Department of English
Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University
2202234 Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Puckpan Tipayamontri
Office: BRK 1106.1
Office Hours: M 1–3 and by appointment
Phone: 0-2218-4703
Section 5
BRK 411
M 10–12, W 8–9
Tentative Schedule (section 5)
Week 1 |
Jun. 6 |
Poetic Qualities Words and Meaning Reading
Discussion: Making inferences; tone, denotation, connotation |
Jun. 8 |
Saying More Reading
Discussion: overstatement, imagery, elegy, satire
Handout: Terms for Literary Discussion, Literary Dictionaries, and Other Books to Explore (download Word file) |
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Week 2 |
Jun. 13 |
Saying
What Is Not Said Reading
Discussion: imagery, irony
Don't forget to bring your notebook to class always.
Reading Response #1 due (your response to the question "What is reading?" when you observe your own act of reading Atwood's "Dreams of the Animals"; see essays from the following students as examples of how they have responded to a similar question: Ployjai Pintobtang, Anchalee Kamnoedkaeo, and Danai Hengtrakul) |
Jun. 15 |
Saying What Is Not Said Reading
Discussion: imagery, understatement, allusion
Test on literary terms (review terms in the dictionaries on the June 8 handout to prepare for this) |
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Week 3 |
Jun. 20 |
Life in Non-life Reading
Discussion: metonymy, synecdoche, imagery In-Class Writing (30 minutes; practice orienting the reader and setting up your argument quickly in the opening of your essay): The Ride of Poetry: Billy Collins, former US Poet Laureate, said that a good poem for him should take you somewhere "that's perhaps disorienting, manipulative, or a little off-balancing" ("The Art of Poetry No. 83"). Read Louis Simpson's poem "The Battle" carefully and discuss its movement into that "somewhere." What transformation happens? Where does the poem take you? |
Jun. 22 |
Layers of Stories Reading
Discussion: allegory, symbolism |
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Week 4 |
Jun. 27 |
Things and Meaning Reading
Discussion: irony, paraphrase
Work 1 given (Word file) |
Jun. 29 |
Sound and Meaning Reading
In-Class Writing (30 minutes; practice substantiating your arguments with evidence from the poem text): Quiz Practice 1 on Marge Piercy's "Barbie Doll" |
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Week 5 |
Jul. 4 |
Sound and Meaning Reading
Quiz 1 (1 hour, 15 points) on an unseen poem |
Jul. 6 |
Anatomy of a Play Mise-en-Scene Reading
Discussion: set, lighting, space, costume, acting; allusion
Work 1 due |
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Week 6 |
Jul. 11 |
Dialog and Audiences Reading
Work 2 given (Write a 2–5-minute play inspecting something. How might you experiment with the various aspects of live theater, using them to inspect the idea, issue, emotion, problem, relationship, characteristic, memory, place, action, or thing that you want to scrutinize? Consider how humor, word play, setting, actors, music, spatial dynamics, and pace might help to bring points of inspection across to us, your intelligent, perceptive, and receptive audience. Have fun!) |
Jul. 13 |
Characters and Context Reading
Lit Breakfast: ~7–8 a.m. (make up for our cancelled Lit Lunch and office hours on Monday)
Sonnet Recitation
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Week 7 |
Jul. 18 |
No class (Buddhist Lent observed) |
Jul. 20 |
Themes Reading
Work 2 due (Write a 2–5-minute play inspecting something. How might you experiment with the various aspects of live theater, using them to inspect the idea, issue, emotion, problem, relationship, characteristic, memory, place, action, or thing that you want to scrutinize? Consider how humor, word play, setting, actors, music, spatial dynamics, and pace might help to bring points of inspection across to us, your intelligent, perceptive, and receptive audience. Have fun!)
Sonnet Recitation |
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Week 8 |
Jul. 25 |
(Midterm week: July 25–29, 2010) Midterm Exam (2 hours, in BRK 402; note room change) There will be four essay-type questions covering material on the syllabus from the beginning of the semester through week 7. Formulate an argument in response to each exam question that allows you to address effectively the requirements of the prompt. As always, you will want to show us your critical and analytical skills: demonstrate that you have read and understood the material, that you can critically engage with that material, with discussion in class, and with the test question, that you can synthesize material and knowledge gained, and that you can write clear and effective prose.
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Jul. 27 |
No class (Midterm week: July 25–29, 2010) |
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Week 9 |
Aug. 1 |
The Elements of Fiction Things and Meaning II Reading
Discussion: imagery, irony, symbolism
Final paper topic proposal and critique |
Aug. 3 |
Point of View: Knowledge Reading
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Week 10 |
Aug. 8 |
Point of View: Tone, Style Reading
Work 3 given |
Aug. 10 |
Shapes of Character Reading
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Week 11 |
Aug. 15 |
Style Reading:
Work 3 due |
Aug. 17 |
Can Such Things Be? Reading |
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Week 12 |
Aug. 22 |
Ambiguity Reading
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Aug. 24 |
Theme Reading
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Week 13 |
Aug. 29 |
The Novel Genre Dystopian Utopia Reading
Quiz 2 (15 points, 1 hour) on Ernest Hemingway's short story "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" (1936). There will be two essay-type questions.
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Aug. 31 |
Dystopian Utopia Reading
Final paper outline due |
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Week 14 |
Sep. 5 |
Dystopian Utopia Reading
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Sep. 7 |
Dream Deferred Reading
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Week 15 |
Sep. 12 |
Trust and Betrayal Reading
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Sep. 14 |
Interpretations Reading
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Week 16 |
Sep. 19 |
If you are
using PowerPoint in your presentation, the
following links may help you design effective
slides. Also, make sure you save the presentation
to a version compatible with PowerPoint 2003. Program: (download pdf file)
1.
Confusing Heart: Edgar Allan Poe's "The
Tell-Tale Heart" 10:00–10:25 a.m., BRK 411 Moderator:
Isaraporn Kitcholwiwat Speakers: 1. "The Denial of Truth in Edgar Allan Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart,'" Ornrumpa Kidmai 2. "The Narrator's Mind: Inner Conflict in 'The Tell-Tale Heart,'" Araniya Wipatavit 3. "The Use of Light-Darkness and Sound-Silence in Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart,'" Proud Permpoolsombat Respondents: 1. Animmarn Leksawat 2. Luksika Sae-ung 3. Nawaporn Suksaran
2.
The Fight between the Heart and the Head of the
Insane Narrator in Edgar Allan Poe's "The
Tell-Tale Heart" 10:30–10:55 a.m., BRK 411 Moderator:
Supamon Rungruangratanakul Speakers: 1. "The Unsuccessful Attempt of the Head in Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart,'" Chomsiri Tirapornvitoon 2. "The
Tell-Tale Heart," Patteera Chaladmanakul 3. "Uncovered Insanity in Poe's 'The Tell-Tale Heart,'" Animmarn Leksawat Respondents: 1. Grittigar Sa-ngasang 2. Chaisopon
Ngamlerdsuporn 3. Ornrumpa Kidmai
3.
Impossibilities of Fiction 11:00–11:25 a.m., BRK 411 Moderator:
Lojana Kiatpermsin Speakers: 1. "Constructed Changes in Setting in 'The Swimmer,'" Luksika Sae-ung 2. "Popped Bubble: Denial
and Acceptance of Truth in Cheever's 'The
Swimmer,'" Grittigar Sa-ngasang 3. "Ned's Life:
Allegorical Setting in Cheever's 'The Swimmer,'"
Punnapa Stapornviriyakul Respondents: 1. Veerawin Suksantinunt 2. Araniya Wipatavit 3. Patteera Chaladmanakul
4.
An Intoxicating Journey to the Life of Neddy
Merrill 11:30–11:55 a.m., BRK 411 Moderator: Grittigar Sa-ngasang Speakers: 1. "Free Will: A
Philosophical Approach to Neddy's Freedom of
Choice," Veerawin Suksantinunt 2. "Swimming: The
Immersion in the River of Booze," Panrawee
Weerapan 3. "The
Exploration of Midsummer in Cheever's 'The Swimmer'
and Shakespeare's 'Sonnet 18,'" Isaraporn
Kitcholwiwat Respondents: 1. Kanchana Manalert 2. Aimratee Sidhikosol 3. Chomsiri Tirapornvitoon
Final paper due
|
Sep. 21 |
8:00–8:55 a.m., BRK 411 Intro Lit
theme potluck breakfast hosted by Section 5.
Currently on the menu: fried chicken, nuggets,
french fries, orange cake, buttered toast with
honey, juice, soda.
Program: (download pdf file) 5. Latin Sayings,
Ives's Playing: The Swiftness and Longevity of Time Flies 8:00–8:25 a.m., BRK 411 Moderator:
Ornrumpa Kidmai Speakers: 1. "Tempus Fugit," Kanchana Manalert 2. "Memento Mori,"
Chaisopon Ngamlerdsuporn 3. "Carpe Diem,"
Supamon Rungruangratanakul Respondents: 1. Isaraporn Kitcholwiwat 2. Lojana Kiatpermsin 3.
Proud Permpoolsombat 6. Self-Discovery through Knowledge in the Short Happy Life of Mrs. Mallard in Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour" 8:30–8:55 a.m., BRK 411 Moderator:
Kanchana Manalert Speakers: 1. "Love, the Blind Murderer," Lojana Kiatpermsin 2. "The Unknown Knowledge of
Mrs. Mallard," Aimratee Sidhikosol 3. "The Short Happy Life of
Louise Mallard," Nawaporn Suksaran Respondents: 1. Supamon
Rungruangratanakul 2. Panrawee Weerapan 3. Punnapa Stapornviriyakul
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Week 17 |
Sep. 26 |
Final Exam (8:30–11:30 a.m.)
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Last updated September 20, 2011