This little book is on my "general knowledge" list of recommended texts for a Masters degree in Creative Writing. 'Doing English' by Robert Eaglestone is valuable background. It's only 150 pages long, and my second-hand copy has a big white sticker on the front of the book saying "1 Week Loan." It was so unintimidating and eager to be read, it practically jumped into my lap... four weeks ago.
That "1 Week Loan" sticker must have been a University of Glasgow employee's evil trick. (That's where it came from, I can see). This was no race-through. Now that I finished it, I want to delve into the texts mentioned at the end for further reading or to start this one all over again. It explores and explains much about the Undergrad degree in English I got in the 80s and it speaks directly to my prior incarnation as a high school English teacher in Los Angeles. Turns out I wasn't wrong to thing there was a battle being waged (not just a little controversy) between the teaching of English as a fixed discipline meant to divide and define people by its cultural narrative versus a much more open-minded and creative approach to the presentation of literature and lessons to be derived from it.
Even as I type that sentence I realize this stuff is absolutely fascinating to me. If you're yawning already, it might not be a 5-star read for you. But if you're even a little intrigued, by all means, take a look.
'Doing English' is a UK-focused book with many references to American and other types of English literature. It's a review of the history of the study (and teaching) of English as a discipline, the accepted literary canon as it exists and as it's developing over time, and most importantly, of the ways "doing English" blurs the boundaries between English literature and many other academic subjects, most notably science. It honors the newness of a more modern approach -- one that's not easy to assess in a classroom, but no doubt dynamic and exciting to teach. The contents seem to repeat, but it's a sort of kaleidoscopic view of something that merits exploration from many angles and through multiple lenses. For a student intrigued by a possible study of English, I think it would be invaluable. Every page of this guidebook deserves its space. Even the end-pages of suggested further reading...
This quote from David Foster Wallace is from that section:
"'Critical appreciation' means having smart, sophisticated reasons for liking whatever literature you like, and being able to articulate those reasons for other people, especially in writing. Vital for critical appreciation is the ability to 'interpret' a piece of literature, which basically means coming up with a cogent, interesting account of what a piece of lit means, what it's trying to do to/for the reader, what technical choices the author's made in order to achieve the effects she wants, and so on. As you can probably anticipate, the whole things gets very complicated and abstract and hard, which is one reason why entire college deprtments are devoted to studying and interpreting literature."
If you don't have time to read the full 150-pages-plus, there you go. That's the nutshell. But if you can make the time, I'd highly recommend digging in for the full walnut.