ENGL 2122/Spring 2022/Schedule

From Gerald R. Lucas
< ENGL 2122‎ | Spring 2022
Revision as of 11:00, 21 January 2022 by Grlucas (talk | contribs) (Added some links to D2L. No idea if they'll work...)

This schedule represents the ideal outline for our study this semester. Yet, like all best-laid plans, we may not be able to keep up with our agenda. Please be flexible and try to look and read ahead whenever possible.

We will do our best to stick by this schedule, but I will inform you verbally, via an email, and/or a literal change to the schedule below whenever there is a deviation. Getting these updates is solely your responsibility. Therefore, this schedule is tentative and subject to change contingent upon the needs of the students and the professor, and dictated by time and other constraints which may affect the course. For face-to-face classes, this schedule reflects only an overview of the assigned reading and other major course assignments. It may not indicate specific class session assignments or activities. Specific in-class assignments may not be reflected on the schedule.

Louis_Meijer_-_Kinderen_op_rots_in_volle_zee

Each week of this class has its own unit or lesson corresponding to a literary movement. Each week is divided into daily work that contain readings (with the occasional reading quiz) and writing. Each week concludes with a test on the materials covered. All assignments during the unit are due on the last Tuesday at 11:59 pm—the day check-ins are scheduled.

Schedule Overview
  • 3/9 Class begins / Introduction
  • 3/9–3/29 — Romanticism
  • (3/21–3/27 — Spring Break)
  • 3/30–4/5 — Victorianism
  • (4/6 — Midterm grades due)
  • (4/8 — Withdrawal date)
  • 4/6–5/3 — The Twentieth Century
    • 4/6–4/12 — Through WWI
    • 4/13–4/19 — Modernism
    • 4/20–4/27 — Postmodernism / Contemporary
  • 5/3 — Short Lit Crit Response due
  • 5/3 — Class ends

Daily Work

As this is a session course and time is limited, here’s how I recommend your proceed: work every day. Put aside at least an hour on every class day, and

  1. Read the primary texts (these are assigned below in individual class days) taking notes as you do, maybe highlighting passages that speak to you in some way.
  2. Take the reading quiz on D2L if there is one assigned. This will be designated with a Quiz-icon.png after the work of literature (sorry that D2L will not let me link these directly).
  3. Read some secondary texts: i.e., do some research on at least one of the texts, being sure you understand the major themes, symbols, etc.
  4. Respond on r/LitWiki (see Repond) (click the Disc-sm.png to take you directly to a r/LitWiki post) on what you think about the text(s), supporting it with evidence from both the primary and secondary texts. I give some suggestions below for potential responses, but these are really up to you—you needn’t respond to every single text, but it is a good idea. You should write a minimum of two posts per lesson (or week).[1]
  5. Check-In at the end of each lesson on D2L. The last day of each unit is set aside for these evaluations.

The idea here is that you engage with the course materials in a consistent way. Not all of it will speak to you, and that’s fine. However, you must actively engage the materials and show that engagement in your weekly work.

Schedule

Date Assignment
3/9 Class Begins
  • Read the syllabus completely, including policies; note any questions you might have.
  • Read How to Do Well in My Class and Writing in the Liberal Arts.
  • Take Introduction Quiz about the syllabus on D2L . Quiz-icon.png
  • Read Reddit Discussions, create a Reddit account, and join r/LitWiki.
  • Respond to r/LitWiki » Welcome to British Literature II (S22).
  • After completing the above, upload a screenshot of your Reddit profile page (get to your profile by clicking your user name in the upper-right in Reddit) on D2L—this way I know your username (so I can evaluate your work) and see that you have done the assignment. This is crucial as it will indicate that you are attending; failure to do this will result in your being reported as a no-show and dropped from the class. If this happens, you will not be readmitted.
The Romantic Period
3/10
Caspar David Friedrich - Landschaft mit Gebirgssee, Morgen.jpg
Introduction to Romanticism Disc-sm.png
3/11
1794 William Blake Songs of Innocence.jpg
William Blake Disc-sm.png

Respond on r/LitWiki » William Blake (General). Or, if you want to respond to a particular poem, locate its thread, or if one has not already been created, feel free to start a new one.; e.g. Blake: “The Sick Rose” as the title of the thread.
3/14 Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
  • A Vindication on the Rights of Women Chapter 2 Quiz-icon.png
  • Vindication Chapter 4 Quiz-icon.png
  • Respond on r/LitWiki
3/15
Ashford, Tintern Abbey
William Wordsworth
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Respond on r/LitWiki.
3/16 George Gordon, Lord Byron
Respond on r/LitWiki.
3/17 Percy Bysshe Shelley
Respond on r/LitWiki.
3/18
Elizabeth Barrett Browning Dorothy Wordsworth

Respond on r/LitWiki.
3/28
Joseph Severn, Portrait of John Keats
John Keats
Respond on r/LitWiki.
3/29 Take the Romanticism Check-In on D2L
The Victorian Period
3/30 Introduction to Victorian Literature
  • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 527–551[3]
  • Take Period Introduction Quiz on D2L Quiz-icon.png
  • Respond on r/LitWiki: Based on your reading, identify the five most important characteristics that define the Victorian Age. Who are the major figures? Major works? What should readers look for in the work?
3/31
Waterhouse, The Lady of Shalott
Alfred, Lord Tennyson Gerard Manley Hopkins
  • “God’s Grandeur”
  • “The Windhover”
4/1 Robert Browning Matthew Arnold Christina Rossetti
4/4 Oscar Wilde
  • The Importance of Being Earnest Quiz-icon.png
4/5 Take the Victorian Period Check-In on D2L
The Twentieth and Twentieth-First Centuries
4/6[4] Introduction to the Twentieth and Twentieth-First Centuries
  • Editor’s Introduction, pp. 1015–1042[5]
  • Take Period Introduction Quiz on D2L Quiz-icon.png
  • Respond on r/LitWiki: Based on your reading, identify the five most important characteristics that define the the turn of the century’s trends in literature. Who are the major figures? Major works? What should readers look for in works of this period?
4/7 Rudyard Kipling
  • “The Man Who Would Be King” Quiz-icon.png
4/8[6] E. M. Forster
James Joyce
  • “Araby” Quiz-icon.png
4/11 Rupert Brooke Siegfried Sassoon Wilfred Owen
4/12 Take the Edwardian/WWI Check-In on D2L
Modernism
4/13
Hulewicz, Leda and the Swan (1928)
William Butler Yeats
4/14 T. S. Eliot
4/15 W. H. Auden Dylan Thomas
4/18 Virginia Woolf
  • “The Mark on the Wall” Quiz-icon.png
  • “Professions for Women” Quiz-icon.png
4/19 Take the Modernism Check-In on D2L
World War II / Postmodernism
4/20
Philip Larkin by Humphrey Ocean.jpg
Philip Larkin Seamus Heany
4/21 Nadine Gordimer
  • “The Moment before the Gun Went Off” Quiz-icon.png
4/22 Katherine Mansfield
  • “The Garden Party” Quiz-icon.png
4/25 Margaret Atwood
  • “Death by Landscape” Quiz-icon.png
4/26 Salman Rushdie
  • “The Prophet’s Hair” Quiz-icon.png
4/27 Take the Postmodernism Check-In on D2L
5/4 Short Lit Crit Response due



notes

  1. Remember, minimums will earn you the minimum passing grade.
  2. See D2L for an overview of the period.
  3. See D2L for an overview of the period.
  4. Midterm grades due.
  5. See D2L for an overview of the period.
  6. Withdrawal deadline.
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