LITR 4232 American Renaissance 

Revised Syllabus for fall 2008 (post-Hurricane Ike) 

Spring 2008, 10-11:20 Tuesday & Thursday, Bayou 1218

Instructor: Craig White      Office: 2529-8 Bayou            email: whitec@uhcl.edu

Phone: (281) 283-3380                Office Hours:  TBA & by appointment

Caveat: Data stated and contracts implied in this syllabus may change with minimal notice in fair hearings at class meetings.


TEXTS: Nina Baym, ed., The Norton Anthology of American Literature, 7th ed., volume B: 1820-1865. 2007.

James Fenimore Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans. 1826. NY: Penguin Classics, 1986.

 


Course Objectives:

1. To use "close reading" and "Historicism" as ways of studying classic, popular, and representative literature and cultural history of the "American Renaissance" (the generation before the Civil War).

2. To study the movement of "Romanticism," the narrative genre of "romance," and the related styles of the "gothic" and "the sublime." (The American Renaissance is the major period of American Romantic Literature.)
Related topics or themes: the Byronic hero; correspondence

3. To use literature as a basis for discussing representative problems and subjects of American culture (Historicism), such as equality (race, gender, class); modernization and tradition; the individual, family; and community; nature; the role of writers in an anti-intellectual society.


Graded Assignments (details via links):

Percentages listed are only symbolic of approximate relative weight; grades are not computed mathematically but by letter grades, which may include pluses and minuses. Pluses and minuses may appear on final grades:

 

Presentations (general requirements):

Attendance policy: You are expected to attend every scheduled class meeting, but you are permitted two free cuts without comment or penalty.  Attendance may not be taken systematically, but missing more than two meetings jeopardizes your status in the course.  If you continue to cut or miss, you should drop the course.  Even with medical or other emergency excuses, a high number of absences or partial absences will result in a lower or failing grade.

Meeting and reading schedule fall 2008

(Except for The Last of the Mohicans, all page numbers refer to The Norton Anthology of American Literature, 7th ed., vol. B: 1800-1865)

Tuesday, 26 August: Introduction; concept of "The American Renaissance"


Thursday, 28 August: Washington Irving 951-985 (“Rip Van Winkle” and “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”)


Tuesday, 2 September: conclude Irving, begin James Fenimore Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans, chapters 1-3 (pages 1-35 in Penguin Classics edition.)

Guide to Last of the Mohicans

Twain, Lawrence on Cooper


Thursday, 4 September: Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans, through chapter 13 (thru p. 133 in Penguin edition.)

Guide to Last of the Mohicans

Twain, Lawrence on Cooper

Text-Objective Discussion: Bryan McDonald


Tuesday, 9 September: Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans, through chapter 24 (thru p. 254 in Penguin edition.)

Guide to Last of the Mohicans

Twain, Lawrence on Cooper

Web highlight (midterms on Mohicans): Nicole Bippen


Classes of 11, 16, 18 September cancelled due to Hurricane Ike. To make up for lost contact hours, next four class meetings are extended by one hour.


Thursday, 23 or 25 September: Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans, complete (thru p. 350 in Penguin edition.)

Guide to Last of the Mohicans

Twain, Lawrence on Cooper


Tuesday, 30 September: Emergence & repression of minority voices. William Apess (Pequot) 1051-58.  The Cherokee Memorials 1263-1268; Sojourner Truth, "Speech to the Women's Rights Convention . . . " 1695-6

Text-Objective Discussion: Karina Ramos


Thursday, 2 October: Ralph Waldo Emerson 1106-1113: introduction + opening 5 pages of Nature; 1163-68: opening 5 pages of “Self-Reliance”

Text-Objective Discussion: Martin Bidegaray


Tuesday, 7 October: "First-Wave Feminism." Margaret Fuller 1637-1659, introduction + from "The Great Lawsuit"; 1675-76: "Fourth of July"; Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Declaration of Sentiments.


Thursday, 9 October: Harriet Jacobs 1808-29, from Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl


Tuesday, 14 October: Frederick Douglass 2060-2143, introduction + (Narrative of the Life . . . + opening of “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?”

Text-Objective Discussion: Adrian Holden


Thursday, 16 October: Henry David Thoreau 1853-1872, introduction + “Resistance to Civil Government” + Backgrounds to Civil Disobedience

Text-Objective Discussion: Faron Samford


Tuesday, 21 October: Harriet Beecher Stowe, 1698-1751, 1780-1792: introduction + selections from Uncle Tom’s Cabin

Text-Objective Discussion: Shanna Farmer

Text-Objective Discussion: Emily Newsome


Thursday, 23 October: midterm exam


Tuesday, 28 October: Edgar Allan Poe 1528: Introduction; “Sonnet—To Science”; "To Helen" 1534-6: “The City in the Sea”; 1542: “Annabel Lee.”

Text-Objective Discussion: Josh Hughey (poem[s] besides "Annabel Lee")

Text-Objective Discussion: Alicia D. Atwood ("Annabel Lee")


Thursday, 30 October: Poe's fiction 1543-1565: “Ligeia”; “The Fall of the House of Usher”

Text-Objective Discussion: Natalie Walker


Tuesday, 4 November: Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1272-76 introduction +  1311-20: “The Minister’s Black Veil.”

Web highlight (final exams on gothic with Hawthorne or Poe): Cheryl Romig


Thursday, 6 November: Hawthorne continued 1289-98: “Young Goodman Brown.”

Text-Objective Discussion: Veronica Nadalin


Tuesday, 11 November: Walt Whitman first meeting: introduction 2190-95 +  “There Was a Child Went Forth” + selections from Song of Myself : sections 1-5 (pp. 2210-13), 19 (p. 2223), 21 (pp. 2224-5), 24 (pp. 2227-9), 32-34 (pp. 2232-9), 46-52 (pp. 2249-54).

Whitman Style Sheet

Whitman Influence

Text-Objective Discussion: Alicia D. Atwood


Thursday, 13 November: Whitman continued: “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” 2263-7

Whitman Style Sheet

Whitman Influence


Tuesday, 18 November: Abraham Lincoln 1627-37: "House Divided speech," “Gettysburg Address,” + “Second Inaugural Address.” Research Project due.

Text-Objective Discussion: Cathrine Marie Nunn


Thursday, 20 November: conclude Whitman: “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d” 2282-8

Whitman Style Sheet

Whitman Influence


Tuesday, 25 November: Emily Dickinson first meeting

Emily Dickinson style sheet

Introduction 2554-58; Poems: "I like a look of Agony" (2558); "Wild Nights" (2565); "There's a certain slant of light" (2567); "I felt a Funeral, in my Brain" (2568)

Text-Objective Discussion: Bethany Roachell


Tuesday, 2 December: Emily Dickinson second meeting

Emily Dickinson style sheet

Poems: "I never lost as much but twice" (2558); "These are the days when Birds come back--" (2559); "Come Slowly--Eden!"; "I'm Nobody! Who are you?" (2564); "I reason, Earth is short--"; "The Soul selects her own Society--" (2574); "Dare you see a Soul at the white heat?"; "It sifts from Leaden Sieves--" [riddle poem]

 Text-Objective Discussion: Elyse Christine Martinez


Thursday, 4 December: Emily Dickinson fourth meeting

Emily Dickinson style sheet

Poems: "I heard a Fly buzz--when I died--" (2579); "This World is not Conclusion" (2572); "I started Early--Took my Dog--" (2582); "I cannot live with You--"; "Because I could not stop for Death--" (2578); "A narrow Fellow in the Grass" [riddle poem] (2588); "A Route of Evanescence" [riddle poem] (2591)

Text-Objective Discussion: Gena Martinez


Tuesday, 9 December, 10:00am-12:50pm: final exam (in-class or email)