Introduction
This course introduces you to English as a profession by training you in the practice of literary analysis and interpretation. We will begin by considering what it means to read a text,
and discuss the different ways people have understood that process over
the centuries. We will then engage in close reading and exploration of
several genres of literature, including various forms of poetry, drama, and fiction, while paying particular attention to issues of
form, point of view, and language, especially figurative language. Later in the course, we will engage in intertextual study, in which we read several texts that have strong connections betweeen them (in this case three works by the Italian postmodernist author Italo Calvino). Finally, we will turn our attention to literary criticism and research.
As a result of your work in ENGH 305, you will
• expand your understanding of the discipline of literary studies, its key terms, concepts, and practices
• develop professional habits of analytical reading
• learn to compose arguments appropriate to analytical essays in literary studies
• improve your ability to contribute to scholarly conversations both in the classroom and in your writing according to appropriate disciplinary conventions
• learn to articulate and to refine a scholarly question that is relevant to the discipline of English
• hone your ability to evaluate the key assumptions, arguments, and use of evidence in secondary source materials
Please
note that this course fulfills the Writing Intensive requirement in both the BA in English and the BFA in Creative Writing programs. It does so through three formal writing assignments: the 1200-word Poetic Form essay, the 1500-word Intertextuality essay, and the Final Research project, which will require approximately 1000 words of your own writing. Because writing intensive courses give attention to process as well as product, you will submit preparatory work for the Poetic Form essay in order to receive my feedback before writing the final draft. A writing intensive course will inevitably demand much of your time
and effort this semester. However, how you respond to those demands should
tell you something important. If you are going to pursue the field of
English as a profession — whether in academia, education, publishing,
some form of writing, or any career in which attention to and understanding
of language is crucial — what we do in this class should be both
exciting and pleasurable for you. No one should pursue a degree in English
who does not love the work; easier and more lucrative (though not necessarily
more rewarding) professions abound. As much of a challenge as this course
will be, it should be the kind of challenge you cannot wait to meet, and
I look forward to helping you meet it. Welcome.
As part of George Mason’s general education program, now known as Mason Core, this course
aims to provide you with the critical thinking skills necessary to make the reading of
and engagement with great works of literature meaningful and ongoing
aspects of your life, and to discuss these works in a spirit of inquiry and respectful debate. Students successfully completing literature courses in the Mason Core program will be able to
1) Read for comprehension, detail, and nuance.
2) Identify the specific literary qualities of language as employed in the texts they read.
3) Analyze the ways specific literary devices contribute to the meaning of a text.
4) Identify and evaluate the contribution of the social, political, historical, and cultural contexts in which a literary text is produced.
5) Evaluate a critical argument in others’ writing as well as one’s own.
Texts and Materials
You must own the following:
A
History of Reading by Alberto Manguel (Penguin)
King Lear by William Shakespeare (Folger)
Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino (Harcourt)
If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino (Everyman)
Six Memos for the Next Millennium by Italo Calvino (Mariner-Houghton)
MSWord (either the Mac or the PC version) or Apple Pages
An excellent dictionary
Recommended: a guide to literary terminology
You
must purchase the editions I have ordered. I make every attempt to hold
down textbook costs where possible. Many
of the works we will be reading are in the public domain, so rather than
making you pay to buy them, I am putting them on web-pages for you. However,
I expect you to print out these assignments, make notes on them, and bring
them with you to class. Other works will be on electronic reserve, and
the same rules apply.
Many of the works we will be reading during the semester are in the public domain. I therefore have taken the opportunity to annotate them and make them available on the course web-site for you. My notes will help you in your readings. However, please note that I expect you to print out these pages and bring them to class on the appropriate days.
For this course you must own a good dictionary. I know you are all used
to using the dictionaries built into your computer or available on the
web; I often use OneLook.com,
which accesses several dictionaries at once. However, dictionaries built
into computers tend to be relatively feeble, and web-based dictionaries
use older editions and are inconvenient when reading.
An actual text dictionary is more useful. Be careful, though, because
anybody can call a dictionary Websters; the name is
now in the public domain and means nothing. The best reasonably-priced
dictionaries available are the Merriam-Webster Tenth Edition, The
American-Heritage Dictionary, and The Concise Oxford English Dictionary. The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary is even better, though more
pricey ($175). My favorite inexpensive dictionary is the Little
Oxford English Dictionary, which is hardcover but only about six inches
by four inches, quite portable, lists for $15, and can be purchased for about $10 on Amazon. Of course, the complete Oxford English Dictionary is the greatest dictionary in the world, though unwieldy in its two-volume Compact edition ($400) and prohibitively expensive ($1045) in its full-sized version. You may access
the complete OED through the Mason library databases, though again web-based dictionaries
are much less convenient than a book.
I
use MS Words Comment function to mark your formal writing assignments. For that reason, you must have some version of MS Word —
not Works, not an open-source program that mimics Word, because those knock-offs often do not handle the Comment function well. Patriot Computers (in the Johnson Center) provides MS Office to
students free. Meanwhile, anyone who does not keep copies
of his or her work in the cloud and on a flash-drive or portable hard-drive these days
is asking for trouble.
Also,
you must own a writers handbook. When you make grammatical and stylistic
errors, I will point them out and expect you to look them up in a handbook.
Some of the better handbooks are Diane Hackers Rules for Writers and A Writers Reference, Muriel Harriss Prentice-Hall
Reference Guide to Grammar and Usage, and Andrea Lunsfords The Everyday Writer. Countless others are available. I do not care
which handbook you own, but if you do
not own any of them, buy one. The primary difference between them is the
way they are organized; the material is mostly the same.
Finally, I strongly recommend you own a guide to literary terms of some kind. Good examples include The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory by J. A. Cuddon (revised by C. E. Preston) and The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms by Chris Baldick. Norton also has a guide called Essential Literary Terms, but it includes exercises that I suspect you will never even think of using, so I cannot recommend it. In any case, you will likely encounter occasions on which the finer distinctions between terms like metonymy and synecdoche escape you, and on those days (and sometimes nights), being able to reach for a paperback that contains the answers will be more than worth the $10 or $15 it has cost you. You can access the Oxford volume through the Mason Library Databases, but never underestimate the value of having a book at hand. Logging into the databases with your university account and password in order to look up a term is simply not as convenient as opening an alphabetically indexed book.
Course
Requirements
Reading Assignments
Because this is a course in reading and writing about
literature, keeping up with the readings is your primary obligation to
the class after attendance. We will be reading poetry, Shakespearean tragedy,
fiction, non-fiction, and criticism. The most important advice I can give
you is not to
read passively— read with a pen in your hand.
Make marginal notes (called
glosses) or keep a reading notebook (rather
than merely underlining passages, which is practically useless by itself). Conduct
a dialogue with the text. Here are some tips to make your reading more
productive for specific genres:
When
reading prose fiction and non-fiction: These are obviously going
to be the most familiar to you. Yet you should remind yourself not to read passively; always engage
with the text. Read with a pen in your hand, make marginal notes or (less convenient) keep
a notebook, ask questions, raise objections, consider ramifications.
When reading fiction, remember that authors have incredible freedom. Ask yourself why the author wrote the text you are reading
in exactly this way, with this narrator, in this style, beginning
it here and ending it there, putting in these particular scenes and
details but leaving out others you might imagine. Remember that all
of these components represent choices the author made, and in those
choices lies the art. Also, taking a little time to put faces
to characters will help you keep them distinct in your mind, and looking up words you dont know
is a must.
When
reading poetry: Take your time. Even though in most cases
the poetry assignments will be shorter in terms of number of pages,
you should spend the same amount of time on each poetry assignment
as you would on an assignment in fiction or drama. Reading
poetry requires a different approach from reading prose. Most poems
require that you read them several times. They are usually densely
packed with meaning and often rich in symbolism. Poetry typically
emphasizes power of expression over logical clarity. Nevertheless,
good poetry is not needlessly obscure. Most poetry obeys the basic
rules of grammar: punctuation is there for a reason, pronouns refer
to the nearest possible antecedent, and so on. Dont be misled
by line breaks the basic unit of meaning in most poems is still
the sentence. Finally, because poems typically have far fewer words
in them than works of prose, it is especially important to look up
words you dont know.
You
must must read poetry aloud to get the full
effect. Find some place away from other people and get used to doing
it. After you have read a poem silently and think you have figured
it out, recite it. Again, pay attention to punctuation and respect
enjambment (in other words, you should not pause at the end of a line
unless the punctuation or syntax suggests it). Try to get a sense
of the rhythmic pattern (cadence) of the lines. Some of the poetry
we are reading this semester is in a formal meter. If it is, respect
the meter but do not overemphasize it; avoid being too sing-song in
your delivery. If the poem is not in a formal meter, you should still
pay close attention to its rhythms. Also, poetry should not, except
in rare instances, be read in a monotone. Allow your emotions free
but realistic play. In other words, avoid reading like a robot without
hamming it up.
When
reading verse drama: Rules for poetry apply, but also you need
to keep in mind the meanings of words such as acting, action,
and play. Drama is more inherently visual and dynamic than
other forms of literature. It lacks the narrative information on which
you have learned to rely when following a plot. You can become confused
if you do not pay close attention to who is saying what, and if you
are not careful to keep the characters distinct in your mind. Taking
the time to construct a mental picture of each character at the beginning
of the play, or when the character first appears, is essential. Give them faces,
clothes, voices, whether of people you know or actors with whom you
are familiar from movies or television. Always remember that characters
in a play never simply speak — they are always moving, or standing,
or sitting; they have physical presence.
The
Listserv
I have assigned you to a listserv group.
Every time you send an e-mail message to the listserv, everyone in the
class receives it, and, in turn, you receive every message that anyone
else sends. When used properly, a listserv is a great way to converse
with your classmates, to test ideas, to ask questions, and generally to
work with the material and each other in productive ways. In this class
you will submit two kinds of posts: Reading Posts in response
to the readings and Synthesis Posts that tie together the readings,
your peers’ posts, and the class discussions. See the
Listserv Assignment for details about what I expect.
Formal
Writing Assignments
The required length of papers in this class is comparatively short; I
am looking for quality here more than quantity. We will talk more
about these assignments
when the time comes, but for more detail on them, check the appropriate
web-pages. All writing assignments in this course should be submitted
as doc or docx attachments to e-mail messages sent directly to me at rnanian@gmu.edu.
Also, I insist you always keep back-up files of your work; in 2020, claiming
a computer glitch destroyed your work is like claiming your dog ate your
homework.
Final
Examination
There will be a final examination; see the Class
Calendar for the day and time. Taking the examination when it
is scheduled is mandatory. Why give examinations at all? I believe examinations
are important in literature courses, not only to help me evaluate your
performance, but to allow you to demonstrate (to yourself as much as to
me) how much you have learned. Typically, students underestimate how much
they have learned until they are tested. We will discuss in class the
form my examinations take. Dont panic: the intent is to test your
ability to express yourself clearly on what you may reasonably be expected
to recall, not to make you spend endless hours cramming your head with
minutia. Indeed, if you keep up with the reading and listserv assignments,
attend class, pay attention, and take notes, you should not need to spend
more than a few hours studying for the exam. If you dont do these
things, I suspect all the cramming in the world wont help you much.
Class
Participation
I believe that learning requires an active engagement on the part
of both the students and the teacher. You cannot simply sit back and expect
to have knowledge downloaded into your brain. Moreover,
I have no desire to stand up at the front of the class and lecture for
seventy-five minutes every day. At minimum, you
must participate by paying close attention to everything that goes on
in class. Ideally, you should also ask questions and risk exposing your
ideas to your classmates. Testing your ideas, even or especially when
they prove erroneous, is worthwhile, so you do not lose credit in my eyes
if I or someone else corrects you about something. (The one rare exception
is if something you say reveals that you are unprepared for class, for
example if you have not done the necessary reading.)
Attendance
A healthy percentage
of success in life depends simply on showing up where and when you are
expected. This is especially true for literature courses, which
do not have a textbook in the same way a history or chemistry class does.
The works you read in this class more closely resemble what rocks are
to a geology class: they are what you are studying, but do not by themselves
tell you what you need to know. I guarantee you that you will learn
far more by showing up and participating than by reading on your own at
this stage of your life, and what you could learn on your own you will
only truly know you know by being in class and testing your assumptions
and conclusions against mine and those of your peers. If you are
the kind of student who has trouble showing up, this is not the course
for you.
On the other hand, students who never miss a class tend to do well in
my courses.
Although
absences are always bad, if you know ahead of time that you will be absent,
you should tell me. For example, if a commitment connected with
the university — an athletic trip, a forensics competition, or something
similar — means you will be away from campus, talk to me and we
can arrange to meet outside of class so that you do not fall behind. If you are home with a 102 degree fever, let me know via e-mail so I do
not think you have just disappeared. Regardless, you are absolutely
responsible for finding out what happened in class (given that you have
e-mail addresses for your classmates, this should not be a difficult task)
and for submitting any assignments due that day. Missing a class
does not grant you an extension.
Policy
on Late Work
Assignments are due when specified.
Listserv Reading Posts cannot be made up once the class for which they
are due begins; listserv Synthesis Posts cannot be made up once the next
class begins. You may submit essays late; however,
the essay will receive a 20% penalty for being late and an additional 10% penalty for every day beyond the first 24 hours,
meaning that an essay that you send to me one day and one hour late
will receive a 30% penalty to the available points. If you make arrangements with me with me prior to the due
date (not after the fact nor on the day on which the assignment is due)
— you may (at my discretion) receive a less severe penalty of one-third
to one-half of a grade (3.33-5.00 points) per day, or, in rare cases,
no penalty at all. Note: this presumes that we discuss it and I agree,
not that you send me an e-mail at the last minute saying, My paper
will be late, please accept it.
Evaluation
You may earn up to one hundred points in this course, divided
as follows:
Assignment |
Points |
Listserv Reading Posts |
24 |
Listserv Synthesis Posts |
20 |
Poetic
Form Essay |
12 |
Intertextuality Essay |
12 |
Research
Project |
12 |
Final
Examination |
20 |
Strong
in-class participation will earn students up to a 5.0 point bonus on their
final grade. While I do not penalize for shyness (showing up on time and
paying attention is adequate), poor participation resulting from inattention
— including excessive absences or lateness — will result in
up to a 5.0 point deduction. Ill warn you if you are in danger of
incurring that penalty. Note this comment from the student handbook: “Students
who fail to participate (by virtue of extensive absences) in courses in
which participation is a factor in evaluation may have their grades lowered.”
Because of the corona virus pandemic and our move to online instruction, we will no longer have a final examination. Instead, I will award points based on virtual attendance during our class sessions. The points will be awarded as follows:
Classes Attended |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
Points |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
7 |
9 |
11 |
13 |
15 |
17 |
19 |
21 |
23 |
25 |
You may see your grades throughout the semester on Blackboard.
Possible
final grades in this course include A+ (97.0 points or above), A (93.0-96.9),
A- (90.0-92.9), B+ (87.0-89.9), B (83.0-86.9), B- (80.0-82.9), C+ (77.0-79.9),
C (73.0-76.9), C-(68.5-72.9), D (60.0-68.4), and F (below 60). Note, however,
that you cannot satisfy the requirements for a degree in English unless you earn at least
a C in this course (though you may re-take it).
I
grant incompletes only in the case of the direst of circumstances beyond
the students foresight and control, and only when I have a reasonable
expectation that the student can complete the course successfully.
Basic Rules of Conduct
A class, like a society, requires that all participants
observe a certain code of civilized behavior. Some of these are pretty
obvious, but believe it or not every one of them is here as a result of
past experience:
Be
on time. Arriving late is disruptive. Running a class is like driving
a stick-shift: it takes time to shift up to cruising speed. When you
walk in after the agreed upon starting time, you stop the class and
make it start out again in first gear. Of course, if circumstances intrude and you arrive late, you should still come in; just do so as unobtrusively as possible. But making a habit of it is rude.
The
outside world should not intrude on our class. Please disable any
cellular telephones, pagers, and wrist watches with alarms, or leave
them behind. Laptop computers are acceptable, but only for class purposes.
Reading e-mail or cruising the web for your own amusement will be
grounds for the class participation deduction mentioned above.
Attendance
implies body and mind and so requires consciousness. Putting
your head down on the desk or closing your eyes because you are tired
is unacceptable at any level above nursery school.
Wait until the class actually ends to pack up. Few things are more
annoying than having to raise my voice at the end of class because
people are sliding their books off the desks and unzipping and zipping
their backpacks.
At
any moment, one of three things will be happening in the class: either
I will be talking, a student will be talking (asking or answering
a question, participating in a class discussion), or everyone will
be concentrating silently on the task at hand. In every case, courtesy
demands that you pay attention, and not engage in your own private
conversations. But please feel free to ask questions and express your
ideas that kind of talking demonstrates your involvement and
is generally a good thing.
The class is only 75 minutes long, so you should seldom, if ever,
need to leave the classroom. If the need arises,
and you cant wait, by all means go in peace. I trust you will
return quickly, and not abuse my patience and generally kind disposition.
Honesty
George Mason University’s Honor
Code requires all members of this community to maintain the highest
standards of academic honesty and integrity. Cheating, plagiarism, lying,
and stealing are all expressly prohibited. In fact, the list of offences
is redundant: cheating is fraud; plagiarism is theft. These are the two
clear felonies of the academic community.
Plagiarism
means using judgments, opinions, research, or phrasing from another source
without giving that source credit. Common knowledge does not fall into
this category, but knowledge researched, compiled, or organized by a particular
person does. Writers give credit through the use of accepted documentation
styles, such as parenthetical citation; a simple listing of books, articles,
and websites is not sufficient. Students must take responsibility for understanding
and practicing the basic principles of good scholarship. To avoid plagiarism,
meet the expectations of a U.S. academic audience, give their readers
a chance to investigate the issue further, and make credible arguments,
writers must
1) put quotation
marks around, and give an in-text citation for, any sentences or distinctive
phrases (even short, two- or three-word phrases, if they are distinctive)
that writers copy directly from any outside source: a book, a textbook,
an article, a website, a newspaper, a movie, a song, an interview, an
encyclopedia, a CD, a baseball card — whatever
2) completely
re-write (not just change a few words) any information they find in
a separate source and wish to summarize or paraphrase for their readers,
and also give an in-text citation for that paraphrased information
3) give
an in-text citation for any facts, statistics, or opinions which the
writers learned from outside sources (or which they just happen to know)
and which are not considered common knowledge for the
target audience (this may require new research to locate a credible
outside source to cite)
4) give
a new in-text citation for each element of information — meaning
not rely on a single citation at the end of a paragraph, because that
is not usually sufficient to inform a reader clearly of how much of
the paragraph comes from an outside source
5) include
a Works Cited list at the end of their essay,
providing full bibliographic information for every source cited in their
essays.
That said, let me be clear. Any
act of academic dishonesty will result in my reporting you to the honor
committee and recommending failure of the course (not merely the assignment). In every case in which I have done this, the honor
committee has accepted my recommendation, and in several cases has imposed
additional penalties. This may sound harsh, but you will find similar
guidelines at every college in the country. It does not get any
more serious than this. I will use available online plagiarism-finding
tools to check your essays as I see fit.
The
official English Department statement on Academic Dishonesty is as follows:
Plagiarism means using the exact words, opinions, or factual information
from another person without giving the person credit. Writers give
credit through accepted documentation styles, such as parenthetical citation,
footnotes, or endnotes; a simple listing of books and articles is not
sufficient. Plagiarism is the equivalent of intellectual robbery
and cannot be tolerated in the academic setting.
The
University Writing Center
The university’s Writing
Center is one of the best resources
you will find on campus. You can schedule a forty-five minute appointment
with a trained tutor to help with any phase of the writing process. Tutors can provide feedback on a draft, answer your questions, and show you strategies for brainstorming, organizing, drafting, revising, and editing. In addition to free individual tutoring sessions, it has an outstanding website that offers a wealth
of online resources
for student writers. To schedule an appointment, visit the center's main location in Robinson Hall B213, or go to writingcenter.gmu.edu, register with the center, and make an appointment using the online scheduler. The
Writing Center even offers some services online, but please plan ahead
and allow at least three days to receive a response.
Note
Regarding Students with Disabilities
Students
with documented disabilities should present me with a contact sheet from
the Disability Resource Center as soon as possible so that together we
may plan appropriate accommodations.
My
Responsibilities
In this syllabus, I spell out clearly what I expect of
you. What may you expect of me? You have the right to expect that I am
knowledgeable about the subject, that I will be prepared for class, that
I will return your assignments to you reasonably promptly, that I will
indicate clearly where you need to apply yourself in order to improve
as both a reader of literature and as a writer, and that I will give you
positive feedback whenever possible. It also means that you can count
on my honest evaluation of your work. If I say something positive, believe
it. If you perform poorly, I will certainly let you know. However,
I will not chase you: if you are struggling, ask to meet with me. More
fundamentally, you can expect that I want you both to succeed and to enjoy
the experience, and will do everything within my power to help.
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