Guest Editors' Introduction: Teaching Medieval Literature off the Grid (original) (raw)

2013, Pedagogy Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature Language Composition and Culture

In modern usage, living "off the grid" means living totally independently, without the modern conveniences of publicly supplied gas, electricity, and water; it also refers to people who strive to remain unrecorded in governmental, financial, and medical documents. More generally, to live off the grid is to live against the grain of society, ideologically at odds with the mainstream. As we have put the idea to use for this guest-edited issue, "Teaching Medieval Literature off the Grid," instructors who incorporate noncanonical texts into their classrooms resemble the above definitions in several respects. For one thing, to teach "off the grid" is almost always to teach self-sufficiently-to locate the texts you think are important and figure out for yourself why they are important, to provide or create your own introductory notes, glosses, and other relevant contextualizing material for your students. It is to build a lesson literally from the ground up. You are certainly off the beaten path, without much assistance or advice from textbooks, teachers' manuals, online resources, or other scholars' work; there is little, if anything, to vouch for or justify your lesson plan. To put it simply, and most generally, to teach off the grid is to teach outside the comfort zone of the canon, without the built-in validations and pedagogies that literary tradition provides. The challenges of teaching off the grid are many, but this issue of Pedagogy argues that the rewards are great. Noncanonical texts can shed light on perspectives different from those represented by the culturally authoritative texts of the canon, often can serve the useful purpose of defamiliarizing traditional readings, and