CompFAQ/Lit Survey/ENGL 2122

From Gerald R. Lucas
< CompFAQ‎ | Lit Survey
Revision as of 08:46, 6 August 2024 by Grlucas (talk | contribs) (Fixed note.)

ENGL 2122: British Literature II Lessons

Directions: For each lesson below, follow all links and read them carefully. All primary texts may be found in your required textbook. All writing exercises should be completed on Packback discussions.

 note: Before beginning any of the assignments below, consult your specific course syllabus. Not all assignments will be completed by every class. Specific assignments, required materials, due dates, and additional instructions will appear on your syllabus.

1. Orientation

  1. Read and review the following links:

2. The Romantic Period

Introduction

Caspar David Friedrich - Landschaft mit Gebirgssee, Morgen.jpg
  1. Read:
  2. Take Period Introduction Quiz on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.[2]

2a. William Blake

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.[2]

2b. Samuel Taylor Coleridge

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.[2]

2c. William Wordsworth

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.[2]

2d. George Gordon, Lord Byron

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.[2]

2e. Percy Bysshe Shelley

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.[2]

2f. John Keats

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.[2]

2g. Other Romantics

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

3. The Victorian Period

Introduction

Waterhouse, The Lady of Shalott
  1. Read:
    • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 527–551[1]
  2. Take Period Introduction Quiz on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.[2]

3a.

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

3b.

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

3c. Oscar Wilde

  1. Read:
    • The Importance of Being Earnest
  2. Take reading quiz on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.

4. Edwardian and World War I

Introduction

  1. Read:
    • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 1015–1042[1]
  2. Take Period Introduction Quiz on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.

4a. Rudyard Kipling

  1. Read:
    • “The Man Who Would Be King”
  2. Take reading quiz on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.

4b.

  1. Read:
    • E. M. Forster: “The Machine Stops”; “Tolerance
    • James Joyce “Araby”
  2. Take reading quizzes on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.

4c. The Poetry of WWI

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

5. The Modern Period

Hulewicz, Leda and the Swan (1928)

Introduction

  1. Read:
    • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 1015–1042[1]
  2. Post to Packback.

5a. William Butler Yeats

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

5b. T. S. Eliot

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

5c.

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

5d. Virginia Woolf

  1. Read:
    • “The Mark on the Wall”
    • “Professions for Women”
  2. Take reading quizzes on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.

6. The Contemporary Period

6a. Poetry

  1. Read:
  2. Post to Packback.

6b.

  1. Read:
    • Nadine Gordimer: “The Moment before the Gun Went Off”
    • Katherine Mansfield: “The Garden Party”
  2. Take reading quizzes on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.

6c.

  1. Read:
    • Margaret Atwood: “Death by Landscape”
    • Salman Rushdie: “The Prophet’s Hair”
  2. Take reading quizzes on D2L.
  3. Post to Packback.



notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 See D2L for an overview of the period.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 See your specific syllabus for forum post requirements.
Written: 2002, 2022; Revised: 08-6-2024; Version: Beta 0.7 💬