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Great Books Discussion Group

 
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Great Books Discussion Group - 11/24/2008 1:03:39 AM   
cih92

 

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I am going to start attending a Great Books discussion group next month. A Great Books discussion group is a book club where the participants read and discuss the classics. Does anyone else belong to a similiar book club?
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RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 11/24/2008 2:26:39 PM   
Auben


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I'm not, but that sounds fun.

What's your first read?

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Tamara

~Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time~
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RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 11/24/2008 5:57:32 PM   
cih92

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Auben

I'm not, but that sounds fun.

What's your first read?


The first read is a chapter from Michael Foucault's book, Discipline and Punish. In a couple of months, we will start reading this book: http://store.greatbooks.org/product_info.php?cPath=12_186&products_id=286
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RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 11/27/2008 8:23:49 AM   
scottmcc1


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Has anyone read:

Brothers Karamazov
by Dostoyevsky, Fyodor.

I may want to read this book. What keeps me from reading Russian novels is the names. I can't pronounce them and then I get them mixed up. Then I am lost.

Reading reviews on Amazon I may check it out Friday after Thanksgiving at the library.

Here is a very good review by a writer that has gone through much suffering.

< Message edited by scottmcc1 -- 11/27/2008 8:55:44 AM >


_____________________________

(My Bible study web page)
http://www.freewebs.com/wftr/index.htm

(comments on nature)
http://www.verde33.blogspot.com

Thoughts on my Christan walk
http://www.verde34.blogspot.com
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RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 11/27/2008 9:11:10 AM   
artemis


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quote:

ORIGINAL: cih92

I am going to start attending a Great Books discussion group next month. A Great Books discussion group is a book club where the participants read and discuss the classics. Does anyone else belong to a similiar book club?


When I was in Jr. High, we had Junior Great Books in my literature class. We read classic short stories and excerpts from longer works and discussed them like a book club (more so than we would normally do with a literature class). We only did it for a year, though. I'm not sure why...


quote:

ORIGINAL: scottmcc1

Has anyone read:

Brothers Karamazov
by Dostoyevsky, Fyodor.

I may want to read this book. What keeps me from reading Russian novels is the names. I can't pronounce them and then I get them mixed up. Then I am lost.

Reading reviews on Amazon I may check it out Friday after Thanksgiving at the library.

Here is a very good review by a writer that has gone through much suffering.


I loved Brothers Karamazov (and loved, loved, loved Crime and Punishment). Russian literature can be hard to keep up with because there are often a lot of characters and they have lots of different names. I'd recommend getting the Cliff's Notes just for the character list

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RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 11/27/2008 11:15:09 AM   
Auben


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I like Brothers Karamazov as well.

BK is not as bad as other Russian novels (War and Peace for instance). One important thing to remember is that there are 4 brothers and that the Russians have given names, names relating to their parentage (Ivanov means son of Ivan, Ivanova means daughter of Ivan), and maybe a family name thrown in as well. Some of the brothers also have nicknames. Their first/given name shortened in a cute way (like Alyosha) the way a family does. The beloved brother in this book has 2-3 of these but they can be recognized easily in context.

Just get a piece of paper for a bookmark. Write down the characters names as they come. Don't try to pronounce them. On one side put the family (father, 4 brothers). On the other side put down the secondary characters with a descriptive word of their position or job.

This book is well worth this extra work.

_____________________________

Tamara

~Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time~
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RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 11/28/2008 10:02:38 AM   
scottmcc1


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I am going to get the book from the library today. My job gives me today Friday as another holiday. I will ride my bicycle down and back which will be about 17 miles. A good morning workout.

I first planed to read it for entertainment, but now I plan to use the problems the book presents and make Bible studies out of them.

I will use your notes plan Auben, thanks. I may also get the cliff notes Artemis, which will help me defining the problems and starting Bible studies.

If my plan starts working I will buy the book.

_____________________________

(My Bible study web page)
http://www.freewebs.com/wftr/index.htm

(comments on nature)
http://www.verde33.blogspot.com

Thoughts on my Christan walk
http://www.verde34.blogspot.com
Post #: 7
RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 12/1/2008 1:28:15 AM   
cih92

 

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quote:


When I was in Jr. High, we had Junior Great Books in my literature class. We read classic short stories and excerpts from longer works and discussed them like a book club (more so than we would normally do with a literature class). We only did it for a year, though. I'm not sure why...



That must have been an interesting class. I'm sure you enjoyed it.
Post #: 8
RE: Great Books Discussion Group - 12/1/2008 1:32:19 AM   
cih92

 

Posts: 125
Joined: 4/18/2005
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I got interested in reading the Great Books or classics when I was in college. I had some literature courses in college and I remember reading Homer, Plato, Aristotle, Virgil, Dante, Chaucer, Shakespeare, the Bible, and so on.
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