Syllabus for ENG 210-03

Approaches to Literature

(Dennis A. Chepurnov)


Missouri Western State College

Department of English, Foreign Languages, and Journalism

ENG 210 Approaches to Literature: Origin and Direction

Section 02 10:00-10:50am, M W F,  SS/C 219

Section 03 11:00-11:50am, M W F,  SS/C 219

Spring 2000



Instructor: Dennis Chepurnov

Office: SS/C 213	

Office Hours: M, W & F  12:00-1:00pm; T 1:30-3:30pm and by appointment 

Phone: 271-5812 (during office hours)

e-mail: chepurno@griffon.mwsc.edu

					

Text:	The Bedford Introduction to Literature.  Ed.  Michael Meyer.  5th ed.

  Boston:Bedford/St. Martin's, 1999.  



Course Objectives 

(see also the ENG 210 departmental web page:

 http://www.missouriwestern.edu/EFLJ/eng210.asp)  

In this course you will:

 study fiction, poetry, and drama

 learn conventions of literary terminology and theory

 learn different approaches to literary criticism

 learn to analyze works of literature

 employ formal conventions of writing literary research/analysis papers



Attendance Policy

Attendance is expected (be sure to sign the roster daily).  Every four absences 

(unless excused and made-up) will decrease your final grade by a letter. 



Students with Disabilities Policy

Any student in this course who has a disability that requires any special 

consideration should make an appointment to meet  with me as soon as possible 

to discuss class requirements.  





Assignments and Grading Policy

Three papers (Fiction, Poetry, Drama) x100 pts each  == 300 pts 

Reading  journal (follow the attached guidelines) & Exercises  == 100 pts

Midterm Exam and Final Exam  x100 pts each  == 200 pts

     600 pts total: A (600-540);B (539-480);C (479-420);D (419-360);F (359-0)



Academic Honesty Policy							 

You are expected to do your own work in this course.  Any case of 

cheating/plagiarism  will result in no credit (0) for that assignment and may 

result in a disciplinary action by the College. 





Tentative Calendar

W 1/19   Course, Texts, Literature

F 1/21     Introduction (1-6), Ch 1 (9-13), Ch 37 (2021-5)



M 1/24   Ch 3 (60-8), Dubus (81-94)

W 1/26   Formalism (2025-7), Faulkner (480-94), Ferguson (500-1)

F 1/28    Ch 4 (97-102), Hawthorne (306-19) 

M 1/31   Biographical Criticism (2027-9), Melville (112-37), Hawthorne (138)

W 2/2    Ch 2 (40-43), Ch 38 (2063-81)

F 2/4     Ch 5 (143- 52), Dib, Camus (Handout)

	

M 2/7    Ch 6 (174-9), Chekhov (185-96), Oates (199-212)

W 2/9    Ngugi, Kanafani (Handout)

F 2/11    Psychological Criticism (2029-31), Wilson (497-99), Jen (642-53)



M 2/14   Historical (Literary History, Marxist) Criticism (2031-33), DeMott (495-7), London (H)

W 2/16   New Historicism & Cultural Criticism (2033-35), Joyce (507-522)

F 2/18    Ch 7 (215-7),  O'Connor (369-73, 381-92)



M 2/21   No Class – President's Day

W 2/23   Mythological Criticism (2037-9), O'Connor (407-426)

F 2/25    Ch 8 (243-9), Mishima (593-609)



M 2/28   Gender Criticism (2035-7), Yoko (Handout)

W 3/1     Ch 9 (268-72), O'Brien (555-64)

F 3/3	   Reader Response & Deconstruction (2039-43), Munro (442-54, 474-5(Ross), 477-8)



M 3/6     Ch 14 (671-91), Salter (703-5)

W 3/8     Ch 16 (717-27, 746-8), Ch 17 (752-9), Auden (1076-7), Neruda (1141-2)

F 3/10     Midterm Examination



M 3/13 - F 3/17   No Class – Spring Break



M 3/20   Ch 18 (775-84), Ch 19 (797-806), Ch 15 (710-6) 

W 3/22   Ch 20 (826-38), Ch 21 (856-63) 

F 3/24    Ch 22 (876-901)



M 3/27   Ch 23 (902-24)

W 3/29   Ch 28 (1169-95) 

F 3/31    Ch 31 – Shakespeare (1316-26), Hamlet (Act I: 1382-1406)



M 4/3     Shakespeare (Acts II&III: 1407-46)

W 4/5     Shakespeare (Acts IV&V: 1447-80) 

F 4/7      Ch 32 (1559-63), A Doll House (Acts I, II: 1563-98)



M 4/10   A Doll House (1598-1612), Ch 33 (1627-36)

W 4/12   Ch 29, Ch 33 (1636-43)

F 4/14    Williams (Scenes I-V: 1864-86)



M 4/17   Williams (1886-1910)

W 4/19   Ch 35 – Hwang (1672-96) 

F 4/21     Hwang (1696-1728)



M  4/24   Ch 28 (1196-1209), Ch 1(18-23)

W4/26,  F4/28,  M 5/1   Film as Text, Drama, Literature







Reading Journals

We will be reading several types of texts in this class  – literature, literary 

theory, and literary criticism, and your journal should be your response to the 

assigned reading.  Every journal entry should have your name and the title of 

the work/chapter on it.  Journals will be collected at the beginning of class 

every day.  No late journals will be accepted.  





A journal entry may be any one of the following:

– your exploration of the emotional effects created by the work

– a connection between the work and personal experiences

– your response to the moral/thematic issues raised in/by the work

– your evaluation of/response to the literary theory introduced in the chapter

    or critical theory applied to the work

– a correlation with relevant works from music, art, science or other disciplines

– a comparison, using any of the above as guidelines, to any other work(s) we read.    



Sometimes you also may be asked to respond along the lines of a specific 

question or through an exercise.  I encourage you to try out various ways of 

responding throughout this semester.  In any case, your journal entry must not 

be simply a summary of the work. 







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