list of pupils to see if they are in class

snicker = laugh silently


< aster = kind of flower

worm out = discover


< sweet pea = another kind of flower

Happy Returns = Happy Birthday

matinée = session (in a cinema...,) in the morning or early in the afternoon

crane one's neck = try to see a thing, e.g. far away or over a fence

weather-beaten = spent much time in the open air, very cold or very hot

dim = not clear

cinder road = lava gravel road

faucet (USA English) = tap (British English)