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Intro to Lit 1

Introduction to Literature ENG 1063-1:

Loss and Reconciliation

School of Arts and Humanities

Instructor: Anderson M. Rearick III, PhD.

Mount Vernon Nazarene University

Spring 2015. Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays

Credit: 3 Hours - Jetter Hall (JTTR), Room 133

Sec. 2 Time: 2:10 am - 3:10 am:

Contact Info:

Dr. Rearick's Office: RH 138 - I (Within School of Arts and Humanities Suit in Regents Hall 138)

Office Hours: MWF: 12:50-1:50 and 3:10 to 4:30; Tues – Thurs 1:50-4:30 or by appointment 1

Office (740) 392-6868 [740-397-9000] Ext. 3508

Home (740) 392-3738-- Please no calls after 9:00

Email: anderson.rearick@mvnu.edu

Course Description:

The purpose of ENG1063, Introduction to Literature, as described by the Online Catalogue: is to be a "study of literary genres through representative readings. Prerequisite: ENG1053G." This class will meet three times a week for three weeks to discuss the nature of literature using as raw material the readings listed as well as a series of handouts to be dispersed during the semester. Discussions will center on some of the common themes that have haunted the human mind and heart throughout western history.

Class Procedure: ENG1063 Introduction to Literature: This class will meet three times a week for fourteen weeks to discuss the nature of literature using the below reading list as raw material drawn from textbooks as well as a series of handouts purchased in the bookstore. Also this class will have a strong amount of activities on the

Moodle platform. Various links connected with our readings (including some of the actual texts) will be found there as well as all the online discussion posts. Visit Moodle often. Rather than divided by literary types or chronological order, class discussions will center on some of the common themes that have haunted the human mind and heart throughout western history. The material will be grouped thematically: isolation through self-centeredness, isolation by gender difference, isolation by

“cultureral” forces, isolation by death, and isolation by war. In each case authors have depicted responses that include forgiveness, love, community reconciliation and peace.

The following reading list is not exclusive and, in fact, many important works (probably including many of your favorites) have been excluded. This class can only function as an introduction, not an exhaustive study. I encourage you to think of the texts for this class not as a single resource but a series of inexhaustible treasure chests, capable of refreshment and inspiration time and time again.

Students will be evaluated by a series of twelve quizzes, class participation a short paper, and a final. Also the option for extra credit will be made available for those who are willing to do extra work.

The purpose of this course is. . .

1. to expose the student to a wide range of literary genres: poetry, drama, novel and short story

2.

3.

4. to introduce the student to a wide ranger of authors of different cultures, genders and ages. to encourage the student to consider what makes a work of literature worthy--how should the cannon be formed? to introduce some of the important common issues which authors--in spite of their different backgrounds, cultures, and mediums--often examine.

Actual Reading Texts: The purpose of this course is to broaden the student's understanding of the human condition, to widen his or her understanding of how people think, and develop his or her own sense of what is worthwhile and beautiful. Thus these texts have value long after the student completes this class and should be looked upon as the beginning of what may become a treasure trove of future reading. Also, contrary to what you may have experienced in the past, our time together will not be series of plot summaries. These works open to larger discussion issues. Thus, while I will warn you what works will be included on the series of quizzes, you are responsible to be “up to speed” on the readings and not depend only on only class discussion for plot specifics. This especially applies to the required

1

Be aware that appointments will become tighter towards the end of the semester during personal reviews with Research.

Intro to Lit 2

novel Great Expectations . One final note, readings listed on a day in a syllabus are expected to be completed by that day.

Criticism

An Experiment in Criticism by C.S. Lewis

Cambridge University Press; Rep edition (January 31,

Autobiography

A Grief Obscured by C.S. Lewis Free Online

1992)

ISBN: 0521422817

List Price: $16.99

Free Online

The Novel

Great Expectations (Dover Thrift Editions)

HarperSanFrancisco (this text is online)

ISBN: 0060652381

List Price: $9.95

Required

Plays: All will be viewed either in class or in special evening sessions.

(Paperback) Free Online by Charles Dickens

Dover Publications (August 1, 2001)

ISBN: 0486415864

List Price: $3.00

Required

The Anthology :

Perrine's Literature: Structure, Sound and Sense

Tenth (10 th ) Edition

Othello

Henry V by William Shakespeare

Taming of the Shrew

Pygmalion

Shadowlands

by William Shakespeare

by George Bernard Shaw by William Nicholson

by William Shakespeare

Please note that except for Othello which is in The

Perrine's Anthology all the others are on web sites.

Hand outs:

The Internet Literary Vocabulary Page accessed from

Edited by Thomas Arp and Greg Johnson.

List Price: $85.95

Harcourt College Pub (Thomson)

ISBN: 141300654X

Dr. Rearick's Reading Corner and Moodle.

Unless specified by Dr. Rearick, such hand-outs should be considered required reading like any of the assigned texts. Required

Supplemental Readings for ENG1063 (Online) Hard copies can be made available. In our readings texts from this are indicated as “handouts.”

Grading Scale:

100 - 93 = A Exceptional! A cut above--unusually good.

92 - 90 = A - Very, Very Well Done! -- above expectations.

89 - 87 = B + Well Done! A fine Job!

89 - 83 = B Really Good

82 - 80 = B - Pretty Good

79 - 77 = C + Solidly in there

76 - 73 = C Clearly a concrete understanding of the subject

72 - 70 = C - Understanding of subject is workable

69 - 60 = D Passing but weak

59 and below is an "F" Fell short of required understanding of material

Grading:

Eleven (11) out of twelve (12) Quizzes: 40%

Class Participation: 20% (online forums, classroom Moodle involvement and attendance)

Papers – not required, extra credit

Midterm: 20% ()

Final Exam: 20% ()

Attendance: Since we are functioning on an intensive schedule, it is vital that you be in class throughout the semester-even on days when a play is being shown in class. Therefore attendance will factor into your class participation grade . Three absences will be allowed and then five points will be taken from the student's "participation" score starting at 85 (90 - 5) and continuing. Students who are involved in a recognized activity for the school (Mandate weekends, traveling musical groups, athletes) need to see the instructor ahead of time so arrangements can be made.

Intro to Lit 3

More About Class Participation: Lecture will only play a part in this class's activities. Literature is meant to be talked about. Students are encouraged to express their opinions and share their unique insights. Each of us brings something special to a text that is ours alone. Thus, your comments are very important. Your online class home on Moodle will have ongoing discussion questions. Students should interact online at least once every two weeks (a total of at least seven entries by the end of the semester). This amount of activity earns a 90% towards your class participation grade ; more interaction raises the grade. More means extra credit . Also this exercise is intended to encourage interaction. Therefore you should plan to make three of your entries responses to what other peers have posted. Here is an example of what a post looks like:

Threaded Discussion Example:

.

Prompt: What is the Nature of Literature?

When adding this class to your schedule last, you probably had in your mind some definition of what literature is.

Mark Twain said a classic was "a book which everyone says one should read but nobody ever does." Besides being

BORING BOOKS, what did you think you were going to study? And why do you think, the study of this material is included in the stuff you MUST take before leaving MVNU?

Student Response: I Recognized Most of the Works

Upon seeing the syllabus, I recognized most of the works and knew that my high school teachers prepared me well for this class. I thought I was in for another episode of high school. In my mind, literature and boredom are synonymous. The outlook was grim.

Looking back, I couldn’t have been more wrong. I can honestly say that my feelings have changed 100%.

This class has been such an enjoyment to me. I am always under the assumption that when I study a piece of literature once I become a master of it. Again, I couldn’t have been more wrong. Revisiting different works has challenged me as much as studying them for the first time. I am continually pushing myself to see new points of view or meaning. The class discussion was great and made me face the reality that even on a

Christian campus there will be differing opinions.

I don’t usually count words, but if you are looking at an approximate number the above entry is about 150 words.

Short entries do count but will be counted as fractions (.5).

Movie Nights: In the past, class time has been used to actually show plays being covered within the hour periods since plays were NOT meant to be read but seen (Milton’s Samson Agonistes is the only exception and he published it because theaters were outlawed in England during his life). Shakespeare made very little money on publishing; his livelihood came from performance . The in-class showings helped emphasize this vital quality, but the practice also used up lecture time. Thus to improve the experience (no chopping up the play into hour segments) and better use class lecture time, this semester there will be four evening movie nights. Attendance to these nights is voluntary; I keep records just to have a sense of participation. The film then is then left on reserve in the library. For those who could not make the showing. Also to makeup for the extra time required to attend this, Friday’s lecture class that week will be canceled. Instead I shall be there to answer questions students may have on any of the readings.

Extra Credti Papers: There is NO paper required for this class. However, students may use the four gateways within

Moodle to submit extra credit papers. These papers should be at least two pages long double-spaced and done in MLA format. The paper should use both a primary and secondary source to prove its point. These will be submitted and graded in the class’ Moodle Turnitin© The grade earned will replace a weak grade in among the quizzes.

Quizzes: There will be a quiz every week online. They should take no more than a half an hour. However they will be accessible from Friday to Monday. Unless indicated by the professor readings assigned for that Friday will very likely appear on the quiz. These quizzes will be composed of multiple-choice, true or false and matching questions, about twelve in total. There will be make-ups only for medical emergencies or such like (if you are sick for more than three days there’s a real problem). Students, who know they will be missing an exam ahead of time, should contact the professor. One quiz will be dropped at the end of the year. These quizzes will be taken online and usually will be available for a 48 hour time span while the actual quiz once opened will be so for one hour.

Midterm: Wednesday Mar. 11: The midterm exam, which is scheduled for just before Spring Break break, will be similar to the quizzes given as far as the type of questions. There are usually 100 questions. We will take this exam in a computer lab the location of which will be announced later

Intro to Lit 4

Final Exam: The final exam will be given on

Tuesday, May 12, 2015 from 1:10-3:00. It will be based strongly on the tests given during the second half of the semester. However, do not be surprised if some material is drawn from the first half. Also I cannot change this date which was assigned to me. Again this will exam will be completed online in a computer lab the location of which will be announced.

Extra Credit: A student can add extra credit to his or her grade by short papers using MLA format on a primary and secondary source concerning any of the works or authors covered in class. In other words, look up a critical article from a journal (or an anthology of essays) and write a report on it. Furthermore, another option for extra credit is to view or listen to and then writes a review about tapes or video films on reserve in the library or available on the

Internet. Credit will vary according to the project. Extra points will be replace quiz scores up to three.

Classroom Etiquette: Normal day-to-day social relations break down quickly without common courtesy. Common courtesy is an extremely important trait in all human interaction including the world of academics. Of course it is also a minimum requirement for getting and keeping most jobs. Thus, using common courtesy in college is good practice for the real world.

The most basic idea is to not disrupt your classmates, or your instructor, during class. So, please avoid behavior like: habitually coming to class late; passing around photos that document what you did on the weekend; maintaining steady conversation with neighbors during lecture or other class activities; taking (or making!) calls on your cell phone.

My concern for common courtesy during class is a practical one. If you are (for example) talking out loud while I am trying to run a class, I will not be able to hear myself think. I'll be hearing you talk. That is disruptive for me, and it makes my job harder. Disruptive behavior can and has poisoned the entire environment of classes. Therefore I will seek to change the behavior of people who make my job harder. I claim the right to impose a seating chart on the class, or on a subset of the class, in order to promote common courtesy.

About Laptops : Laptop computers are a great tool, but like all technology there is also a potential for abuse. Many of my peers have banned laptops from the classroom entirely to avoid the back-row, Facebook, email cyber-surfers. I would prefer not to do this. Therefore laptops will be allowed but only in the front row and users of laptops must be willing to respond to a clap-checks periodically. (I will demonstrate)

Those who cannot stay on task will have to leave these remarkable tools in their rooms. Bring extension cords if you need them.

Disability Needs: Students who qualify for and desire accommodations in this course due to a disability, as defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, must follow the Disability Service Policies and Procedures as put forth by the office of

Academic Support. The guidelines can be accessed in electronic form at the web address http://www.mvnu.edu/academics/services/dservices.html (see Moodle for link) and in a hard copy at the Academic

Support office. Call extension 4540 for further information.

On a personal note, I am disabled because of eyesight, my son is disabled by breathing complications and mild

Asperger’s. Both my daughter and my wife (who is just finishing up her PhD from BU) struggle with ADHD. Thus, I am especially sensitive to the needs and challenges faced by otherwise qualified students. I "toughed" it out when I was at ENC, but the world has changed for the better and there are many resources available to you I wish I had, resources I in fact presently use in my office such as a close circuit TV attached to the screen of my computer as well as speaking programs which allow text to be read to me. Pursue these things and see me if you have any such needs.

Literature on the Web: As we make our way through the readings you may wish to visit my web page, Dr. Rearick's

Reading Corner, located at: http://nzr.mvnu.edu/faculty/trearick/english/rearick/readings/re_intro.htm

This address is reachable both on and off campus. Those of you who are local and do not have a computer should remember that the Knox Public Library offers web access for a limited time, and--of course--the labs of the campus library and computer labs are available to you. Of course the links to these resouces are also within our Moodle site.

Other web pages relating to works of literature that might be of interest to the student can be accessed from this index page by title, author, genre, sub-genre, time period, or nationality. I have tried to place some ideas and even sometimes some test questions connected with our class readings within these files. Also in several cases there are links to study guides, e texts, and even connections to relevant web pages on the net. Furthermore you will find similar links within your Moodle class home.

Intro to Lit 5

2015 Spring Class Schedule

Important Dates:

Please be aware that the schedule given below may change according to the discretion of the instructor. Classes are fluid, organic things, and each has its own personality.

Mon. Feb. 2, ( Spring classes begin )

Fri. Mar. 13, ( Midterm Exam )

Mon. through Fri. Mar 16 -20 ( Spring Break )

Wed. Fri. April. 3-6 ( Easter Break )

Mon. May 11, 2015 ( Last Day of Class ).

May 12 – 15 Exam Week

Final Exam: Tuesday, May 12 , 2015 from 1:10-3:00

Note: All readings and assignments are due on the day for which they are listed. The professor reserves the right to modify this schedule.

Week One: Feb. 1-5

THEME I: The Nature of Literature and its depiction of Isolation: The readings within our first week will define literature and examine its concern with humanity’s basic state of isolation in general.

Terms: Here are some terms which you should know by the end of this section.

Look up the literary meaning for. . .

Short story vs novella

 allegory

 genre

 sub-genre

 cultural text

 verisimilitude

 canon

 willing suspension of disbelief

Note: looking up these words is not an option; it is expected: Remember to look at the Glossary available at Dr.

Rearick's Reading Corner under the heading: "Resources." A link is also available in Moodle.

Mon. Feb. 2 First Day of Class

 Introduction: The Natures of Literature: “Welcome to the Wide World of Books!”

Lecture on Pleasure: the Cornerstone of Literature—defining what we study. .

Readings : (Note—Readings are expected on the day for which they are assigned. These are clearly the exception and will appear within the opening lecture.)

“There is No Frigate Like a Book" by Emily Dickinson 697-698

"This is My Letter to the World" by Emily Dickinson (Handout)

"Literature; Now What the Heck. . .?" (Handout)

Trial Quiz is online: should be completed before Friday—just want to be sure you are comfortable with the system.

Wed. Feb. 4

 A Lecture on Shakespeare’s Theater – Communicating to the masses.

Readings:

"Literature; What Do You Suppose. . .?" [Handout or online]

Othello by William Shakespeare 1276-1296 (Act One) within Perrine’s Literature

Great Expectations: Chapters: 1-2

Intro to Lit 6

Fri. Feb. 6

Lecture on the Changing Canon: How Literature Speaks to Different Ages

Readings

"Young Goodman Brown" [e-text] by Nathanial Hawthorne (325-337)

Othello [online text] by William Shakespeare (1296-1315) (Act Two)

An Experiment in Criticism . Chap. One: "The Literary Reader" (online)

Quiz # 1 online

Week Two: Feb. 9-13

Mon, Feb. 9

 Lecture on Isolation: Literature’s natural antithesis—why isolated people write

Readings

"Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by S.T. Coleridge [Handout]

"The Daffodils" or "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" by William Wordsworth (1029)

"The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell (67-85)

Othello [online text] by William Shakespeare (1315-1337) (Act Three)

Tues. Movie Night Feb 10 Othello at 7:00

Wed. Feb. 11

A Lecture on The Romantics and Two Young Men Who Turned the World of Poetry Upside down! What they thought of poetry and how it worked against the forces of isolation.

A Lecture on What is Going On in Kubla Khan? Are Visionaries, Poets and Prophets Doomed to Isolation?

Readings

“Paul's Case by Willa Cather (260-277)

"Tinturn Abbey" by William Wordsworth [Handout]

"Kubla Khan" [e-text] by Samuel T. Coleridge (961-963)

Othello [online text] by William Shakespeare (1337-1354) (Act Four)

Fri. Feb. 13

Readings

Othello by William Shakespeare (1354-1369) (Act Five)

Great Expectations : Chapters: 3-5

Quiz # 2 online

Week Three: Feb. 16-20

Mon. Feb. 16

The Lady of Shallot Isolation by Aesthetic Vision or by Gender Difference?

Readings

"I'm Nobody" by Emily Dickinson [Handout]

"The Lady of Shallot" by [online text] Tennyson [Handout]

Wed. Feb. 18

THEME II . Gender Difference as Isolating Factors

Learn the literary meaning for. . .

 themes

 motifs

 symbols

 patriarchy

 negative capability

 marginalized

Intro to Lit 7

 antifeminist literature

 misogynist

Remember that there is a Glossary available at Dr. Rearick's Reading Room under the heading: "Resources" on

Moodle.

Lecture How Does Literature Portray the Isolating Nature of Gender Differences?

Readings

"If" by Rudyard Kipling [Handout]

"The Wife" by Emily Dickinson [Handout]

"A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner (542-550)

The Wife of Bath’s "Prologue" [online text] by Geoffrey Chaucer [Handout]

Great Expectations : Chapters: 6-7

An Experiment in Criticism Chap. Three: "How the Few and the Many use Pictures and Music" by C.S. Lewis

A helpful Study Guide on the Taming of the Shrew is available on Moodle

Fri. Feb. 20

 Shakespeare's Bad/Good Woman & Good/Bad Woman: How the Bard Rebelled Against the His Age’s

Isolating View of Gender Relations

“The Wife of Bath’s Tale" by Geoffrey Chaucer [Handout]

"A Jury by Her Peers" by Susan Gladspell (550-569)

"Roman Fever" by Edith Wharton (online)

“ A Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin (540-542)

The Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare

Great Expectations : Chapters: 8-10

Online Quiz # 3

Week Four: Feb. 23-27

Mon. Feb. 23

THEME III. Love and Marriage—Forces Against Isolation, Their Success and Failure .

Terms you should learn about Lit and Love:

Poetry

Lyrical Poetry

Metaphor

Dramatic Monologue

Carpe Diem

Courtly Love

Remember that there is a Glossary available at Dr. Rearick's Reading Room under the heading: "Resources."

Lecture on Literature and Love: Where Does the Power Come From to Overcome the Isolation cased by

Gender Differences?

Readings:

"To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell (744-745)

The Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare

"The Gilded Six-Bits" by Zora Neale Hurston (553-563)

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 1-9 (online)

Great Expectations: Chapters: 11-15

Tues. Movie Night Sept 24 Taming of the Shrew at 7:00 in JSB133 (the Round Room)

Intro to Lit 8

Wed. Feb. 25

The Nature of Poetry What Compels Poets to Speak?

Readings:

Pygmalio n, [online text] by George Bernard Shaw

"Sonnet to a Friend" by Samuel Coleridge [Handout]

Fri. Feb. 27

Readings:

"We Outgrow Love" by Emily Dickenson [Handout]

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 10-17

Online Quiz # 4

Week Five: Mar. 2-6

Mon. Mar. 2

A Lecture About (Gasp!) Dickens In Love

Readings :

Pygmalion , by George Bernard Shaw

"My Last Duchess" by Robert Browning (789-790)

“The River Merchant's Wife" translated by Ezra Pound [Handout]

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 18-28

Great Expectations : Chapters: 16-17

Wed. Mar. 4

THEME IV.

The Power of Familial and Personal Love Against The Isolating Force of Culture:

Terms you should learn about Lit and Culture:

Bildungsonroman

Romance

Marginalized

Culture

Drama

Remember that there is a Glossary available at Dr. Rearick's Reading Room under the heading: "Resources."

A Lecture about How Charles Dickens Revolutionaries the Novel and Made a Pretty Penny for Himself at the

Same Time, Overcoming the Obstacles of Culture, Money, and Class

Readings

Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw

"Meeting at Night" by Robert Browning (713)

“Porpyria’s Lover” (877-878)

"Parting at Morning" by Robert Browning (713)

"Everyday Use" by Alice Walker (166-173)

"The World is Too Much with Us: Later and Soon" by William Wordsworth (705)

An Experiment in Criticism by C.S. Lewis: Chap. Four: "The Reading of the Unliterary"

Fri. Mar. 6

Lecture: Cultural Expectations as Isolating Forces

Readings

Pygmalion , by George Bernard Shaw

"The White Man's Burden" Rudyard Kipling [Handout]

"Cross" by Langston Hughes (705)

Great Expectations : Chapters: 18-20

Online Quiz # 5

Week Six: Mar. 9-13

Mon. Mar. 9

Living on the Edge of Society--Does Anyone Know I'm Out Here?

Readings

"The Ransom of "Red Chief" by O. Henry [Handout]

"The Whipping" by Robert Hayden (666-667)

Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw

Great Expectations : Chapters: 21-22

Tues. Movie Night Mar. 10 Pygmalion at 7:00

Wed. Mar. 11

Beyond Race and Economics: Culture's Isolating Pressure on Age Groups

Readings

Pygmalion , [online text] by George Bernard Shaw

"My Heart Leaps Up When I Behold" or "The Rainbow" by William Wordsworth [Handout]

"In the Inner City" by Lucille Clifton (788-789)

Great Expectations : Chapters: 23-25

Midterm Exam

Fri. Mar. 13

Great Expectations : Chapters: 26-27

Week Seven: Mar. 16-20 Spring Break

Great Expectations : Chapters: 28-30

Week Eight: Mar. 23-27

Mon. Mar. 23

Can the Formulaic Literature Still Be Great Literature?

Readings

"The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky" Stephen Crane (Online in Moodle)

"The Drunkard" by Frank O'Conner (364-372)

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 28-39

Wed. Mar. 25

What About the Family?

Readings

"The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson (278-285)

"My Son, My Executioner" Donald Hall (Online in Moodle)

"Resolution and Independence" by William Wordsworth [Handout]

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 40-50

Fri. Mar. 27

A Warning to Fathers (and mothers)

Readings

"We Are Seven" by William Wordsworth [Handout]

"Anecdote for Fathers" by William Wordsworth [Handout]

"Those Winter Sundays" by Robert Hayden (721)

"Frost at Midnight" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge [Handout]

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 50-59

Great Expectations: Chapters: 31-33

Online Quiz # 6

Intro to Lit 9

Intro to Lit 10

Week Nine: Mar. 30-Apr. 3

Mon. Mar. 30

THEME V.

Isolation through Death and Hope through Consolation

Learn the literary meaning for. . .

Biography

Eulogy or Elegy

Autobiography

Be sure to look up definitions for these terms in the Glossary provided by Prof. Rearick and linked and from his

Readers' Corner

Lecture: A Comparison of Shadowlands and A Grief Observed

Readings

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 59-67

Great Expectations : Chapters: 34-35

Wed. Apr. 1

 C S Lewis and Alfred Lord Tennyson’s shared approach to Grief

Readings

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 68-71

In Memorium [handout] by Alfred Lord Tennyson

Great Expectations : Chapters: 36-38

Fri. Apr. 3

No Class: Good Friday

Sun. Apr. 5 Easter “He is Risen!”

Week Ten: Apr. 6-10

Mon. Apr. 6 No Class (Road to Emmaus -- Travel Day)

Wed. Apr. 8

 “Weeping Privately and Publicly: How Poets Have Portrayed the Ultimate Separation”

Readings

"On My First Son" by Ben Jonson [Handout]

"The Lost Baby Poem" by Lucille Clifton (online)

Shadowlands by William Nicholson

Friday: Apr. 10

Is it really better to have loved and lost?

Readings

"Oh Captain! My Captain! " by Walt Whitman [Handout]

"Thanatopsis" by William Cullen Bryant [Handout]

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 72-79

Shadowlands by William Nicholson

Great Expectations : Chapters: 39-40

Online Quiz # 7

Week Eleven: Apr. 13-17

Mon. Apr. 13

Lecture—Dickens and Death in Great Expectations

Readings

"Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard by Thomas Gray [Handout]

"On the Death of a Fair Infant Dying of a Cough" by John Milton [Handout]

A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis pp. 80-89

Shadowlands by William Nicholson

Great Expectations: Chapters: 41-43

Tue. Apr. 14 Movie Night April 8 Shadowlands at 7:00

Wed. Apr. 15

Love and Grief

Readings

Shadowlands by William Nicholson

"On His Deceased Wife" by John Milton [Handout]

"When Lilacs Last in the Doorway Bloom'd" by Walt Whitman [Handout]

Fri. Apr. 17

The Death of the Mighty and the Humble

Readings

Shadowlands by William Nicholson

"Dover Beach " by Matthew Arnold (835-836)

"Death be Not Proud" by John Donne (909)

“Death Shall Have No Dominion” Dylan Thomas (audio file)

"Because I Would Not Stop for Death" by Emily Dickinson (764-765)

Great Expectations : Chapters: 44-45

Online Quiz # 8

Week Twelve: Apr. 20- 24

Mon. Apr. 20

How Poets Deal with Their Own Inevitable appointment with Death

"Crossing the Bar " by Alfred Lord Tennyson (828)

"Do Not Go Gentle Into that Good Night" by Dylan Thomas (906)

"I felt a Funeral in my Brain" by Emily Dickenson (717-718)

Great Expectations : Chapters: 46-48

Wed. Apr. 22

Lives there More Faith in Honest Doubt?

Readings

"Hope" by Emily Dickinson [online]

"I Never Saw A Moor" by Emily Dickenson [online]

"Bereft" by Robert Frost (728)

"Is My Team Plowing?" by A.E. Housman (686-687)

In Memorium [Online Text] by Alfred Tennyson

Great Expectations : Chapters: 49-50

Intro to Lit 11

Intro to Lit 12

Fri. Apr. 24

Learn the literary meaning for. . .

Romance (review)

Heroic

Chivalry

Realistic

Be sure to look up definitions for these terms in the Glossary provided by Prof. Rearick and linked and from his

Readers' Corner.

Lecture on War and Chivalry

Readings

The Knight’s Tale by Chaucer [online]

Henry V by William Shakespeare

Great Expectations : Chapters: 51-53

Online Quiz # 9

Week Thirteen: Apr. 27-May 1

Mon. Apr. 27

THEME VI.

The Brotherhood of Chivalry and the Isolation of War

From Where Does Isolation Arise in Combat?

Readings

The Knight’s Tale by Chaucer [online]

Henry V by William Shakespeare [e-text]

Great Expectations : Chapters: 54-55

Wed. Apr. 29

Is Experience Necessary to Understand War?

Readings

Henry V by William Shakespeare

"Drum Taps" from Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman [Handout]

Drum Taps

"The Dresser"

"Reconciliation

Great Expectations : Chapters: 56-58

Fri. May 1

Christians and the Use of Deadly Force

Readings

Henry V by William Shakespeare

"The Man He Killed" by Thomas Hardy (681)

“Channel Firing” by Thomas Hardy (982-983)

Online Quiz #10

Week Fourteen May 4-8 (Last Full Week)

Mon. May 4

War Viewed From a Distance vs., War Viewed Face to Face

Readings

Henry V by William Shakespeare

Great Expectations : Chapters: 59

"The Battlefield" by Emily Dickinson [online]

Tues. May. 5 Movie Night May 6 Henry V at 7:00

Wed. May 6

 Is Chivalry the “Old Lie?”

Readings

Henry V by William Shakespeare

"The Charge of the Light Brigade" by Alfred Lord Tennyson [Handout]

"Boots" by Rudyard Kipling [Handout]

Fri. May 8

Readings

The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane (Excerpt)

“The War Pray” by Mark Twain (Online and Handout)

Online Quiz #11

Week Fourteen May 11-15 (Final Week)

Mon. May. 11

Whose Side is God On? Can We Be in Communion With Him and Still Wage War?

Readings

"Anthem for Doomed Youth" Wilfred Owen (892)

"Dulce et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Own (661-662)

"At a Calvary near The Ancre" (Online)

"The Parable of the Old Man and the Young" (Online)

Final Exam will on Tuesday, May 12 2015 from 1:10-3:00

Have a Wonderful Summer!

Intro to Lit 13

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