Department of English

Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University



2202234  Introduction to the Study of English Literature

 

 

Tentative Schedule

* Indicates course syllabus reading

Week 1

Aug. 10

1: What Is Poetry?
Reading
Aug. 12 No class (Mother's Day)

Week 2

Aug. 17

2

Reading

Aug. 19

3

Reading

Week 3

Aug. 24

4  

Reading

  • *William Shakespeare, Sonnet 116 ("Let me not to the marriage of true minds"), Shakespeare's Sonnets (1609)
Aug. 26 5

Reading

  • *Christina Rossetti, "Remember," Poems of Christina Rossetti (1904)

Week 4

Aug. 31

6

Reading

Sep. 2
7

Reading

Week 5

Sep. 7

8
Reading

Reading response 1 due

Sep. 9

9: Fiction: Short Stories 

Reading

  • *Flannery O'Connor, "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" (1955)

Week 6

Sep. 14

10 

Reading

  • *Flannery O'Connor, "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" (1955)

Sep. 16

11  

Reading

  • *Sarah Gailey, "A Lady's Maid" (2017)

Week 7

Sep. 21

12

Reading

  • *Sarah Gailey, "A Lady's Maid," Barnes and Noble Sci-Fi and Fantasy Blog (2017)

Sep. 23

13

Reading

  • *Brad Aiken, "Done That, Never Been There," Small Doses of the Future: A Collection of Medical Science Fiction Stories (2014; Chula access)
Reading response 2 due

Week 8

Sep. 28

14
Reading

  • *Brad Aiken, "Done That, Never Been There," Small Doses of the Future: A Collection of Medical Science Fiction Stories (2014; Chula access)

Sep. 30

15

Reading

  • *Brad Aiken, "Done That, Never Been There," Small Doses of the Future: A Collection of Medical Science Fiction Stories (2014; Chula access)

Week 9

Oct. 5

Test 1 (Midterm week: October 5–9, 2020)

(Online, open-book, 80 minutes, 20 points)  Test 1 consists of two parts: the first is on an unseen poem with short answer-type prompts, and the second is on syllabus poems with an essay-type prompt. The test paper in PDF form is posted on the course webpage at 9:35 a.m. A safe way to work is to type out your answers in a Microsoft Word or other word processing document, saving frequently, and attach the file to e-mail to acharn Puckpan, the grading instructor for this test, when you are done. Responses should reach her inbox when the 80 minutes are up (plus five minutes grace period). This means that your mail should arrive in her account no later than 11:00 a.m.

It is recommended that you pace yourself according to the suggested time allocations as devoting more than 15 minutes on part 1 will hurt your part 2 as it is worth more points. Take a few minutes to plan an outline before writing your essays. Formulate a thoughtful thesis/point in responding to the question that allows you to address effectively the requirements of the prompt. Answering every single question in the prompt cluster in order and separately may not result in a coherent and unified essay. Structure your writing to most suitably set up, develop and support your argument/idea/points in response to the prompt. Bullet points are not proper paragraph or essay form. Cite specific lines, words or features to illustrate and support your points and claims. You will want to show us your critical and analytical skills: demonstrate that you have read closely and understood the poems, that you can critically engage with that material, with discussion in class and outside of class, and with the test question, that you can synthesize material and knowledge gained and apply it to an unseen text, and that you can write clear and effective prose. Give your essay a title if you like.

Oct. 7

Test 2 (Midterm week: October 5–9, 2020)

(Online, 8:00–9:30 a.m., 20 points)  Test 2 234 test 2 has one page with three prompt choices for you to choose one to respond to in an essay on the three syllabus short stories. See below for more detailed instructions.
  • Answer sheet:
    • Download the answer sheet 234 test 2 answer sheet and enter your information in the header. You can do this in advance to save test taking time.
    • Rename your answer sheet file according to the indicated format, i.e.,
      20234 - Test - your name here please.docx
      Replace "your name here please" with your name (and the first syllable of your last name for the two Nuttanuns). Ex.
      20234 - Test 2 - somying.docx
    • Type your answer on this sheet and send it as an attachment (.docx) to reach tapanat.k@chula.ac.th by 9:30 a.m.
    • In addition, you may attach a PDF file of the completed answer sheet as a fixed record of your work, against grader comments and any accidental changes in the official file. Only the word-processing sheet will be graded.
    • Links to your answer (ex. on OneDrive, Google Drive, Google Doc, or online Word) are not acceptable and will not be graded.
  • Test paper: If you cannot download the test file on this page at 8:00 a.m., notify your section instructor immediately (and CC your message to tapanat.k@chula.ac.th). Be sure to refresh your screen to view the most current page and not the cached information on your device.
  • Time: The test begins at 8:00 a.m. E-mail of your answer sheet file reaches acharn Tapanat at tapanat.k@chula.ac.th no later than 9:30 a.m. If your file is undeliverable within five minutes of sending it, take a screenshot of the notification message and of your answer sheet and send it to inform your section instructor immediately (CC: tapanat.k@chula.ac.th).
  • Proofreading: Double check not only your work (Did your response match the prompt number you indicate? etc.), but also the send to e-mail address. A typo from haste can result in the test file not being delivered, as some of you have learned the hard way. To be safe, you can copy and paste acharn Tapanat's e-mail to your message.

Week 10

Oct. 12

16: Drama

Reading

  • *Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie (1944)

Oct. 14

17

Reading

  • *Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie (1944)

Week 11

Oct. 19

18

Reading

  • *Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie (1944)
    • Anna Miles, ed., "Study Guide," Sacramento Theatre Company (2016)

Oct. 21

19

Reading

  • *Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie (1944)

Week 12

Oct. 26

20

Reading

  • *Stephen Karam, Sons of the Prophet (1944)
Reading response 3 due

Oct. 28

21
Reading

  • *Stephen Karam, Sons of the Prophet (2011)

Week 13

Nov. 2

22

Reading

  • *Stephen Karam, Sons of the Prophet (2011)

Nov. 4

23: Fiction: The Novel

Reading

  • *Ali Smith, Girl Meets Boy (2007)

Week 14

Nov. 9

24

Reading

  • *Ali Smith, Girl Meets Boy (2007)

Nov. 11

25

Reading

  • *Ali Smith, Girl Meets Boy (2007)
  • Terry Eagleton, "What Is a Novel?," The English Novel: An Introduction (2005)

Week 15

Nov. 16

26
Reading

  • *Ali Smith, Girl Meets Boy (2007)
Reading response 4 due

Nov. 18

27

Reading

  • *Ali Smith, Girl Meets Boy (2007)

Week 16

Nov. 23

28: Presentations

(Groups present on their chosen literary work(s).)

Nov. 25

29: Presentations

(Groups present on their chosen literary work(s).)

Week 17

Nov. 30

Final Exam (online, 1:00–4:00 p.m., 60 points)

The final exam consists of three essay-type questions, one on each of the works we have read in the latter half of the semester: The Glass Menagerie, Sons of the Prophet and Girl Meets Boy. See below for instructions.

  • Answer sheet:
    • Download the answer sheet 234 final exam answer sheet and enter your information in the header. You can do this in advance to save test taking time.
    • Rename your answer sheet file according to the indicated format, i.e.,
      234 Final - your name here please.docx
      Replace "your name here please" with your name (and the first syllable of your last name for the two Nuttanuns). Ex.
      234 Final - somsak.docx
    • Type your answer on this sheet and send the (.docx) file to reach your section instructor by 4:05 p.m. (five-minute grace period included).
    • In addition, you may attach a PDF file of the completed answer sheet as a fixed record of your work, against grader comments and any accidental changes in the official file. Only the word-processing sheet will be graded.
    • Links to your answer (ex. on OneDrive, Google Drive, Google Doc, or online Word) are not acceptable and will not be graded.
  • Final exam paper:
    • The exam paper will be given in both Word and PDF (to check against in case your different Microsoft Word versions affect the content display).
    • If you cannot download the exam files on this page at 1:00 p.m., notify your section instructor immediately (and CC your message to tapanat.k@chula.ac.th). Be sure to refresh your screen to view the most current page and not the cached information on your device.
  • Troubleshooting:
    • If you experience delays and/or crashes during the exam period, record a short video clip of your work screen that shows your writing, the frozen or broken connection, and the date and time in the same shot. When your device and/or the internet connection recovers, record a short video clip of your work screen again, showing your writing, the returned function/connection, and the date and time to account for the time lapse. Send these along with your answer sheet at the end of the exam period. If file size limit is exceeded, make sure you send your answer sheet on time, and attach the video evidence in a separate later message.
    • If your answer file is undeliverable within five minutes of sending it, take a screenshot of the notification message and of your answer sheet and send it to inform your section instructor immediately (CC: tapanat.k@chula.ac.th).
    • Problems with responses and delivery can be avoided with proofreading. Double check not only your work (Did your answer match the prompt number you indicate? etc.), but also the send to e-mail address. A typo from haste can result in the exam file not being delivered, as some of you have learned the hard way. To be safe, you can copy and paste e-mail addresses to your message.

 

 


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Last updated November 30, 2020