Why College Classes Are Using ‘The Simpsons’By Alexandra - TopicsExpress



          

Why College Classes Are Using ‘The Simpsons’By Alexandra Svokos HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) -- Bart and Lisa Simpson have been in elementary school for 25 years. But that hasnt stopped them from showing up on college campuses. Universities across the country are using satirical references from The Simpsons to grab students attention and convey lessons inBy Alexandra Svokos HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) -- Bart and Lisa Simpson have been in elementary school for 25 years. But that hasnt stopped them from showing up on college campuses. Universities across the country are using satirical references from The Simpsons to grab students attention and convey lessons in literature and all manner of popular culture. If the references are important enough to be lampooned by The Simpsons, these works must be important cultural milestones, says Hofstra University adjunct English professor Richard Pioreck, who has been incorporating the denizens of Springfield into his courses for about a decade. He currently teaches a course about the Broadway theater and how The Simpsons have embraced various musicals and plays. Next semester, he shifts to an online literature course titled The Doh of Homer that includes readings from Edgar Allan Poes The Raven and The Fall of the House of Usher, and Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol -- all referenced in Simpsons episodes. Teachers need to keep things fresh, says Denise Du Verenay, an adjunct English professor at St. Xavier University in Chicago, co-author of the book The Simpsons in the Classroom: Embiggening the Learning Experience with the Wisdom of Springfield. They need to reach students however they can. And using The Simpsons to grab their attention, I think, is brilliant, she says. Fighting against pop culture isnt going to do anyone any good. In recent years, other universities have had courses focused on the primetime show -- which celebrates its 25th anniversary on Wednesday -- including Oswego State University in New York and San Jose State University in California. Longtime Simpsons executive producer Al Jean says hes not surprised professors have embraced the program. Some people may think we are very vulgar, but then they find there is a lot of warmth and emotion and many people are surprised at the intelligence of some of the jokes, he says. Pioreck says he decided to use the show after a friend of his daughters passed an exam on The Devil and Daniel Webster by watching a Simpsons episode that focused on the story. He found that the sitcom usually aims for more than just the easy punchlines, with writers layering the plotlines with humor that can be appreciated by lowbrow, middlebrow and highbrow audiences alike. For example, in one episode that parodied A Streetcar Named Desire (A Streetcar Named Marge), the dynamics of Homer and Marge Simpsons marriage are deftly illustrated through a comparison to the relationship of the couple in the play, Stella and Stanley. The Simpsons do a great deal of parodying, whether its a complete script or a number here or there, Pioreck says. Quite often they choose family relationships; what makes a man a success is one of the things that we pursue. And you can see what happens to Homer. Even though it looks like hes not a good father, he steps up and he comes through in the end. Jean acknowledges a theme in many episodes is the comparison of the C. Montgomery Burns character -- the miserly owner of Springfields nuclear power plant -- to the lead character in the movie Citizen Kane, Charles Foster Kane. Mr. Burns ... he doesnt have fulfillment in his life even though hes the richest person in town, Pioreck says. Here are two people who have it all, they have more money than they know what to do with and yet theyre not happy. Homer has no money, but has friends and family. Almost incredibly, at least one young Hofstra student confesses shed never seen the sitcom before signing up for the Simpsons-Broadway course. Elizabeth Sarian, a 21-year-old music performance major from Plainview says she signed up because of her interest in Broadway, not the cartoon. Still, she says, the connection to The Simpsons is hardly trivial because it really does teach you a lot from watching it. ift.tt/1gB4pon
Posted on: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 23:47:26 +0000

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