92571-001
English 5471—The Novella John D. Schwetman
Spring 2010 jschwetm@d.umn.edu / tel. 726-8437
SpHC 210 Kirby Plaza 328
Monday, Wednesday 2-3:50pm Office Hours: Monday 1-1:50pm
4 credits and Wednesday 11-11:50am
http://www.d.umn.edu/~jschwetm/spring2010/engl5471/

Course Objective

At the end of this semester, students should be able to present clear, analytical arguments interpreting and evaluating various exemplars of the novella from different time periods and literary cultures and have an understanding of critical models that apply to literary study. Some students will also emerge from this course with a paper that they can include in their senior portfolios fulfilling the research paper requirement.

Expectations

To accomplish the above objective, students should . . .

. . . show up to class on time and ready to discuss the reading assigned for that day. Excessive absences will have a negative impact on your grade.

. . . write clear, persuasive analyses of works of literature in the exams and the research paper. Careful revision and proofreading of drafts will be necessary to do well on the paper.

. . . bring a complete draft of the research paper to class on the allotted peer-editing day.

. . . ask questions and comment in class discussions.

. . . be respectful of fellow students and refrain from behavior that might impair their learning opportunities. Any behavior that substantially and repeatedly interrupts the instructor's ability to teach or the students' ability to learn will result in appropriate penalties. Disruptive behavior includes inappropriate use of communications technology in the classroom, such as ringing cell phones, text-messaging, watching videos, playing computer games, doing email, or surfing the Internet on one's computer instead of note-taking or other instructor-sanctioned activities. For further clarification of UMD policies in this regard, consult UMD's Student Conduct Code at "http://www.d.umn.edu/conduct/code/".

Requirements

  1. Early-Term Exam—addressing issues from the first part of the semester and serving as a springboard for the research paper. (on February 17th)

  2. Final Exam—cumulative with an emphasis on issues from the second part of the semester. (on May 14th)

  3. Research Paper—a minimum of 10 typed, double-spaced pages of literary analysis citing at least 5 different secondary sources a maximum 30% of which can be obtained from the Internet. It must adhere to the MLA documentation style. With further revision, this paper can fulfill the research paper requirement for your English Portfolio. (due on May 3rd)

  4. Annotated Bibliography—produce a list of 7 secondary sources in MLA Format and write 150 words of commentary for each source. (due on March 31st)

  5. Peer Editing—in class in the week and a half before the paper is due. (on April 19th)

  6. Participation—participation in group discussions, attendance, etc.

Remember that, should you revise this for the Portfolio research paper, it must:

  • be a minimum of 12 (typed, double-spaced) pages

  • cite at least 7 different secondary sources (a maximum 30% of which can be obtained from the Internet—this exclusion does not apply to full-text articles from refereed journals accessed through JSTOR or other Internet databases)

  • demonstrate mastery of MLA format.

Grade Breakdown

Midterm10%
Final35%
Research Paper45%
Participation10%

Your grade will depend primarily on your written work and the understanding of the material that you convey through that work. A command of standard written English and the ability to present an argument will also contribute to the determination of your grade.

If you turn a paper in late, your paper will receive a deduction of 1/3 of a letter grade for each business day that it is late. Students who miss exams may not make them up without a valid excuse for the absence. Valid excuses include health emergencies, family crises. If students anticipate missing an exam or a paper deadline for a valid reason and consult with me in advance, I can consider exceptions on a case-by-case basis.

Academic dishonesty tarnishes the reputation of the University of Minnesota Duluth and discredits the accomplishments of its students. Because the university is committed to providing students every possible opportunity to grow in mind and spirit, it must insist on an environment of trust, honest, and fairness. Consequently, all members of the academic community must regard any act of academic dishonesty as a serious offense. In keeping with this ideal, this course will adhere to UMD's Student Academic Integrity Policy, which is available online at "http://www.d.umn.edu/assl/conduct/integrity/". This policy sanctions students engaging in academic dishonesty with penalties up to and including expulsion from the university for repeat offenders.

Individuals who have any disability, either permanent or temporary, which might influence their capacity to perform in this class, are encouraged to inform me at the start of the semester. I can make special adaptations of teaching methods, assignments, materials, or testing as required to provide for equitable participation in the course. The Disability Resources Center is also available to assist students with disabilities. It is located in 258 Kirby Student Center and on the web at "http://www.d.umn.edu/access/".

Required Readings

Behn, Aphra. Oroonoko, Or, The Royal Slave. 1688. New York: Penguin, 2003.

James, Henry. The Aspern Papers. 1888. New York: Oxford U. P., 2008.

Kafka, Franz. The Metamorphosis. 1915. Trans. Stanley Corngold. New York: Bantam, 2004.

Melville, Herman. Billy Budd, Sailor. 1924. New York: Penguin, 1986.

Pynchon, Thomas. The Crying of Lot 49. 1966. New York: HarperPerennial, 1990.

Saunders, George. "Bounty." CivilWarLand in Bad Decline. New York: Riverhead, 1996.

Toomer, Jean. Cane. 1923. New York: W. W. Norton, 1987.

Wharton, Edith. Ethan Frome. 1911. New York: Penguin, 2005.

I will provide a list of supplementary readings in a later addendum to this syllabus.