Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Independent Reading Prep for Term Three

Independent Reading Project


By the end of the day on Monday (1/28) post a comment below telling me (1) what option you have picked (the options are explained below), (2) what you plan to read to get some background on your option (if it's a website post the URL; make sure it's a scholarly source), and (3) what novel, play, or other lengthy work (for example, a collection of stories or poems) of literary merit you plan to read and respond to before the middle of term three.

We will be doing some preliminary research on Thursday, January 24. Wikipedia is a useful tool for preliminary research (though you should not rely on Wikipedia research in scholarly writing).

Option 1: Bildungsroman. You might continue your study of the Bildungsroman genre (1) by consulting several sources -- starting with this one -- to learn more about Bildungsromans and (2) by reading a couple bildungsromans in addition to the one's you've already studied.

Option 2: Ur*-Narratives (Sacred Texts, Myths, Fairy Tales). You might continue your study of how writers, poets, and other artists use older, archetypal stories -- Bible stories, Greek myths, German fairy tales, etc. -- to create new stories, films, poems, paintings, etc. (We've already studied how Joyce, several painters, and several poets have made use of the Daedalus-Icarus myth.) You will (1) investigate an ur-narrative (a myth, a fairy tale, etc.) and (2) explore how several writers (and perhaps filmmakers, poets, and visual artists) have made use of the original story. (You might modify the assignment to look at how a couple different myths/tales are used.)
*"Ur" is Germanic in origin. In English it is sometimes used as a prefix meaning "original" or "prototypical".

Here are a few books that are based on myths, sacred texts, or folk tales:
* Here's a link to a list of books based on Greek mythology.
* William Butler Yeats wrote several plays based on Celtic mythology and tales.
* Anne Sexton wrote Transformations, a book of narrative poems based on German fairy tales.
* John Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath and East of Eden include many Biblical allusions. Grapes of Wrath allusions include The Book of Job, the story of Noah and the flood in Genesis, and the story of the Hebrews and the Promised Land (Numbers, etc.) East of Eden is built around the Cain and Abel story in Genesis.

Option 3: Author Study. You might continue your investigation of one of the authors we have studied so far this year: Calvino, Ellison, Rhys, Bronte, Joyce. Or you might want to study another major author. Your study will include an investigation of (1) the author's life and cultural context and (2) her/his literary output beyond what you have already read.

Option 4: Literary Movement. You might continue your investigation of a literary movement that we have touched upon this year: Romanticism, Gothicism, Victorianism, Modernism. Or you might want to study another literary movement. Your study will include an investigation of (1) the -ism and (2) representative literary works from the movement.

Option 5: Literature of a Culture. You might continue your investigation of the literature produced by a particular culture. The works we have read so far this year have come out of several cultural contexts: Italian, African-American, Anglo-Caribbean, English, Irish. Or you might to want to study the literature of another culture. You will (1) investigate the literature produced by the particular culture and (2) read representative literary works from the culture.

Option 6: Critical Lens. You might study literature using a particular critical lens: gender studies, critical race theory, queer theory, Marxist literary criticism, psychoanalytic (Freudian) literary criticism, archetypal literary criticism, ecocriticism, deconstruction, etc. (Click here for Wikipedia's "literary theory" page for more ideas.) You will (1) investigate the critical theory and (2) read literary works "through the lens" of the critical theory.

Option 7: Something else that you concoct and propose. This something else should have a research component and a literary component.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Responses to the Final Discussion: Portrait of the Artist

In the comment section below, please respond to one of your classmate's ideas during the discussion of the book on Wednesday.  You can extend their ideas, disagree with his or her ideas in a constructive way, or use his or her ideas to go a bit deeper into something you have been thinking about.  Please post your response by Tuesday, January 22.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Midterm Vocabulary and Essay

My apologies for being so late with this post for the vocabulary.  I have scheduled time with Ms. Saunders for you to enter in all of the information that you have gathered tomorrow, Friday, January 11. So don't worry about having the info in by class time on Friday.  MLA format for citations is good (and is usually standard in humanities courses).

The Portrait of an Artist essay question was handed out by my substitute yesterday, so if anyone missed this please see my bookshelf for a copy.  I will need to collect these papers on Friday, January 18th, so that I will have time to have them graded before midterms and the end of the quarter.  We will be talking about it in class today and we will be discussing parts IV and V early next week.  As an alert, I will be asking for a summary for those parts (written just before the discussion, of course) and I am particularly interested in how you understand Stephen's aesthetic theory, as this is where the book as been heading.