Surviving the Journey
A Universal Approach for the Student Critic
by
Book Details
About the Book
Surviving the Journey
is more than a book. It is a process designed to enhance the art of reading the
classics. Professor Botta takes his readers on a journey through literature
that mirrors the human journey through life.
This book is a roadmap
to understanding the wisdom of the past, connecting literary adventures with
modern human problems. The knowledge of great writers like Homer, Shakespeare,
Melville, Hawthorne, and Hemingway trapped between the pages of books is
unleashed, launching the reader into another dimension. The rewards are
permanent.
The concepts presented
are based upon an approach to literature known as Archetypal Criticism,
emphasizing the patterns of timeless human experiences that recur in literary
works spanning centuries. The Ordeal of life for human beings, real or
fictional, is consistent – we are born, we live, and we die. Literary
characters face the same human dilemmas as they focus on the goals that
ultimately transform them into heroic figures. Literature reflects life.
Readers will take pride in the identification of human patterns or models
authors use to teach the lessons of time. Understanding the struggles of
literary protagonists unlocks the portal to the wisdom of the ages. Surviving
the Journey is the key.
About the Author
John J. Botta, Jr. is
currently a faculty member at a private New England college, where he teaches
Writing, Humanities, and Sociology courses. He is a graduate of New York Law
School (JD), California State University (MA), Trinity College and University
in the United Kingdom (MA), and Seton Hall University (BA). He has lectured
international students in the areas of Critical Thinking, Leadership, and
Ethics.
Professor Botta is the
author of To Hug an Angel, and his online publications include: Philosophy
and Contemporary Issues; Free Speech and Pornography; The Responsibility of
Criminals; and, Rationalism v. Empiricism.
He resides in North
Sutton, New Hampshire with his wife of thirty-three years. They have four grown
children and two grandchildren.