The Beauty and The Beast. Jean Cocteau's version of the fairy
tale. Time permitting we'll watch some of it in connection with The
Metamorphosis. We'll talk about the function of fairy tale elements
and of music in the story. How much do you know about the myth of Orpheus?
The legend of St. Cecilia? About "Death the Fiddler" (Richard II
"Sweet music do I hear"?)? Consult the nearest Encyclopedia. Read Dryden's
Song for St. Cecilia's Day, 1687 (hand-out); Alexander's Feast
or, The Power of Music; An Ode in Honor of St. Cecilia's Day: 1697. Time
permitting we'll listen to Handel's musical settings of Dryden's poems.
Of course, you can go to the music library and hear the music there. While
there listen to Mozart's Magic Flute, it's at bottom an opera
about music. We'll view some of it in class, Tamino encountering Sarastro's
animals, Pamina and Tamino facing the two most destructive of the four
ancient elements, fire and water.
A major problem is lack/impossibility of communication. How can insects
and humans communicate with one another? How do animals communicate? See
J.W.Bradbury and S.L.Vehrenkamp: Principles of Animal Communication
(1998). In the same context "When Lizards Do Push-Ups" in Science
News, 2-27-99.
Steven Berkoff adaptated The Metamorphosis for stage and film. We'll watch some of it in class. Tim Roth is a terrifically agile Gregor Samsa. We'll watch Fred Astaire dance all over the walls and across the ceiling for comparison. Baryshnikov was Gregor on Broadway. The father is played by Berkoff himself.
Christopher Plummer is dreadfully pompous as Cornell's Vladimir Nabokov
in a video version of Nabokov's essay on the short story. Shots of the
Cornell campus, but the "lecture" itself is filmed elsewhere. We'll see
some of it in class.