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Engineer Deconstructs Literary Criticism

DNS-and-BIND writes "This is the story of one computer professional's explorations in the world of postmodern literary criticism. Wouldn't it be nice to work in a field where nobody can say you're wrong?"

4 of 600 comments (clear)

  1. My favoritest paper ever! by Kulaid982 · · Score: 5, Funny

    In eleventh grade, I wrote my term paper on The Hobbit. Part of the assignment was to provide literary criticism of the work. I cited sources that stated how JRR Tolkien HATED allegory and reading deeper into works and therefore claimed I didn't need to provide any literary criticism of the Hobbit. My teacher bought it and I got an A. Tolkien rocked because he felt literature should be taken at face value.

    --

    Isn't it interesting how you come to recognize posters based solely on their sigs???
  2. What do you get ... by MonkeyBoyo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Q: What do you get when you cross a Post Modernist with a Mafioso??


    A: An offer you can't understand.

  3. Re:Another exploration into post-modernist literat by drooling-dog · · Score: 5, Funny

    That paper used lots of big words and I didn't understand it at all, so it must have been written by really smart people!

  4. Re:Another exploration into post-modernist literat by Slamtilt · · Score: 5, Funny

    I remember an odd line in that book. At one point, reference is made (at least in the edition I was reading) to a "slime green volume". Since it's such an odd description, I inevitably began to wonder if it was a misprint, for either "lime green" or "slim green". Then I wondered if it could be an intentional misprint. Then I wondered if it wasn't a misprint, but was deliberatly placed to make the reader wonder about this. Then I thought about how clever the translator must have been if it was intentional. Then my head exploded.