History of British Literature II

English 3352:001

Fall 2004


Thomas A. Ryan Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00-10:50

202 CarH 310 Preston Hall


Phone: 272-2692 or 272-2758 Email: ryan@uta.edu


Web: http://www.uta.edu/english/TAR/tar.html

Course Web Site: http://www.uta.edu/english/TAR/britlit2.html


Office Hours: Monday and Wednesday, 1:00-2:30


Course Prerequisites: Six hours sophomore literature


Text: The Norton Anthology of English Literature, vol. 2, Abrams et al., eds. Seventh Edition.


Course Description: The primary focus of this course will be the literature of the British Isles in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. This semester the class will try to take advantage of the Internet and other learning and teaching aids made possible by computers. Students will be encouraged to explore the literary, artistic, musical, cultural, and historical milieus of the works we shall read and to share their discoveries with the other students in the class through email and class participation.


Course Learning Goals/Objectives: The goals of this course are to broaden and deepen the student's knowledge of the British literary tradition and to improve the student's interpretive and writing skills.


Attendance and Drop Policy: Attendance in class and class participation are important. It is extremely important that you read the assigned material before coming to class. I will give reading quizzes, if necessary, as an incentive. If for some reason you cannot continue in the class, please remember to officially drop the course. It is now against University policy for faculty members to drop students.


Course Requirements: In addition to a Midsemester and a Final Examination, four (4) explications (each three to five pages in length) will be required on poems to be assigned during the semester. These explications may be submitted electronically. Please be sure to acknowledge and correctly document the primary and any secondary sources you use. Due dates for the explications are


September 17


October 11


November 8


November 29.


Course Evaluation and Final Grade: The two examinations--which will be part machine-graded multiple choice and part essay--will count fifty percent, the four essays will count forty percent, and attendance and class participation--both in-class and online--will count 10 percent.


Student Evaluation of Teaching: Toward the end of the semester, I shall ask your opinion on the success of the course by having you complete the Student Evaluation of Teaching Survey.


Americans with Disabilities Act: The University of Texas at Arlington is on record as being committed to both the spirit and the letter of federal equal opportunity legislation; reference Public Law 93112: The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended. With the passage of new federal legislation entitled Americans with Disabilities Act [ADA], pursuant to section 504 of The Rehabilitation Act, there is renewed focus on providing this population with the same opportunities enjoyed by all citizens. As a faculty member, I am required by law to provide "reasonable accommodation" to students with disabilities, so as not to discriminate on the basis of that disability. Student responsibility primarily rests with informing faculty at the beginning of the semester and in providing authorized documentation through designated administrative channels.


Academic Dishonesty: It is the philosophy of the University of Texas at Arlington that academic dishonesty is a completely unacceptable mode of conduct and will not be tolerated in any form. All persons involved in academic dishonesty will be disciplined in accordance with University regulations and procedures. Discipline may include suspension or expulsion from the University. "Scholastic dishonesty includes but is not limited to cheating, plagiarism, collusion, the submission for credit of any work or materials that are attributable in whole or in part to another person, taking an examination for another person, any act designed to give unfair advantage to a student or the attempt to commit such acts." (Regents' Rules and Regulations, Part One, Chapter VI, Section 3, Subsection 3.2,

Subdivision 3.22)


Class Schedule

Dates and Assignments are tentative.

M

Aug 23

Introduction

W

Aug 25

Blake, There is no . . ., All Religions Are One, Thel

F

Aug 27

Blake, Thel, Book of Urizen (on Inernet)

M

Aug 30

Blake, Book of Urizen (on Internet)

W

Sep 1

Blake, Marriage of Heaven and Hell

F

Sep 3

Blake, Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience

M

Sep 6

Labor Day Holiday

W

Sep 8

Wordsworth, Early poems, Lyrical Ballads (including Preface)

F

Sep 10

Wordsworth,"Tintern Abbey"

M

Sep 13

Wordsworth, "My Heart Leaps Up," Ode: Intimations . . .

W

Sep 15

Wordsworth, "Resolution and Independence," "Elegiac Stanzas"

F

Sep 17

Wordsworth, Prospectus to The Recluse; The Prelude (selections) [Explication Due]

M

Sep 20

Wordsworth, The Prelude (selections)

W

Sep 22

Wordsworth, cont.

F

Sep 24

Coleridge, Ancient Mariner

M

Sep 27

Coleridge, "Kubla Khan," "The Eolian Harp"

W

Sep 29

Coleridge, "This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison,"

"Reflections on Having Left a Place of Retirement"*

F

Oct 1

Coleridge, "Frost at Midnight," "Dejection: An Ode"

M

Oct 4

Byron, selections from Lara, Childe Harold, and Don

Juan (The Byronic Hero)

W

Oct 6

Byron, Manfred

F

Oct 8

Shelley, "To Wordsworth," selections from Alastor,

"Mount Blanc"

M

Oct 11

Shelley, "Hymn to Intellectual Beauty," "Ode to the

West Wind, " "To a Sky-lark" [Explication Due]

W

Oct 13

Keats,"The Eve of St. Agnes," "Ode to a Nightingale"

F

Oct 15

Keats, "Ode on a Grecian Urn," "To Autumn," sonnets

M

Oct 18

Midsemester Test

W


Oct 20

Carlyle, from "Characteristics"*, from Sartor

Resartus, "The Everlasting No"; John Stuart Mill,

from Autobiography, Chapter 5.

F

Oct 22

Tennysson, "Mariana," "The Lady of Shalott,"

"Ulysses," "Locksley Hall"

M

Oct 25

Tennyson, "Locksley Hall Sixty Years Later,"

from In Memoriam

W

Oct 27

Browning, "Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister," "My

Last Duchess," "The Bishop Orders His Tomb . . ."

F

Oct 29

Browning, "Fra Lippo Lippi," "Andrea del Sarto," "AbtVogler"

M

Nov 1

Arnold, Marguerite poems, "The Buried Life,"

"Memorial Verses"

W

Nov 3


Arnold, "Dover Beach," "Stanzas from the Grande

Chartreuse," selections from prose

F

Nov 5

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, "The Blessed Damozel"; Walter

Pater, from The Renaissance; Ernest Dowson, "Cynara"

M

Nov 8

Conrad, "Heart of Darkness" [Explication Due]

W

Nov 10

Yeats, poems to be assigned

F

Nov 12

Yeats, poems to be assigned

M

Nov 15

T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land, "Tradition and the

Individual Talent"

W

Nov 17

Virginia Woolf, "The Legacy"; James Joyce, "Araby";

D. H. Lawrence, "Odour of Chrysanthemums"

F

Nov 19

Katherine Mansfield, "The Daughters of the Late

Colonel"; Stevie Smith, poems

M

Nov 22

Samuel Beckett, Endgame

W

Nov 24

Auden, poems to be assigned; Dylan Thomas, poems to

be assigned

F

Nov 26

Thanksgiving Holiday

M

Nov 29

Gordimer, "The Moment before the Gun Went Off";

Alice Munro, "Walker Brothers Cowboy";

Edna O'Brien, "Sister Imelda" [Explication Due]

W

Dec 1

Tom Stoppard, The Real Inspector Hound; Recent

poets, poems to be assigned

F

Dec 3

Catch-Up and Review

M

Dec 6

FINAL EXAMINATION 8:00a-10:30a