May 2009 Archives

Sede di Roma

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Our students in Communication Arts & Sciences arrived in Rome a week ago to start their seven week program at the Penn State Sede di Roma.

Also in Rome this summer are Penn State students in Human Development and Family Studies; Nutrition; and Architectural Engineering. In fall and spring semester, the Penn State Sede di Roma is host to Penn State students in Architecture.

Four Seasons in Rome

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4seasonscover_screen.jpg

In Four Seasons in Rome, Anthony Doerr considers the relation of his journal to his published work.

"As I work on yet another draft of my story, I try to remember these lessons. A journal entry is for its writer; it helps its writer refine, perceive, and process the world. But a story--a finished piece of writing--is for its reader; it should help its reader refine, perceive, and process the world--the particular world of the story, which is an invention, a dream. A writer manufactures a dream. And each draft should present a version of that dream that is more precisely rendered and more consistently sustained than the last."

Anthony Doerr, Four Seasons in Rome (New York: Scribner, 2008), 156.

Doerr is a writer of fiction, and he observes early in Four Seasons in Rome that he has been for many years in the habit of starting the day with a journal entry to exercise his writing muscles. But Four Seasons itself is neither fiction nor writer's journal, though it draws on both, one supposes. Doerr, who spent a year as a fellow of the American Academy in Rome, writes of how he at first made slow headway on his fiction in progress. Rome seemed to demand that he pay more attention to his journal, and so he did, eventually, one supposes, recording the raw material that resulted in Four Seasons, which retains the generally chronological shape of a traveler's journal but has a more finished quality -- it is now for the reader, not the writer.

Our own study abroad students in Rome are asked to write journals--starting with the daily observations and reflections that they can then use to create a second and third draft addressed to readers, while retaining the day-by-day shape of a journal. In this exercise our students are participating in a genre that is centuries old.

Thanks to Sarah Benson for lending me her copy of this book.

Tourism - Stay Home

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Chances are, wherever you live, that travel and tourism are a big part of your local economy. Not only are we all tourists, but we all live in tourist destinations.

This week our Communication Arts & Sciences students arrived in Rome for the start of their seven week study abroad experience, led by Professor Stephen Browne and graduate students Mia Briceno and Una Kimokeo-Goes.

Here at home in State College, Pennsylvania, we are reminded every day that we, too, are a tourist destination. In our local paper, The Centre Daily Times, this morning, we were informed that "Two years ago, visitors spent an estimated $352 million in the county. Tourism is considered the second largest industry in Pennsylvania."

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