English 473.001: Special Topics in Shakespeare:
Shakespeare's Sonnets |
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Spring 2007 | Robert Matz |
ST 1 126 TR 10:30-11:45 |
Office Hours: TR 1:00-2:00, |
Office: Robinson A 423 | |
Email: rmatz@gmu.edu | |
Office Phone: 703-993-1169 | |
Home page: http://mason.gmu.edu/~rmatz | |
Required Texts: |
Shakespeare: The Poems, ed. David Bevington (Bantam) = SP |
Shakespeare's Sonnets, Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells = EW |
Love's Labor's Lost, in Shakespeare: Three Early Comedies, ed. Bevington (Bantam) |
Othello, ed. Bevington (Bantam) |
Readings on Electronic Course Reserve = ECR |
Readings online |
This course celebrates and analyzes Shakespeare's sonnets. We'll consider the sonnets from many perspectives: their representation of the writer, his beloveds, and of love; their use of the sonnet form; their relationship to other Renaissance sonnet sequences; their implication in English Renaissance culture; their relationship to Shakespeare's plays; and their contemporary reception, in critical argument and in the creation of modern editions of the sonnets. Course requirements: two essays; two projects; a recitation; reading responses, and a final Schedule of reading (subject to change) |
T Jan. 23 | Course Introduction | |||||||||||||||||||||||
"This powerful rhyme": Close Reading the Sonnets |
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R Jan. 25 | Sonnets 1-26 (in SP) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T Jan. 30 | Sonnets 27-42 (in SP); Booth, "sonnet 35"; Vendler, "sonnet 35" (both readings ECR) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
R Feb. 1 | Sonnets 43-75 (in SP); EW, chapters 1-2 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T Feb. 6 | Sonnets 76-99 (in SP) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
R Feb. 8 | Sonnets 100-126 (in SP); EW, chapters 3-4 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T Feb. 13 | Sonnets 127-142 (in SP) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
R Feb. 15 | Sonnets 143-54 (in SP); EW, chapters 5-6 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
"Sweet argument": Historical and Literary Critical Contexts | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
T Feb. 20 | Trousdale, "Rhetoric" (ECR); from The Courtier (ECR); from Puttenham, from Arte of English Poesie (3.1) (online) | Essay 1 assigned (3 pp. close reading) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
R Feb. 22 | Sedgwick, "Swan in Love" (ECR); Bray, "Homosexuality and Male Friendship" (ECR) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T Feb. 27 | Rackin, "The Lady's Reeking Breath"; from Montaigne, Essays (ECR); from Anger "Protection for Women" (online) | Essay 1 exchanged | ||||||||||||||||||||||
R March 1 | CW, chapters 9-10 and discussion of sonnet edition research project | Essay 1 due; Sonnet edition project assigned |
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T March 6 | Vendler, "Introduction," 1-37, 160-63 (ECR) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
March 8 | Marotti, "Love is Not Love," 396-414 only |
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Spring Break - March 11-18 |
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"Shall I compare thee"?: Other sonnet sequences and love poems | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
T March 20 | Sidney,
Astrophil and Stella, 1-9, 15, 18, 21, 23, 27, 37, 41, 49, 52, 59,
60, 69, 71, 74, 81, 90. |
Sonnet project assigned | ||||||||||||||||||||||
R March 22 | Daniel, Delia ; 1-6; 11-12; 36-39, 45, 49, 50; To Delia; Spenser, Amoretti, 1-6, 9, 15, 37, 61, 64, 65, 68, 74, 75. Instructions | Daniel Glosses | Spenser Glosses | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T March 27 | Drayton, Idea, "To
the Reader," 1-3; 6, 47, 49, 51; Barnes, Parthenophil and Parthenophe,
63-65; Davies, "Gulling
Sonnets," 1-6; Barnfield, Certain Sonnets, 7, 8, 15, 18, "To
His Friend"; Wroth,
Pamphilia to Amphilanthus, 14, 15, 22, 23, 35, 46, 48 (Drayton, Barnes
and Barnfield sonnets will be hard copy distributed in class, in advance
of this day's reading) |
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R March 29 | No reading assigned:
finish discussion of Renaissance sonnets |
Sonnet project discussion and exchange | ||||||||||||||||||||||
T April 3 | Shakespeare "A Lover's Complaint" (in SP); CW, chapter 8 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
"An unperfect actor": Two plays | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
R April 5 | Love's Labor's Lost, acts 1-2; CW, chapter 7 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T April 10 | Love's Labor's Lost, acts 3-4 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
R April 12 | Love's Labor's Lost, act 5 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T April 17 | Othello, acts 1-2 | Sonnet edition project due | ||||||||||||||||||||||
R April 19 | Othello, acts 3-4 |
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T April 24 | Othello, act 5 | Sonnet/discussion project due; Essay 2 assigned (5 pp.) |
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"Dressing old words new": Packaging the Sonnets | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
R April 26 | Shakespeare in Love (video/dvd; watch before class at home or in Johnson Center) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T May 1 | Sonnet web | Essay 2 exchanged | ||||||||||||||||||||||
R May 3 | Wrap up | |||||||||||||||||||||||
T May 8 | No class | Essay 2 due | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Other important dates:
Course policies: Online Readings: Participation and Attendance: Reading Responses: Sonnet Recitations: Sonnet Projects: #2.Write your own sonnet and discuss it: Paper Deadlines: Late papers: You need to have your first paper done on time so that you can work on it in the paper workshop. I also expect that the final versions will be handed in on time. Late final versions will be graded down a half grade for each day late. On late first versions, see below under "paper standards." I have also scheduled an exchange for your own sonnets a week and a half after that project is assigned. Please bring a sonnet either drafted or at least one quatrain finished and a plan for the rest. This is an interim due date. Paper Standards (final and first versions): I'll grade the paper on basis of the revised version only, but I will expect the original version to be your best initial attempt at the topic. Original versions not done, not typed or obviously incomplete will result in a half letter grade reduction in the evaluation of the final paper. It would not be fair for other students to have to read work that is not your best; additionally, it is in your interest to write as good an original version as possible, so that your second version is even better. Remember that because everyone has two tries at the paper, I will accordingly have higher expectations for the final version. Paper Helps: I would also suggest that you give yourself plenty of time to work. Writing a paper at one sitting is, for most people, unpleasant, and the results are not likely to be satisfactory. Start early! Plagiarism: Also note that uncited sources will constitute plagiarism even if they ended up in your work without your conscious knowledge (e.g. you forgot you read the material; you confused your own notes with notes on a source), since part of the scholarly responsibility that comes with using secondary sources is keeping track of which words or ideas were yours and which came from a source. If you do not wish to take on this responsibility then you should not consult secondary sources. I will take all suspected cases of plagiarism to the Honor Committee. Final: Grading:
Students with Disabilities: GRADE CRITERIA FOR ESSAYS A Specific, complex and/or striking thesis, thesis developed without digression through the course of the paper, consistently precise, sensitive and/or striking interpretations of the text, crafted prose, no major mechanical problems B Specific thesis, thesis generally developed through the course of the paper, consistently good interpretation of text, competent prose, minor mechanical problems C Has a thesis, but one that needs greater specificity or complexity, thesis developed with some digression or repetition, some good interpretation, some mechanical problems D Very general thesis, thesis development digressive or repetitive, plot summary or thoughts/speculations not based on textual evidence, major mechanical problems F No thesis or thesis development |