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Christopher Douce

A335 Journal - January 2026

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Edited by Christopher Douce, Friday 30 January 2026 at 10:05

3 January 2026

Happy new year!

My previous TMA result has finally come in. I’ve had a look through the comments, and they are helpful. The big takeaway point is to work harder to integrate everything together – secondary sources, the text that is the focus of the analysis, and my opinions about everything. Also, it is important to make my opinions clear – do I agree or disagree with other critics? All this is good academic practice which I was never formally taught in my study of computing. With this in mind, I do feel as if I’m getting some useful additional academic training from studying English.

I’m looking forward to the next TMA. Over the winter break, I had a short break of a couple of days. During that time, I managed to choose and then read three articles for next TMA. When I got back, I’ve had a go to summarise them for when the TMA 3 discussion forum opens. What I need to do is to go through my chosen set text with a fine toothed comb, whilst thinking about the main essay question.

I managed to get a bit of extra ‘study’ done first thing this morning. Whilst lying in bed, I listed to a podcast by Emma Smith, a fabulous Shakespeare scholar from Oxford University I thought there might be a connection between a topic she raised and the forthcoming EMA question. Without too much messing about, I managed to track down the source, which I’ve now sent to my Kindle.

My final action of this morning is to eyeball the TMA 4 question, which is due in April. I have two immediate thoughts. The first is that it appears to be quite open, i.e. for a couple of the options we get to choose our own texts (if we wish to do so). The second is that there’s a group of texts that I’ve not yet read. I need to restart reading Salih and then move onto Calvino, but I’m a bit intimidated by its length. I have, however, booked time off in leave for the beginning of March, so I might be okay.

5 January 2026

I tried to download a version of the Salih text, but it isn’t available on the Kindle, so I downloaded a copy of Cosmicomics. I have a paper version, but I don’t have it with me at the moment. I don’t like it. I’m nearly through the first 12 stories. I’m not, yet, at the point of wanting to throw it across the room (which I wanted to do with a Woolf text), but I’m not too far from it. I appreciate what it’s trying to do, but from my reading, I don’t think it works. It feels overly contrived. This is the extent of my literary analysis.

The TMA 3 wiki should open soon. I’ve asked my tutor a question, and has kindly responded. My next task is to read over what I’ve prepared and then post my text to the collaborative area. I then have a couple of weeks until I need to put my thoughts in order for the penultimate TMA. In the meantime, my day job is going to dominate.

This is my first day back. I think I need another holiday.

13 January 2026

My contribution to the collaborative literature review has been done. I’m quite pleased when what I managed to put together.

Over the last week or so I’ve been jumping around between different texts. I’ve abandoned Cosmicomics. I really don’t like it. This said, I have got part way through an audiobook version of Between the Acts, which isn’t as bad as I remembered. I got through a few chapters whilst on a long drive. I’ll try to start it again when I have another long drive in a couple of weeks.

After seeing a fabulous play, I was inspired to read Stuff Happens by Hare, another of our set texts. I tore through it in under a day and found it thoroughly enjoyable. Given all the current political insanity, it came across as being unexpectedly quaint.

I’ve just finished listening to a cluster tutorial that was about another drama, The Playboy of the Western World. The tutor was fabulous, and packed in a whole lot of detail that either had passed me by, or I hadn’t known about. I might well go back and give it another listen. We were also given a link to a video recording of the play which I’m going to watch. I’ve already listened to an audio recording of it, which I found through Drama Online, but I haven’t (yet) got the entire sense of the play. I’ll really know what is what when I get to see it at The National at the end of next month – I just wish that I had booked in to see it earlier.

My next steps: I’ve downloaded another secondary source – a paper about modernism, and The Aran Islands by Synge and have sent these to my Kindle. I’m going to take myself off to a coffee shop, get out my virtual highlighter, and perform the role of an English student. (I would enjoy it more if I wasn’t so stressed about editing and writing materials for my day job!)

14 January 2026

I’ve started the modernism paper, but I got distracted. I recently found a copy of Reading and Criticism by Raymond Williams, published in 1955. Williams is mentioned in the module materials.

I have about 3 chapters to go: a chapter on reading drama, a chapter on bringing criticism all together, and a chapter about the role of literature in society. I read one first thing this morning. I’m hoping to get another one read by the end of the day.

16 January 2026

I’ve been to a few more tutorials. I was at the guest lecture about Ford last night, and ended up getting a bit confused. A lot of words were used. Just when I think I’m ‘getting’ modernism, a whole bunch of other ideas about it are thrown my way. I now have the job of picking through them all, and figuring out how the relate to my chosen text.

I’ve downloaded a bunch of papers from a Cambridge Companion, and have downloaded a couple of papers recommended by students. What I’ve got to do now is to read (and understand) everything, which is a whole lot easier said than done.

I keep thinking about the final TMA. I would like to pair Rhys with another text. That text must have been published between the years of 1932 and 1946, but I have no idea which text to choose. I have, however, found two useful resources (albeit a resource that is also trying to sell us books). Both are lists from Penguin. The first is 20 books that defined the 1930s. The second is, perhaps unsurprisingly, Books that shaped the 1940s. There are quite a few I’ve not heard of, and there are quite a few that I fancy reading. I’m sure we’ll be offered quite a bit of guidance when it comes to TMA 4.

19 January 2026

I think I’ve decided what to pair the Rhys text with (spoiler alert: it isn’t Woolf). I’ve ordered a cheap second hand copy of my chosen text from a popular second hand marketplace. If I hate the text, I have a lot of time to choose something else. I hope to have a good look at it next week.

I’m continuing with my reading of criticism of The Playboy of the Western World. To try to make more sense of it, I managed to spend a couple of hours watching something called the Druid production. I watched it whilst reading the Project Gutenberg edition on my Kindle whilst making the occasional set of notes. I now have a lot more of a sense of the play. It is a curious piece. It is completely over the top, and patently ridiculous, but I quite like it.

I have two other things to do. Look up both Synge and modernism in two reference books I have at home. There’s also a tutorial about Synge this evening. I’ll then consolidate my secondary reading. I should be able to start writing either at the end of this week, or the start of next week.

Something else. My tutor has shared an additional resource which relates to modernism and a bit of the forthcoming TMA. I’ve downloaded it and have sent it to my Kindle.

There’s always more stuff to read.

22 January 2026

I’m very nearly ready to get stuck in with my essay. I thought I would have a good old go at it this morning. Before I got cracking, I noticed that a tutor had shared some slides from their Synge tutorial. I downloaded them, opened them, and had a quick browse through. I don’t (yet) think my critical eye is as refined as it could be. I need to sit down with the text, and the PowerPoint slides, and go through them both carefully.

Whilst on a break, I jumped ahead to a bit of the final TMA; I started to re-read the opening of Good morning, Midnight. I really like this text. In the same morning, I received delivery of a text that I think I might pair it with. I’ll have to see if it’ll work.

Here’s my plan: quickly review the additional resource (which I said I would do) that tutors have been sharing, eyeball all the critical articles I’ve downloaded, and then start to pick apart passages from Playboy.

27 January 2026

This TMA 3 essay is doing my head in. I’m finding it really slippery. I’ve finished making loads of notes, but I’m worried that in the process of trying to distil everything down, my chosen argument might be way too complicated. There is a simple reason for this: the more that I have read, the more I see the different ways that the play can be understood. I have some thoughts about the passages that I’ve chosen, but I feel I need to write them down to see if they may any sense. I’m at a point where I feel I need to get this done.

I also feel as if I’m at a similar point in the module as I was last year with A334 - feeling a bit tired and confused. I’ll be really glad when this one is out of the way. I’ve been a bit overwhelmed with all the sources I’ve tried to make sense of.

30 January 2026

My TMA has gone in. I think it is as best as it can be. It has gone in way early, simply because I need to manage my workload.

Last night I started to listen to the Rhys audio materials, which I really liked and finished listening to them this morning. I tried to find a recording of the BBC radio play that was mentioned. I wasn’t successful, but I did find a radio programme about Good Morning, Midnight by comedian Josie Long. Her episode of The Exploding Library is really worth a listen. I even found a few minutes to look in the library, and have already downloaded a couple of critical articles which might be useful later. My next step is to go back to re-reading Good Morning, Midnight.

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Christopher Douce

A335 Journal - August 2025

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Edited by Christopher Douce, Monday 1 September 2025 at 10:46

11 August 2025

I’ve just come back from a couple of weeks of much needed leave.

A few days before heading away I was stuck down by a nasty stomach bug which meant that I couldn’t travel. Whilst recovering, I listened to a couple of audio books: a selection of stories by Katherine Mansfield (but not the exact same selection that have been selected from the module), and a listen to Under Milk Wood by Thomas, as narrated by Richard Burton. I liked Mansfield, but I loved the Thomas text. I remembered fragments from seeing a production of it in the 1990s at the national theatre.

I was planning on taking a lot of texts on holiday with me, but I culled the collection down to a practical core. Plus, I was told I might be getting a couple of the texts for my birthday.

When I finally got stuck into my holiday, I began with Good Morning, Midnight by Jean Rhys, which I adored. It felt quite contextually topical, since I was going to be travelling via Paris on the way back (and I had been drinking a bit of wine to celebrate my break). Next up was Between the Acts by Woolf, which I hated. I found the introduction of the text really helpful, which attuned me to her prose style, but I felt the it was artificial and detracted from what was going on. Perhaps I’ll change my views when I get into the module materials.

Next up was Playboy of the Western World by Synge. Interestingly, there’s a production of this which is going to take place at the national theatre in the new year (I was tipped off about this by some chat in the Facebook group). Tickets have been booked. I have no idea whether it will coincide with the TMA schedule (the module website isn’t open yet). I quite liked it, and I started to think about the meaning of the various characters, and how much there was to decode. I’m sure we’ll get onto this when we get into the module materials.

I followed this by The Good Soldier by Ford Maddox Ford. I really liked this one. Due to the focus on ‘the soldier’ I was reminded of the film The Talented Mr Ripley, which is probably a spurious comparison. I also though of The Secret History by Donna Tartt, which I read when it came out. One of the names of the characters is shared between these two texts.

Two of the birthday texts I received were The Mill on The Floss by George Eliot, and the Norton edition of Walden by Thoreau, which is (of course) different than the version that I had downloaded for my Kindle. I tore through The Mill on The Floss in about three days. I really like Eliot’s writing style; her very considered descriptions. I was really interested to learn that the novel is set in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire. I’m guessing that the river Floss might have been inspired by the river Trent.

In the final couple of days, I managed to start the Thoreau text beginning with his essay Civil Disobedience, which has striking resonance today. I then found my way to the start of Walden, reading his chapter on the economics of living by a lake. I was then drawn to the biography section, asking myself the question: ‘who is this chap?’ I was also struck by how young he died.

I should also mention that I got the A334 result I was hoping for, which is a relief. I felt that the EMA assessment was very fair, and I can clearly see where I could have done better and gained a higher mark. There is always learning to be had.

I’m now back to my day, job triaging my inbox. I’m going to try to keep up the reading momentum and shall try to find some time to read some Thoreau every day; I feel it’s important to get ahead. I want to move onto Season of Migration to the North by Salh, which looks like an interesting read.

16 August 2025

The module website is open. It’s taken a few days to get there, but I’m starting to have a look around. I’ve read the introduction, and I’ve skim read the assessment guide. There are specific bits about TMAs 1 and 3. I think I’m going to enjoy TMA 3, even though it looks like it is going to be group work. Relating to the module website, a further task is to identify whether there are some resources that I can send to the Kindle. Before getting to this, I was directed to a short series of YouTube videos about Women Writers: Voices in Transition beginning with Katherine Mansfield.

A final note on this entry is that I’ve become an A335 WhatApp group co-moderator. There are already a number of messages. To answer a question, I need to look at what the A335 GenAI policy is. I’m sure it will be somewhere on the module website.

29 August 2025

Over the last week or so I’ve been trying to snatch a few moments here and there to read Walden. Just before a long drive, I downloaded a Walden audio book on Audible. It turns out there are quite a few of them, and one was even included in my Audible subscription. The audiobook ran to ten hours, but I realised that I had the equivalent of four hours of audiobook remaining, which was pretty much the length of my drive.

I’m going to have to go over it again if I use this text for any of my assignments, but I have concluded that Thoreau writes really well about squirrels.

I’ve downloaded his essay Walking which runs to an hour and three quarters, which I’m going to have to listen to whilst going on some walks. After this, I’ll continue my pre-reading with Salih. Then there’s the sci-fi novel, but I’m in no rush to read that one.

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