- ENGL 525:
- Women in Literature
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Spring 2012; TU 11:30 - 12:45 p.m.
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- Professor Westman
- English/CS 108B; 532-2171
- Office Hours: M, W 9-10 a.m. & by app't.
- westmank@ksu.edu
- Required Texts
- Anne Bronte, The Tenant
of Wildfell Hall (1848)
(Penguin)
- L.M. Montgomery, Anne of
Green Gables
(1907) (Penguin Puffin Classics)
- Jean Rhys, Wide Sargasso
Sea (1966)
(Norton Critical Edition)
- JeanetteWinterson, The Passion
(1987)
- Helen Fielding, Bridget Jones's
Diary (1996, 1998)
- Pat Barker, Regeneration
(1991)
- Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's
Tale (1985)
(Anchor Books)
- Suzanne Collins, The Hunger Games (2008)
- Gloria Naylor, Mama Day
(1987)
- J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter
and the Prisoner of Azkaban (1999)
- Class Pack (selected poetry,
non-fiction prose, and critical essays; available on 1/13/12 at A&S Copy Center in Eisenhower Hall)
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- Note: Prerequisites for taking ENGL 525 include at least one of the following: English 125/210 (Honors English) or English 200 (Expository Writing 2).
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- Course Description:
- In this course we will study how a variety of women authors both respond to and reshape a tradition of literature that has typically been sexed as male and gendered as masculine. Issues we will explore include:
- their choice of themes and genres
- the relationship between expectations for women writers and readers and what women wrote and read
- the changing social role of the woman author writing for herself and for others across several centuries of cultural change
- the ways that racial, class, and national affiliations affect the production and reception of women writers' works
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- Course Objectives:
- To become familiar with and to appreciate women's literature and its historical and formal conventions
- To develop and apply critical skills for reading, thinking, and writing about literature
- what a literary text conveys (its themes, its view of the world)
- how a literary text conveys that knowledge (its aesthetic form, its selection/omission of detail)
- To use relevant cultural and historical information when interpreting literature
- To sharpen your communication skills and media skills for an increasingly technological age
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- Reading and Class Participation: Any literature course is a reading-intensive experience, so plan accordingly! Our class will be based on discussion, so class participation is expected and will count for 20% of your final grade. "Class participation" is not the same as just showing up and taking notes: you must be an active presence in the class. To participate, you must complete the reading assigned for each class session, think carefully about what you have read, and come to class ready to share your ideas. For each class, bring the appropriate book or course pack, so you can not only contribute to discussion but also mark passages that we discuss; this process will help you understand, remember, and review.
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- Your participation grade includes your contributions to our discussions in class (in large and small groups) and to our discussions on Message Board in K-State Online. I will expect at least one posting a week from each student to the Message Board; the guidelines and instructions for using the Message Board appear below.
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- Attendance: Obviously, you can't participate effectively if you aren't in class. Since the University requires that students attend all classes in which they are enrolled, there are no excused absences. You will not be penalized for your first two absences; thereafter, further absences will jeopardize your final course grade. Excessive or repeated lateness will also jeopardize your final grade. Excessive absences (six or more) may result in failure of the course. If you wish to receive a passing grade in this class, then, attendance is important.
While I appreciate your offering explanations for absences other than illness, the only way to excuse an absence is to provide me with an official letter from your dean or advisor. Classroom work or homework assignments missed due to absence cannot be made up. If you are absent, it is your responsibility to find out from another class member any announcements or assignments.
- Class Discussion Questions : As part of the class participation grade, students will sign up in groups of three or four to initiate discussion for one of our class sessions. Questions for class discussion (4-5 in number) should highlight issues or themes or queries you think we should address in our class discussion of the reading assigned for that day, given the discussion topic listed below. After conferring about and drafting the questions, groups leading discussion should email me their questions by 7 p.m. the night before the class; I will confirm receipt and offer any suggestions for the order or focus of the questions.
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- Quizzes: Expect 8-10 quizzes during the semester at the start of the class session. Quizzes are designed to test your knowledge of the reading assigned for that class session and the critical skills we develop and practice during our discussions. The quizzes will consist of identifications and interpretive questions which will help you improve your critical skills and will allow me to evaluate those skills and your comprehension of the material.
I reserve the option to replace a quiz with a two-page, typed response paper, due at the start of class; if assigned, response papers would be in response to a particular interpretative question distributed at the previous class session. Quizzes (and response papers) will be graded on a scale of 1 to 5 points: 5=A, 4=B, 3=C, 2=D, 1=F. I will average the points at the end of the course after dropping the lowest grade.
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- Paper: You will write only one formal paper (6-7 pages) in this class: a persuasive argument in essay form, which will use one or two of our assigned texts to argue for your interpretation of the theme(s). If your paper is late, it will be penalized a full letter grade (i.e.: A to B) for each day it is late. Papers must be typed, double-spaced, with one inch margins and with a 11- or 12-point standard font; the pages should be spell-checked, proof-read, numbered, and stapled or paper-clipped together. Your name, my name, the date, and the type of assignment should appear in the upper-left hand corner of the first page.
A note on sources: a "Works Cited" page should accompany any assignment that cites books and other outside sources, and you should use the MLA method for documenting sources. When you turn in a paper, you pledge that the work is your own and that you have faithfully abided by the guidelines for documenting sources. The University's Honor Code obliges you to cite the source of any idea that is not your own. If you quote, paraphrase, or use another’s ideas, you must give credit to the person whose ideas you are using. Otherwise, you have plagiarized. If you have any questions, please ask. If you do plagiarize, you will fail this course.
Online Message Board: To offer another venue for discussion, we'll be using an online message board in K-State Online. Each week, each student is required to post at least one paragraph-length comment about the materials we're reading and discussing in class. I will read these discussions and assess a grade (at the end of the semester) based on the thoughtfulness of your comments, their ability to foster discussion among your classmates, and their responsiveness both to our readings and to your classmate' comments in class and on the board. I'll provide some weekly question prompts as I follow these conversations, and I may also participate, but I see the message board primarily as a way for you to raise issues we haven’t addressed -- or addressed fully or to your satisfaction -- during our regular class meetings.
The weekly message board will run from Friday to Friday, to encourage you to post right after as well as before our class discussions, but I encourage you to contribute your ideas throughout the week and to check the board for others' postings. Your postings do not need to be long, but they do need to be substantive: they must be long enough to convey clearly the problem you are taking up and your point of view, connecting your comment to others' comments whenever possible. I will offer models of successful comments early in the semester.
To post to the message board, follow these directions:
1. Go to my homepage at http://www.ksu.edu/english/westmank/ and click on our course (ENGL 525), and then "Message Board" to login to K-State Online and go directly to the "Message Board." (You may also login to the K-State Online course page for ENGL 525, click on "Collaboration" and then select "Message Board.")
2. You should see all the messages posted to date and the newest threads ones first.
3. To post, choose to "reply," so you can engage directly in the conversation and your message can "thread" beneath the one you're responding to. Please change the subject line so it reflects the content of your message.
Multi-Media Project: You will choose one of four possible multi-media projects to complete during the semester. Your multi-media project can be submitted on any class day but must be turned in no later than April 27. Each project should demonstrate insight and understanding of the text with which it connects, should be thoughtfully constructed, and should be presented professionally with attention to detail. Refer to the grading rubrics (posted in K-State Online) for detailed grading criteria. The assignment will be distributed next week, but here are brief descriptions:
- Option 1: Create a soundtrack cd to accompany one of the texts we're studying. It must have 5-6 tracks and be accompanied by a written explanation (2 pages in length) of how each selected song relates to the text and its themes.
- Option 2: Using events, situations, or characters from one of our texts, create a fictional front page of a newspaper about that text. Format appropriately (single spaced, columns, headings/headlines), and include a written explanation (2 pages in length) about your process of selection, research, or design, in light of the text's themes.
- Option 3: Film a one-minute commercial or create a visual advertisement designed to encourage a specific target audience to read one of our texts. With the dvd containing the commercial or with the finished visual ad, include a written explanation (2 pages in length) identifying the audience of the commercial/ad and explaining why your commercial/ad will persuade that audience to read the text, given its themes. Also, if you faced any significant difficulties creating this project, explain those challenges.
- Option 4: Create a collage of pictures and words (cut from magazines or assembled as digital images) that connects with a text from the syllabus. Include a written explanation (2 pages in length) explaining why you chose those particular images for that text and why you arranged them as you did, given the text’s themes.
- Examinations: You will have a take-home midterm exam and a cumulative final exam. A missed exam counts as a zero; no make-up exams will be offered without an excuse from your dean or doctor.
- Email: I highly recommend email as a way of touching base with me about your work for the class -- a kind of virtual office hours. You can send me queries about reading or writing assignments, your thesis statement for an essay, or anything else that could be handled with a quick exchange of messages. I check my email throughout the day, but please remember that I am not perpetually online.
- Conferences: I want you to succeed in this course, and I am happy to meet with you about your work and your progress. I encourage you to see me before exams or papers are due, or if you have questions about material we discuss in class. Please feel free to stop by during office hours (M, W 9:00-10:00 a.m.), or contact me by phone or email to arrange a more convenient time to meet.
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- Note: If you have any condition such as a physical or learning disability that will make it difficult for you to carry out the work as I have outlined it or which will require academic accommodations, please notify me in the first two days of the course.
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- Grading:
- Quizzes 25%
- Class Participation 20%
- In-class 10%
- Postings 10%
Paper 15%
Multi-Media Project 10%
Take-Home Midterm 10%
Final Exam 20%
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Schedule
of Classes
- Note: All assigned reading should be completed by the date listed.
[CP]= Class Pack
Tradition and
the Gendered Talent
January |
T 17 |
|
Introduction: "Tradition
and the Gendered Talent" (with apologies to T.S. Eliot): Sidney,
Sonnet #1 ("Loving in Truth,..."); Shakespeare, Sonnet #18 ("Shall I compare thee..."); Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress"; Lady Mary
Wortley Montagu, "The Lover: A Ballad" |
|
U 19 |
|
Mary Wollstonecraft, from Vindication of the Rights of Woman [CP]; selected poems: Anne Bradstreet and Anne Finch [CP] |
|
T 24 |
|
Gilbert and Gubar, from The
Madwoman in the Attic [CP] |
|
U 26 |
|
"Debating Women:
Arguments in Verse"; Jonathan
Swift, "The Lady's Dressing
Room"; Montagu,
"The Reasons that Induce Dr. S. to write a Poem
called The Lady's Dressing
Room"; Aphra Behn,
"The Disappointment"
[CP] |
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Novels and Romances:
The "Dangers" of the (Female) Imagination
|
T 31 |
|
Spectator #365; Samuel Johnson,
Rambler #4; Jane
Austen, from Northanger Abbey; Sarah Stickney Ellis, from The Women
of England (1721-3); Harriet Martineau, from Autobiography (1725-28); Janice Radway, from
Reading the Romance (60-61); selections from Dangerous
Men and Adventurous Women (1-2, 4-6; 56-9; 133-9) [CP] |
February |
U 2 |
|
Anne
Bronte, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (3-185) |
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|
T 7 |
|
Bronte, The Tenant of Wildfell
Hall (186-335) |
|
U 9 |
|
Bronte, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (339-489)Critical readings on Bronte: Langland, from Anne Bronte: The
Other One. Optional reading: Frawley, "'The Fair Unknown': Privacy and Personhood in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall" [CP] Discussion #1 |
|
T 14 |
|
Rossetti,
"In an Artist's Studio" and "Goblin Market"
[CP] |
|
U 16 |
|
L.M.
Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables (1-192/through Chp 19) |
|
T 21
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Montgomery, Anne of Green
Gables (193-369)
Selection of critical readings
on Montgomery (select two):
Epperly, Nodelman, Rubio,
MacLulich, and Berg [CP]
Discussion #2
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Taking the Pen
in Hand...
|
U 23 |
|
Woolf,
from A Room of One's Own; Adrienne
Rich, "When We Dead Awaken: Writing
as Revision"
[CP] |
|
T 28 |
|
Rhys,
Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) (9-64) |
March
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|
U 1
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|
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Wide Sargasso Sea (64-112) |
|
T 6 |
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Wide Sargasso Sea; excerpts from Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre (119-132); excerpts from Rhys' letters & facsimile of mss. (135-147); critical essays by Rhys (in Norton Critical edition): Rhys, "The Bible Is Modern"
(148-149); Rhys, from "Black ExerciseBook"
(155-156); and Rody, "Burning Down the House..." (217-225) (All readings in Norton Critical edition.)
Discussion #3 |
|
U 8 |
|
No class -- work on take-home midterm and read ahead. |
|
F 9 |
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Take-Home Midterm Exam Due to my mailbox in ECS 119 by 5 p.m |
|
T 13 |
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Jeanette
Winterson, The Passion (3-76) |
|
U 15 |
|
Winterson, The Passion
(79-160) Critical essays on and by Winterson:
from Palmer, "The Passion:
Storytelling, Fantasy, Desire" [CP]; Winterson, "A Work of
My Own" [CP]. Optional critical reading: Westman,
With
"money and a room of her own":The
Legacy of Woolf's Advice for the Woman Artist at Century's
End" |
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- Spring Break -- March 19th - 23rd
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T 27 |
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Pat
Barker, Regeneration (3-145) |
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U 29 |
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Barker, Regeneration (149-252); reviews of Regeneration [CP]Discussion #4 |
April |
T 3 |
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Margaret
Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale (1-106 / Chp1-18) |
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U 5 |
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Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale (109-197 / Chp 19-30) |
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T 10
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Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale (199-311 / Chp 31-end); from "A Reader's Companion to The Handmaid's
Tale" (316-321); reviews/critical readings of Atwood [CP] Discussion #5 |
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U 12 |
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Collins,The Hunger Games |
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M 16 |
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Prospectus for Paper Due (1 page) to my mailbox in ECS 119 by 5 p.m. |
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T 17 |
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Gloria Naylor, Mama Day (1-165) |
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U 19 |
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Naylor, Mama Day (166-312) Discussion #6 |
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T 24 |
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Rowling, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (1-268) |
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U 26 |
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Rowling, Azkaban (269-435) Helen
Fielding, Bridget Jones's Diary; reader comments/reviews [forthcoming]
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M 30 |
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Paper #2 Due (6-7 pp.) to my mailbox in ECS 119 by 5 p.m.; information about MLA citiation format |
May |
T 1 |
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Selected Poems: Fleur Adcock, Wendy Cope, Margaret Atwood, Carol Ann Duffy, and Erica Jong [CP] |
|
U 3 |
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Review |
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W 9 |
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Final Exam (IDs & Essay), 2:00 - 3:50 p.m. |
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Department of English
| Kansas State University
Email:
westmank@ksu.edu
Last updated 22 April 2012