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Available
September 2006
ISBN-10: 1-55380-037-0
ISBN-13: 978-1-55380-037-8
5
3/4 X 9
36 pp trade paper, 8 b&w illustrations
$9.95
Cdn
$8.95 US
Literary
Criticism

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Living Language
and Dead Reckoning: Navigating Oral and Written Traditions
By J. Edward Chamberlin
In this highly personal essay, Ted Chamberlin asks
some old, old questions such as "why do
we need stories and songs?" Turning frequently
to First Nations people, he looks at their culture
and asks what it means to listen. In response,
he notes that we take great pleasure in the comforts
of narration, of finding our way within a story,
a kind of "dead reckoning" out at
sea when the fog rolls in and we experience “being
almost lost.” Much of the essay focuses
on people from around the world who have often
been described as pre-literate. Chamberlin takes
issue with this view and argues that such people
"read" a whole host of signs and stories, and
that in
understanding how this reading takes place we
can understand something of our own habits of
reading and listening. Whereas scholars such
as McLuhan and Ong have claimed that such cultures
are "imprisoned in the present," Chamberlin
points out that this is demonstrable nonsense.
All cultures are both oral and written, he argues,
and knowledge comes from both listening and reading.
Employing his own position as a "teller
of tales" he asks whether we believe the
teller or the tale, and draws attention to the
importance of not only the storyteller but also
the community of listeners. For Chamberlin, Living
Language and Dead Reckoning, the publication
of the Garnett Sedgewick annual lecture for 2005
at the University of British Columbia, is the
first step towards a "history of listening."
"In
this insightful, entertaining and at times wistful
essay, Ted Chamberlin equates literacy with 'dead
reckoning,' and urges us to reconsider the
many advantages of orality, which include a sense
of community and the presence of the teller of tales." — Dr.
Gernot Wieland, Head, Dept. of English, UBC
J. Edward Chamberlin was born in Vancouver and educated at the universities
of British Columbia, Oxford and Toronto. He is now University
Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University
of Toronto. His books include The Harrowing of Eden: White
Attitudes Towards Native Americans (1975), Ripe was
the Drowsy Hour: The Age of Oscar Wilde (1977), Come
Back to Me My Language: Poetry and the West Indies (1993), and If
This Is Your Land , Where Are Your Stories? Finding Common Ground (2003).
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