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UNION COUNTY COLLEGE Summer 1 2008, T&Th 9am-12:45pm, N-28
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Dr. Susannah Chewning
Course
Description: Study of the major British poets
and prose writers from Beowulf to Pope and Swift, studied in their
historical context and in their aspects of enduring merit. Prerequisites:
ENG 101 and 102 or ENG 122.
Course Objectives: by the end of the semester each student will
understand the chronology and historical continuity as a basis for the study of British literature, so that writers and their works may be observed within their cultural milieu and moment.
through an examination of the literature and culture of England from the Anglo-Saxon period through the eighteenth century, obtain a broad understanding of the tradition of literature in England.
develop techniques of accurate and appreciative interpretation through the practice of critical thinking and writing
examine the power of literature throughout the medieval and early modern periods; through texts that will address such issues as heroism, human relationships, spirituality, gender issues, justice, love, literacy and morality, each student will identify the cultural distinctions among the various genres of these periods in an effort to make connections with the cultures of writers of previous eras and their own lives.
identify and discuss the ethical dimensions in a specific literary work
produce a well-defined thesis on a topic pertinent to the course and develop it into an effective and well-organized essay.
conduct effective research on her chosen topic, using both Library and Internet resources.
identify and correct errors in mechanics and develop a clear and readable style.
Required Texts:
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Greenblatt, Stephen, et. al., eds. The Norton Anthology of English Literature. Volume 1. Eighth edition. New York: WW Norton, 2006.
Shakespeare, William. The Tragedy of King Richard II. New York: Washington Square P, 1996.
Hacker, Diana, ed. A Pocket Style Manual. Fourth edition. Boston, MA: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2004.
Course Requirements: For policies please click here.
Reading assignments. Please make sure you read all the assignments on time. You will also be expected to discuss what you have read at length in class. Participation, which is 20% of your grade, includes being in class, taking quizzes, and being prepared to participate.
Three papers: two shorter papers, of approximately 750 words, due June 5, June 19, and one longer paper of at least 1,200 words (five typed pages) due July 3. Topics will be assigned and discussed at length in class. All papers written for this class must be typed and must conform in style and format to the MLA System of Style and Documentation. Late papers will not be accepted.
Response Papers: Eleven short response papers based on your readings, each of at least two hundred words. These are informal papers in which you discuss your response to the readings we do for class. It is the best way for you to communicate with me and, at least on paper, participate with the class in your discussion of what you have read. These papers will not be accepted late and cannot be revised. You may write additional response papers for extra-credit, but please turn in a minimum of eleven.
Conferences. Please feel free to come to my office, H-125, before or after class (or by appointment) and speak to me informally about your work. My office hours are Tuesday and Thursday afternoons by appointment
Mid-term and final exams in class.
Breakdown of Grades: Participation 20%; Papers 50%; Exams and Quizzes 30%
How to reach me: Phone: (908) 709-7182. E-mail chewning@ucc.edu. Webpage: http://faculty.ucc.edu/english-chewning. Regular mail:
Dr. Susannah Chewning
Department of English
Union County College
1033 Springfield Avenue
Cranford, NJ 07016
My mailbox on campus is in the Nomahegan Faculty Lounge. Because of my very busy schedule, it is difficult for me to return telephone calls. You are much more likely to get an immediate response from me if you e-mail me during the hours of 9am and 5pm. I cannot accept e-mailed or faxed papers, nor can I relay grades (including final course grades) via e-mail or phone. No exceptions. My office hours are by appointment, but please feel free to drop by my office before or after class to discuss your progress in this course.
Please bring a pen (or other writing implement), paper, and your book to every class. Let me know if you lose your syllabus or other course materials so I can get you additional copies. The syllabus will also be available on WebCT. Your username for WebCT is your UCC student ID and your password is your birthday.
Schedule of Assignments: In addition to these assignments, there may be
homework given in class. If you miss a class, you should speak to a classmate
(not me) to get the assignment. Not being in class is no excuse for not
completing an assignment--please keep in touch with me, especially if you have
to miss a class.
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Schedule of Assignments: In addition to these assignments, there may be homework given in class. If you miss a class, you should speak to a classmate (not me) to get the assignment. Not being in class is no excuse for not completing an assignment--please keep in touch with me, especially if you have to miss a class.
The assignments in this class are organized into two categories: required assignments and options. One option is required for each student for each class, and the assignments that are required are required for everyone. The options are set up as an opportunity for you to look at texts that interest you from a particular perspective, rather than simply reading all the texts I want you to read in a particular order. There are three options for each assignment after the first day: option 1 is religion, option 2 is gender/sexuality/love, and option 3 is politics/warfare. You can stick with one option for the whole course (see paper 1 and paper 3 assignments) or you can pick a different one each time; it’s up to you. Please make yourself aware of each option (I will discuss each one in more detail in class) and what you want to get out of this class in order to make selections that will be more interesting and useful to you as a student. Click here for the Option Chart.
| T | 5/27 |
Introduction to class. Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People. The Dream of the Rood. The Wanderer. The Wife’s Lament. Film: The History of Britain. |
| Th | 5/29 |
Anglo-Saxon poetry. Anglo-Saxon culture. Response due. Video: Adventure of English. Required: Beowulf; Option 1: King Alfred’s Preface to Pastoral Care. Option 2: Judith. Option 3: The Battle of Maldon. |
| T | 6/3 |
The Legend of King Arthur. Required: “Legendary Histories of Britain,” Norton, pp. 117-128. Option 1: The Mabinogi of Pwyll and “Exile of the Sons of Uisliu.” Option 2: Le Roman de Tristran. Option 3: Sir Thomas Malory, Le Mort Darthur (pp. 439-53). |
| Th | 6/5 |
Required: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and Geoffrey Chaucer, The General Prologue, ll. 1-19. Option 1: Pilgrim Portraits of the Nun’s Priest, the Prioress, and the Monk. Option 2: Pilgrim Portraits of the Wife of Bath and the Miller. Option 3: Pilgrim Portraits of the Knight and the Shipman. Paper 1 due. |
| M | 6/9 | Extra-Credit: Discuss some aspect of medieval religion (ie, Christianity, Judaism, Islam, or any of the pagan traditions alive at the time, such as Norse or Celtic paganism) by choosing a divine figure (ie, saint, patriarch, or god) and finding medieval representations of that figure. For example, our textbook includes a tale of the Old Testament's Judith; or you could look at the figure Loki from Norse myth and find medieval images or other depictions of him. Look at Encyclopedia Mythica as a starting point. |
| T | 6/10 | Required: John Gower, Confessio Amantis, pp. 319-330. Gower’s Vox Clamantis and the Mirour de L'Omme (read the relevant excerpts for your option). Option 1: Chaucer, the Pardoner’s Tale. Option 2: Chaucer, the Wife of Bath’s Tale. Option 3: Chaucer, summary of the Knight’s Tale and the Miller’s Tale |
| Th | 6/12 |
Required: Middle English Incarnation and Crucifixion Lyrics and The York Play of the Crucifixion. Option 1: Julian of Norwich, all selections. Option 2: Margery Kempe, pp. 384-98. Option 3: Ancrene Riwle and excerpts from The Vision of Piers Plowman, pp. 356-67. |
| M | 6/16 |
Extra-Credit: Choose a medieval film from the following list and compare it to your understanding of the Middle Ages based on our readings and class discussions. Choose from the following list: Anchoress (available in the UCC library); Monty Python and the Holy Grail; Kingdom of Heaven; Tristan and Isolde; The Thirteenth Warrior; A Knight’s Tale; King Arthur (2004); Ladyhawke. |
| T | 6/17 |
Required: Edmund Spenser, Amoretti and Epithalamion. Option 1: “Faith in Conflict,” pp. 616-32. Option 2: Sir Thomas Wyatt, all selections. Option 3: Niccolo Macchiavelli, The Prince, chapters XIV to XXI. Midterm examination in class. |
| Th | 6/19 |
Required: Shakespeare, The Tragedy of King Richard II, Acts 1 and 2. Option 1: WWNorton.com, “Dissent, Doubt, and Spiritual Violence”; Option 2: Choose any four of William Shakespeare’s sonnets, pp. 1058-1077; Option 3: Shakespeare’s Sources. Paper 2 due. |
| T | 6/24 |
Required: Shakespeare, The Tragedy of King Richard II, Acts 3, 4, and 5. Film: Richard II. All Options: from British History Sources website: Ordinance of Labourers, 1349; Statute of Labourers, 1351; Peasant's Revolt, 1381. Thomas Nashe, “A Litany in Time of Plague.” |
| W | 6/25 |
Extra-Credit: Watch two of the three videos on the authorship of Shakespeare (on reserve in the Library) and write an extra response paper arguing who you think is the author of Shakespeare’s work (due by this date). |
| Th | 6/26 |
Class cancelled. Response is due by 5pm on Friday, 6/22. Required: Ben Jonson, “To the Memory of My Beloved,” “On My First Son,” Christopher Marlowe, “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love,” Sir Walter Raleigh, “The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd,” Elizabeth Cary, The Tragedy of Mariam, the Fair Queen of Jewry. Option 1: John Donne, pp. 1295-1303. Option 2: Mary Wroth, all selections. Option 3: “The Wider World,” pp. 927-943. |
| T | 7/1 |
Required: John Milton, Paradise Lost, Books I and II. Option 1: WWNorton.com, “Paradise Lost in Context.” Option 2: WWNorton.com: “Gender, Family, Household.” Option 3: “Civil Wars of Ideas.” |
| Th | 7/3 |
Required: John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book IX and Sonnets, pp. 830-832. Response due. Take-home final examination due by 7pm. Paper 3 due. |
ENG
205-001 British Literature Paper Topics
Please keep in mind that all papers must be typed and must conform to the MLA
System of Style and Documentation. If you are an English major, I strongly
recommend that you buy The MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, 6th ed.
It will help you through four years of College English papers. If not, Hacker’s
Manual should be enough, but please be conscientious about format. Also, keep in
mind that late papers will not be accepted and that your final paper must
conform to the UCC English Department’s requirements in order for you to pass
this class.
Paper 1, due June 5 (minimum of three pages). Based on one of the three
options (religion, gender, and politics) for readings on the syllabus, discuss
two or more texts (at least one required and one from an option, through 6/5 only) and
discuss the similarities and differences of the works, authors, and historical
context of the works. You may write this paper using only the texts we’ve read
so far; further research is not necessary but is welcome.
Paper 2, due June 19 (minimum of four pages). Choose one of the topics listed on
www.wwnorton.com/literature for the Middle Ages and write a paper based on one
of the following questions. Cite all sources and any additional sources you use
carefully.
(a) Medieval Estates and Orders: Read over the introduction to medieval estates
on the website. Then choose at least two texts, one from the website and one
from your reading in class (both can be from the website if one has already been
assigned). In your paper discuss the estates or levels of society represented in
the texts, how those classes of society are represented, and how society in the
Middle Ages can be better understood using those texts.
(b) King Arthur: Read over the introduction to King Arthur on the website. In
your paper write about two or three aspects or characteristics of the Arthurian
tradition as they are represented in some of the texts we have read in class and
that are available on the website (choose at least two texts). Some
characteristics you might look for would include religious significance
(Christian and non-Christian); sexuality and love; mythology; story-telling and
narrative; historical issues; or more specific ideas about specific characters
(ie, Lancelot, Gawain, Guinevere, or Arthur as they are represented in two or
more texts).
(c) The First Crusade: Choose one of the twelve questions listed under
“Explorations” on the website’s link to The First Crusade.
(d) The Linguistic and Literary Contexts of Beowulf: Choose one of the eight
questions listed under “Explorations” on the website’s link to The Linguistic
and Literary Contexts of Beowulf.
Paper 3, due July 3 (minimum of five pages). This paper must be a research
paper and should include the use of five sources (at least one of which should
be electronic). The topic should reflect an issue or concern that best defines
your knowledge of the development of British literature from AD 1000 to AD 1750.
You may use texts from a specific option on the syllabus (ie, follow a topic
through the time period of the course and discuss how it changes, develops,
stays the same). We will discuss the kind of research I expect for this paper at
length in class, but some suggestions for topics include:
(a) Take a topic from one of the options and choose two or three texts from
different time periods covered by the course and discuss how that topic or issue
changes (or does not change) over time. For example, how does Christianity
change from The Dream of the Rood to Julian of Norwich to John Donne to
Paradise
Lost? Find at least three outside sources besides texts we’ve read this semester
and discuss them in the context of the idea or topic you’ve selected.
(b) Discuss the life and influence of one of the authors we’ve discussed this
semester (not Shakespeare) and include in your discussion the following: a
thesis that explains what aspect(s) of the author’s life you will emphasize in
your paper; a brief biography of the author; a discussion of one or more texts
you’ve read by that author, providing a connection between events in the
author’s life and the works you discuss; the use of three or more secondary
sources (not websites) that support your discussion of the author and his or her
works.
(c) Discuss a concept or idea from the Middle Ages, Renaissance, or Restoration
period as it is represented by one or more texts from that period and from
something more contemporary (a modern novel, tv show, or film). For example, how
medieval is J.R.R. Tolkien and his representation of “middle earth”? Is the
recent British tv series, Robin Hood, authentic to the tradition of Robin
Hood in medieval and Renaissance literature? Is the use of witchcraft (or
mythology, dragons, etc) in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series accurate according to
sources from British literature? Find something contemporary and connect it to
its pre-Modern literary roots.
(d) Discuss the historical and literary connection between the late fourteenth
century as we have studied it and how it is represented in Shakespeare’s Tragedy
of King Richard II. You can compare Shakespeare’s Richard to what you can learn
of the historical figure, or you can compare the period based on aspects of the
literature (Chaucer, Gawain, other works or figures) and Shakespeare’s version.
(e) Choose one of the major characters in Milton’s Paradise Lost and compare the
presentation in this text with the representation of the same character in one
or more other texts (such as the Bible, works of art, or other literary works).