God no. Especially if that would make their homework look like they were playing video games.Silvanus said:Well, do we really want to make our offspring attend yet another arts class in secondary school?
The thought had struck me when I saw Shylock, largely because I find that debate actually interesting. There seems to be far less ambiguity in the motives here than those of Shakespeare or Kipling or similar. I mean, I suppose we could go all "death of the author" route, but at that point you can argue any character as degrading or empowering, sexist or feminist, liberal or conservative.Y'know, it's just occurred to me that Shylock is a brilliant example, actually. Like "Sexist" and "Feminist", the "comic villain" and "tragic victim" would be two ostensibly diametrically-opposed characters, both embodied in a single personage!
Could this really be... the single greatest example of giving a debate too much credit?!
I mean, hell, here's an alternate explanation for Star Wars [http://darthsanddroids.net/episodes/0075.html] that makes a lot more sense than what Lucas came up with, but it's still not the intent.