Calumet College of St. Joseph

SYLLABUS FOR WORLD LITERATURE II

 

Term:  Summer, 2001-3 (April  29-August 3)                                          

Course Number: (ENG 231X)

Instructor:   Dr. Valerie Pennanen

Office:  Room #518

Office Phone: (219) 473-4294

E-mail:  vpennanenccsj@hotmail.com

Home Phone: (219) 937-0341

Office Hours:  By Appointment

 

Instructor Background: B.A., Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology and Ancient Greek (Bryn Mawr College); M.A. and Ph.D., Classical Art and Archaeology (The University of Michigan); teaching experience in classics, art history, art appreciation, and liberal studies.

 

Course Time:  Thursday – 7:00p.m. – 10:00 p.m.

 

Course Description: This course continues the classical literature studies of English 230 with emphasis on romantic, realistic, and modern literature.  It also presents the student with major works in translation from French, Spanish, Russian, and African classics.

 

Prerequisites:  None

 

Learning Outcomes/ Competencies:

Students in this course will become familiar with the great literary heritage of our world from the Enlightenment through the twentieth century.

 

Textbooks: M. Mack et al. ed., The Norton Anthology of World Masterpieces, Volume II (7th edition, 1999)

 

Learning Strategies:  Lectures, group discussions and dramatic readings.

 

Assessment:

 

Exams (Midterm and Final)                                                              50 % of grade

Class Participation                                                                              25 % of grade

Final Paper                                                                                           25 % of grade

 

 

Class Policy for Assignments:  If a student misses a test, he/she must contact the instructor within 48 hours to arrange for a makeup.  The 48-hour rule also applies to a missed paper deadline.  Makeup tests and paper extensions will be granted ONLY in case of illness or family emergency.

 

 

 

Grading Scale:

 

A: 92-100                A-: 90-91               B+:  88-89     B: 82-87         B-:  80-81    C+: 78-79

C: 72-77                 C-: 70-71              D+:  68-69     D: 62-67         D-:  60-61    F:  59 & below

 

Class Policy on Attendance:

Regular attendance is crucial to your success in this class.  More than two (2) absences will be sure to harm your class participation grade (and they are bound to hurt your other grades, too).  If you miss more than three (3) classes, you should consider withdrawing.

 

Class Policy on Electronic Devices:

Tape recording of lectures is permitted, although not encouraged.  If you feel that you absolutely must carry a pager, beeper, or cell phone, please speak with the instructor prior to class. 

 

 

Course Outline:

 

Class Dates:                                                       Topics/Assignments:

 

Week 1 (May 2)                                                    Welcome and Introduction

 

Week 2 (May 9)                                                    Moliere, Tartuffe

                                                                                Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz,  “Reply to Sor Filotea de la Cruz”

 

Week 3 (May 16)                                                 Swift, Gulliver’s Travels, Part IV: A Voyage to the Country of

    the Houyhnhnms

                                                                                Pope, “An Essay on Man,” Epistle I

                                                                                Voltaire, Candide

 

Week 4 (May 23)                                                 Poems by Blake:

                                                                                     “Introduction” (from Songs of Innocence)

                                                                                     “The Lamb”

                                                                                     “The Little Black Boy”

                                                                                     “Holy Thursday”

                                                                                     “The Chimney Sweeper” (from Songs of Innocence)

                                                                                     “The Tyger”

                                                                                     “The Chimney Sweeper” (from Songs of Experience)

                                                                                Poem by Wordsworth:

     “Ode on Intimations of Immortality”

 

Week 5 (May 30)                                                 Poem by Coleridge:

                                                                                     “Kubla Khan”

                                                                                Poems by Shelley:

                                                                                     “Stanzas Written in Dejection”

                                                                                    “Ode to the West Wind”

                                                                                Poems by Keats:

                                                                                    “On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer”

                                                                                    “Bright Star”

                                                                                    “La Belle Dame sans Merci”

                                                                                    “Ode on a Grecian Urn”

                                                                                    “Ode to a Nightingale”

                                                                                Goethe, Faust

 

Week 6 (June 6)                                                  Douglass, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An 

     American Slave

                                                                                Review for Midterm Exam

Week 7 (June 13)                                                                Midterm Exam

 

Week 8 (June 20)                                                                Flaubert, Madame Bovary

                                                                                Poem by Baudelaire

“To the Reader”

                                               

Week 9 (June 27)                                                                Tolstoy, “The Death of Ivan Ilyich”

                                                                                Kafka, The Metamorphosis

 

NO CLASS ON THURSDAY, JULY 4

 

Week 10 (July 11)                                                Poem by Yeats:

                                                                                                “The Second Coming”                                                      

                                                                                Poems by Eliot:

                                                                                                “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”

                                                                                                “The Waste Land”

                                                                                FINAL PAPERS DUE

 

Week 11 (July 18)                                                Borowski, “Ladies and Gentlemen, to the Gas Chamber”

                                                                                Camus, “The Guest”

                                                                                Beckett, Endgame

 

Week 12 (July 25)                                                Wright, “The Man Who Was Almost A Man”

                                                                                Lessing, “The Old Chief Mshlanga”

                                                                                Bachmann, “The Barking”

                                                                                Garcia Marquez, “Death Constant Beyond Love”

                                                Review for Final Exam

 

Week 13 (August 1)                                             FINAL EXAM

 

                                                                               

Class Participation:

Please note that this accounts for 25% of your course grade.

 

Center for Academic Excellence:

Tutoring assistance is free to all students of Calumet College of St. Joseph. Call the Center for Academic Excellence (CAE), to make an appointment at 473-4287. The Center has experienced and well-trained tutors in most subject areas to help students who are struggling in a course or who are doing well and would like to do better. Regular weekly tutoring sessions are likely to improve your grade.

 

Statement of Plagiarism:

If an instructor or other Calumet College of St. Joseph personnel find that a student has plagiarized or been involved in another form of academic dishonesty, the instructor or other personnel may elect to bring the matter up for judicial review. The maximum penalty for any form of academic dishonesty is dismissal from the College. The procedures for judicial review are listed under the section of CCSJ handbook that addresses student grievances. (Academic Planner 2001/2002 p.27)

 

Citation Guidelines:

Calumet College of St. Joseph adheres to citation guidelines as prescribed by the particular discipline (i.e., MLA, APA, and Chicago Manual of Style or Turabian.).  All of these guidelines are available in the Calumet College of St. Joseph library or bookstore.  These texts outline how to cite references from a variety of sources, including electronic media.

 

Withdrawal from Classes Policy:

After the last day for class changes has passed (see College calendar), students may withdraw from a course in which they are registered with permission from the faculty member conducting the course. A written request detailing the reason(s) for the withdrawal must be filed with the Registrar. The Registrar must receive written request for withdrawal by the last day of classes prior to the final examination dates specified in the catalogue. Written requests may be mailed to the Registrar or faxed to the College fax number 219-473-4259. Students are to make note of the refund schedule when withdrawing from courses. The request is forwarded to the faculty member, who makes the final determination to accept or deny the request. If the request is honored, the student will receive notification of official withdrawal; if denied, the notification will indicate why the withdrawal is disallowed. Note: Degree Completion Division (DCD) students should consult the DCD Student Handbook for information on DCD withdrawals.

 

An official withdrawal is recorded as a "W" grade on the student's transcript. Dropping a course without written permission automatically incurs an "F" grade for the course (see Refund Schedule).