Shimer College HUMANITIES 2: Poetry, Drama, and Fiction Spring 2010

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Instructor: Adam Kotsko E-mail: a.kotsko@shimer.edu Office: 219 Office phone: 312-235-3547 Section C: MWTh, 1:45-3:05 in Radical 2; Section D: MWTh, 4:45-6:05 in Hutchins Course Description Humanities 2 is an introduction to imaginative literature: poetry, drama, and fiction. The course will focus on selected works of Western literature from ancient Greece to the modern era. In addition to introducing you to these selected works, the course will aim at developing your reading, speaking and analytic skills. Humanities 2 is a designated writing course within the Shimer Curriculum. Thus, in order to pass the course, all writing assignments must be of passing quality in order to receive a passing grade for the course. Course Objectives For course content: 1. Demonstrate ability to derive meaning from sophisticated works of prose fiction and poetry. 2. Demonstrate empathic understanding of the imaginative and sympathetic experience of those represented in literature. 3. Define and cite instances of irony, metaphor, and symbol. 4. Show understanding of how literary criticism can assist and increase comprehension of literary works. For writing: 1. Write competent College-level prose. 2. Construct persuasive arguments. 3. Express ideas with confidence and clarity. 4. Demonstrate command of sentence and paragraph structure. 5. Select, introduce, and analyze quotations. 6. Learn and demonstrate use of inclusive language. 7. Learn how to revise, rethink, and edit essays. Course Requirements Discussion (50% of the final grade): A good discussion, one based on shared inquiry, is not the same as a lively conversation in the lounge. It is focused. It returns to the text for authority and for inspiration. It is not about winning an argument, or simply having one s own ideas prevail. Our common goal is to gain a deeper understanding of the text. It is a guided conversation, guided not only by the faculty member and the students, but above all by the text itself. A good discussion depends upon careful preparation of the reading assignment, a willingness to speak and to listen, open-mindedness, and mutual respect on the part of all members of the class. Absence Policy: The prerequisite for good class discussion is prompt attendance at each class and careful preparation of the assigned reading. Each student is expected to attend every class in its entirety and to come to class on time. Absences are there for emergencies. You may be unable to complete the course if you miss more than four (4) class sessions. If you must miss a class, please let me know in advance if at all possible. You will receive a written warning if you are reaching the limit of absences. 1

Written Assignments (50% of the final grade): Humanities 2 is a designated writing course. This means that special emphasis will be placed on improving your writing through a series of papers and rewrites. There are four required essays, and at least one of the papers (either the Poetry or Greek paper) must be rewritten. Due dates are noted on the calendar. You must receive passing grades on all four papers in order to pass the course. All written assignments must be turned in, and worthy of a passing grade, as of 4 PM Friday, April 20, 2012, which is the last date and time at which written work will be accepted. In order to gain the most out of the course, you must turn your papers in on time. If you fall significantly behind, you will be told that you can no longer pass the course. The timetable on the Course Calendar will allow for you to receive necessary feedback on your writing. You will have sufficient time to rewrite, and will thereby be able to develop your skills over the semester. You may rewrite more than one paper as long as you are up-to-date on all of your other writing assignments. If you wish to rewrite the Novel paper, you will need to submit that paper by noon on Saturday, April 16 (e-mail only). Each paper must be 4-5 pages in length. The first paper must treat Poetry, the second Sophocles or The Odyssey, the third Hamlet, and the fourth Hurston s Their Eyes Were Watching God or Dostoevsky s Crime and Punishment. Your essays must focus on the text, and you must use references (quotes and page numbers) from the text to support your claims. I will give you some suggestions for paper topics, though you may also select a topic of your choice. If you choose a topic of your own, please discuss it with me beforehand. All papers must be double spaced, paginated, typed, and have titles. They must be submitted via e-mail before class or in hard copy at the beginning of class on the day they are due. You must submit the original paper (with comments) with all rewrites. In all cases I am available to work with you on your writing so take advantage of this opportunity. This timetable will give you necessary feedback on your writing. You will have time to rewrite, and will thereby be able to develop your skills over the semester. Required Course Readings Aristotle, Poetics Beckett, Waiting for Godot Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment Homer, The Odyssey Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God The Norton Anthology of Poetry, 5th edition Shakespeare, Hamlet (in Bevington, ed., The Complete Works of Shakespeare) Sophocles, Oedipus the King and Antigone (in Grene and Lattimore, eds., Sophocles I) Additional readings are included in a course packet and marked in the syllabus: (**). Tentative Course and Reading Schedule January 17 Tuesday Class intro and Poetry selections: Pithy Poems [See appendix for details on poetry selections] January 18 Wednesday Poetry selections: Short Poems January 19 Thursday Poetry selections: Shakespeare Sonnets 2

January 23 Monday Poetry selections: Later Sonnets January 25 Wednesday Poetry selections: Narrative Poems January 26 Thursday Poetry selections: Difficult Poems January 30 Monday Poetry selections: Difficult Poems (cont.) February 1 Wednesday Poetry paper due February 2 Thursday Odyssey, bks. 1-6 February 6 Monday Odyssey, bks. 7-12 February 8 Wednesday Odyssey, bks. 13-18 February 9 Thursday Odyssey, bks. 19-24 February 13 Monday Auerbach, Odysseus s Scar (**) February 15 Wednesday Sophocles, Oedipus Rex (full text) February 16 Thursday Sophocles, Oedipus Rex (reread) February 20 Monday Sophocles, Antigone (full text) February 22 Wednesday Sophocles, Antigone (reread) February 23 Thursday Aristotle, Poetics February 27 Monday Greek paper due; Poems from Norton Anthology: Keats, To Homer, 906; Tennyson, Ulysses, 992-994; Muir, The Return of the Greeks, 1337-38; Merwin, Odysseus, 1743-44 February 29 Wednesday Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I March 1 Thursday Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act II March 5 Monday Dean s Break March 7 Wednesday Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act III March 8 Thursday Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act IV March 12 Monday Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act V; Rewrite of poetry or Greek paper March 14 Wednesday Beckett, Waiting for Godot, Act I March 15 Thursday Beckett, Waiting for Godot, Act II March 19 Monday Shakespeare paper due; Ameleth legend (**) March 21 Wednesday Holiday Break March 22 Thursday Holiday Break March 26 Monday Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, Part I March 28 Wednesday Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, Part II March 29 Thursday Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, Part III April 2 Monday Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, Part IV April 4 Wednesday Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, Part V April 5 Thursday Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, Part VI, epilogue 3

April 9 Monday Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God, chs. 1-5 (pp. 1-47) April 11 Wednesday Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God, chs. 6-13 (pp. 48-122) April 12 Thursday Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God, chs. 14-20 (pp. 123-184) Novel paper due by noon on Saturday, April 14, if planning to rewrite (e-mail only) April 16 Monday Kafka, In the Penal Colony (**) April 18 Wednesday O Connor, A Good Man is Hard to Find & Parker s Back (**) April 19 Thursday Final Papers and All Rewrites Due at Beginning of Class Appendix: Guide to Poetry Selections from the Norton Anthology Pithy Poems: Read each poem aloud. Spend some time considering the effect of condensing the poet s thoughts or experiences to a foreshortened form. Choose one poem that you find particularly effective, spend more time exploring it, and come to class prepared to introduce the discussion on that poem. Selections: Now Goeth Sun Under Wode (15); Western Wind (84); Blake, The Sick Rose (742); Dickenson, #1108 and #1793 (1126-7); Houseman, Here Dead Lie We (1180); Williams, The Red Wheelbarrow (1274); Pound, In a Station of the Metro (1297); Hope, Inscription for a War (1485); Jarell, The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner (1553); Merwin, Separation (1744); Momaday, Two Figures (1862) Short Poems: Prepare poems by reading them aloud and choosing one you would like the class to discuss. Selections: Frost, Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening (1237); Ransom, Bells for John Whiteside s Daughter (1367); cummings, spring is like a perhaps hand (1393-94); Bogan, Song for the Last Act (1408); Hughes, Theme for English B (1434); Roethke, The Waking (1500); Bishop, One Art (1527-28); Brooks, We Real Cool (1588); Larkin, Talking in Bed (1654-55); Atwood, This is a Photograph of Me (1894) Shakespeare Sonnets: Read the section at the back of your text on sonnet form (2042-2044 plus the diagram). You are welcome to read the rest of the article on form if you wish. Read them all and use the notes to help you consider the sonnets listed below and come to class having worked hard on one of them: Selections: Shakespeare #18, #29, #73, #129, #130, #138 (259-68) Other Sonnets: As you study these sonnets, think about the way that the author is using or changing the sonnet form as compared to Shakespeare. Selections: Donne, Batter My Heart (320); Wordsworth, The World Is Too Much With Us (802-03); Shelley, Ozymandias (870); Yeats, Leda and the Swan (1200); Stevens, The Emperor of Ice Cream (1256); Millay, Euclid Alone Has Looked On Beauty Bare and I, Being a Woman (1383-84); cummings, next to of course god (1394); Brooks, my dreams, work, must wait till after hell (1586) 4

Narrative Poems: Each of the following poems tells a story. Read them all and then choose one, studying it until you are sure you are following the narrative and exploring the form in which the poet chose to tell it. Selections: Donne, The Sun Rising (295-96); Coleridge, Kubla Kahn (809-10); Byron, When We Two Parted (835-36); Keats, La Belle Dame Sans Merci (917-18); Browning, My Last Duchess (1012-13); cummings, anyone lived in a pretty how town (1396-97); Auden, Advice to Young Ladies (1483-85) Difficult Poems: After reading these poems, choose one to work on before the first class session. After the first class session, reread all poems we have discussed in detail, then choose one of the remaining to focus on for the second class session. Selections: Arnold, Dover Beach (1101); Stevens, Sunday Morning (1257-60); Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock (1340-43) Yeats, Sailing to Byzantium (1199-1200) 5