Introduction to American Literature (KIK-EN221) Book Exam Reading List Autumn 2017 / Spring 2018

Similar documents
Introduction to American Literature (KIK-EN221/Eng223) Book Exam Reading List Autumn 2018 / Spring 2019

ENGLISH 2570: SURVEY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE Fall 2004

Syllabus American Literature: Civil War to the Present

ENGLISH 2401E -- AMERICAN LITERATURE -- ONLINE

AMERICAN LITERATURE, English BC 3180y Spring 2010 MW 11-12:15 Barnard 409

AMERICAN LITERATURE English BC 3180y Spring 2015 MW 2:40-3:55 Barnard 302

MORAVIAN COLLEGE Spring 2008 English 101 A& B American Literature

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

ENGLISH 2308E -- AMERICAN LITERATURE ONLINE

OHLONE COLLEGE Ohlone Community College District OFFICIAL COURSE OUTLINE

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

Winter 2009 Survey of American Literature Page 1

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

Language Arts 11 Honors and Regular: Literature: The American Experience. Unit 1: The New Land

American Literature and Culture

PETERS TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL

College Prep English 10 -Honors

JUNIOR HONORS ENGLISH

Poetry Report. Students who know that they will not be here on Wednesday, 3/11, due to a prearranged absence, will need to turn their report in early.

11 th Grade AP Language and Composition Curriculum Map Template Secondary. Time Frame: 1 st Marking Period COMMON CORE ASSESSMENTS STANDARDS CORE

Semester 1 Literature Grade 11

Honors American Literature Course Guide Ms. Haskins

The American Transcendental Movement

Tel Aviv University The Lester & Sally Entin Faculty of Humanities The Department of English and American Studies

A-G/CP English 11. Gorman Learning Center (052344) Basic Course Information

EH 231: American Literature I Spring 2015

Lahore University of Management Sciences

LT251 Poetry and Poetics

LT251: Poetry and Poetics

CURRICULUM CATALOG ENGLISH III (01003) NY

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

American Romanticism

CURRICULUM CATALOG. English Grade 11 (1150) VA

Assignments You will be responsible for writing three essays of 5-7 pages each, taking ten open-book reading quizzes, and completing the final exam.

AMERICAN LITERATURE FROM 1492 TO 1865

CURRICULUM CATALOG. English III (01003) WA

The American Renaissance

HONORS ENGLISH 9 Summer Reading

ENGLISH 11 (MASTER MAP)

Curriculum Plan: English Language Arts Grade August 21 December 22

Expanding and Revising the American Renaissance

ENG United States Literature, 1865 to 1945 (10774)

AP English Language and Composition

INGL3251 Professor: Time: Office hours: Course description: Teaching strategies: Methods of Evaluation:

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS

CURRICULUM MAP-Updated May 2009 AMERICAN HERITAGE

Unit: Written Research and Oral Presentation Skills Duration: May be applied to any unit Works studied: MLA Guide and necessary research materials

Romanticism & the American Renaissance

CONTENTS. Newly Annotated Fiction and Nonfiction: E-texts and Videos. Multigenre E-texts and Videos: Stories, Poems, Essays, Memoirs, Speeches

ENGLISH. Minor. Courses. English 1. Literature Non-Western World

Reconstructing the American Literary Renaissance Fall 2009

Everyman s Library Pocket Poet

Summer 2016 Reading Assignment American Literature 11 th Grade

ADIKAVI NANNAYA UNIVERSITY:: RAJAMAHENDRAVARAM. Structure of Final Year BA SPECIAL ENGLISH under CBCS. A: A Study of the English Language

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT BOOK LIST

To: English III Honors Students Re: Summer Reading Date: April 22nd, 2011

Advanced Placement (AP ) English Literature and Composition Exam

When you submit them at the end of the semester, please name your file: s11_eng10106_yourlastname_journals

Huntsville City Schools Pacing Guide Course English Grade 10

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

Required Text Robert S. Levine et al., eds. The Norton Anthology of American Literature, 9th edition, vols. A-B.

Eastern Christian High School Summer Reading Assignments

English 2328 Course Syllabus Addendum

AP English Literature & Composition

direct urgent questions only please at

NFC ACADEMY ENGLISH III HONORS COURSE OVERVIEW

American Literature and Composition Mid-Term Exam

A Correlation of Grade 11, 2017 To the AP English Literature and Composition Exam

American Literature Spring 2015

American Literature Survey II Klapper 631 Spring

American Literature to 1865

The Feast of Literature

Peter Messent is Professor of Modern American Literature at the University of Nottingham.

AP English Language and Composition

AP ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND COMPOSITION (CP and CPD)

Online Courses for High School Students

Modernism and Beyond

Parini, Jay, ed., The Columbia History of American Poetry [review]

ENG 2050 Semester syllabus

A Historical Guide To Walt Whitman (Historical Guides To American Authors)

The Scarlet Letter, A Romance (With An Introduction And Annotation By Larzer Ziff) By Hawthorne, Larzer [Introduction], Nathaniel; Ziff

Poetry Project. Name: Class Period:

usurped the place of a work of art (Against Interpretations)

The American Experience as Told through Autobiographies UGS 302 (61815)...Fall TTh 12:30-2 pm...cal 22

English 343: American Poetry. Tues. & Thurs. 11:30-12:45, Armstrong 121

AP Literature and Composition. Where do I fit in? What motivates human to act? Why is acceptance important to one s existence?

Eighth Grade Humanities English. Summer Study

GREENEVILLE HIGH SCHOOL CURRICULUM MAP

Literature An Introduction to Reading and Writing AP Edition, 2012

Course Pacing Guide. Concept: Analyze and Extend Big Idea: The Sacred Earth and the Power of Storytelling

English 224H Contemporary American Literature (Am. Lit. II)

Pierce College English English Composition: The Challenge of Literature in Short Fiction, Poetry and Drama

ENG103: Literary Analysis and Composition I (Comprehensive)

AML3311w Major Figures in American Literature (3) -A study of the writings of selected major American authors. Tests and critical papers required.

1970 Poem: Elegy for Jane (Theodore Roethke) Prompt: Write an essay in which you describe the speaker's attitude toward his former student, Jane.

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

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

Massachusetts Tests for Educator Licensure

Honors Literary Analysis and Composition I

TEACHER CERTIFICATION STUDY GUIDE. Domain/Competency / Skill # Pg # LITERATURE AND LANGUAGE

Transcription:

Introduction to American Literature (KIK-EN221) Book Exam Reading List Autumn 2017 / Spring 2018 Instructor: Howard Sklar, PhD E-mail: howard.sklar@helsinki.fi Office: Metsätalo C611 Office Hour: Monday, 14:00-15:00, and by appointment About the Exam Autumn: Monday, 23.10.2017 Spring: Monday, 5.3.2018 Length of Exam: 3 hours Exact location and times to be announced later The autumn 2017 and spring 2018 book exam for Introduction to American Literature is based on the reading list for the spring 2017 course. You must register in advance for the book exam via WebOodi. HUOM! Please see the sample questions at the end of this PDF for the format of the exam. Assigned Readings This list of readings refers to page numbers in the one-volume Norton Anthology of American Literature (shorter 8th edition). (Note: The page numbers for the shorter 7th are listed in parentheses after the pages for the 8th edition. If you have an earlier edition, or the two-volume edition, please contact me if you have difficulty locating the correct page numbers.) Important: In addition to the selections listed below, students should read the section introductions and individual author introductions in the anthology. The following reading list follows the progression of the spring 2017 course: 1) Introduction: Why American Literature? Anne Bradstreet, A Letter to Her Husband, Absent Upon Public Employment, 121 (108-109) Phillis Wheatley, On Being Brought from Africa to America, 403 (420-421) 2) A New Nation and Its People J. Hector St. John de Crévecoer, from Letter III: What Is an American to This is an American, 309-312 (310-313) Thomas Jefferson, The Declaration of Independence : http://www.constitution.org/us_doi.pdf Thomas Paine, The Crisis, No. 1, 331-336 (332-338) 3) American Transcendentalism Ralph Waldo Emerson, The American Scholar, 536-542 (520-525) to goes forward at all hours Henry David Thoreau, from Walden o 858-862 middle of page (844-847, bottom of page) o 902 bottom 906 middle (888 bottom 892 middle) o 928 (914) from I left the woods to now put foundations under them. Margaret Fuller, from The Great Lawsuit: Man versus Men. Woman versus Women, 752-760 (739-747)

4) American Romanticism Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown, 619-628 (605-614) Edgar Allan Poe, The Tell-Tale Heart, 714-718 (702-705) Herman Melville, Ahab : http://americanliterature.com/author/herman-melville/book/mobydick-or-the-whale/chapter-28-ahab 5) The Emergence of Major American Poetic Voices Walt Whitman, from Song of Myself o Section 1: 1024-1025 (1011) o Sections 15-17: 1033-1036 (1020-1023) o Section 24: 1040-1042 (1028-1030) o Section 52: 1067 (1055) Emily Dickinson o Poem 269 [Wild Nights Wild Nights!], 1197 (1205) o Poem 320 [There s a certain Slant of light], 1197-1198 (1205) o Poem 446 [This was a Poet It is That], 1205-1206 (1213) o Poem 479 [Because I could not stop for Death--], 1206-1207 (1214-1215) o Poem 620 [Much Madness is divinest Sense], 1208-1209 (1216) 6) Nineteenth-Century Social Protest Frederick Douglass, from Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: o Chapter I, 946-949 (931-934) o Chapter IV, 954-956 (940-941) to stained with his brother s blood o Chapter VI, 959-960 (944-946) to benefit of both o Chapter VII, 961-964 (946-949) to I would learn to write o Chapter IX, 970-971 (955-956) from I have said to end o Chapter X, 973-978 (958-963) from If at any one time to but was never whipped. Frederick Douglass, What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?, 1002-1005 (988-991) Harriet Beecher Stowe, from Uncle Tom s Cabin, Chapter VII: The Mother s Struggle, 781-790 (767-776) Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address, 748-49 (735-36) 7) Late Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Part I Kate Chopin, The Story of an Hour, 1609-1611 o Link (if you don t have the 8th edition): http://archive.vcu.edu/english/engweb/webtexts/hour/ Stephen Crane, The Open Boat, 1768-1784 (1779-1795) Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wall-Paper, 1669-1681 (1684-1695)

8) Late Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Part II Mark Twain, from Huckleberry Finn o Note: Please see the following brief plot summary before reading the selections below: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/adventures_of_huckleberry_finn#plot_summary Chapter VII, 1308-1311 (1295-1299) Chapter VIII, 1311-1317 (1299-1304) to watched um throo de bushes Chapter XIX, 1360-1365 (1356-1362) Chapter XXI, 1371-1374 (1367-1371), to run himself to death. Chapter XXXI, 1415-1418 (1412-1415), to might as well go the whole hog Henry James, Daisy Miller: A Study, 1511-1549 (1495-1532) 9) Early Twentieth-Century Aspirations Booker T. Washington, from Up from Slavery, Chap. XIV, 1633-1636 (1630-1633), to shake hands with me. W.E.B. Du Bois, from The Souls of Black Folk o Chapter 1, 1717-1722 (1729-1734) o Chapter 3, 1722-1731 (1734-1744) Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin), from Impressions of an Indian Childhood, 1825-1830 (1838-1845) 10) American Modernist Poetry Robert Frost o The Road Not Taken, 1919-1920 (1960) o Out, Out, 1921-1922 (1962) Amy Lowell, September, 1918, 1897 (1937) T.S. Eliot, from The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock 2006-2009 (2039-2042) William Carlos Williams, Spring and All, 1965-1966 (2012) Wallace Stevens, A High-Toned Old Christian Woman, 1952-1953 (1992-1993) Langston Hughes, I, Too 2223-2224 (2266) 11) American Modernist Prose Ernest Hemingway, Hills Like White Elephants o Link: http://faculty.weber.edu/jyoung/english%202500/readings%20for%20english%202500/hills %20Like%20White%20Elephants.pdf William Faulkner, A Rose for Emily, 2182-2188 (2218-2224) Richard Wright, The Ethics of Living Jim Crow: An Autobiographical Sketch o Link: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~ma01/white/anthology/wright.html

12) Post-War Poetry and Drama Tennessee Williams, from A Streetcar Named Desire, Act I, Scene 1, 2300-2309 (2337-2346) Elizabeth Bishop, The Fish, 2289-2290 (2399-2401) Sylvia Plath, Daddy, 2605-2607 (2656-2658) Allen Ginsberg, from Howl, Section I, 2540-2545 (2592-2597) 13) Post-War Prose (and a Poetic Finish!) Maxine Hong Kingston, No Name Woman, 2691-2699 (2744-2753) Art Spiegelman, from Maus, 2736-2752 (at the end of this PDF, if you have the 7th edition or earlier) Sandra Cisneros, The House on Mango Street o Link: https://www.deanza.edu/faculty/pesanojulie/pdf/houseonmango.pdf N. Scott Momaday, The Delight Song of Tsoai-Talee o Link: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46558/the-delight-song-of-tsoai-talee Note: In the pages that follow, you will find the format of the exam and the text for Spiegelman.

Introduction to American Literature (KIK-EN221) EXAM FORMAT: Sample Questions and Instructions Autumn 2017 / Spring 2018 Maximum time allowed for the exam: 3 hours (NOTE: This is the basic format of the exam. Each section below contains one sample question. Please note that during the actual exam you will need to answer seven questions in Section A and seven questions in Section B, as well as write two short essays for Section C. Also, some of the point totals listed below may change, according to the content of the exam.) ANSWER ALL THREE SECTIONS SECTION A: Prose Identifications (21 points/3 points per question; approx. 45 minutes for section) Identify only 7 of the following quotations (if you identify more than seven, only the first seven will be graded). Keep your answers brief. A phrase or a few words are sometimes all you need. For each quotation give: (a) the first and last name of the author (b) the title of the work (c) an answer to the question 1. We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. For what purpose was this text written? SECTION B: Poetry Identifications (21 points/3 points per question; approx. 45 minutes for section) Identify only 7 of the following quotations (if you identify more than seven, only the first seven will be graded. Keep your answers brief. A phrase or a few words are sometimes all you need. For each quotation give: (a) the first and last name of the author (b) the title of the work (c) an answer to the question 1. So many steps, head from the heart to sever, If but a neck, soon should we be together. What does the head represent in this poem? What does the heart represent? SECTION C: Essay Questions (60 points; 30 points per essay; approx. 45 minutes per essay) Write TWO essays, each approximately 500-600 words, each essay based one of the following topics. Once you have chosen your topic, use 3 (but not more) of the suggested texts in your answer. Use as much detail from the texts as you can remember to support your points. Be sure to begin each essay with a short introductory paragraph, and end it with a short concluding paragraph. 1. Discuss humanity s or the individual s relationship to nature in 3 of the following texts: Henry David Thoreau s Walden, Stephen Crane s The Open Boat, Emily Dickinson s There s a Certain Slant of Light, or Elizabeth Bishop s The Fish.