ADVANCED COMPOSTION
English 120A
Course Description
In this section of 120A we will concentrate on how to write effective essays about literature. This will not be a "general" writing class; our focus is literature and how one makes an argument about literary texts. We will consider the genres of poetry, short fiction, and novels. Students will write two shorter essays and then choose one of the "anchor" texts and write a longer research paper. We will cover such issues as crafting an argumentative thesis, marshalling evidence from the text, seeking and incorporating secondary sources, and analyzing ideas and material in a compelling fashion.
Schedule of Activites: (PDF copy of syllabus here)
M1/25--INTRODUCTION
W--1/27In-Class Essay & Gardner, Chapters 1 ("The Role of Good
Reading") & 2 ("The Writing Process") Essays
for Review Critique Form
M2/1"
W2/3Gardner, Chapter 5 ("Writing About Poems") Thesis
Statements
M2/8Anne Bradstreet, "The
Author to Her Book," E. A. Robinson, "Miniver
Cheevy," & Robert Frost, "Two
Look at Two"
W2/10Robert Browning, "My
Last Duchess" & W. B. Yeats's "Among
School Children"
M2/15--CLASS CUT DUE TO IMPOSED FURLOUGH*
W2/17--Paragraphing
M2/22--Emily Dickinson, "The
Soul Selects her own Society--" Wallace Stevens, "Anecdote
of the Jar"
W2/24Hacker, "Clarity" (1-20) & Sentences
M3/1WORKSHOP (bring complete draft of poetry essay)
W3/3--James Joyce "Araby"
PAPER DUE!! (sample of successful
poetry essay)
M3/8Herman Melville, "Bartleby
the Scrivener" & Gardner, Chapter 4 ("Writing About Stories")
W3/10--Nathanael Hawthorne, "Rappaccini's
Daughter"
M3/15--CLASS CUT DUE TO IMPOSED FURLOUGH*
W3/17---Margaret Atwood, "Rape Fantasies"
M3/22--WORKSHOP (bring complete draft of short fiction essay) Steps for Revision
W3/24--Ernest Hemingway "Hills
Like White Elephants" PAPER DUE!! (sample
of successful short ficiton essay)
M--3/29--SPRING BREAK
M-4/5- Review of Critical articles on Hemingway
Study Qeustions of Hemingway essays
W-4/7-Resources Workshop in Computer Lab (Electronic
Indexes & Databases)
M4/12--Grammar
W4/14--CLASS CUT DUE TO IMPOSED FURLOUGH*
M4/19--Gardner, Chapter 7 ("Writing a Literary Research Paper") Annotated Bibliographies Due (see Hacker, 130-47 & Short
Guide to MLA Formatting)
W4/21
M4/26--Joan Didion, Play It As It Lays
W4/28-- " PAPER
DUE!!
M5/3--Conferences (Conference Schedule here)
W5/5--CLASS CUT DUE TO IMPOSED FURLOUGH*
M--5/10--Conferences
W--5/12-- Last Day of Instruction
*FURLOUGHS--As part of the state's attempts to balance its budget, furloughs have been imposed on all faculty and staff for the academic year 2009-10. I have noted those dates when we will not hold class, and there are other non-instructional days during which I am also furloughed. Under the terms established by the university and the state, I am not allowed to conduct university business; therefore, I will not be available to teach, to hold office visits, nor to respond to phone calls or emails. These furlough conditions are out of my hands; if you have objections, I recommend you address them to the proper authorities--Gov. Schwarzenegger, your representatives in the California Senate and Assembly, and Charles Reed, Chancellor of the CSU.
Are you curious why your fees have increased so much--it's because of declining state funding
TEXTS
Janet Gardner, Writing About Literature |
Required
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Diana Hacker, A Pocket Manual of Style |
Required
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Joan Didion, Play It as It Lays |
Required
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Herman Melville, Billy Budd |
Choose One
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Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man | |
Marilynne Robinson, Housekeeping | |
F. Scott Fitzgerlad, The Great Gatsby |
The final course grade will be based on:
1 poetry essay
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*To miss any of the assignments above will result in an automatic failure of
the course. NO EXCEPTIONS.
STUDY QUESTIONS FOR STORIES AND NOVEL
"Araby"--James Joyce
1.) Explain the title; what does it mean both literally and figuratively?
2.) The story abounds in religious imagery. Trace some of this and explain what it's significance is?
3.) What is the point of the series of seemingly unrelated bits of information--disappointment with the dead priest's belongings; standing apart from the girl when speaking to her and his companions at the same time; gossip over the tea table; his uncle's tardiness and inane remarks about the boy's departure; etc.?
4.) Explain the meaning and/or significance of the last line, "Gazing up into the darkness I saw myself as a creature driven and derided by vanity; and my eyes burned with anguish and anger."
"Bartleby, the Scrivener"--Herman Melville
1.) Who is the narrator and how do we respond to him?
2.) Who is Bartleby and what is his importance?
3.) What is the importance of the concluding paragraph and it information about Bartleby's former occupation?
"Rappacini's Daughter"--Nathaniel Hawthorne
1.) What kind of garden is this; what kind of plants are here; how is the fountain important?
2.) How are we to interpret Dr. Rappacini; how and why is he important?
3.) How are we to interpret Beatrice; how and why is she important?
4.) How do we interpret Giovannni; who is he?
5.) How are we to interpret Baglioni?
6.) What is the importance of the brief introduction ("Writings of Aubépine")?
"Rape Fantasies"--Margaret Atwood
1 . What is the tone of this story and how is it related to thecharacterization and the method of narration? How is it related to the general subject announced by the title?
2.) Whom do you imagine as the person listening to the narrator? What is the occasion for telling such a story?
3.) Consider the content of these fantasies and what stands out?
4.) What seems to be the point of these stories; look especially at the title.
"Hills Like White Elephants"--Ernest Hemingway
1.) What are these people talking, or trying to talk, about; what's going on here?
2.) What is the importance of the scene where the young woman comments on the hills looking like white elephants and then the one later when she says they don't look that way after all?
3.) Has the quarrel been resolved when the story ends?
4.) Look closely at the story's method; what is significant about this?
PLAY IT AS IT LAYS--Joan Didion
1.) Discuss the importance of the setting.
2.) Analyze the significance of the recurring snake and gambling imagery.
3.) At one point the narrator writes, "Sometimes in the night she had moved into a realm of miseries peculiar to women [my italics], and she had nothing to say to Carter" (62). The suggestion here is that Marias experiences are uniquely female; explain the effect of the authors choosing a female protagonist.
4.) Analyze and explain why Kate is so important to Maria. Granted that she is the womans child, but Marias obsession indicates that there may be something more involved here.
5.) What are some of the novels major themes; analyze the treatment of these.
CONFERENCES |
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Monday, May 3 | Monday, May 10 |
10:00--Lois Greagor | 10:00-- |
10:10--Gina Villagomez | 10:10-- |
10:20--Sherral Bell | 10:20--Megan Lane |
10:30--Jessika Morrison | 10:30--Logan Brown |
1:30--Rebekah Myers | 10;40--Carrie Sadowy |
1:40--Breanne Patton | 10:50--Amber Kantner |
1:50--Gregory Johnson | 11:00--Amber Carlson |
2:00--Lynn Hernandez | 11:10--Irena Antonenko |
2:10--Kacey Kuebler | 11:20--Cuitlahuac Sanchez |
2:20--Selin Gutierrez | 11:30--Robert DiShone |
2:30--Vickie Horrell | 1:30--Katherine Stidham |
2:40--Autumn Bonstedt | 1:40--Amber cheatham |
1:50--Margie Fuston |
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2:00--Lauren Coppage |
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2:10--Jessica Sloan |
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2;20--Karina Sofia |
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2:30--Ashlee Mingo |
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2:40--Ryan Rich |
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3:00--Jessie Storrs |