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To: Borges

A compelling defense of “The Hunger Games:

http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DRsFBbS39_z0&v=RsFBbS39_z0&gl=US

My concern with respect to today’s children is along the same lines as the following I found:

A few years ago, a college writing professor, Kay Haugaard, wrote an essay about her experiences teaching “The Lottery” over a period of about two decades.

She said that in the early 1970s, students who read the story voiced shock and indignation. The tale led to vivid conversations on big topics – the meaning of sacrifice and tradition; the dangers of group-think and blind allegiance to leaders; the demands of conscience and the consequences of cowardice.

Sometime in the mid-1990s, however, reactions began to change.

Haugaard described one classroom discussion that – to me – was more disturbing than the story itself. The students had nothing to say except that the story bored them. So Haugaard asked them what they thought about the villagers ritually sacrificing one of their own for the sake of the harvest.

One student, speaking in quite rational tones, argued that many cultures have traditions of human sacrifice. Another said that the stoning might have been part of “a religion of long standing,” and therefore acceptable and understandable.

An older student who worked as a nurse, also weighed in. She said that her hospital had made her take training in multicultural sensitivity. The lesson she learned was this: “If it’s a part of a person’s culture, we are taught not to judge.”

I thought of Haugaard’s experience with “The Lottery” as I got ready for this brief talk. Here’s where my thinking led me:

Our culture is doing catechesis every day. It works like water dripping on a stone, eroding people’s moral and religious sensibilities, and leaving a hole where their convictions used to be.


68 posted on 03/27/2012 11:33:06 AM PDT by St_Thomas_Aquinas (Viva Christo Rey)
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To: St_Thomas_Aquinas
How much of the students' response is a trained reaction to the political correctness of college which was increasing during that time? I could see back in the 1970s being able to have a free form discussion over that story. By the 1990s the students would want to know what is the "proper" opinion is before expressing it because of fear of academic punishment for drawing outside the lines. Even in the 1980s it was known among students which professors liked the students to fight back and which ones would drop your grade for having the "wrong" opinion.
76 posted on 03/27/2012 1:34:32 PM PDT by KarlInOhio (You only have three billion heartbeats in a lifetime.How many does the government claim as its own?)
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To: TR Jeffersonian

Ping


85 posted on 03/27/2012 4:47:05 PM PDT by kalee (The offenses we give, we write in the dust; Those we take, we engrave in marble. J Huett 1658)
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