- During my senior year in college, my best friend was interviewed for
a Mellon Fellowship. It was the mid-eighties, and we were Comparative
Literature concentrators, drunk with French post-structuralism and hungry
for the next big wave in high theory. During my friend's interview,
a Famous Harvard English Professor asked her, "How would you begin
to teach Keats's 'Ode on a Grecian Urn' to first-year undergraduates?"
My friend launched upon a lengthy disquisition surveying the various
approaches that she might take to expose the poem's aporias, to tease
out its unresolved ironies and to confront its deceptive use of prosopopoiea.
The Famous Harvard Professor listened patiently. When my friend concluded
her rigorous and sophisticated response, she expectantly asked Famous
Harvard Professor what she thought of such an approach, and whether
that was the answer she was looking for. Famous Harvard Professor replied,
"Well, all I really hoped you would say was that you would begin
by reading the poem aloud."
- I share this anecdote for several reasons, not the least important
of which is that it calls us back to remember the sheer musical beauty
of Keats's language, the luscious sensuousness of Keats's words. This
is something of which every class needs to be reminded (and of which
most students, whose experience of poetry is silent and textual, are
likely to be ignorant). But it also reminds us that students frequently
think that literary analysis requires taking a "simple" question
and returning a "complex" answer. They imagine (and often
with good reason) that such "complexity" is "what we
want" as teachers. I would argue, however, that many good teachers
are not so much concerned with answers, really, but with questions.
For me, and especially with first-year students, encouraging the act
of questioning and helping students to formulate meaningful questions
are my primary pedagogical objectives. This is especially true when
we work with a hypercanonical text, such as "Ode on a Grecian Urn."
Such texts, in general, are hypercanonical precisely because they are
resistant to any definitive final interpretive answers. This text, in
particular, is famously resistant. But it is also a poem that is all
about how the questions, rather than the answers, are the most important
part of our encounter with an aesthetic object.
- The rhetorical act of questioning, and the pedagogical strategy of
privileging questions over answers, inform how I teach the ode, largely
because of the context in which I teach it. I regularly teach the poem
to first-year students in my university's required World Literature
survey. It is a course that isn't built to achieve any level of "depth,"
and which serves a student population with little background in literary
history or theory and a good deal of resistance to being forced to study
literature at alland poetry in particular. We usually have only
one class session to discuss the poem (in a four class sequence on European
Romanticism). Because most of the students at my university are there
to get degrees in the sciences or the health professions, they do not
feel terribly eager or empowered to study literature. Many talk about
reading poetry as if it were something written in a secret code to which
no one ever bothered to give them the key. The students are also generally
hard-working and ambitious for high grades. Thus, in the literature
classroom, they want to be told what a text means and what they have
to know about it so that they can transcribe that information on their
test and get an A. They want answers, but that is only because they
have been taught that having the answers is what matters most for their
GPA. My purpose in teaching the poem, then, is to begin to readjust
their intellectual value system to see the equal importance of questions
and questioning. "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is a perfect text
for such an objective.
- I don't delude myself that my methods are original or theoretically
sophisticated, and I guess, to a certain extent, they are "new
critical." I try to have students pay attention to textual details
and read the poem closely. Because of the structure of the course in
which I teach the poem, I don't teach the poem with much historical
or biographical context. While I assign students to read the biographical
blurb introducing Keats in the Norton Anthology of World Literature,
I tend not to make too much of it. To the extent, however, that I don't
attempt to resolve the ambiguous questions that the poem poses, I could
say that I resist new critical techniques and tendencies. I don't ever
untangle the ambiguities the poem sets forth for the students, and I
use the poem metapoetically, as a way of teaching about reading poetry
and responding to art in general. As such, albeit in an unsophisticated
way, I draw from the deconstructive methods that I learned in my own
college classes.
- If there is any critic who has influenced my understanding of the
poem, and best helped me to teach it to my first-year students, it is
Susan Wolfson. In The Questioning Presence: Wordsworth, Keats, and
the Interrogative Mode in Romantic Poetry, Wolfson identifies the
interrogative mode as an essential dimension of Keats's style and describes
Keats's contribution to "the fundamentally interrogative character
of the major poems of Romanticism. These poems are critically implicated
in perceptions that provoke inquiry, experiences that elude or thwart
stable organization, events that challenge previous certainties and
require new terms of interpretation" (18). Reading Romantic poems,
then, is a way to help students reframe their experience of poetry in
particular, and knowledge in general.
- When I teach the poem in the third week of the semester, I am primarily
concerned with how the questions we pose to our students, and the ways
in which we help students to pose their own questions, may be more important
than the kinds of answers we might try to teach them about literary
theory or literary history. If I can teach them to feel comfortable
and confident asking questions on their own, then there's a greater
likelihood that they will continue to read poetry, and take pleasure
in reading poetry, even if it means, to quote Keats's famous letter,
"being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without any irritable
reaching after fact & reason" (43).
- I usually start the class, then, by having the students read the poem
aloud (mindful of the advice of Famous Harvard English Professor). Then
I ask, much to their surprise, if they notice anything unique about
the poem's punctuation, and whether there is any punctuation mark that
seems to recur. There's usually silence because they imagine that my
simple question must be a trap, as it is far easier than the typical
"English teacher" question. But then a brave soul will state
the obvious. This allows me to remind them that in a lyric poem, an
author has to deal with more limited space (or "length requirements")
and thus needs to choose every word and even every mark of punctuation
with great care.
- But then I ask the students why Keats would have so many question
marks in the poem. I ask them what his questions are about. I ask them
whether the questions seem to have anything in common. I ask them, finally,
to whom Keats is asking all of these questions, and, what that might
mean for his actually getting any answers. I then ask perhaps the most
troubling question, which is, why ask questions when you know you cannot,
at least at a literal level, get an answer? Why bother? What's the point?
(This last question is the one that non-English majors always seem to
ask about the study of literature). I am careful in this whole process
never to answer my own questions or to acknowledge any of the students'
responses as "correct" or "incorrect." Whether the
class notices this, and how soon they notice, varies from semester to
semester.
- However, students catch on pretty quickly that the speaker in the
poem mirrors their own quandary in approaching "remote" and
"difficult" works of art. Once they can identify with the
speaker, they can also use his questions to help think through their
own. As Wolfson describes, "over the course of the ode, Keats turns
the activity of his verse into a dilemma for the reader fully analogous
to the speaker's dilemma of interpretation before the urn. By the conclusion
of the ode, in fact, we may have the uneasy feeling not only that these
dilemmas have converged but that they may even have reversed, for Keats's
speaker abandons us with an ambiguously toned 'that is all' just before
becoming as silent as the urn itself" (319-20).
- By emphasizing the interrogative over the declarative in the course
of our reading the poem slowly and carefully together in class, by the
time we get to the famous final lines, the students feel comfortable
really probing the "answer" that it purports to give. If class
has gone well, the students are now suspicious of the "answer"
of the last lines, which, as Wolfson notes, "has the sound of wisdom,
but its import is very much qualified by its emergence from a context
in which what we know and how we know are subjects of questioning rather
than the substance of answers. The more one teases this summary assurance,
the more one hears a tone that unsettles its performance of meaning"
(327). By the end of class, I hope that I have helped students to better
"hear" that unsettling tone, and no longer reach so irritably
after facts and reason.
- To be sure, any number of other Romantic poems might demonstrate the
interrogative quality of poetry and help model the vital, creative,
intellectual importance of questioning. Blake's "The Lamb"
and "The Tyger" come immediately to mind. But in so far as
Keats's ode asks questions specifically about a work of art, and in
so far as Keats is using those questions to get at even greater mysteries
like eternity and truth and beauty (ideas about which there are a lot
of answers but no final ones), the ode is a very good teaching text.
This is not because of the answers that it gives, but, again, for modeling
the importance and the urgency of the act of persistent questioning.
Wolfson sums this up quite eloquently, linking this feature with Keats's
musicality: "The urn befriends its readers the way Keats's rhyme
doesby encouraging our imaginative activity in a perpetual fixing
and unfixing of what we think we know. We come to value its artistry
not so much by what it yields to thought as by what it does to thought,
provoking questions and refusing to confirm any sure points and resting
places for our reasonings" (325-6). The poem demonstrates for students
a point I go on to stress during the remainder of the semester: that
literature, and especially poetry, is really a way to try to ask questions
about things that there may, ultimately, be no answers for.
- By teaching the poem early in the semester, I hope to help the students
to become better questioners, and thus help shape their ability and
openness to reading a diverse variety of "strange" texts from
a variety of "foreign" or "remote" cultures, texts
about which they are unlikely to find definitive answers but will enjoy
much more if they are comfortable and confident asking questions. In
the end, my teaching of "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is motivated
by a refusal to give answers, and a desire to teach the value of unanswered
questions. I aspire to teach like the urn itself, forcing questions
but never dispensing final answers. I work to frustrate students into
challenging the conventions of questioning that operate toward the teleology
of the answer. The ode is a perfect text for those purposes, and what's
more, it ultimately allows me to make transparent to my students my
motives in being so "mysterious." As Wolfson writes, "The
play of questions with which the ode begins culminates in a linguistic
limit that is both a parody of critical processes and a cunning expansion
of mystery beyond the bourn of words" (327-8).
- By the way, my friend didn't win that Mellon Fellowship. I think,
however, that like me, she must have learned some good lessons from
the interview, as today she is a tenured professor at a major public
research university, and has just been awarded a university-level prize
for excellence in teaching.
Works Cited
Keats, John. Letters of John Keats. Ed., Robert Gittings. Oxford:
Oxford UP, 1970.
Wolfson, Susan. The Questioning Presence: Wordsworth, Keats, and the
Interrogative Mode in Romantic Poetry. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1986.
|