ENGL 2122/Fall 2021/Schedule: Difference between revisions

From Gerald R. Lucas
(Updated syllabus.)
(Updates.)
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Each week of this class has its own unit or lesson corresponding to a literary movement. Each week is divided into daily work that contain readings (with the occasional reading quiz) and writing. Each week concludes with a test on the materials covered. The following is a general overview of the schedule.
Each week of this class has its own unit or lesson corresponding to a literary movement. Each week is divided into daily work that contain readings (with the occasional reading quiz) and writing. Each week concludes with a test on the materials covered. The following is a general overview of the schedule.


{{notice|Before beginning your work each week, read through the whole lesson so you know what to expect and understand what’s expected. Each tab corresponds to a lesson. All assignments are contained therein. Any questions should be posted to the [https://discourse.grlucas.net/c/Lit/world-lit/6 class forum], and be sure to '''read my weekly [https://discourse.grlucas.net/tags/c/lit/world-lit/6/feedback feedback]'''.}}
===Daily Work===
As this is a session course and time is limited, here’s how I recommend your proceed: '''work every day'''. Put aside at least an hour on every class day, and
# '''Read the primary texts''' (these are assigned below in individual class days) taking notes as you do, maybe highlighting passages that speak to you in some way;
# '''Read some secondary texts''': i.e., do some research on at least one of the texts, being sure you understand the major themes, symbols, etc.;
# '''Write a response''' {{crossreference|(see [[ENGL 2122/Fall 2021/Requirements#Writing|Writing]])}} on what you think about the text(s), supporting it with evidence from both the primary and secondary texts. I give some suggestions below for potential responses, but these are really up to you. You should write a ''minimum'' of two posts per lesson (or week).{{refn|Remember, minimums will earn you the minimum passing grade.}} A day is set aside each week for your unit tests and responses. You should have your responses done ''before'' then, so that day may be devoted to the test.
The idea here is that you engage with the course materials in a consistent way. Not all of it will speak to you, and that’s fine. However, you must actively engage the materials and show that engagement in your weekly work.


===Schedule===
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! {{date|Nov 30}}  
! {{date|Nov 30}}  
| '''Test #6''' and '''Response'''
| '''Test #6''' and '''Response'''; '''[[Short Lit Crit Response]]''' due
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Revision as of 08:56, 10 August 2021

This schedule represents the ideal outline for our study this semester. Yet, like all best-laid plans, we may not be able to keep up with our agenda. Please be flexible and try to look and read ahead whenever possible.

We will do our best to stick by this schedule, but I will inform you verbally, via an email, and/or a literal change to the schedule below whenever there is a deviation. Getting these updates is solely your responsibility. Therefore, this schedule is tentative and subject to change contingent upon the needs of the students and the professor, and dictated by time and other constraints which may affect the course. For face-to-face classes, this schedule reflects only an overview of the assigned reading and other major course assignments. It may not indicate specific class session assignments or activities. Specific in-class assignments may not be reflected on the schedule.

Gustave_Wappers_-_Épisode_des_Journées_de_septembre_1830_sur_la_place_de_l'Hôtel_de_Ville_de_Bruxelles

Each week of this class has its own unit or lesson corresponding to a literary movement. Each week is divided into daily work that contain readings (with the occasional reading quiz) and writing. Each week concludes with a test on the materials covered. The following is a general overview of the schedule.

Daily Work

As this is a session course and time is limited, here’s how I recommend your proceed: work every day. Put aside at least an hour on every class day, and

  1. Read the primary texts (these are assigned below in individual class days) taking notes as you do, maybe highlighting passages that speak to you in some way;
  2. Read some secondary texts: i.e., do some research on at least one of the texts, being sure you understand the major themes, symbols, etc.;
  3. Write a response (see Writing) on what you think about the text(s), supporting it with evidence from both the primary and secondary texts. I give some suggestions below for potential responses, but these are really up to you. You should write a minimum of two posts per lesson (or week).[1] A day is set aside each week for your unit tests and responses. You should have your responses done before then, so that day may be devoted to the test.

The idea here is that you engage with the course materials in a consistent way. Not all of it will speak to you, and that’s fine. However, you must actively engage the materials and show that engagement in your weekly work.

Schedule

Date Assignment
The Early Romantic Period
6 October
Friedrich, Two Men Contemplating the Moon
Introduction to Romanticism
  • Romanticism: Revolt of the Spirit
  • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 3–30
  • Respond: Based on your reading, identify the five most important characteristics that define the Romantic Age. Who are the major figures? Major works? What should readers look for in the work?
7 October
1794 William Blake Songs of Innocence.jpg
William Blake
  • From Songs of Innocence:
    • “Introduction”
    • “The Lamb”
    • “The Little Black Boy”
    • “The Chimney Sweeper”
    • “The Divine Image”
  • From Songs of Experience:
    • “Introduction”
    • “The Chimney Sweeper”
    • “The Tyger”
    • “The Sick Rose”
    • “London”
  • Respond: Compare two poems, one from the Songs of Innocence and one from the Songs of Experience.
8 October
Ashford, Tintern Abbey
William Wordsworth
  • “Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey”
  • “I wandered lonely as a cloud”
  • “I travelled among unknown men”
  • “The World is too much with us”
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
  • “Kubla Khan”
  • “Christabel”
  • “Dejection: An Ode”
11 October Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
  • from A Vindication on the Rights of Women
12 October Test #1 and Response
The Late Romantic Period
13 October George Gordon, Lord Byron
  • “She Walks in Beauty”
  • “Darkness”
14 October Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • “Ozymandias”
  • “To a Sky-Lark”
15 October
Joseph Severn, Portrait of John Keats
John Keats
18 October Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  • Selections from Sonnets from the Portuguese
19 October Test #2 and Response
The Victorian Period
20 October Introduction to Victorian Literature
  • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 527–551
  • Respond: Based on your reading, identify the five most important characteristics that define the Victorian Age. Who are the major figures? Major works? What should readers look for in the work?
21 October
Waterhouse, The Lady of Shalott
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
  • “The Lady of Shalott”
  • “The Lotos-Eaters”
  • “Ulysses”
Gerard Manley Hopkins
  • “God’s Grandeur”
  • “The Windhover”
22 October Robert Browning
  • “My Last Duchess”
  • “Porphyria’s Lover”
Matthew Arnold
  • “Dover Beach”
  • From The Study of Poetry
Christina Rossetti
  • “Goblin Market”
25 October Oscar Wilde
  • The Importance of Being Earnest
26 October Test #3 and Response
Victorian / Edwardian / World War I
27 October Introduction to the Twentieth Century
  • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 1015–1042
  • Respond: Based on your reading, identify the five most important characteristics that define the the turn of the century’s trends in literature. Who are the major figures? Major works? What should readers look for in works of this period?
28 October Rudyard Kipling
  • “The Man Who Would Be King”
29 October E. M. Forster
James Joyce
  • “Araby”
1 November Rupert Brooke
  • “The Soldier”
Siegfried Sassoon Wilfred Owen
  • “Anthem for a Doomed Youth”
  • “Dulce Et Decorum Est”
  • “Apologia Pro Poemate Meo”
2 November Test #4 and Response
Modernism
3 November[2]
Hulewicz, Leda and the Swan (1928)
William Butler Yeats
  • “Leda and the Swan”
  • “The Second Coming”
  • “Sailing to Byzantium”
4 November T. S. Eliot
  • “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”
5 November[3] W. H. Auden
  • “Musée des Beaux Arts”
Dylan Thomas
  • “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night”
8 November Virginia Woolf
  • “A Room of One’s Own”
9 November Test #5 and Response
World War II / Postmodernism
10 November Philip Larkin
Seamus Heany
  • “Digging”
  • “Clearances”
  • “Punishment”
  • “The Skunk”
11 November Nadine Gordimer
  • “The Moment before the Gun Went Off”
12 November Margaret Atwood
  • “Death by Landscape”
15 November Salman Rushdie
  • “The Prophet’s Hair”
29 November Ishiguro
  • The Remains of the Day
30 November Test #6 and Response; Short Lit Crit Response due



notes

  1. Remember, minimums will earn you the minimum passing grade.
  2. Midterm grades due.
  3. Withdrawal deadline.
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