TCC Hawaiian "Virtual Odyssey" online conf.: presenter: gloria mcmillan Global Literary Salon at DU MOO ABSTRACT Gloria McMillan's presentation addresses the potential of MOOs for generating a new and different type of college classroom discussion of literature. Humanities instructors who use literary texts have come under fire for their curricular materials in a time of "pragmatism." As noted in David Caldwell's 1996 TCC presentation, literary texts foster unique cross-cultural bonds that are not available from other types of texts. This study uses categories suggested by Caldwell's paper and current feminist theory to analyze a MOO log file of a Global Literary session hosted by "miyan" in Japan. The discussion following the presentation of the MOO log explores possible ways to incorporate MOO-based Global Literary sessions into the current community college writing format. The way literature has been traditionally taught leaves much to be desired. Students have a difficult time relating to texts and places far removed from their daily experiences and local culture. One participant in last year's TCC conference quoted a common position regarding literature, saying, Would it not make more sense, some now ask, to replace the upper division undergraduate emphasis on foreign language or even English literature with the reading of newspapers and magazines, or with a social sciences course, in which juniors and seniors engage in the quantitative analysis of demographics, geography, or economics while using the target language? David Caldwell challenges those who use literary works in any fashion to justify this learning activity in terms of the needs of students of the '90s and beyond into the 21st century. BACKGROUND ========== Using the MOO for a synchronous session on haiku. . . led by a host in Kanazawa, Japan. One of our most successful Global Literature sessions was a session on the haiku led by "Miyan" at Diversity University MOO. A look at the log from this MOO session presents some questions to consider when using international hosts for literature sessions: * What is the difference between a discussion led and participated in by Americans and one that is hosted by a native of the country of the author or genre being studied? * Can a session hosted by a person IN the country of origin of the author or genre be significantly different than a session by a host who emigrated long ago? This question involves reviewing Lu and Horner's essay "The Problematic of Experience." * Can the differences be isolated and defined clearly enough to provide an assessment of the value of global literature sessions? * Does this new way of discussing global literature constitute a more cross-cultural way of teaching global literature? * What other experiments along these lines are being conducted? When we make a rhetorical analysis of the May 3, 1997 haiku session led by "Miyan," we will be considering the above questions and adding more to them. Hypothesis ========== David Caldwell suggests that there are values not found in the essence of business relationships that are the medium of communications in literature. "Good corporate citizenship" is not the single goal for liberal arts students, claims Caldwell. But if this be the case, then what is the goal? And how is this goal furthered by using international hosts for global literature sessions at a MOO? Caldwell claims that "the liberal arts encourage linkage, bridge- building, and a search for interconnection between differing bases of knowledge and experience." To assess what societal values emerge in global literature sessions, the models of teaching literature must, themselves, be assessed. For instance, the Arnoldian model that literature is "the best that has been known and thought" might be examined to see how the subjective position of an "impartial observer," calmly sifting through formal values measures up to the requirements of today's society, which calls into question the objectivity and impartiality of any subject position. Whose "best" is "the best"? Is "the best" only the Western European model? And how is "the best" arrived at? On the other hand, the pragmatic values of concern to the global business community may or may not find "the best" that has been thought and written of great interest. Further research may need to be done about the "commodification" of canonical literature for a global readership. Is "commodification" the only possible outcome for meetings between people of cultures widely separated in space and in power? Linkage involving openness, sharing, and mutual exploration may require students to adopt a mindset not totally committed to pragmatism, because Caldwell's definition of the literary experience as "a willingness to see through the eyes of another" may require us to relinquish some of that Darwinian ideal of control of the situation. The idea that there is more than one point-of-view is a struggle for every person. In using the MOO to show that the unexpected can emerge in discussions that truly cross cultural boundaries, there may be some element of risk as well as a sense of fun in discovery. Meaghan Roberts defines the opposite of the overdetermining patriarchal ideology that operates in the world and classroom we have known. She cites Paul Ricoeur's formulation of utopia as "a metaphoric nowhere which offers the possibility not of escaping ideology in favor of some regressive perfect moment, but of creating tension/pressure between/on what we live/think/write and what we might." If, as Caldwell claims in his 1996 TCC presentation, other values emerge from the study of literature (linking, bridge-building, and a search for interconnection), then how can we use the technology at hand to promote the broadest array of values in our discipline? This study will attempt to show how using a MOO to discuss global literature can further goals that may include, but also extend beyond, the corporation's type of global relating. Rhetorical Analysis of Transcripts ================================== What is our data? The data for this presentation is highlights of a DU MOO Global Literature session. These sessions were entirely voluntary, sporadic, and lightly populated. The data is intended to illustrate some potentially useful categories, not prove any trends. What is different about such sessions? The log may show some rhetorical features that mark off a MOO-based discussion from a traditional teacher centered discussion of a cross- cultural text. Each MOO-based discussion has as a resource a person who has experiential knowledge of the locale and culture of the author, genre, or period that the class is reading. What effect does live international discourse have upon learning? Methods ======= Rhetorical analysis of primary texts. How a session at the MOO differs from a traditionally taught class session might best be studied via key concepts such as: ============================================================ Experiential knowledge ---------------------- What might a host know from experience of a local author, poet, genre that never would appear in a biography or critical text? Cross cultural comments ----------------------- How might a form of peer mentoring go on in which the local host might augment the more academic knowledge of the instructor and students (where the instructor and students jointly construct knowledge of the subject)? Note participants' spontaneous invention of haikai in session logs. Empathic comments ----------------- Empathy is the ability to feel, to a certain degree, what others are feeling. Linguistic-sharing comments --------------------------- Comments in which host and students share discoveries about each other's languages. More of a peer-tutoring and informal situation than a formal language learning situation. Humor in context ---------------- Comments regarding both intentional humor in the text and humor in the MOO learning situation. Comments may deal with unintended humor such as similarity of words, misunderstood words, or just the situation of studying haiku on a MOO. =========================================================== My hypothesis is that far less of all four categories above occur in the traditional literary analysis of global literature. For the purpose of this presentation, I will point out instances of these discursive categories. Once the categories are set up, instances may be compared of occurrences of these rhetorical behaviors with a controlled-group study. The model for teaching literature to further intergroup communication is derived from cultural studies theory and Burkean theory. Kenneth Burke's "interest in structure came from his conviction that the aims of any discourse are embedded in its formal principles, and his focus on power came from his interest in the effect of cultural discourses as they seek to change individual attitudes and behavior (Burke online). While sensitive teaching of global literature may move individuals to a better understanding of other peoples and cultures, there is also value in socially constructive models of literature, such as Raymond Williams' pedagogical theory. Williams describes a wide area of potential meetingplaces of societies, and in Communications, he outlines a broader basis for a culture than merely the relationships of property, power, and production. Williams finds these relationships no more fundamental to a society than relationships in describing, learning, modifying, exchanging, and preserving experiences" (Raymond Williams' online). Burke proposed in his A Grammar of Motives, not a direct and painless route to global understanding via language, but only the more modest hope that people would increasingly fight with language rather than with guns and bombs. In looking at how the new MOO-based discourse may add to the cooperative side of Burke's theory, we might consider the model of non-biological evolution that Martin Keegan presents for MUDs. He states that our choices of participation nudge the evolution one way or another: towards the destructively competitive (limited resources and killing to gain them, gaming model) or towards the socially cooperative (object-building MOO model). The act of choosing causes a replication and proliferation of MUDS with activities of the one sort or the other, thus our choices are part of the process of causing a sort of non-biological evolution. Martin Keegan's MUD tree model . Keegan makes abundantly clear that online choices determine future options, noting that, The origin of the "social versus combat" distinction may be seen in the figure - muds where resources are consumed through battle and plunder (and which hence require resetting) attract a different sort of person from that attracted by muds which revolve around creation of complex scenarios, either through programming and building, or role-playing. The Socialisers and Explorers in Bartle (1996) are attracted to muds in the TinyMUD mould, and that the Achievers and Killers are drawn to Dikus and AberMUDs. Session Transcipts ================== Below are excerpts from the MOO tape of "Miyan's" haiku session illustrating the categories listed above: * Experiential knowledge of host. Miyan's experience * Cross-cultural sharing. Our cross-cultural discoveries. * Empathic comments. Empathy * Linguistic-sharing comments. Learning Japanese via haiku * Context humor. We break the humor barrier Institutional Constraints ========================= Questions for further consideration: How may the qualitative differences of MOO literary salons be demonstrated? Future need to secure steady number of presenters. Method for this? Is a system of accreditation helpful? Note Burke's position on voluntary attendance. Make course a recognized level within the currently existing system? Conclusions =========== Suggestions for future research in the area of Global Literary sessions: More research needed on specific character of MOO literary discussions. Research a MOO or web sign-up for international hosts. Research various systems of external rewards for participation for hosts. Research ways to make course an Honors course or a part of WRT 102. Biographical Note ================= Gloria McMillan is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Rhetoric and Composition Program of the English Department at the University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ. Her dissertation work is on the uses of literacy among Chicago immigrants from 1890 to the 1930s. She was an "early adopter" of the use of MOOs in her community college classroom, seeing the poential for lower income people to make truly global, cross-cultural contacts. Works Cited =========== "Arnold, Matthew." The Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism Lu, Min Zhan, and Bruce Horner. "The Problematic of Experience." College English 60.3 (mar 1998): 257-77. Roberts, Meaghan "Poetic Subjectivity, Its Imagination and Others: Toward an Ethical Postmodern Imagination" Enculturation 1.2 (Fall 1997)