Dr. Steven Thomas ENGL A, fall 2011

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PIRATES, PURITANS, AND THE REVOLUTIONARY ATLANTIC WORLD Dr. Steven Thomas ENGL 346 01A, fall 2011 office phone: x3193 time: even days, 11:20 am 12:30 pm office: Quad 352-B place: Quad 353 office hours: odd days, 1:15 2:15 pm and by appointment THE IDEA OF THE CLASS Almost everyone has seen the popular Pirates of the Caribbean movies, but where did these pirate stories come from? Would it surprise you to learn that the rigidly religious Puritans in New England sometimes did business with the anarchic pirates? The colonial period of America was a chaotic and strange moment in world history, but it was also a foundational moment. It was then that three of the most significant documents for American culture and economics were written: the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and Adam Smith s Wealth of Nations. In this class, we will read some of the earliest pirate stories, the classic novel Robinson Crusoe, debates among Puritans about the morality of slavery and the nature of money, poems about the business of tobacco, the famous autobiographies of Benjamin Franklin and Olaudah Equiano, and the writings of Thomas Jefferson as well as some of Adam Smith s classic work on economics. This course is intended to be of general interest not only to English majors and future high school teachers, but also to majors in Economics, History, Political Science, and Business. Therefore, this class will not be a traditional survey of American literature from the Puritans of the seventeenth century to the so-called American Renaissance of the 1850s up to the Civil War. Rather, the class will instead approach literature from a trans-atlantic perspective a perspective that reveals the many kinds of cultural connections (both literary and economic) among Europe, the Caribbean, and Africa as well as North America. And considering the enormous breadth and scope of such a trans-atlantic approach, the course will focus primarily on the eighteenth century. Hence, we will supplement and contextualize our reading of literature from a variety of geographic locations with a history book entitled The Atlantic World. Finally, because this class is imagining a new way of looking at literature, we will finish the semester by thinking about and practicing how literature gets edited for anthologies and textbooks. TEXTS IN BOOKSTORE Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe Egerton, Games, Landers, Lane, and Wright, The Atlantic World Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative and Other Writings Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography and Other Writings Jon Lewis, The Mammoth Book of Pirates Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations RECOMMENDED Jonathan Swift, Gulliver s Travels and Other Writings, ed. Clement Hawes (2004) ON-LINE TEXTS A significant amount of material will be available through Moodle. You can access Moodle through CSBSJU s Current Students page or here: <https://moodle.csbsju.edu/login/index.php>. 1

EVALUATION Five Short Essays. 15% each Editorial Exercise. 15% Attendance and Participation... 10% WHAT HAPPENS IN THE CLASS This class is divided up into units, each of which focuses on a specific theme and poses several questions about that theme. We will read a variety of texts including not only early British-American literature and early economic literature but also some recent scholarly study on that literature and history. The reasons for reading such a variety are (1) so that you will gain some historical and critical perspective, and (2) that you acquire a sense of the diversity of literature and ideas during the colonial period of American history. At the end of each unit, you will bring a two-page, single-spaced essay. In class when the paper is due, you will discuss your essays in groups for the first half the class and then quietly work on a revision of your own paper for the second half. SHORT ESSAYS Your essays will address the theme of each unit on the syllabus by engaging with the texts assigned for that unit of the course. One of these texts must be the Atlantic World history textbook, and one of your goals is to use this textbook to situate the literary texts within their historical context. In addition, your essay should focus on two of the literary texts, with some attention to their literary characteristics (e.g., metaphor, allusions, irony, narrative persona, etc.), and then briefly mention at least one (or two) of the other literary texts. Your goal is to make a comparative argument about those literary characteristics in their historical context. I will grade you on (1) how well you formulate and answer a question, (2) how well you support your claims with evidence from the texts, and (3) your reasoning and organization. Your essays should be exactly two pages, single spaced, using 12 point Times New Roman font, with 1.25 inch margins, no more, no less. As for the header on the first page, at the top left, put your name and date, and at the top right, put the name of this class English 346 and the number of the unit (e.g., Essay, unit #?). There should be one line of space between the header and the essay, and no title. Please do not print it double-sided, because you will need the backs of the pages to write more. On the back of your essay, after 40-45 minutes of group discussion on the day that it is due, you will re-think what you wrote based on the conversation you had with your group. You should respond to different points of view that were discussed by other members of your group, and you might also consider one of the texts that you did not mention in your original paper and ask yourself whether your thesis works with that text as well. Your in-class essay will be graded on (1) how honestly and clearly you reconsider the texts and question your original thesis, (2) how well you draw upon the conversation with your group, and (3) how well you support your new ideas with evidence from the texts. EDITORIAL EXERCISE Usually the so-called classic texts that you read for college classes have been carefully edited. However, many of the literary texts from the past have never been edited and reproduced for classroom use. Why some texts get chosen for anthologies and textbooks and others don t is a complex question that you can speculate about on your own (cf., Michel Foucault s famous essay What Is an Author? ); however, for this assignment, you will simply learn the beginnings of how to edit something from the archive for classroom use. You will form teams of two or three people. Your team will be assigned one primary text along with some secondary reading to help with your interpretation and contextualization of the primary text. Your task is (1) to write a brief introduction that would help other students understand what they are reading and pose an argument about why this text is important or relevant to the study of English and American literature, (2) to include a helpful bibliography of primary and secondary sources, and (3) to 2

begin to make footnotes to explain any specific words or concepts. You are required to have a minimum of only ten footnotes. ATTENDANCE AND PARTICIPATION Half of your attendance and participation grade is your attendance. You are allowed three absences. Unless you have a documented excuse, I will reduce your attendance grade by 20% for each absence in excess of those three. The other half of this grade is your participation. I expect you to be prepared to discuss the reading every day and to listen respectfully to your classmates. Some of your participation grade will include worksheets, handouts, or pop quizzes in class. I do not accept late worksheets, and there are no make-ups for missed in-class work. POLICIES Any act of plagiarism can result in an F for the course and can go on your permanent academic record. Please see The College of St. Benedict and St. John s University s official policy on plagiarism: <http://www.csbsju.edu/academics/academic-catalogs/ 2009-2011-Catalog/Programs/Rights/Plagiarism.htm>. All students have the right of non-discriminatory access to the programs at the colleges. If you have a disability and require special consideration, you must inform me as soon as possible. I reserve the right to change this syllabus at any time during the semester and will inform you of all changes in a timely manner. FALL 2011 CALENDAR Aug. 31 (Wed) Introduction Unit One Economic Criticism / Atlantic Framework? Sept. 2 (Fri) Atlantic World, Introduction and ch. 1 George Berkeley, Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in America Handsome Lake, How America Was Discovered Sept. 6 (Tue) Sept. 8 (Thu) Terry Eagleton, Preface and ch. 1 from The Function of Criticism Jennifer Baker and Eric Wertheimer, Economics and Early American Literature, Early American Literature Project Muse Jonathan Swift, Modest Proposal from Gulliver s Travels and Other Writings Wealth of Nations, Introduction by Kathryn Sutherland and Introduction by Adam Smith and book IV, ch. vii Atlantic World, ch. 2 Sept. 12 (Mon) Atlantic World, ch. 3-4 Book of Pirates, p. xi-xiii and 49-96 Sept. 14 (Wed) Book of Pirates, p. 114-125 and 206-213 and 292-299 and 455-458 Sept. 16 (Fri) unit one paper due plus in-class revisions 3

Unit Two Labor and Land Sept. 20 (Tue) Atlantic World, ch. 5 Bartolome de Las Casas, The Destruction of the Indies John Locke, Property from Two Treatise of Government Benjamin Franklin, Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America Sept. 22 (Thu) Smith, Wealth of Nations, book I, ch. vii-xi Benjamin Franklin, Information to Those Who Would Remove to America Sept. 26 (Mon) Atlantic World, ch. 6 Samuel Sewall, The Selling of Joseph John Saffin, Brief Answer to the Selling and Negroes Character Cotton Mather, The Negroe Christianized Sept. 26 Terry Eagleton, Gorecki Theater, 7:00 pm Sept. 28 (Wed) Thomas Jefferson, Laws from Notes on the State of Virginia Benjamin Franklin, Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim on the Slave Trade Sept. 30 (Fri) Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative, editor s introduction and ch. 1-2 Phyllis Wheatley, To Maecenas and On Being Brought from Africa Extra Reading: Steven Thomas, Doctoring Ideology, Early American Studies Project Muse Oct. 2 Seamus Heaney, Escher Auditorium, 2:00 pm Oct. 4 (Tue) Equiano, Interesting Narrative, ch. 3-5 and ch. 12 Book of Pirates, p. 241-56 Leeward Treaty with Maroon Captain Cudjoe Oct. 6 (Thu) unit two paper due plus in-class revisions Unite Three Imagining Value Oct. 10 (Mon) Oct. 12 (Wed) Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations, book I, ch. i-vii Atlantic World, ch. 8 Cotton Mather, Life of Phips Nathaniel Hawthorne, Sir William Phips Book of Pirates, p. 257-71 Oct. 13 16 Long Weekend Oct. 18 (Tue) Mather, Life of Phips Anne Bradstreet, To Her Father and Upon the Burning Edward Taylor, Another Meditation at the same time Oct. 20 (Thu) Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe, p. 1-71 4

Oct. 24 (Mon) Oct. 26 (Wed) Oct. 28 (Fri) Defoe, Robinson Crusoe William Dampier, Rescue (in Norton edition of Robinson Crusoe, p. 227) Woodes Rogers s account (in both Norton, p. 230 and Book of Pirates, p. 157) Defoe, Robinson Crusoe, finish Smith, Wealth of Nations, book I, ch. viii Karl Marx from Capital (in Norton edition of Robinson Crusoe, p. 274) (Recommended: entire chapter of Marx s chapter on the Commodity Fetish ) unit three paper due plus in-class revisions Unit Four The Culture of Commodities and the Meaning of Cash Nov. 1 (Tue) Atlantic World, ch. 7 and ch. 9 Review of Smith, Wealth of Nations, ch. 8-10 Nov. 3 (Thu) Nov. 7 (Mon) Isaac Hawkin s Browne, excerpt from A Pipe of Tobacco Ebenezer Cooke, excerpt from The Sotweed Factor T. H. Breen, introduction to Tobacco Culture Ebenezer Cooke, Sotweed Redivuvus Nov. 9 (Wed) Jennifer Baker, Securing the Commonwealth, Introduction and ch. 2 Benjamin Franklin, A Modest Inquiry into Paper Currency Jonathan Swift, Drapier s Letters I and IV Extra reading: Steven Thomas, Taxing Tobacco and the Metonymies of Virtue Nov. 11 (Fri) unit four paper due plus in-class revisions Unit Five Economic Man Nov. 15 (Tue) Atlantic World, ch. 10, 11, and 14 Nov. 17 (Thu) Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography, p. 1-72 Annis Boudinot Stockton, To Palemon No. 2 Nov. 21 (Mon) Franklin, Autobiography, p. 72-134 Nov. 23 27 Thanksgiving Recess Nov. 28 (Mon) Nov. 30 (Wed) Franklin, Autobiography, finish Equiano, Interesting Narrative, ch. 6 Mark Twain, Good Little Boy and Bad Little Boy Smith, Wealth of Nations, book IV, ch. i-iii and vii-ix Equiano, Interesting Narrative, ch. 7-8 5

Dec. 2 (Fri) Dec. 6 (Tue) Equiano, Interesting Narrative, finish Harriet Jacobs, excerpt from Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl Toussaint L Ouverture, excerpts unit five paper due plus in-class revisions Unit Six Editing the Archive Dec. 8 (Thu) Dec. 12 (Mon) Dec. 14 (Wed) class meets at CSB, in room 130 of BAC guest: art professor Rachel Melis before class, on library s website, explore the databases Early American Imprints, Early England Books Online, AAS Historical Periodicals, MLA Bibliography, and Historical Abstracts class meets at the HMML (the rare books and manuscript library in Alcuin) guest: HMML librarian, Matthew Heintzelman in-class workshop on editing the archive; bring your research to class Dec. 20 Editorial Exercise due 6