|
"I then began again to think about
the bottom nature in people, I began to get enormously interested
in hearing how everybody said the same thing over and over again
with infinite variations but over and over again until finally if
you listened with great intensity you could hear it rise and fall
and tell all that there was inside them, not so much by the actual
words that they said or the thoughts they had but the movement of
their thoughts and words endlessly the same and endlessly different."
--From The Gradual Making of
The Making of Americans, Gertrude Stein, 1935
Course Objectives:
This course will provide students
with a sampling of American literature since 1900. The literature
that we will study is by writers from diverse backgrounds so that
we might get a sense of the diversity of experiences and events
represented in American literature. By exploring American literature
as it develops through the twentieth century, we will gain a historical
sense of various literary movements. Some questions that we will
ask include, "What does it mean to be American?"; "What
is distinctly American about the literature that we
read?"; and "To what cultural changes do American writers speak?"
The goal in this course is to introduce you to a great variety of
literature as a means of exploring the culture from which it arose.
Creating connections between ideas and understanding patterns in
the development of American literature will be foremost in our priorities.
If you apply yourself to the reading
and writing assignments, you can expect to sharpen your analytical
skills, improve your writing, and increase your knowledge of American
literature and the important events and issues that shaped it during
the last 100 years.
Required Texts:
Lauter, Paul et al. The Heath
Anthology of American Literature. 2 vols. Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Co, 1998.
(We will use volume 2.)
Required Materials:
One 3.5" floppy computer disk
Xerox copies for reserve materials
$10
Class Participation:
Since this class involves sharpening
your reading and analytical skills, good discussions are imperative.
Your participation grade (10%) will depend on your attendance, contribution
to group work, and active interest in debates and discussion. Poor
attendance will affect your class participation grade adversely.
In this class, missing more than two classes will result in the
loss of one letter grade. Missing more than five classes will result
in the lowering of the overall grae by one letter for each day missed.
Good attendance alone will not guarantee a superior participation
grade.
Quizzes:
Expect that content quizzes will
be given daily. Quizzes will be short (5 points), and students can
drop their three lowest scores. Quizzes will account for 10% of
your total grade. On some days, quizzes will be substituted for
closed-book, in-class writing activities, worth five points.
Group
Project:
Groups
will conduct discussions with Saginaw Valleys BlackBoard
server. Each group will be required to produce at least thirty
pages of out-of-class discussion on BlackBoard, either by posting
comments on bulletin boards or chatting in real time. Fifteen pages
are due before midterm and the rest before finals. (Be sure to contribute
piecemeal throughout the semester. To do all of the work the week
before it is due reduces the quality of the discussions and adversely
affects your grade.) Depending on your groups needs, you can
use either format or a combination of the two. In these discussions,
you will carry on topics that originated in class or new ones that
you would like to explore on your own. These discussions should
remain focused on topics that we discuss in class and should work
toward making connections between the literature that we read and
the historical moments at which the literature is produced.
These discussions will
be printed and turned in for credit (10% in total). Each member
of the group will keep a copy of the discussion for his or her portfolio.
(You can use the laser printers in any of the computer labs on campus
to print a discussion.) If any member of the group the group becomes
"dead weight" and fails to interact in discussions in a productive
manner, the other group members have the right to bonus points that
I will allot as fits each special case.
Writing Assignments:
- One
essay, worth 30% of your grade will illustrate your depth
of understanding on a given topic, of which you will have several
to choose at least two weeks before they are due. This paper ought
to be about five pages in length and have a research component.
-
Two
short response papers (2-3 pp), the first is worth 10% of
the total grade and the second 15% (25% combined), will demonstrate
your engagement with the texts that we cover in the course.
Late Paper Policy:
No late papers will be submitted
without a penalty. Your grade will drop one letter for each class
day your paper is late, beginning with the first day it is due.
Computer problems do not qualify as a legitimate excuse for a late
paper.
Writing and Research Assistance:
The Writing Center is located in
room 134 of Zahnow (249-1661). To e-mail the Writing Center, send
your message to writing-center@svsu.edu.
Consult my web page for other writing resources for students, including
a link to the Zahnow Library
page.
Final Exam:
The final will be cumulative and
will be essay in format. Its primary objective will be to draw connections
between major ideas in twentieth-century American Literature. It
will constitute 15% of your grade.
Grade
Breakdown
|
Class Participation
|
10%
|
|
Quizzes
|
10%
|
|
Group Project
|
10%
|
|
Paper #1
|
30%
|
|
Response
essay #1
|
10%
|
|
Response
essay #2
|
15%
|
|
Final Exam
|
15%
|
|