Monday, October 17, 2016

Scholarly Article #4

I read Cynthia Selfe’s article during a car ride to see/hear Joshua Bell--a famous violinist-- play Brahms with the LA Philharmonic. While reading the following quote, I thought of one of Joshua Bell’s narratives, which he shared in an interview:  “an individual’s relational positioning vis a vis their own and others’ literacy practices and values is not simply a detail within their narrative but, rather, a specific form of personal and political rhetorical agency,” (Selfe). I use Bell’s story to encourage students to calmly approach performance situations.
            Bell explains that, when he was a kid, he completely botched the beginning of his piece during a competition. After he messed up, he played with reckless abandon because he thought he lost. I tell my violin students this story before they perform, for the sake of helping cope with performance anxiety. I also use this story before I present information or perform because I think that giving the audience a sincere moment is more important than a flawless delivery. This is an example of how I use other peoples’ narratives politically and personally. I am including a link of Joshua Bell's narrative here
            Violinists shape narratives while they perform. Most violinists have heard the Mendelssohn violin concerto, but we all keep listening to it because every violinist plays it differently. Even though all of the notes are the same, violinists nuance phrases; therefore, every violinist plays differently because each violin student has had different life experience and different music-learning experience.
The same is true for responding to text. I will not have the same response to this article that my classmates will have because I have a different background from each classmate. Selfe says, about students, “Our own professional commitment… encourages us…as Bruce Horner has observed, to objectify students as interchangeable learning subjects, as if they come to us without context, without histories, without culture, and without their own personal narratives.” This quote reminds me of the symphony.
            Similar to a teacher and his or her students, symphony conductors generally do not know the background of the musicians in the symphony. However, similar to the teacher and students, the conductor does not need to know the musicians’ backgrounds. The musicians bring music-learning background to rehearsal. Likewise, students gain experience in the classroom and add to their personal and political narrative.

 To the left is a picture from 2010 of me and some violin friends outside of the Walt Disney Hall, which is where I saw Joshua Bell play with the LA philharmonic over Fall break. 

Both of my parents are music teachers and created a youth symphony called Zion Youth Symphony Orchestra. I was on a Zyso tour, during this picture. 

5 comments:

  1. I liked your personal insight in the matter of narratives. The parallels between Bell's personal music narrative and your students' experiences was also an interesting parallel.

    However, I don't think the comparison between writers and musicians really carries over. A musician's ability to play a scripted piece seems very different than a writer's ability to produce a new creative work. In that respect, understanding backgrounds, or at least being aware that not all students will perform the same, is very important when it comes to instructing writers.

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  2. I love how you equate musicians with writers here in the sense that just like writers each have a different method and style, so too do musicians. One violinist will play the Mendelssohn violin concerto in an entirely different, personal way from another violinist. It goes to show how the arts (e.g. writing, music) helps us to express ourselves as well as to find ourselves. Whether we're writing or playing music, we're building our identity and sharing it with others. Love your thoughts on this, Jazzy! :)

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  3. I appreciate how you responded to this article with a narrative of your own. My favorite quote from your response was that "giving the audience a sincere moment is more important than a flawless delivery." As a teacher, while reading Selfe's article, although she kept referring to teachers and classroom practices with personal narratives, although she invites teachers to request personal narratives, and although she presents problems with grading/critiquing narratives by looking at style/structure/analysis rather than as a transformative agent, I thought that your paragraph comparing a (writing) teacher with a symphony conductor provided a solution I can relate to and apply.

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  4. Hi Jazzy,

    Yes indeed, your comparison between musical pieces and writing pieces are palpable. Good job! This post also reminds me that multimodal literacy practices does not only allow us to explore who we are as digital natives but also provides more opportunities for us as digital writers to express our individual thoughts, views, stories. Some writers might also refer this article to their initial perceptions of a discipline and how, after reading Selfe, might give them another perspective from which to draw their own academic, professional, and/or social lives. What a breakthrough indeed!

    Dr. B

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  5. All responses recorded. ~Dr. B (sgd)

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