Syllabus for ENG 210-05

Approaches to Literature

(Stacia L. Bensyl)


English 210-05  Approaches to Literature: Commonwealth Literature

MWF 12:00-12:50 SS/C 219

Department of English, Foreign Languages and Journalism

Dr. Stacia L. Bensyl  SS/C 208P  phone 271-5936

Office hours: 11-12 MWF, 1-2 MW, 10-11 TTh, 2-4 Th, and by appointment

Email--bensyl@griffon.mwsc.edu



Required Texts:

Emecheta, Buchi.  In the Ditch.

Lim, Geok-Lin and Norman A. Spencer.  One World of Literature.

McCourt, Frank.  Angela's Ashes.



Course Objectives:

Upon completion of English 210-05 you should be able to:

 Identify and appreciate the qualities of Commonwealth Literature

 Analyze Commonwealth Literature in terms of those qualities

 Write about Commonwealth Literature and discuss it in class

 Think critically about Commonwealth Literature



To reach these objectives you will:

1. Write a weekly reading journal over the reading assignments for that week.  It must be 1 to 2 word-processed, double-spaced pages, and it will be turned in to me at the beginning of the hour each Friday.  Each journal assignment is worth 10 points.

2. Take quizzes over the reading assignments.  Each quiz is worth 10 points and quizzes cannot be made up.  If you are not in class to take the quiz, you simply lose the points for that assignment.

3. Take a final exam on Monday, May 8, from 11:30-1:20.  The final exam is worth 200 points.

4. Present a brief (7-10 minute) introduction to the class about one of the writers whose work we will be reading.  Each student will choose a different author, and will present his/her information to the class prior to our discussing the author's work in class.  I will have a sign-up sheet the second week of class for this assignment.  50 points

5. Research on the Web the phenomenon of Angela's Ashes.  50 points.



Academic Honesty:

I abide by the standards for academic honesty outlines in the student handbook.  If I suspect you are claiming another's work as your own, or cheating in any way, I will report you to the department chair and the dean.



Attendance:

I expect you to attend every class. Quizzes cannot be made up, however I will drop one quiz grade (the lowest grade or a zero, as the case may be) when figuring your final grade.





Students with disabilities:

Any student in this course who has a disability that prevents the fullest expression of his/her abilities should contact me personally as soon as possible so that we can discuss class requirements.



Grading policy:

90-100% = A

80-89%  = B

70-79%  = C

60-69%  = D

59-0%   = F

What is Commonwealth Literature?



	Many of your may be unsure about what Commonwealth Literature is.  Very simply, it is the literature that has come from the countries Great Britain once colonized or held.  The Commonwealth is comprised of former British colonies or territories.  These countries are not possessions of Britain anymore.  They all work together as a conference of independent nations who have former ties with the British Empire. We will be studying the literature of some of the following Commonwealth countries: Australia, New Zealand, Indian, and Trinidad.   Ireland and South Africa seceded from the Commonwealth.  Therefore, I guess you could say I'm taking liberties and using the term in its broadest possible context.  Singapore and Egypt and Nigeria all have British ties.  And there are others.  Much of what you will "get" from this course is what you discover on your own.  Maybe someday you'll be watching a National Geographic special and it will remind you of something you we discussed in class.  Maybe someday you'll have a classmate or coworker or friend who comes from a Commonwealth country or a country with British ties.  It might be in retrospect that you use what you'll learn in this class, but as the world shrinks and we become a much more global people, it's imperative that we know as much about each other as possible.  A good way to learn about people is through their literature.

	I'm sure you'll come to class with many questions.  Expect to meet many differences in the literature we read.  Sometimes it will challenge your comfort zone.  Sometimes you'll barely be able to relate to what's happening in the text.  What's important is that you allow yourself the opportunity to read the assignments with your eyes as wide open as you possibly can.  You might be amazed at what you see.













Tentative course schedule:

1-19	Introduction to Commonwealth Literature

1-21	film

1-24	"Gateman's Gift"

1-26	"Breast-Giver" 

1-28	"Breast-Giver"

2-2	"The Interview"

2-4	"Nomad and Viper"

2-7	"Nomad and Viper"

2-9	No class

2-11	"A House of Flesh"

2-14	"The Happy Man"

2-16	"The Land of Sad Oranges"

2-18	"Another Evening at the Club"

2-21	Presidents' Day--no class

2-23	catching our breath

2-25	In the Ditch 

2-28	In the Ditch

3-1	In the Ditch

3-3	In the Ditch

3-6	The Swamp Dwellers	

3-8	The Swamp Dwellers

3-10	"Civil Peace"

3-13	Spring Break

3-15	Spring Break

3-17	Spring Break

3-20	"A Soldier's Embrace"	

3-22	"The Hajji"

3-24	"The Pyrotechnicist"	

3-27	"Shoemaker Arnold"

3-29	photocopied poems

3-31	catching our breath

4-3	T.B.A.

4-5	T.B.A.

4-7	"The Cooboo"

4-10	"Clothes Make a Man"

4-12	"Mr. Parker's Valentine"

4-14	"His First Ball"

4-17	"His First Ball"  "The Skeleton of the Great Moa . . ."

4-19	"Dancing Girls"

4-21	Angela's Ashes

4-24	Angela's Ashes

4-26	Angela's Ashes

4-28    Angela's Ashes

5-1     Winding up





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