Saturday, September 14, 2019
Revisioning the Scholarship Boy
Re-Visioning the Scholarship Boy In ââ¬Å"When We Dean Awaken: Writing as Re-Vision,â⬠Rich describes the dilemma we all face as humans in our search for identity. Are we to allow the forces of the past to define us, or are we to transcend these forces creating a new identity? For Rich her struggle with a male dominated society causes her to redefine herself through writing. As the title of her piece suggests, Rich uses ââ¬Å"writing as Re-vision,â⬠a way to rewrite the past, effectively breaking free of tradition.In ââ¬Å"The Achievement Of Desire,â⬠Rodriguez is faced with a similar crisis of identity, when faced with Hoggartââ¬â¢s concept of the ââ¬Å"scholarship boyâ⬠. While this concept seems to represent the hold of authority over Rodriguez, he instead uses it in his search for identity, breaking the hold of authority over him. Rich writes, ââ¬Å"until we understand the assumptions in which we are drenched we cannot know ourselvesâ⬠¦. â⬠(Ric h 18). In much the same way Rodriguez must understand the assumptions imposed by the concept of the ââ¬Å"scholarship boyâ⬠in his quest for self-identity.When examining Rodriguezââ¬â¢s struggle the following questions arise: Has Rodriguez broken free of the academic authorities in his life, which attempt to rigidly define his identity? Is he a ââ¬Å"scholarship boy,â⬠or something more? When contemplating these questions, we come to a surprising result; Rodriguez had used his quest for identity as a catalyst, allowing him to solidify his own philosophy of education. Throughout the achievement of desire Rodriguez uses the concept of the scholarship boy to express his philosophy of education.While at first we see the scholarship boy as a mere caricature, eventually it begins to increase in depth, until finally we realize that Rodriguez is in fact talking about himself. Rodriguez writes: ââ¬Å"In large part, however, the reason he is such a bad student is because he re alizes more often and more acutely than most other students ââ¬â than Hoggart himself ââ¬â that education requires radical self-reformation. â⬠(529) In this passage we begin to see pieces of Rodriguezââ¬â¢s philosophy of education. For Rodriguez, a successful education exists as a force of inevitable change.This change often pulls one away from their native culture, integrating them with society. Rodriguez states, ââ¬Å" Radical educationalists meanwhile complain that ghetto schools oppress students by trying to mold themâ⬠¦the truer critique would be just the reverse: not that schools change ghetto students too muchâ⬠¦they change most students barely at all. â⬠(529) For Rodriguez a proper education inevitably ââ¬Å"moldsâ⬠the student. The emphasis in the American educational system on ââ¬Å"creativity and originalityâ⬠ultimately hinders the success of the student.Rodriguez furthers his philosophy on education with his views on imitation. For Rodriguez imitation i ââ¬Å"From the story of the scholarship boy there is no specific pedagogy to gleanâ⬠¦ he makes clear that education is a long unglarorous even demeaning processâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ¦. Great quote to set up another paragraph For rodriguez, education need not be a pleasurable process. While thescholorship boy seems a negative story in reality it is a necessary one in terms of education. For the student of immigrant parents to become educated he must be ripped from his native cultureRodriguez reveals; ââ¬Å"A primary reason for my success in the classroom was that I couldnââ¬â¢t forget that schooling was changing me and separating me from the life I enjoyed before becoming a student. â⬠(516) During the beginning of his life, Rodriguez lives as the ââ¬Å"scholarship boyâ⬠. Rodriguez writes, ââ¬Å"I lacked a point of view when I read. Rather I read in order to acquire a point of view. â⬠(527). Furthermore Rodriguez writes ââ¬Å"I knew too much (and not enough) to be able to write anything but sentences that were overly cautious, timid, strained brittle under the heavy weight of footnotes and qualifications.I seemed unable to dare a passionate statementâ⬠(531). After these realizations Rodriguez searches for an answer to his shortcomings in academic literature coming face to face with Hoggartââ¬â¢s concept of the ââ¬Å"scholarship boyâ⬠. For the first time Rodriguez begins to question himself, framing these inquiries through the concept of the ââ¬Å"scholarship boyâ⬠Through questioning himself Rodriguez finally comes to terms with himself allowing a synthesis to occur, applying his skills of abstraction to his problem of identity.Rodriguez writes ââ¬Å"And yet, positively: the ability to consider experience so abstractly allowed me to shape into desire what would otherwise have remained indefinite. â⬠. Rodriguez takes this synthesis further concluding ââ¬Å"If, because of my schooling, I had gr own culturally separated from my parents, my education finally had given me ways of speaking and caring about this factâ⬠(532). Rodriguez goes further to illustrate his transformation, by contrasting his thoughts as a ââ¬Å"scholarship boyâ⬠with his thoughts in the present.Rodriguez writes ââ¬Å" Faithfully, I wrote down all that they said. I memorized it: ââ¬Å"The praise of the unlettered by the highly educated is the primary theme of ââ¬Ëelitistââ¬â¢ literatureâ⬠But, ââ¬Å"the importance of the praise given the unsolitary, richly passionate and spontaneous life is that it simultaneously reflects the value of a reflective life. â⬠(532). To Rodriguez this quote falls perfectly in line with his own conclusions from his experience, the wisdom of learning to balance the two opposing forces in his life. Yet as a scholarship boy these words mean nothing to him.Rodriguez writes, ââ¬Å"But there was no way for any of it to mean very much to me. I was a sch olarship boy at the time, busily laddering my way up the rungs of education. â⬠(532). Throughout ââ¬Å"Achievement of Desireâ⬠, Rodriguez maps his transformation from a ââ¬Å"scholarship boyâ⬠, to someone with his own authority. It is possible to see a similar transformation occur for Rich when we examine ââ¬Å"When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-Visionâ⬠. For Rich the final step of this transformation is through her act of writing about her struggle.Rich writes, ââ¬Å"Moreover if the imagination is to transcend and transform experience it has to question, to challenge, to conceive of alternatives, perhaps to the very life you are living at the moment. â⬠¦. For writing is re-naming. â⬠(Rich 23). It would seem that a final piece of evidence for Rodriguezââ¬â¢s transformation is ââ¬Å"Achievement of Desireâ⬠itself. Rodriguezââ¬â¢s ability to write about his struggle allows him to use the transformative power of the imagination, effectively using writing as Re-Vision.
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