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Tales Out of School: Gender, Longing, and the Teacher in Fiction and Film [Hardcover]

Professor Jo Keroes Ph.D. (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

June 16, 1999

Jo Keroes's scope is wide: she examines the teacher as represented in fiction and film in works ranging from the twelfth-century letters of Abelard and Heloise to contemporary films such as Dangerous Minds and Educating Rita. And from the twelfth through the twentieth century, Keroes shows, the teaching encounter is essentially erotic.

Tracing the roots of eros from cultural as well as psychological perspectives, Keroes defines erotic in terms broader than the merely sexual. She analyzes ways in which teachers serve as convenient figures on whom to map conflicts about gender, power, and desire. To show how portrayals of men and women differ, she examines pairs of texts, using a film or a novel with a woman protagonist (Up the Down Staircase, for example) as counterpoint to one featuring a male teacher (Blackboard Jungle) or The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie balanced against Dead Poets Society.

The portrayals of teachers, like all images a culture presents of itself, reveal much about our private and social selves. Keroes points out authentic accounts of authoritative women teachers who are admired and respected by colleagues and students alike. Real teachers differ from the stereotypes we see in fiction and film, however. Male teachers are often portrayed as heroes in film and fallibly human in fiction, whereas women in either genre are likely to be monstrous or muddled and are virtually never women of color. Among other things, Keroes demonstrates, the tension between reality and representation reveals society's ambivalence about power in the hands of women.

 



Editorial Reviews

Review

"Keroes's major contribution is to (quite deftly) use literary and film criticism as tools for exposing the power and gender politics that shape and reflect modern society. To do so, she focuses on a critical microcosm of society, the world of school and schooling, and teachers and students, not as they exist in everyday reality but as they are depicted (and therefore interpreted) in novels and film. With this focus, Keroes also exposes the beliefs and values that the broader culture ascribes to the institution of schooling."—Melanie Sperling, University of California, Riverside

About the Author

Jo Keroes is a professor of English at San Francisco State University.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 176 pages
  • Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press; 1st edition (June 16, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0809322382
  • ISBN-13: 978-0809322381
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,068,056 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tales Out of School by Jo Keroes, April 14, 2001
By 
Elizabeth A. Sommers (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tales Out of School: Gender, Longing, and the Teacher in Fiction and Film (Hardcover)
"For as long as I have been an adult, I have been a teacher."

Jo Keroes, Tales Out of School, Acknowledgments, ix

_Tales Out of School: Gender, Longing, and the Teacher in Fiction and Film_, Jo Keroes' recent book (Southern Illinois Press, 1999), explores sexism, racism, ambition, relationships between students and teachers, and the dynamics of the teaching life. Keroes writes about the images of teaching in novels, films and letters. Males such as Sir in _To Sir With Love_ are often portrayed as heroic as they struggle to teach their initially truculent students, while women such as Miss Jean Brodie in _The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie_ are more often portrayed as sinister, frustrated, manipulative or thwarted as they try to reach pupils who are often increasingly insoucient or suspicious. Whether on film or on paper, her tales are dramas that take place in the classroom, in tutorials, in the often neglected or ridiculed situations in which teachers and students find themselves. Jo Keroes draws from literary theory and techniques, research and teaching experience to explore teachers' fictional and dramatic images, to unravel volatile mixes of feelings, ideas, participants and purposes. As she comments in the Introduction:

This tension between reality and representation, these contradictory images and expectations, are suggestive precisely because they speak to society's need to construe images that deny and in some cases counter a reality we find dangerous and/or unacceptable. More simply, they reveal our continued ambivalence about women's power. I'm interested in exploring not just the way these stereotypes continue to play out, but also the tensions the stereotypes reveal and the ways in which certain texts work to subvert them. While we often see traditional gender patterns inscribed in fiction and film, the most interesting of these patterns show disruptions and disharmonies, inconsistencies and contradictions, resistance to and variations on familiar themes (8).

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