Monday, March 22

Springtime for Scotland

It's been almost two weeks since I've written, so I figured I would take some time out of reading Toni Morrison's Beloved to write. My second class (or module) started last Thursday (technically it's my third class, but I'm hard pressed to acknowledge Research Methods as an actual academic endeavor). The class is Female Gothic and all of the texts we are reading are by women. It's a survey course, we started with Ann Radcliffe and Mary Wollstonecraft and are ending with Ann-Marie MacDonald's Fall On Your Knees, which was written in the early 90's. My other class, Contemporary Gothic, is absolutely brilliant, but it's completely out of my niche. I hardly know anything about contemporary fiction, let alone contemporary Gothic fiction. This week we are reading Beloved which I've read twice before and disliked every time I read it. I'm one hundred pages in and I'm starting to believe that the third time is NOT the charm.

I finally made it down to Glasgow this weekend. It's a pretty city; we didn't stray from the city centre and it seemed to me that it's mainly comprised of high-end stores and Starbucks. Great for shopping, but not much else. They do have a Gallery of Modern Art and there is also a TGI Friday's. It's good to know that it's there for when I long for a little taste of America. Only I'm actually wondering just how much of American restaurant it is. There's an American style restaurant in Stirling that offers bangers and mash (sausage and mashed potatoes) and fish and chips along side burgers and fries. I just hope they have fried green beans and ranch dressing.

Here's a fun fact about Scotland: In Scotland there's a rivalry between Edinburgh and Glasgow, similar to that of Oklahoma City and Tulsa, or Houston and Dallas. In other words, people from Edinburgh hate Glasgow and Glaswegians (people from Glasgow) aren't very fond of Edinburgh. And after careful consideration, I would say that I'm on Edinburgh's side of this debate. Edinburgh also has the National Library of Scotland, the Scottish Poetry Library, and JK Rowling wrote Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone there. Edinburgh maybe be a bit more touristy, but you have to get your kilt towels somewhere.

On April 16 I'm going to see Rufus Wainwright in concert in Edinburgh. I'm incredibly excited. I absolutely love Rufus Wainwright and I haven't been to a concert in ages. It's also in my favorite city and, most importantly, it gives me something to which I can look forward.

I was so incredibly bored for the first month I was here that I just wanted to go back to Oklahoma. Now things are picking up and I'm sure that by this time next month I'll be struggling to keep my head above water. Not like that's a big deal, I thrive on stress. The next thing you know, it will be August and I will be a crying mess on a plane back to the States.

Spring has finally arrived in Scotland. Flowers are blooming in the beds that line the path I take walking to campus. Birds are singing and it's finally getting warmer. I no longer have to sit in my room huddled in a sweater and blanket while wearing my fingerless gloves so I can type/read with warm hands. In other words I no longer look like a character from La Boheme when I'm reading in my room. On Sunday the clocks will spring forward and there will be daylight for an extra hour. I'm so happy for spring.

1 comment:

  1. Hey Kirstin! Have a night out on the West End before choosing Edinburgh over Glasgow. The West End is the sex. Plus, Glasgow has given birth to Belle and Sebastian, Camera Obscura, Franz Ferdinand, Boards of Canada, and various other awesome bands. Writerwise it has James Kelman, Tom Leonard, Janice Galloway, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Agnes Owens, Liz Lochhead - loads of immense fucking writers, seriously. Glasgow is awesome, but I can understand why you didn't think much of it based on the city centre. It's just not where it's at. The west end, on the other hand ... Magic happens there. True story.

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