evadne_noel: A man and the cresent moon in a rowboat (scarygoround.com)
[personal profile] evadne_noel
You know you're an English Major when:
by Noelle, Lisa and Erin

1) You feel the need to edit everything you read.

2) You read the scholarly introductions of books because you’re genuinely interested.

3) You walk into a Starbucks and think of Moby-Dick.

4) You know Moby-Dick has a dash in it.

5) You think The Iliad and The Odyssey are fun reads.

6) You haven’t needed to consult the MLA Handbook for years.

7) You think Shakespeare’s comedies are actually funny.

8) You know who the real protagonist of “Antigone” is.

9) You use the word “protagonist.”

10) Thanks to Paradise Lost, you think Lucifer is the hero of Genesis.

11) “I knew him, Horatio.”

12) You know how to use a semi-colon properly.

13) You secretly believe that no one has actually ever finished Finngans Wake.

14) You know which character Frankenstein really is.

15) While Holmes may be smarter, you know that Dupin could still totally kick his ass.

16) You think a 20-page research paper is a weekend project.

17) You know “The Crucible” isn’t really about the Salem Witch Trials.

18) You’ve been forced to read Pamela.

19) You’ve read the second ending of Persuasion.

20) You know why “To boldly go where no man has gone before” is grammatically incorrect.

21) You know that Les Misérables is not really like the play. Neither is Phantom of the Opera.

22) You own a Norton anthology. Or twelve.

23) Thanks to Shakespeare, you can name the kings of England better than the presidents of the United States.

24) You think Hawthorne wrote Italian Romances better than the Italians.

25) You know the difference between romance and Romance.

26) If you have to read Poetics one more time, someone will DIE.

27) You think being buried beside your true love in an open-sided casket so your bones can mingle for all eternity really shows you care.

28) You think Susan Glaspell is soooo much better than Eugene O’Neill.

29) You’ve read Edith Hamilton.

30) You crane your neck to see what other people are reading on the metro (and probably judge them accordingly).

31) You specifically look for T.J. Eckleburg glasses.

32) There is absolutely no research whatsoever on your paper topic.

33) You are seriously considering naming your child Hrothgar, Phinneas, Ursula, Una, Cordelia, Dorothea, Eustacia, Scout or Pearl.

34) You know how to pronounce “Giles Cory.”

35) You compare your social circle’s various dramas to Belinda and the Baron.

36) You have the Webster word of the day e-mailed to you.

37) You’ve read more by Louisa May Alcott than Little Women.

38) You love the smell of old book.

39) You’re insulted by a service station named after Walt Whitman

40) You avoid dead letter offices because of Bartleby.

41) You’re afraid your language is turning into Newspeak.

42) You know that it’s “far from the madding crowd.”

43) You know that Joyce Kilmer is a man and that George Eliot is a woman.

44) You know that Hawthorne actually added the “w” in his name.

45) You think there needs to be a cage death match between MLA and APA.

46) You can tell the difference between all of Oscar Wilde’s plays.

47) Someone calls their fiancé their “intended,” and you run away screaming, “The horror! The horror!”

48) You’ve read Huckleberry Finn so many times that you don’t believe it is actually a banned book.

49) You know that David Copperfield isn’t just a magician.

50) Marion Zimmer Bradley has killed your love of the tales of King Arthur.

51) Your video collection is largely made up of BBC productions.

52) You know that this is not the best of all possible worlds.

53) Your dog is named Argus, Shiloh, Toto, Benji, Buck, Sounder or Old Yeller (not recommended).

54) You get the old Looney Tunes joke “I will hug him, and squeeze him, and call him George.”

55) You are upset when life doesn’t happen in terms of exposition, inciting forces, rising action, a climax, falling action and denouement.

56) You think there needs to be more Peter Ackroyd available in America. But Hawksmoor was still eff-ed up.

57) You think Redcrosse is an insult to Saint George.

58) You can spell "Houyhnhnms" without looking. (from [livejournal.com profile] dreamstrifer)

59) You think the funniest thing in Gulliver's Travels is that he goes to Japan.

60) You learned more about Anne Boleyn from the poems of Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder than from history class. And it was more interesting too.

61) You know that Ophelia made the most famous grammatically incorrect statement ever.

62) You go to a play, see a gun on the wall, and, well, you know the rest.

63) You're an English major, not a spelling major. So quiet [sic] asking you how to spell things off the top of your head.

My friend Lisa and I came up with most of this list while wandering around Washington, D.C. on New Year's Day. It started in a Starbucks when I came up with the third quote on the list. From there, we came up with about 45 more English Major jokes until we drove back to Connecticut the next day. It was a lot of fun. We'd be looking at the Hope Diamond in the Natural History Museum, and Lisa would say, "Okay, how about...'You know who Frankenstein really is'?" We are both crazy English Majors. Or were. Technically we are both crazy English degree holders. Anyway, my friend Erin came up with a few more later in January.

Feel free to add more in comments. I can't say they'll be added to my list because I don't have final editorial say all by myself. But if you want one added, I'll ask Lisa, and if we put it on, we'll put your name after it.

I suspect Lisa and I will be adding to this list, oh, probably for the rest of our lives. Because even if we move on to other things, we are still, at heart, English Majors.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-01-31 02:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ratatusk.livejournal.com
If you liked that icon, you may also like this one...especially since it's from the same comic, Queen of Wands (http://www.queenofwands.net/).

(no subject)

Date: 2005-01-31 08:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evadne-noel.livejournal.com
As someone who views the purposeful misspelling of words a sign of the decline of society...yes, I do like that icon.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-01-31 08:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ratatusk.livejournal.com
Yes....yes I can understand that well. I do believe that you'll hate this book (TTYL) (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0810948214/qid=1107231160/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/103-1233838-8960605?v=glance&s=books) as much as I do then.

As one reviewer said:

In the future, robot archaeologists will be sifting through the rubble of a long dead human civilization, patiently searching for the ultimate cause of mankind's extinction. After sifting through the remains of our fallen society, searching through libraries and the streets of ghost towns and the insides of long-dead computers, they will eventually find the horrific shout that set off the avalanche that would destroy us.
They will find TTYL.

It will be the first time a robot weeps.



(no subject)

Date: 2005-01-31 08:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evadne-noel.livejournal.com
Is that the book entirely in IM? I saw that in the bookstore and nearly screamed in agony.

My. God. What are we coming to?

(no subject)

Date: 2005-01-31 08:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ratatusk.livejournal.com
Yes. Yes it is. The pages of the book also made to look like an IM screen. I work in a bookstore and when I first saw that book I almost screamed with the sheer agony that gripped my mind. The saddest part is, since they first came in, at least three have been sold *shudder*.

I think it's made for the teenage girls who come in or call asking for the Gossip Girl books in a voice completely devoid of anything resembling intelligence, instead filled with the thought of new clothes or their latest boy friend.

...[/end rant]

(no subject)

Date: 2005-01-31 09:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evadne-noel.livejournal.com
That's the most terrible thing I've ever heard. It will probably become a best seller.

Ah, if only you could fill the void in their heads with your rant.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-01-31 09:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ratatusk.livejournal.com
I tried that once, with a livejournal community [livejournal.com profile] beautyandbooks but I all got was an enormous amount of people insulting me and my intelligence *shakes head*.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-02-01 04:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evadne-noel.livejournal.com
I was wondering how any book community worth its salt could get away with insulting someone's intelligence. Then, I looked at the userinfo and saw that they were "elitest." And, lo, suddenly all became clear.

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