Survey of African American Literature

Similar documents
ESSEX COUNTY COLLEGE Humanities Division ENG 237 Survey of African American Literature Course Outline

CONTENTS VOLUME 1. Foreword by Trudier Harris-Lopez... xi

ENG 2050 Semester syllabus

Guide to the Deborah H. Barnes Papers. Gettysburg College, Musselman Library Special Collections & College Archives

MS-112: Deborah H. Barnes Papers

Grading: Assignment Due Date Value Literary Analyis Essay June 6 10% In-Class Essay June 20 10% Quiz June 22 10% Preliminary Research Report July 5 Se

Writing Research Essays:

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. Economics 620: The Senior Project

Syllabus American Literature: Civil War to the Present

DISABILITY ACCOMMODATIONS POLICY

RESEARCH PAPER. 1. Cover Page: This should contain the title, your name, class period, and date. The title of your paper may be a creative title.

Course Syllabus. Course Information Course Number/Section HUSL 7360 / 501 The American Modernist Twenties Term fall 2012

Pensacola Christian College. Factual Fiction. Project # A Project Submitted to. Instructor s Name. in Partial Fulfillment of

Summer Reading 2015 AP English 11 Language and Composition

Conventions for Writing a Literary Analysis Paper

What is a historical paper? The Basic Framework. Why Should I Choose the Paper Category? History Day Paper Formatting

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG106 LITERATURE APPRECIATION: DRAMA/SHORT NOVEL. 3 Credit Hours. Prepared by: Debra Sutton

Course Syllabus & Policies Review Literary Terms Power Points in AML 2020 Files. Introduction: The Transformation of a Nation (3-16)

HST 290: The Practice of History

What Is Documentation? - Is acknowledging sources that we have used in our research

Bethel College. Style Manual

Course Syllabus & Policies Review Literary Terms Power Points in AML 2020 Files. Introduction: The Transformation of a Nation (3-16)

English 342 Syllabus: Twentieth-Century American Literature (Spring 2016)

Department of American Studies M.A. thesis requirements

Department of American Studies B.A. thesis requirements

The University of Texas of the Permian Basin

Sixth Grade Country Report

qwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqw ertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwert yuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyui Course Assignments opasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopa

Romeo and Juliet Figurative Language Analysis 100 points

MLA Formatting and Style Guide

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY AFRICAN-AMERICAN AUTHORS BCTC LEARNING RESOURCE CENTER

Political Science Department at the College of Charleston Guide to Referencing i

Research paper. Mrs. French English II

DRAFT (July 2018) Government 744 Foundations of Security Studies. Fall 2017 Wednesdays 7:20-10:00 PM Founders Hall 475

Writing the Annotated Bibliography for English/World History Synthesis Essay

HISTORY 3800 (The Historian s Craft), Spring :00 MWF, Haley 2196

Documenting Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism

English I Mythology Research Project

English 4 DC: World Literature Research Project

syllabus, print print Course Expectation Agreement Print literary terms list reading log print Print up independent reading assignment and story map

History 469, Recent America Syllabus, fall 2015

Why Should I Choose the Paper Category?

Guidelines for the Extended Essay (GR338)

MLA Guidelines & Paper Editing

INR 2002 Research Paper Assignment

ENGLISH 2235: AMERICAN LITERATURE 1 SUMMER 2010 Section 001: , T/R Instructor: Paul Headrick Office: A302b Office Phone:

AP Literature and Composition

Essay #1: Analysis of The Orchid Thief. Deadline: Submitted to Turnitin as a Single File Upload by 11:30pm on Tuesday, 2/20.

PLEASE NOTE: I have a no-electronic-devices policy in the classroom.

Introduction Schedule and WLC Services... 1 Where to find support... 2

MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION DOCUMENTATION. Honors English 1 MLA - 8th Version

Books The following books are required and are available at the Bookstore:

Sabolcik AP Literature AP LITERATURE RESEARCH PROJECT: ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

*In English 201, you will hone the critical writing skills you worked on in English 101.

Core D Research Essay

Style Sheet: Guide for Authors

Due today: Shaping Sheet (everything except intro/conclusion) Rough draft Tomorrow, 11/16

Research Paper The Book Thief

RESEARCH! WORKS CITED!! ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY!!! A Practical Guide to Successful Research And Impeccable Works Cited

Summer Reading 2017 AP English 11 Language and Composition

Neuqua Valley High School

CEDAR CREST COLLEGE REL Spring 2010, Tuesdays/Thursdays, 2:30 3:45 p.m. Issues in Death and Dying 3 credits

Learning Outcomes By the end of this class, students should be able to:

Advanced Placement (AP ) English Literature and Composition Exam

[COE STYLE GUIDE FOR THESES AND DISSERTATIONS]

U.S. History Writing Assignment Due: April 19, 2016 Maximum Points that can be earned: 100

Unit 3: Multimodal Rhetoric Remix Assignment 5: Photo Essay & Rhetorical Analysis

THE ASSIGNMENT: STEP FOUR: Put together your poster! Decide how you will present your analysis to the class.

The Literary Essay An analysis of the literary devices used in Night.

History of Music II: Late Baroque and Classical MUS 133b, Spring 2016 Tuesday/Friday 11:00 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. Slosberg 212

#Touchstones 1 Early British Literature

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY AFRICAN-AMERICAN AUTHORS BCTC LIBRARIES

ENGLISH 2308E -- AMERICAN LITERATURE ONLINE

APA. 2. Include the names of the researcher(s) in the sentence. Place only the date in parentheses:

MLA Style A Guide to Citing Sources

Avoiding Plagiarism. For more information on MLA or APA style citations, see our handouts: What Is an MLA-Style Essay? and What Is an APA-Style Essay?

AGEC 693 PROFESSIONAL STUDY PAPER GUIDELINES

ARLT 101g: MODERN AMERICAN POETRY University of Southern California Dana Gioia Fall, 2011 Mondays / Wednesdays 2:00 3:20 p.m.

M, Th 2:30-3:45, Johns 212 Benjamin Storey. Phone:

MLA Basic Formatting and Citation Style Quick Guide (8 th Edition)

Introduction to International Relations POLI 65 Summer 2016

Guidelines for the Preparation and Submission of Theses and Written Creative Works

English 10-Persuasive Research Paper

School of Professional Studies

Text: Temple, Charles, et al. Children's Books in Children's Hands: An Introduction to Their Literature, 3rd ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 2005.

Name. The Crucible Essay Topics

History of Western Music II

Writing Research Essays:

MLA Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Citing Sources

British Literature I: Culture in Con(text) English 261/001: British Literature up to 1800 Spring Semester 2013

Essay Writing Guidance. Maj John Doe. Graduate Writing Skills (GSS-501S) 21 December 2016

Analysis and Research In addition to briefly summarizing the text s contents, you could consider some or all of the following questions:

Borough of Manhattan Community College City University of New York Department of English

CESL Master s Thesis Guidelines 2016

SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENTS 2018

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2016

Symbolism in "Two Kinds"

Smart Start: Plagiarism & Citation Be smart and & don t plagiarize. Elise Tung Librarian August 29 & 30, 2018

MLA Documention Guide Prepared by St. Peter Chanel s English Department

WILKES HONORS COLLEGE of FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES FOR HONORS THESES

Transcription:

The Harlem RenaissanceSaLois Mailou Jones, Fetish, 1927 Survey of African American Literature 1900-2000 Spring 2014 Dr. Nagueyalti Warren 207 Candler Library nwarren@emory.edu 7-6058 office 678-343-8858 cell best number to call 770 482-6067 home Office Hours: Monday, Wednesday, Friday 1:45-3:45 and by appointment Text: The Norton Anthology of African American Literature 3 rd Edition Course Goals: The goal of this course is to provide an overview of African American literature from 1900 to the present. Students will read and examine writings by major contributors to each decade in the genres of fiction (short story and novel) essay, poetry, and plays. Students will write four five-page critical essays based upon some aspect of their reading and comprehension of the eras covered. The goal of the assignment is to enhance the student s skills of critical thinking and argument. Each essay will be first submitted as a draft and will not be graded. The submission of the second draft will be graded. The final project will consist of all four papers, revised and compiled as a coherent essay or collection of essays. This course fulfills a writing requirement.

Each student is responsible for an oral presentation of primary source material. Oral presentation counts as a quiz grade. Grading: Critical Essays 50% Quizzes 25% Final Project 25% College Plagiarism Statement from the Emory College Honor Code The Use of Sources in Writing Research Paper or Critical Essays in Emory College A writer's facts, ideas, and phraseology should be regarded as his property. Any person who uses a writer's ideas or phraseology without giving due credit is guilty of plagiarism. Information may be put into a paper without a footnote or some kind of documentation only if it meets all of the following conditions: It may be found in several books on the subject. It is written entirely in the words of the student. It is not paraphrased from any particular source. It therefore belongs to common knowledge. Generally, if a student writes while looking at a source or while looking a notes taken from a source, a footnote should be given. Whenever any idea is taken from a specific work, even when the student writes the idea entirely in his own words, there must be a footnote giving credit to the author responsible for the idea. Of course methods of documentation vary, and it is possible to cite in the text itself rather than a footnote. The point is that the student should give credit when credit is due and that he should give the credit in a manner specified by the instructor or the department. The student is entirely responsible for knowing and following the principles of paraphrasing. "In paraphrasing you are expressing the ideas of another writer in your own words. A good paraphrase preserves the sense of the original, but not the form. It does not retain the sentence patterns and merely substitute synonyms for the original words, nor does it retain the original words and merely alter the sentence patterns. It is a genuine restatement. Invariably it should be briefer than the source."* Any direct quotation should be footnoted (or documented in any acceptable fashion). Even when a student uses only one unusual or key word from a passage, that word should be quoted.

If a brief phrase that is common is used as it occurs in a source, the words should be in quotation marks. The source of every quotation should be given in a footnote or in the prescribed manner. It is of course the prerogative of the instructor to prescribe that no secondary sources may be used for particular papers. A student who uses a secondary source must remember that the very act of looking up a book or an article should be considered as a pledge that the student will use the material according to the principles stated above. * Floyd C. Watkins, William B. Dillingham, and Edwin T. Martin, Practical English Handbook, 3rd ed. (Boston, 1970), p. 245. Weekly Assignments January 15 Decade 1900-1910 Introduction to the class. Discuss syllabus. Read for the next class: Dunbar 905-927. Paul Laurence Dunbar 1872-1906 January 17 Discuss Dunbar. Read for the next class: 624-635 Charles Chesnutt s The Wife of His Youth. Define literature. State why it is important. January 20 MLK Holiday January 22

Discuss Chesnutt. Read for next class: 650-662 Pauline E. Hopkins Talma Gordon January 24 Discuss Chesnutt and Hopkins. Read for next class: 675-685 Ida B. Wells, From the Red Record January 27 Film: Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice. Read for next class: 686-766 The Souls of Black Folk W.E.B. Du Bois January 29 Discuss Ida B. Wells. Begin discussion of Du Bois. Read for next class: complete reading Souls Film: W.E.B. Du Bois of Great Barrington Thesis statement due in class today also submit topic for MARBL research.

January 31 Discuss Du Bois. Read for next class: 929-936 Sutton Griggs Discuss Griggs. End of unit. Review for Quiz next class period Decade 1910-1920 Quiz on Unit One 1900-1910. Read for next class: 786-791 James D. Corrothers February 03 Select topic for oral report. Discuss Corrothers. Read for next class: 791-883 The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man First Draft of paper due today James Weldon Johnson painting at Smithsonian by Laura Waring. February 05 Discuss Johnson s Lift Every Voice and poetry. Continue reading novel.

February 07 Discuss novel. Discuss next week s assignment for library. February 10 Revised paper due today. Read for February 18: 946-951 Fenton Johnson and Alice Dunbar Nelson 936-940 February 12 Discuss Johnson and Nelson. Review for quiz. End of Unit. Decade 1920-1930 The Harlem Renaissance February 14 Film: The Tulsa Race Riot (1921). QUIZ 2; Read for next class: 953-967 Introduction and Arthur Schomburg February 17 Discuss Schomburg. Read for next class: 975-983 Jessie Redmon Fauset.

February 19 Discuss Fauset. Read for next class: 766-777 Du Bois on women. Thesis statement due in class today. February 21 Film: From These Roots. Read for next class: 777-785 (Du Bois) and 1311-1314 (Hughes) First draft of second paper due on February 28 th February 24 Discuss black art Hughes and Du Bois. Read for next class: 983-993 Locke. We will read 993-995 Georgia Douglas Johnson in class. February 26 Discuss Locke. Read. February 28 First draft of second paper due today. March 03 Film: The Harlem Renaissance. Read for next March 8: 1085-1168 Nella Larsen. Claude McKay

March 05 Discuss Garvey and McKay 999-1003 and 1003-1006 in class. Home to Harlem March 07 Discuss Quicksand Read for March 19 th 1168-1223 Jean Toomer. today. Nella Larsen. Read for next class:1224-1243revised draft of paper 2 due March 10 SPRING BREAK Jean Toomer March 17 Discuss Jean Toomer and Cane. Oral Reports 1 and 2 Read: Rudolph Fisher Rudolph Fisher, MD March 19 Discuss The City of Refuge and Fisher. End of unit. Review for Quiz 3 Decade 1930-1940 March 21 Quiz Read for next class: 1282-1288 Arna Bontemps. Thesis statement due in class today. Oral Reports 3 and 4

Arna Bontemps March 24 Discuss Bontemps and Langston Hughes. Hughes will be read in class. Read for next class: 1355-1368; in class reading of Melvin B. Tolson. Oral Reports 5 and 6. Melvin B. Tolson March 26 Discuss era. Read Tolson. Read for next class:1382-1399 Dorothy West. Oral Reports 7 and 8. Dorothy West March 28 Research Day No Class. Read for next class: 1403-1436. Draft of 3 rd paper due today. April 02 Discuss Wright. Discuss West and Richard Wright. Read for the next class: 1535-1570 Ralph Ellison. Oral Reports 9 and 10.

Ralph Ellison April 04 End of unit. Discuss Ellison and read Margaret Walker in class. Review for Quiz 4. Oral Reports 11 and 12. Margaret Walker Revised draft of 3 rd paper due April 7 Decades 1950-2000 April 07 Quiz 4 Read for next class: 1696-1749 James Baldwin. Oral Reports 13 and 14. James Baldwin April 09 Discuss Baldwin and the Civil Rights Era. Read for next two class:1768-1830 Lorraine Hansberry. Oral Reports 15 and 16. Thesis statement due in class today. Lorraine Hansberry April 11 Film: Lorraine Hansberry: The Black Experience in the Creation of Drama April 14

Discuss A Raisin in the Sun. Read for the next class: 1831-1859 Draft of paper 4 due today. Oral Reports 17 and 18 April 16 Discuss era, Malcolm and Martin Letter and Speech. Read for next class: 1911-1920 Gayle and Lorde Audre Lorde April 18 Discuss Gayle s Black Aesthetic and Lorde s poetry, which will be read in class. Read for next class:1937-1963 Amiri Baraka. Oral reports 19 and 20. April 21 Film: Dutchman Read for next class: 1960-1967 Sonia Sanchez Sonia Sanchez April 23 Discuss Baraka and Sanchez. Read for next class: 2214-2285 Toni Morrison. Toni Morrison

April 25 discuss Toni Morrison; Read for next class: 2322-2344 Ernest Gaines Ernest Gaines April 28 Film: The Sky is Gray; discuss Gaines and his story. Review for final quiz April 29 Final Quiz Final Project: Due Tuesday May 06 The Final Project The final project should compile your four revised essays with an introduction, a works cited page and must follow MLA guidelines. Number your pages consecutively in the final project. Use MLA Style for works cited. Use parenthetical documentation within the body of the paper. Give your paper a creative (original title). Underline your thesis. In your introduction clearly state your basic argument and how each essay supports it. For example, if you are arguing that African American literature is political, then each of your four essays would have been about the political aspects of what we have read or discussed. Remember that you must take a position. Are politics an appropriate part of literature? State your opinion and then support it. Ask yourself the so what question regarding your paper. Why is what you are arguing important? What is the counter argument? If each of your four papers concerns a different argument, then your introduction should discuss each and show how all four topics are characteristic of African American literature. The minimum page requirement to fulfill a writing requirement is 20 pages. Your four essays should constitute twenty pages. The introduction should be no longer than three pages. The final project must be submitted on 81/2 X 11 inch paper and placed into a binder. Failure to submit hard copies of the project will result in failure to pass the course. Criterion for grading essays: Arguable thesis statement that is underlined Creative title (title written according to MLA Style guidelines) Clearly acknowledges a counter argument Supports opinions with examples and evidence from the texts

Formats according to MLA style (Arabic numerals, upper right) Correctly cites sources (If outside sources are used) Makes logical argument Draws logical conclusion Proof reads paper before submitting Makes changes and revisions to each draft as suggested Mechanical errors, grammatical errors, awkward usage, faulty diction, spelling errors, all lower the grade Papers must be submitted electronically on the dates they are due by midnight Primary Research topics 1. African American Cinema Collection 1907-2001 2. African American Miscellany Collection 1848-2009 3. African American Photography Collection 4. African American Sheet Music Collection 1880-1980 5. African American Sports Collection 1964-1980 6. AKA-Nu Alpha Chapter (Emory) 7. John Wesley Work 8. Vincent Harding 9. Josephine Baker 1906-1975 10. James Baldwin 1924-1987 11. Raymond Andrews 12. Michel Fabre s archive 13. John Oliver Killens 1916-1987 14. Lucille Clifton 1930-2010 15. Camille Billops and James V. Hatch 16. Owen Dodson 1914-1983 17. William Levi Dawson 1899-1990 18. Louise Thompson Patterson 1909-1999 19. SCLC Records 20. Rudolph Fisher