LITR 5831 World Literature Colonial-Postcolonial
 
Assignments 
 


Take-home / email
 

Midterm  2011
 

including Research Plan

Model Assignments

Midterm Submissions 2009

Midterm submissions 2008

Midterm submissions 2005

Midterm submissions 2003

(no research plans + different texts)

dates, data, etc.

Due 29 September-2 October

No class meeting 29 September; instructor in office to confer, phone, email.

Submission format: Email attachment to instructor at whitec@uhcl.edu, or arrange otherwise. No hard copy.

Submissions are posted (as is) on course webpage by instructor.

Weight: 20-30% of final grade

Organization:

+

Essay length: Write one long essay or 2-3 briefer ones

Research Plan Length: 2-3 paragraphs, or incorporate into essay(s) (details at link: Research Plan)

Title your essay(s).

Spacing: No need to double-space, but OK. All electronic copies converted to single-space for onscreen reading .

Prep time and writing time: Spend app. 3-4 hours writing your exam in its final form, but prepare as much as you like or can. Preparations include review of notes and texts, but also outlining and drafting, which you may use as notes when you write your final version.

Your research plan may be either a separate text or part of your midterm essay(s)--whatever works best for you.

Special requirements:

Possible references--not required but potentially helpful:


topics, questions, assignment

(Essays--Research Plan linked separately)

Organization: 1-3 Essay(s) on Objectives 1-3

Write an essay describing your learning experience in the seminar, its subject, readings, and objectives . Suggestions appear below, but I'll read what you send me. Course-specific expectations:

If you're really stumped, ask yourself some questions and start building some answers. I'm not looking for this or that particular insight as much as how you respond honestly and constructively to our shared readings and discussions with the objectives (terms and themes) in play.

Purpose of exam:

Questions / topics: Write your best essay about the course, its readings, and its subject and objectives.

You can't cover every aspect of Objectives 1-3. (The seminar won't have covered everything by midterm.)

Cover as much course material as you can explain compellingly and readably (I’ll let you know if you don’t do enough), but you can’t cover everything and aren’t expected to. Much of your own contribution will be selecting, prioritizing, emphasizing, and connecting what matters to you and whatever set of identities you represent. Make it interesting and make it matter, first to yourself and then to a reader.

Possible Prompts:


Organization and Style

Overall, your task as a writer is to explain and demonstrate your understanding of our course's content and methods.

Given Obj. 1, you should consider putting our texts and concepts in dialogue:

Put yourself in dialogue with the course--self / other, known / unknown, familiar / unfamiliar, America / world

Since our course's materials may be unfamiliar, your writing strategy might personalize your essay(s).

One possibility would be to share something of your own literary background, interests, and ambitions, progressing to how this course may or may not match or extend them.

Or address a future student just beginning the course. Guide or help them anticipate the course, assignments, style.

The "path of learning" is another personalizing or humanizing approach. It may sound mickey-mouse at first, but it can take you places, and you can submerge the artificial parts.


Required References

(somewhere in your midterm)


Evaluation standards

Evaluation standards: As in most Literature courses, quality of reading and writing is the key to judging excellent work from competent work—not just reproducing data but organizing it into a unified, compelling essay.

Instructor's Reaction & continuing dialogue:

A week or two after submission, you'll receive an email from the instructor including your grade report with a midterm grade and a note responding to your effort and accomplishment.

Consider replying to instructor about your midterm note. Graduate students work with faculty somewhere between master-apprentice and colleagues. Discussing your graded work can be a starting point for learning to interact with faculty. If you don't communicate in this way, look for other opportunities before semester ends. Professors can be intimidating and unhip, but they're used to cooperating if you cultivate chances. We're just older versions of yourselves!


Preparing for your midterm

The midterm is designed to give the student considerable choice in emphasis and outcomes while requiring coverage and competence in common course materials. In the most successful submissions for these and similar exercises, students use their own voices and references to express and advance ideas or themes developed by the seminar's texts, objectives, lectures, presentations, and discussions.

A dependable principle for such preparations is to start as early as possible so that your conscious and unconscious mind have time to work through the mental operations implicit in your interests and the subject matter. One hour a week ahead is worth two hours the night before.

1. Reflect on what you think about when you think of the seminar and its readings. A normal exercise for discovering your mind is to think about a subject before sleeping, then pay attention to what you think about the subject on waking.

Talk about the seminar and its subjects with someone in or outside the course and pay attention to what you find yourself saying and what questions your acquaintance asks. What assumptions are you and your acquaintance operating on, and what about the subject conforms to or exceeds those assumptions?

2. Start notes for the midterm. Write down any impulse toward the subject matter, no matter how obvious or blunt. When you return to your notes, review them--extend some, cut some, put different notes together.

3. Review assignment, model assignments, evaluation standards.

4. Review & reread parts of texts that either worked for you or remained puzzling.

5. Start drafting. Professors or professional readers can usually detect the difference between raw, unedited prose that was recently composed and never reviewed, and prose that has been reviewed, refined, and extended.

6. Have a trusted reader read what you've written. Ask them to indicate what worked and what didn't. Many readers won't tell you what didn't work because they'll just glide or bump through it, but you can infer by process of elimination.

7. Keep up with what's working for you (or not) for sake of final exam development and/or conference with instructor.

8. Don't forget the Research Proposal!

9. Welcome to email or phone instructor any time before or during submission-window. Always better to solve problems beforehand, plus I like seeing you working on problems. I check emails more often than phone messages.

10. When you think you've finished, put the exam aside for at least an hour, then give it a final read-through: proofread, edit, correct, improve. At the graduate level, "better" is more important than "late."

See also "Possible Prompts" above.


Course objectives 1-3

primary objectives for seminar discussions and exams

(Welcome to refer to other objectives.)

1.  To bring classic literature of European colonialism and emerging literature from the postcolonial world into dialogue—either conscious debates between authors or exchanges arranged by later readers.

1a. To mediate the “culture wars” between the “old canon” of Western classics and the “new canon” of multicultural literature by studying them together rather than separately.

1b. To extend the colonial-postcolonial transition to a contemporary third wave of transnational migration. Alternative terms: post-national, post-race, post-modern.

2. To theorize the novel as the defining genre of modernity, both for colonial and postcolonial cultures.

2a. By definition, the genre of the novel combines fundamental representational modes of narrative and dialogue.

2b. To extend genre studies to poetry and film (especially Derek Walcott of St. Lucia, West Indies [b. 1930; Nobel Prize for Literature, 1992]).

3.  To account for Americans’ difficulties with colonial and postcolonial discourse.

3a. Is America (USA) an imperial, colonial, or neo-imperial nation? Or an “empire in denial?”

3b. Does American resistance to or ignorance of postcolonial criticism react to this discourse’s development from outposts of the former British Empire and French / Francophone traditions? 

3c. How may colonial-postcolonial discourse fit into American nationalist and multicultural curricula? If this is your only colonial-postcolonial course, how may it serve your scholarly or teaching interests?