HOW TO READ A BOOK - The Start of a Book

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  • Опубликовано: 10 дек 2024

Комментарии • 75

  • @ElaineDarlingtonBrown
    @ElaineDarlingtonBrown Год назад +55

    Perfect introduction to textual analysis. Many more, please.

  • @travisgoolsby4280
    @travisgoolsby4280 Год назад +62

    I wish you were my English teacher in school

  • @phyllisriley1013
    @phyllisriley1013 8 месяцев назад +21

    At 77 I’m still learning thanks to you.

  • @leafsonata
    @leafsonata Год назад +27

    I hope you make more content like this. This is how you get 💫reading afterglow💫

  • @Yesica1993
    @Yesica1993 Год назад +20

    That Bleak House passage felt like pure misery. I've struggled with reading Dickens. But there are passages like this that just get to me. I wish I had the gift for writing like that! Just a few lines and he's painted a whole world. You can see and feel and smell and taste it all. It really is extraordinary.

    • @tristanandtheclassics6538
      @tristanandtheclassics6538  Год назад +9

      It's impressive, isn't it. You can tell that Dickens had a remarkable and colourful imagination. He more than describes, he captures the essence of things.

  • @myrnaburgoyne2082
    @myrnaburgoyne2082 7 месяцев назад +8

    Thank you for leading me away from scrolling and bingeing back to my true love, reading. I’ve had the book Circe on my shelf for over a year and picked it up the other day after watching one of your videos, set a timer for one hour, and sat down to read it. You cannot imagine (or maybe you can) the pure joy I felt at burning past my one hour goal as I remembered how satisfying it is to absorb new ideas and turns of phrase that I underlined with pure delight. Every day since has been punctuated by this awakened passion. Liked. Subscribed. Bell rung!

    • @tristanandtheclassics6538
      @tristanandtheclassics6538  7 месяцев назад +2

      This was a delightful comment to receive. Thank you for sharing. I'm so happy for you.😀😊❤️

  • @jilll3490
    @jilll3490 Год назад +24

    Thank you so much, Tristan, for sharing your talent with us. This is exactly what I was looking for. You are the best!

  • @Hfun7
    @Hfun7 Год назад +8

    This has instantly become one of my favourite educational channels!

  • @kidus5431
    @kidus5431 Год назад +8

    This was a lovely video. That Dombey & Son opening reminded me why Dickens is one of my favourites.

  • @emanuelacerchie
    @emanuelacerchie Год назад +5

    Good evening, I will definitely use some of your tips with my students on my next lesson on Dickens...and they will also appreciate a pure musical English accent. (I am an Italian teacher of English language and literature, I just stumbled upon your amazing channel).

    • @tristanandtheclassics6538
      @tristanandtheclassics6538  Год назад +3

      Hi, Emanuela! I'm so pleased to meet you and that you found my little channel useful. What a rewarding job for you. To teach is one of the most admirable endeavours one can be in. I'm delighted that your students are getting to read Charles Dickens. They must be very proficient at speaking English.
      You have my deepest respect for your noble work.
      Is there any topic that you would like me to make a video on?

    • @emanuelacerchie
      @emanuelacerchie Год назад +2

      Well thank you so much, I have just finished Stevenson focusing on the theme of the double, my next author will be Oscar Wilde and in the second term we well be tackling Modernism.

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 Год назад +7

    This is a great video and a treat (and will be useful, as I examine another author to determine how he begins his books). Thank you for posting this. I would love to see more of these How to Read a Book analysis videos.

  • @KpopLovingPenguiin
    @KpopLovingPenguiin Год назад +4

    When I clicked on this video, I never thought that it would be this interesting! Thank you so much for this video. It was so very delightful to see you analyse the openings 😊

  • @SaraSmit-e8w
    @SaraSmit-e8w 24 дня назад +1

    The iron and stone bridges in the first paragraph of Our Mutual Friend make me think of the Iron and Stone Ages.

  • @radiantchristina
    @radiantchristina Год назад +5

    oh, I can tell I'm going to love this video! I'm saving it so that I can listen to it at work today :) (already hit like though, because i know its going be a good one )

  • @Bloominjules
    @Bloominjules Год назад +3

    A lozenge is a motif used in architectural ornamentation, usually diamond or rhombus shaped... also medieval heraldry such as a shield, or the shape of the shield itself. I'm enjoying your intro--Dickens is so dense, packed with interesting things!

  • @Kcorner-z2p
    @Kcorner-z2p 9 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve just unlocked a brand new hobby! Always loved annotating poetry, didn’t know I could apply similar analysis to books. Thank you so much. I will be starting pride and prejudice- would love a similar breakdown of it❤

  • @alimohammedali4836
    @alimohammedali4836 Месяц назад

    You are an amazingly brilliant analyst of English literature masterpieces . Go on and keep up your perfectly fine job. I really enjoy following you . All the best of luck,Tristan.

  • @gommine
    @gommine 5 месяцев назад +1

    Mental note to re-read Bleak House. I didn't enjoy it back then but I think I read it in the wrong context and at the wrong time in my life.

  • @lorryt8648
    @lorryt8648 8 месяцев назад +2

    So helpful!! You are an excellent teacher!

  • @Mandibil
    @Mandibil 7 дней назад

    Brilliant stuff. Dickens is in a league of his own, my all time favourite author

  • @Dinadoesyoga
    @Dinadoesyoga Год назад +2

    This was brilliant. Thank you so much! I just finished Dombey and Son yesterday and saw these devices repeated throughout, and it was so vivid. I'm going to look at the introductions more carefully now.

  • @dianerademaker1896
    @dianerademaker1896 8 месяцев назад

    Tristan, you have changed my whole outlook on reading. I am so excited to have found your channel! From someone who read very quickly, and therefore missed a lot of the subtleties, I think, I have slowed down and appreciate what I read so much more! I am 76 - so much to read - appreciatively - and so little time. ☺

  • @ChrisHunt4497
    @ChrisHunt4497 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks Tristan. I was never taught this and for me it is life changing.

  • @RebeccaStamm
    @RebeccaStamm Год назад +8

    Once again, you’re amazing!

  • @kasiakwiatkowska5816
    @kasiakwiatkowska5816 Год назад +3

    Oh Tristan, so informative, and so utterly educational! I am so grateful for all your dedication to the channel, and our community. Even though I have been going through a whirlwind in my personal life, I was really looking forward to going back to reading and watching your videos 🙏💛 Greetings from Vegas!

  • @Sman-eg1zs
    @Sman-eg1zs 11 месяцев назад +1

    This was really interesting, I have David Copperfield, which I first read as a kid, I was given a copy a few years ago. I have just started war and peace again, so I think I'll read 10 pages of that in the day, and do DC as bedtime reading. You have made me want to read the other Dickens novels, Thanks.

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 Год назад +4

    In Dombey and Son: Dickens contrasts he "great" armchair against the "little" basket bedstead; again leading to the idea that Dombey is great and son is not (he is little by comparison). Also, Dickens uses a boxing metaphor at the end of the paragraph, where son "squares" up with his little "clenched fists" ready to feebly take on his new existence (son is portrayed as a fighter that you would not want to wager on, as if he is about to take on an opponent [life itself] who is more than he can handle).

  • @gommine
    @gommine 5 месяцев назад

    I absolutely love this line by line analysis. I have read a few of Dickens' novels so far (but only one recently) and never got so much out of the opening lines. I'm looking forward to re-reading soon!

  • @tonyspark
    @tonyspark Год назад +3

    Awesome video! Worth every minute of my time. Thank you.

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 Год назад +2

    In Our Mutual Friend: The "two figures" also, without even mentioning the word 'fog,' gives us the impression that we are onlookers at a distance, and can not make out exactly who is in the boat, but we can distinguish that there are two figures. Like the opening of a movie where we see the 'establishing shot,' and we see the boat from a distance on the Thames, and through the fog, we can make out the boat and that there are two figures on it, but not much more (though we can see the bridges as well). In the next paragraph, we 'zoom in' and get more detail about the two figures.

  • @jallen418
    @jallen418 Год назад +2

    This was absolute gold. Thank you!

  • @LaJessChelle
    @LaJessChelle 9 месяцев назад

    This is amazing content! Thank you! I took notes, and I learned so much. I have yet to read anything by Dickens, but I’ve moved a couple of his works to higher places on my “to read” list.

  • @robing.1336
    @robing.1336 2 месяца назад

    I really enjoyed this. Have you made other videos that look at other author's opening paragraphs? If not, please more. I found this fascinating.

  • @Laele267
    @Laele267 11 месяцев назад

    Such great way to explain analysis. Thank you Tristan, I hope you make more of these videos!

  • @masterprocrastinator7078
    @masterprocrastinator7078 Год назад +1

    Thanks Tristan! Wonderful!

  • @jackiesliterarycorner
    @jackiesliterarycorner Год назад +4

    I'll have to start looking at and studying the first paragraphs of novels and see what I comprehend in it.

  • @MaxZampieriCine
    @MaxZampieriCine 7 месяцев назад

    Tristan. Thank you. This is wonderful.

  • @dellh86
    @dellh86 Год назад +2

    This video needed a better title. I almost didn't click on it becuase "well I know how to read a book". Great video though. Coincidentally, I have Oliver Twist on my tbr for 2024. I have never read any Dickens and this video has me excited to read him

  • @Kisstamasdr
    @Kisstamasdr Год назад +2

    Thank you Tristan.

  • @paulhammond6978
    @paulhammond6978 11 месяцев назад +1

    v. interesting. You made me go and read the opening of David Copperfield again, and I made a connection I hadn't thought of before - Copperfield with his "birth at the chimes of midnight" is clearly related to Midnight's Children, whose protagonist was also born at the chimes of midnight on the day that India became independent. And Midnight's Children is a bildungsroman that uses the lives of him and the other children that were born at the same time as a symbol for the life of the country of India that is the same age. I'm not sure if Rushdie made that connection deliberately or consciously, but Rushdie would certainly be aware of the influence of Dickens.

  • @Whatever_Happy_People
    @Whatever_Happy_People Год назад

    Hullo Tristan I have just finished the brother's karamazov. Loved it. Peace.

  • @susprime7018
    @susprime7018 Год назад +2

    Very fine.😊

  • @ToddSmith23
    @ToddSmith23 Год назад +2

    Great video

  • @Michajeru
    @Michajeru Год назад +1

    Wow! This was so informative.

  • @carolvoit8411
    @carolvoit8411 8 месяцев назад

    This is great!

  • @katssketches1118
    @katssketches1118 Год назад

    Loved this.

  • @xaviercrain7336
    @xaviercrain7336 Год назад +1

    Stirring staring also should be accounted for and Marseilles and Marshall sea prison

  • @bad-girlbex3791
    @bad-girlbex3791 Год назад

    Phantasmagorical, immersive allegorical.

  • @smkh2890
    @smkh2890 5 месяцев назад

    A friend expressed surprise when I said 'I'm going to do some reading." Obviously a hang-over from student days where 'reading' meant 'work' !

  • @xaviercrain7336
    @xaviercrain7336 Год назад +2

    We should also be speaking of the macabre in dickens GE and its link to the gothic and how it plays off of the Arabic to which it is derived: cemetery

    • @BookLover19
      @BookLover19 Год назад

      Can you please elaborate on the Arabic?

    • @xaviercrain7336
      @xaviercrain7336 Год назад

      @@BookLover19 look up the word in Arabic by looking at the dictionary and you will see how some traditions are corrupted when placed into modern contexts
      In Arabic gravesites are not places of fear or gothic pretense. They are places where the dead are communed with not made enlightened propositions over, propositions which are rather farcical even if childlike

  • @renatarocha5430
    @renatarocha5430 Год назад +1

    Wonderful analysis of the text. I am from Brazil and your content is helping me a great deal analysing texts and studying English literature!!!!!!

  • @saberwolf156
    @saberwolf156 Год назад +5

    I've struggled with Dickens in the past; I'm assuming it's a fault of my own. Maybe I should try again with a different book.

    • @tristanandtheclassics6538
      @tristanandtheclassics6538  Год назад +4

      I do think Dickens is exceptional, however, you don't need to feel that it is a fault on your part if he doesn't resonate with you. Plenty of people don't get on with Dickens. There is no author that appeals to everyone.
      If it helps, I did a video on "The Humours" which might help you with understanding Dickens way of writing. 😀👍

  • @KasiaSzatkowska
    @KasiaSzatkowska 6 месяцев назад +1

    I just couldn't help but notice, in the last one - Hard Times - the juxtaposition not only between facts and children, being humane and being scientific, but also the cunning usage of words right out of nature world: plant and root. And animal (although reasoning) for that matter. Plant - being verb in here, however as a noun, bringing to mind roses, trees, beautiful perennial borders and such. And roots, being the foundation of growth and providing their above-grounds parts with live-bearing water. Here we have "plant nothing" and "root out". I instantly shivered - so anti-nature this person is! He is a kind of man that would pave out the garden, because they would like to accommodate their lots of cars, only to find their cellar flooded with the next slightest rain, because in fact (FACT!) - one cannot fight nature (nor being human, in FACT, which is very much NATURAL way of being). Oh what a disgusting person that is! I have not read Hard Times and I cannot say I am being attracted by this paragraph. However knowing some Dickens, I know I will actually love it :-)
    Tristan, I enjoined this deep dive SO MUCH! Thank you!! I believe you have just showed me how much I have missed, reading as I did, eager to see the story being told, rather than to savour it a word at a time. Because in Dickens each word seems to be like a chocolate :-) Thank you again and very best wishes!

  • @SergeyA-x8s
    @SergeyA-x8s 11 месяцев назад

    HOW TO DESTROY A BOOK

  • @Biber0315
    @Biber0315 5 месяцев назад

    Sorry, couldn't make it very far into your analysis. It just angered me to hear you praise the very things I've been criticized for in my own writing.