Basically, I am saying that most of the good options are already taken by other people. Which is great. I enjoyed reading all of your posts and feel that there are some really good ideas out there. My post is basically a fragmented mess of semi-formed ideas, but that is often what my units look like before I actually start teaching them. I’ve never been a plan every second of every minute of every class kind of teacher. I have some general points I want to hit, but am usually open to any interesting side routes that present themselves along the roughly sketched path in my brain.
One thing that I would obviously want to discuss with Nat Turner, would be the gruesomeness of it. But I want to go beyond just what makes it gruesome? or is this necessary? or is there any place for this sort of content in a serious literature class? I would want to focus on how the graphic novel as a form achieves this revulsion in us compared to other media. Does Nat Turner have a more visceral effect on a person, then a description of torture/murder in a novel? How about a nonfiction account? And finally, what about a medium where the viewer is more passive, like film or television? How effective is each of these mediums in making us uncomfortable and what specific techniques does each employ in the process? This would be tough in a high school classroom, as issues would obviously arise if you were to start long detailed passages of brutal acts of violence or showing clips from violent movies.
As I mentioned last week, I think Nat Turner would be a great companion text for the novel Beloved. Many of the same themes are explored and Beloved is as much of a stomach punch text as Nat Turner in my opinion. Nat Turner would also obviously work well with The Confessions of Nat Turner, by William Styron. William Styron’s novel is interesting because it elicited a response from prominent black writers such as Ralph Ellison and James Baldwin** (called William Styron’s Nat Turner: Ten Black Writers Respond appropriately enough). The main issue was that the black writers took issue with the way that Styron (white, Southern) portrayed Turner. Questions arise about whether a white writer has any “right” to tell a historical black man’s story, and broader issues about depictions of race, gender, sexuality, etc. Do certain people or peoples “own” certain stories? Is there such a thing as out of bounds in literature? Does anyone have a problem that Kyle Baker is a white man telling this story, and telling it in this way?
Have students pull what some people are claiming Thomas Gray did and write a completely fabricated confession of a real historical (or even someone in the news today) figure. All they would need would be some basic facts about a marginal person in a history textbook and could fill in the details themselves. If you want to get crazy, you could have them turn it into a graphic novel. Writing a poem helps you understand the mechanics of poetry in a way that just reading poetry cannot, it makes sense that the choices involved in creating your own graphic novel would lead to a deeper understanding of the form as well.
**Correction: Ralph Ellison and James Baldwin actually defended Styron, I misread the information I was looking at. My apologies. However, there was quite a brouhaha over Styron’s novel, especially when it won the Pulitzer Prize. There is a section on Styron’s novel and the response to it in the reading on Blackboard.