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Literary & Historical Utopias
Date &
time
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in-class students write exam in
B2233
during class hours (3-6pm) on
Thursday, 9 July. No class meeting.
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Email exams
after last meeting on 7 July; due by 3pm Friday 10 July (unless prior arrangements).
No meeting 9 July: Instructor in office
(B2529-8); confer, phone (281 283 3380), or email (whitec@uhcl.edu).
Two essays of 1-2 hours each
- 1 essay from "Overview"
topics
- 1 essay from "Focus"
topics
content
details below
Relative
weight: 30-40% of final grade
Format:
In-class or email; open-book and open-notebook
Length:
Most essays in 2007 finals were 6-10 paragraphs, varied by paragraph lengths.
Required References
(across entire exam):
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Refer to 2-3 course
objectives (or parts) more than briefly--discuss, develop,
question or vary.
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Refer to 6 or more texts, at least half since the midterm.
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Especially
in your Overview essay, refer to texts both before and after the midterm.
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Regard the
Founding, Multicultural, & Alternative texts for 29-30 June and 6 July as
course texts.
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Refer to at least
one of your research postings, either applying research to a Focused
Topic or integrating into your Overview essay.
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Quote or refer
to at least one passage from the
2007 final exams or
2005 final exams
Optional
references:
Contents
Write two essays, one
from the "Overview" list and the other from the "Focus" topics
- Title both essays and indicate
topic number(s)--e. g. A1, B3.
- Combine topics as inspired, but not required.
- If essays overlap
with each other or midterm,
no need to avoid or write everything over. Refer
quickly to your own work as you would someone else's.
- Objectives are listed with most topics. Don't feel
limited to those objectives, but develop objectives for both essays.
- Question prompts are not checklists. Your essays establish their own premises
with reference to texts and objectives.
A. Overview topics
(choose 1 topic from group A, or combine topics, for
a single essay)
Topic A1. Utopia as Literature
(Objectives 1 &
2, maybe others)
Discussion of utopias often leads to religion, history,
politics, sociology, economics, gender, family--everything that constitutes a
society. (Interdisciplinary objective 4.) How does a Literature course keep literary
considerations foremost in the study of utopias?
2-3 course texts
Optional approaches:
- What do you learn about literature and fiction from studying this
special genre? Or, how did fiction help you learn about utopian
societies and thought?
- Since Utopias are written primarily for social purposes, what strategies, frustrations, or rewards are involved in keeping the
"literature" aspect in sight?
- Non-literary aspects appeal to non-Literature
students or students lacking confidence in genre.
- Recall passages or scenes
in utopian fiction that deliver literary satisfactions. Identify what may be
literary as opposed to cultural or social about such pleasures.
- If literary purposes are overlooked, what risks to
utopian studies?
Topic A2. Utopias: Monocultural or Multicultural?
(Obj. 3h & 4c)
Obj. 3h.
How may utopian texts, communities, and studies exemplify multiculturalism or monoculturalism?
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Does defending utopian studies as
"Western Civilization" simply muscle out multiculturalism?
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Is the utopian impulse universal or
specific only to Western culture or civilization?
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If utopias or millennia are detected
in non-Western texts or traditions, are such terms appropriate, or do we
simply project our identities and values on cultures that are in fact doing
something else altogether?
Assignment: Address one or more
of Obj. 3h's questions, or develop a new question on related issues of utopia
and multiculturalism.
How much should utopian
studies invite, require, or repress of racial / ethnic
difference or dissent? Consider the multicultural value of
"equality and difference" in relation to utopias' emphasis on equality
with risks of conformity.
3-4 text references:
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at least one text from 30 January (slave
narratives, King's Dream speech,
Chief Seattle,
Wovoka) + Toni Morrison's
Paradise
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historical utopia?--race may not be emphasized, but what
impressions of mono- or multi-culturalism?
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research posting?
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For a "monocultural" utopia, consider connecting to one
of our primary utopian texts or to the dominant culture texts from Founding
Utopias on 29 January.
Content prompts:
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Did "multicultural texts" contribute to the course, or
did the effort strain the concept?
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Are utopian studies fundamentally a "Western Civilization" theme
and not a universal concept?
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Despite the diversification of literary studies, utopian
studies seems to meet multicultural literature only tangentially. How might these
fields
meet more productively without losing essential western-civilization backgrounds
of classic utopian thought?
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Minority or multicultural narratives often operate by
"oppression > liberation." Are such narratives compatible with utopian or
dystopian literature?
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Suggest revisions to Objectives 3h & 4c?
Topic A3.
Teaching Utopia (Obj. 5 &
others depending on answer content)
Evaluate the significance, worthiness, and range of
utopian studies as a topic for literature courses at any educational level.
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What
gains and risks does the subject pose?
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What potential for motivating or
alienating students?
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What positives and negatives for utopian studies in
contrast to our educational & economic emphasis on heroic
individualism in dystopian texts like 1984 and Anthem?
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Personal & professional experiences are welcome, but
return to objectives and texts in this course or other courses.
Topic A4.
All-purpose Overview Option
Develop an Overview essay that helps meet the final
requirements and relates your learning to your personal &
professional interests.
Organization and content are open to
students' direction. Content options offer possibilities, but ask yourself
what you've learned and relate this learning to other courses,
readings, teaching, research, career, lifestyle, or other social issues on any
scale.
Content options:
- What subjects do utopian studies open for study that are otherwise repressed or ignored?
- Continue your midterm essay?
- Learning outcomes?
- Shift in literary emphasis from formal issues to social
significance
- utopia / dystopia as single subject?
- observe an issue, subject, or problem that rose
repeatedly from web reviews or class discussions
Requirements:
Refer to 3 or more texts from across the semester
Refer to 1 or more course objectives, developing your
topic's relevance to the objective.
Reference options:
Outside texts, courses, issues are all possibilities, but
speak to this course's objectives, materials, and methods.
B. Focused Topics
(choose 1 topic from group B, or combine topics, for
a single essay)
Topic B1. Evaluate and revise a course
objective (or part of one, or some combination). You are welcome to continue
ideas begun in your midterm, making direct references to what you wrote
then and enlarging or extending earlier positions.
Topic B2. Evaluate
“millennialism” (Obj. 2d) in utopian narratives. How does
millennialism change the concept or dynamics of utopia? What literary or
cultural advantages or disadvantages result?
Refer to Revelation and 2-3
other texts.
Topic B3. Final course
text: Callenbach's Ecotopia (1975); answer one of the following,
or attempt some combination if so inspired.
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a. How much does
Callenbach’s Ecotopia match or vary
generic conventions of utopian fiction in our earlier utopian texts? How much is an ecotopian concept already
built into other course texts? Refer primarily to
Ecotopia
but also to two other texts. If Herland,
consider that both involve ecology and feminism--in a word,
"eco-feminism": evaluate the assumed connection.
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b. As texts for public school curricula, how
successfully might Ecotopia or other utopian texts of our utopian
texts replace standard assigned texts in the dystopian tradition such as
Anthem, 1984, and Brave New World? What problems or
rewards?
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c. Using Ecotopia as a leading
example, what are some frustrations and pleasures of reading utopian fiction? In what ways does or doesn't it
measure up to the quality of literature you expect in a graduate seminar?
Compare to other texts this semester. How do you rationalize these issues of
literary quality?
Topic B4: Convergence of literature and history in utopian
studies (Obj. 3, 4).
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What connections did you make between these two aspects
of utopian studies?
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How might you help others share
and develop such learning?
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What relations are
possible between literary and historical utopias?
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Suggestions for the seminar's coordination of these
aspects?
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How might you re-organize our objectives so that the "Literary Objectives" and the "Historical
Objectives" are less separate?
Topic B5: Focused review and application of research
postings & other sources
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Plan or imagine a larger research project based on your
research posting(s) and other sources in this course or beyond.
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Review highlights, outcomes, and possible extensions of your
research (in postings and elsewhere)
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Relate to at least one course objective.
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Consider web reviews, class discussions, outside
readings, other courses at any level as student or teacher.
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The "learning path" offers a familiar organization:
What was the source of your interest, what did you learn, why does it
matter, what next?
Evaluation standards: As in most Literature courses, quality of
reading and writing is key to distinguishing excellence and competence--not just covering course materials but
referring to them extensively and organizing analyses into unified,
compelling essays.
Competence in spelling, punctuation, grammar, and clarity are
taken for granted in graduate studies. Given time pressures, occasional careless errors
won't break your grade, but chronic errors
must be factored.
Good writing is always inventive, surprising, and hard to
describe, but outstanding literary criticism observably extends a line of
argument through thorough development of textual examples.
Another, more subtle sign is writing that mixes the
author's language and style with that of the course. Reference to course
objectives is the most dependable source of the course's common language.
Thematic unity, continuity, and transitions are essential. The best
exams connect parts to form larger ideas.
Pause between paragraphs to review what you've written or preview what comes next. Summarize.
Explain. Keep your larger goal in sight for yourself and your reader.
Audience: Anyone in our seminar should recognize your terms and explanations
and enjoy your personal contributions and style. Future students may read your
essays in our "Model Assignments." But keep the
instructor in sight--connect with shared terms and texts, and
"write up" in organization and ambition of thought. You may identify and address a special hypothetical
audience, like another classroom or a book group, but such a move is not
expected or required.
In-class materials: Write in blue or black ink in a bluebook
or on handy paper. Fronts and backs, single-spacing acceptable. No pencil,
please. Just cross through anything you don't want me to read.
Email:
email a copy of your answers to instructor at whitec@uhcl.edu.
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The mistake students are most
likely to make is to send it to “white” rather than “whitec”;
if you send it to “white,” it goes to another teacher.
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Attach appropriate word processing file(s) to an email for
whitec@uhcl.edu.
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Copy the contents of your word processing file, then paste them into an
email message to me at whitec@uhcl.edu
Spacing: No need to double-space, but OK if you do.
All web postings go single-space.
Prep time
and writing time: Spend 3-4 hours writing the exam you will submit, but
spend as much time preparing as you like (or can find). Preparations could
include the usual review of notes and texts, but you are also encouraged to
outline, practice drafting, and after drafting, revise or rewrite as time
permits. Outlines and previous drafts count as notes,
which you may consult as you write your midterm for submission.
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