Ashton Nichols Syllabus

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Archive for January, 2015


English 220—Introduction to Literary Study—Spring 2015

English 220    Critical Approaches and Literary Methods    Nichols

REQUIRED TEXTS:

Brontë, Charlotte. Jane Eyre: Case Studies. Ed. Beth Newman. Bedford.

Heaney, Seamus. Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.

Mayes, Frances. The Discovery of Poetry. Harcourt.

Murfin, Ross and Supryia Ray, The Bedford Glossary of Critical and Literary Terms. Bedford.

Rhys, Jean. The Wide Sargasso Sea. Norton.

Shakespeare, William. The Tempest: Case Studies. Ed. Gerald Graff. Bedford.

(You must have copies of all of these texts in these precise editions)

COURSE AIMS AND LEARNING GOALS:

This course is designed to introduce you to the variety of questions we can ask about literary texts, their authors, and their audiences. We will study a limited number of texts using a variety of critical approaches: formal, generic, reader-response, feminist, psychological, economic, ecocritical. The course will also provide closely supervised instruction in the format and basic elements of critical writing (this is a “W” course). The course is designed to prepare you for the sorts of questions you will be expected to ask and answer throughout an English major, but it is not only for future English majors. The course is designed to help you to explore your own reasons for reading, writing about, and interpreting literary texts in a variety of ways.

COURSE REQUIREMENTS:

Student participation will be a key element of this course. The small size of the class will allow us to conduct our class work on the seminar model, with students providing regular input into class discussion and in-class exercises, both written and oral. More than three (3) unexcused absences will be grounds for lowering your grade in the course. The College’s plagiarism policy will be strictly enforced. If you have questions about plagiarism, contact me directly. You must complete all of the assigned work in order to receive credit for the course. Grades will be based on the following scale:

Class                        Essay #1        Essay #2          Essay #3    Take-Home Final

Participation              (poem)            (novel)            (play)              Exam

10%                              20%                20%                20%                30% = 100%

Please do not hesitate to contact me at any time during the semester to discuss the course, our readings, your writing, or your grade.

ASSIGNED READINGS AND CLASS WORK:

This class will be unlike others you have had in the English Department. There will be a range of readings assigned for each day, and you will often be asked to emphasize some aspect of those readings for class work. Essays and written work will draw on your reading of all assigned material. You will revise and resubmit almost all of your writing. You will also be encouraged to read more widely than the required reading in order to fulfill the requirements and goals for the course. You will be placed in discussion groups that will regularly be asked to present specific material or questions to the class. The terms listed under the readings below will be defined progressively. You will familiarize yourself with the attached handout on “Interpretive Methods” and be able to refer to and critique these approaches as the semester proceeds. Our class will become more flexible and discussion oriented as our work progresses.

Date         Text/s      Critical Terms/Method Readings      Writing 

JANUARY 19 M Our syllabus—Our syllabus as a Text—-Our class as a Dialogue “Read” what?

22 TH Heaney: 3-7 Mayes ix-xviii and 1-24, Glossary: “form,” “formalism”

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26 M Heaney: 10-11, 13-14 Mayes 25-48, Glossary: “intentional fallacy”

29 TH Heaney: 29-35 Mayes 66-85, Glossary: “affective fallacy”

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FEBRUARY 2 M Heaney: 100-114 Mayes 85-108, Glossary: “irony,” “paradox”

5 TH Mayes 138-155 ————Imagine one image

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9 M Heaney: 156-165 Mayes 165-184, Glossary: “New Criticism,” “genre”

12 TH Heaney: 72, 120 Mayes 184-201

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16 M Mayes 217-232 (“Ozymandias” handout)                 Workshop Draft of Essay #1

19 TH Heaney: 214-17, 332-41  Mayes 232-45, Glossary: “poetry,” “poetic diction”

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23 M Heaney: 411                                                                           ESSAY #1 DUE

26 TH Brontë: 17-220

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MARCH 2 M Brontë: 220-437

5 TH Film versions of Jane Eyre: 465-71

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9 M SPRING BREAK

12 TH SPRING BREAK

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16 M Brontë: 441-464, 475-91. Glossary: “new historicism” “ecocriticism”

19 TH Novel reading day   ______________________________________________________________________________

23 M Brontë: 534-86, 607-35. Glossary: “feminist criticism” “reader-response criticism”

26 TH Rhys: 17-61                                        ————————-Workshop Essay #2 Draft

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30 M Rhys 65-190 Glossary: “Marxist Criticism” Brontë: 492-533

APRIL 2 TH Research Day for Essay #2

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6 M What is a Novel? Glossary: “novel” ————————————-ESSAY #2 Due

9 TH Shakespeare Act I-II

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13 M Shakespeare Act III-IV

16 TH Shakespeare Act V

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20 M Shakespeare 91-115, 388-413 Glossary: “gender criticism,” “feminist criticism”

23 TH Shakespeare 213-320, Glossary: “poststructuralism,” “postcolonial”

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27 M Exam writing (favorite Heaney poem, favorite Shakespeare scene)———ESSAY #3 DUE

30 TH Last Class and Discussion of Take-Home Final Exam (Class evaluation)

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Tuesday, May 5, 5:00 p.m. (NO LATE EXAMS): Final due in KAUFMAN 192

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Ashton Nichols, Class 1:30-2:45 p.m.–Monday & Thursday, Kaufman 178

Office Hours: M TH 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. (and by appointment)

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ACADEMIC HONESTY

The Dickinson plagiarism policy will be strictly enforced. This class adheres to the college’s Community Standards, which clearly state: “Students are expected to do their own work. Work submitted in fulfillment of academic assignments and provided on examinations is expected to be original by the student submitting it.” Please review the Community Standards document for more information. Please do not hesitate to ask me any questions you may have about citation, documentation, or academic honesty.

ACCOMODATING STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES

 Dickinson College makes reasonable academic accommodations for students with documented disabilities. Students requesting accommodations must make their request and provide appropriate documentation to Disability Services in Biddle House. Because classes change every semester, eligible students must obtain a new accommodation letter from Director Marni Jones every semester and review this letter with their professors so the accommodations can be implemented. The Director of Disability Services is available by appointment to answer questions and discuss any implementation issues you may have. Disability Services proctoring is managed by Susan Frommer at 717-254-8107 or proctoring@dickinson.edu. Address general inquiries to Stephanie Anderberg at 717-245-1734 or e-mail disabilityservices@dickinson.edu.

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Interpretive Methods: A Primer

Critical approaches are not cookie-cutters placed over a text. Effective interpretations draw on more than one approach in order to develop an argument. Every one of the categories below overlaps with others in important ways. Less useful interpretations force the text into narrowly methodological readings; such reductive interpretations always weaken an argument by leaving it open to objections from other points of view. The following categories, however, represent ways that literary critics and theorists have been talking about texts for the past half-century. Your own reading and writing about literature should reflect the ways that you give emphasis to various sorts of questions that can be asked about texts.

Textual (Philological): this form of analysis emphasizes the physical text as an object of study. Is there still a manuscript copy of the work in the author’s handwriting? Are there conflicting manuscript versions? Can we date this work? How? How did the author or editor revise the work over time and in different editions? How might these questions influence our understanding of the text?

New Critical: a form of reading that stresses our ability to analyze a literary text without considering the circumstances surrounding its production. Such reading de-emphasizes the author and the historical context in favor of a “pure” analysis of language as language: tropes, symbols, metaphors, allusions, metrics, narrative structure. A “great” work is then seen as one that exemplifies certain identifiable characteristics: unity, complexity, subtlety, allusiveness. Sometimes identified with “close” reading.

Historicist/New Historicist: traditional forms of historicism emphasize the importance of historical “background” to the understanding of literature. The more a reader knows about the time and place in which a work was produced, the more effective will be that reader’s interpretations of the text. So-called “new” historicism argues that history itself is much less stable than we thought because our understanding of the past is always conditioned by our mediator (the historian) and by our own subjective position in a complex, multivalent culture.

Biographical: reading that emphasizes the author as a key to understanding the text. Such interpretations see the author’s childhood, education, family background, social class, and life experiences as important critical considerations. Traditional biographical readings tend to see authors as “products” of their times. More recent authorial critiques tend to stress the psychology of the author as a key to literary interpretation. Did the author long for a “mother”? Did the author hate a “father”? What did the author hide? Do we identify with the author’s life?

Psychological (Freudian): such readings see psychological categories and terms–conscious, subconscious, ego, id, superego, Oedipal, repression, transference–as important ways of talking about literature. They may focus on the psychology of the author, the characters/voices in the text, or the reader, seeking to explain plots, imagery, and authorial intention in terms of an analysis of mental events. For such interpretations the “hidden” aspects of a work are often more important than the “obvious.”

Economic (Marxist): Marxist interpretations emphasize the economic and material conditions of all human activity. Such readings claim that literary works are a function of the material circumstances of the author (rich or poor) and the economy of the author’s society (feudal, mercantile, capitalist, socialist). Such readings also stress the role of literature in hiding or revealing class distinctions and the need for political change.

Reception/Reader Response: discussions of responses produced by a text on its audience. Such critiques might discuss acceptance or rejection of a work by the reading public over time, reception by contemporary critics, or the current state of criticism of a text. Reception theory also analyzes and interprets the process of reading itself? What does it mean to “read” a work? What does it mean to “misread” the same work? Could we read disinterestedly?

Deconstructive: de(con)structive readings reveal the linguistic tensions in a literary text. They also want to argue that all language is less st(able) than we often assume. Does “light” always imply, contain, or implicate “dark”? Does a seemingly unified text contain contradictions? How might a poem about the beauty of nature actually reveal the author’s own confusions about his pre/con/re-ceptions. Do certain words hide a much as they reveal? Do we find “true” meaning or make our own meanings? Is there “Meaning,” or are they only “meanings”?

Feminist: such readings stress the fact that women and men have different experiences–including linguistic experiences–or point out similarities across gender boundaries. Feminist interpretations draw attention to the fact that the author was male or female, or to varying responses by male and female readers. Such readings tend to emphasize the history of gender relationships as a key to understanding the text. At the most theoretical level a feminist reading argues that language itself is male or female (i.e. based on certain gendered assumptions).

Cultural Studies: criticism that sees literary works not as the products of “genius” authors, but as artifacts of the cultures in which they were produced and in which they are interpreted. Cultural studies also incorporates the records of societies–imaged, photographs, films, clothing, objects–into the concept of “text,” arguing that to read a text is to read the culture in which it was produced and also the culture in which readers are performing the act of interpretation.

Ecocriticism: a recent form of interpretation that has emerged out of emphasis on the relationship between humans and the natural environment. Ecocritics emphasize the role played by nonhuman nature in a wide range of literary texts. They also interrogate the ways that human interactions with nature (plants, animals, geology, landscapes) have affected human life and the natural world. Many ecocritics have environmentalist or preservationist agendas; others are more interested in the philosophical and cultural implications of human understanding of and impact on the natural environment.


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