English 517:
Literature
of the Vietnam War
Syllabus
/ Reading Schedule / Assignments
George
Herring Essay (PDF) /Tobey
Herzog Essay (PDF)
Dr. Susan Farrell
26 Glebe Street, #205
953-5785
farrells@cofc.edu
Office Hours
MW 3:15-4
TR 1:30-3
and by appointment
Books
--Graham Greene, The Quiet American
--Philip Caputo, A Rumor of War
--Michael Herr, Dispatches
--Le Ly Hayslip, When Heaven and Earth Changed Places
-Jusef Komunyakaa, Dien Cai Dau
--Tim O'Brien, The Things they Carried
--Tim O'Brien, In the Lake of the Woods
--Robert Olen Butler, A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
--Bobbie Ann Mason, In Country
--Essays by Herring and Herzog available as PDF files
Course Description
This course examines a wide variety of artistic responses to the Vietnam
War. We will read and discuss memoirs, novels, short stories, and poetry arising
out of the war. We will also watch and analyze three Vietnam War films. We'll
examine these works in both the historical context of the war and in the literary
and aesthetic context of late twentieth century America.
Coursework
Required work for the course includes careful reading of all assigned
literature, attentive watching of the three assigned films, and active participation
in class discussions. Please come to class prepared with questions and comments
about the assigned reading or discussion topic for each day--the success of
the course depends on your involvement.
Papers, Presentations
Early in the semester, you will choose (or be assigned) one of the books on
the syllabus. Your first major paper (an annotated bibliography) and your
class presentation will focus on this text. The bibliography will be due on
the same day that you present your research findings to the class—the second
day we discuss the work. Coursework will also include an approximately 15-page
research paper due at the end of the class. The research paper may focus on
the same work you researched for your bibliography, or you may choose to focus
on a different work (either literature or film) or on multiple works. Whatever
your topic, I will expect you to place your own reading of the work or works
within a critical context relevant to it. A draft of the research paper will
be due on Monday, April 25th. We will spend time the final week of class discussing
student drafts. I will provide more detailed information about papers and
presentations well in advance of their due date.
Position Papers
In addition to the two major written assignments (the annotated bibliography
and the research paper), I will ask you to write eight short (approximately
500 words) position papers. For each book and film on the syllabus, I’ll provide
a list of possible topics. Position papers will be due on scheduled days;
they will not be accepted late. You may choose which eight papers to write
and which to skip.
Note: You may not write one of your position papers on the book that you write
your annotated bibliography on.
Exams
There will be a final exam in the class. I will give you more information
about it before the end of the semester.
Grading
| Your final grade will be determined according to these percentages: | Letter grades assigned will have the following numerical values: | |||||
| Position Papers | 20% |
A+/98 |
B+/88 |
C+/78 |
D+/68 |
|
| Annotated Bibliography | 20% |
A /95 |
B /85 |
C /75 |
D /65 |
|
| Presentation | 5% |
A-/92 |
B-/82 |
C-/72 |
D-/62 |
|
| Research Paper | 30% |
F = 50 |
Paper
not turned in = 0 |
|||
| Final Exam | 25% |
|||||
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Reading Schedule
Read at least the portions of the books listed before coming to class on
the dates below.
Please note that the films will be shown in Physicians
Auditorium on scheduled Mondays, from 1:00-4:00. I hope you make every
effort to attend these screenings since it’s much better to see these war
films on the big screen with a real audience. If you can’t make a film
screening, though, you may rent the movie yourself and watch it at home.
Week 1:
Course Introduction
Week 2:
MLK Holiday—No Class
W
19 January
George Herring, “American and Vietnam:
The Unending War”
Week
3:
M 24 January
The
Quiet American (Parts
One and Two)
The Quiet American (Parts Three and Four)
presentations; position papers due
Week 4:
M 31 January
A Rumor of War (Prologue and Part
One)
W
2 February
A Rumor of War (Parts Two, Three, and Epilogue)
Week 5:
Dispatches (through “Khe Sanh”)
W
9 February
Dispatches (finish book)
Week 6:
The Deer Hunter (Physicians Auditorium,
1:00-4:00)
W
16 February
Discuss The Deer Hunter
Week 7:
When Heaven and Earth Changed Places (Chapters 1-5)
W 23 February
When Heaven and Earth Changed Places (Chapters 6-end)
FINDING A FORM
Week 8:
Dien Cai Dau (Through "Tu Do Street")
W
2 March
Dien Cai Dau (finish the book)
Week 9:
M
7 March
Spring Break
W
9 March
Spring Break
Week 10:
M 14 March
Apocalypse Now (Physicians Auditorium, 1:00-4:00)
W
16 March
Discuss Apocalypse Now
position papers due
Week 11:
M 21 March
The Things They Carried (through “Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong”)
W
23 March
The Things They Carried (finish book)
WAR’S AFTERMATH
Week 12:
M 28 March
In the Lake of the Woods (Chapters
1-18)
In the Lake of the Woods (finish book)
Week 13:
M
4 April
A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain (through "A Ghost Story")
W 6 April
A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain (finish book)
presentations; position papers due
Week 14:
M 11 April
Platoon
(Physicians Auditorium, 1:00-4:00)
W
13 April
Discuss Platoon
position papers due
Week
15:
In Country
(through Chapter 18)
W 20 April
In Country (finish book)
presentations;
position papers due
Week 16:
M 25 April
Discuss
drafts of research papers
W 27 April
Discuss
drafts of research papers
Final
Exam; Saturday, May
7, 12-3 pm
Position Papers / Annotated Bibliography / Research Paper
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Your position papers should be approximately 500 words (they should be no more than two typed pages), so you'll have to think carefully about what you want to say and make every word count. You’re required to turn in 8 position papers over the course of the semester. Remember that late position papers are not accepted. You may either respond to one of the suggested topics or come up with your own if you’d prefer.
Click on the book to see specific topics for each.
Possible Topics:
-- Which of Greene's main characters, Fowler or Pyle, do you think finally
comes off better by the end of the novel? Does Greene want us to like or
sympathize more with one than the other of these two men? Why? How does
his presentation of character seem to fit with Greene's ideas about the
French War in Vietnam, or about colonialism in general? What evidence in
the book supports your view?
--What do you think is the function of Fowler’s English wife in the text?
Why does Greene include this character?
--Explore the theme of religion in the novel—how does Fowler’s faith (or
lack thereof) affect the decisions and choices he makes? What do you think
Greene is saying about religious faith in general?
--Do you think Phuong is presented stereotypically in the book? Why or why
not?
Possible Topics:
-- On page xvii of the Prologue, Caputo writes that evil was inherent not
in the men but in the circumstances of the war. Does Caputo change this
view anywhere in the book? Contradict it?
Where does Caputo finally believe the evil of the war lies? Who's to blame?
--Toward the end of his Postscript to A Rumor of War, Caputo writes
that the Vietnam War "was not an anomalous chapter in our national
history." He adds, however, that "it was an anomalous chapter
in our national mythology" (353). Using specific examples from the
book, can you explain what you believe Caputo means by these statements?
--In his Postscript, Caputo discusses some of his stylistic decisions in
writing the book. What about the book’s style strikes you? Why does Caputo
write the book in the manner he does? How does style help support theme?
Do you think that Caputo’s structural and stylistic choices are successful?
Possible Topics:
--We’ll talk quite a bit about Herr’s use of language in the book. How would
you characterize his style? What sources does he seem to be drawing on with
his use of language? Does the language work for you?
--Dispatches is often described as an example of the New Journalism.
In your view, how does Herr’s reporting in the book differ from conventional
journalism? What does Herr have to say about conventional war reporting?
What do you think Herr believes the role of the war correspondent to be?
--Critic Maria Bonn criticizes Herr for conflating war experience and sexual
experience and thus reinforcing patriarchal notions of heroism and glory.
“Despite Herr's search for new means of representation and for a new way
of understanding,” Bonn argues, he finally locates himself squarely in old
stereotypes and sensibilities." Do you agree with this assessment or
not? Do you find the book sexist?
--Finally, do you think Herr romanticizes the war in Vietnam or not? If
so, does this seem to you to be a problem? How do his final conclusions
differ from or concur with those drawn by Caputo at the end of A Rumor
of War?
Possible Topics:
--Because the Clairton scenes are so realistic, the Vietnam scenes seemed
melodramatic and strange to many critics. The Russian roulette scenes, for
instance, have no historical validity. What do you think about this issue?
Do you agree with critics who dislike the Vietnam portions of the film or
do you think they work? Why do you think Cimino chose to make the two halves
of his film so different?
--Critics also disagreed about the depiction of Vietnamese in the film,
some arguing it was racist and stereotypical and others disagreeing. What
do you think?
-- What do you think about the two deer hunting scenes in the film? Why
are these included? What do they show? What does Michael's "one shot"
philosophy in the hunt before going off to war say about his character?
What's going on with the conflict between Michael and Stan? How does the
second deer-hunting scene differ from the first? How has Michael changed?
Has his relationship with Stan changed as well?
--Comment on the western frontier mythology in the film. Does the film’s
title evoke James Feminore Cooper’s The Deerslayer, for instance?
Is Michael at all like a typical western hero?
--What do you think of the film’s ending? What is Cimino trying to accomplish?
Does the ending work?
Possible Topics:
--Obviously, this book comes from a very different perspective than those
we've already read in the course. Does anything in the book so far surprise
you or contradict some of your assumptions about the war in Vietnam? Did
you learn anything new, particularly in light of the two books we've already
read and the film we've seen? How would you compare Hayslip's narrative
of her experiences to those of Caputo and Herr?
--What do you think of the structure Hayslip uses—the way she juxtaposes
her past as a young girl and woman in Vietnam with her present (1986) return
to the country? Does this structure seem to work well? Why do you think
Hayslip uses it? Are the two stories of equal interest?
--After reading the whole book, do the charges made against Hayslip by various
Vietnamese ex-patriot communities in the U.S. ring true? Do you believe
Hayslip is too kind to the Communists in the book, particularly those in
power in the mid-80’s?
--What do you think of Hayslip’s relationship with Anh? Do you find it believable?
What about Hayslips’s relationships with men in general?
Possible Topics:
--Explore a repeated image or motif that you’ve noticed Komunyakaa using
in more than one poem. How does this repeated image work through the book
as a whole?
--What special concerns of African American soldiers in Vietnam does Komunyakaa
raise in his work? How does the issue of race figure into his poetry?
--How would you characterize Komunyakaa’s style as a poet? Are there other
poets you’d compare him to, or schools of poetry you’d place him in? Are
there ways you feel he is noticeably different from other contemporary poets?
--Choose one of Komunyakaa’s poems and provide a brief close reading of
it.
Possible Topics:
--Focus on a particular scene of your choice from the movie and explore
and interpret what the scene is all about. You might choose one of the opening
scenes in the film: Willard in his hotel room when he's called to his mission
or the scene with the General at lunch when Willard is actually given his
assignment. Or you might choose one of the stops on the strange journey
upriver: Colonel Kilgore and his surfing obsession; the USO show; searching
the Vietnamese sampan; the nearly surreal scene at the Do Lung Bridge; or
the long ending scene at Kurtz's compound. Whichever scene you choose, you
should think about what happens in it, about what Coppola seems to be saying
in the scene, about what the scene adds to the whole point of the film.
--One common criticism about American depictions of the Vietnam War is that
they erase the Vietnamese themselves. Do you think Apocalypse Now does this?
You might consider, for example, the ways that Southern California culture
is exported into the Vietnam of the film—surfing, drugs, rock-n-roll. Or
what about the way the film depicts Americans fighting other Americans as
Willard enacts his mission to kill Kurtz?
--Why do you think Coppola included the references to T.S. Eliot and literary
modernism in the film? (Kurtz quotes from Eliot’s “The Hollow Men”; the
books on Kurtz’s shelves include Sir James Frazer's The Golden Bough and
Jess Weston's From Ritual to Romance, books on cultural mythology very influential
on the moderns, especially on Eliot’s “The Wasteland”).
Possible Topics:
--How reliable is narrator Tim O’Brien? Does author O’Brien have ironic
distance from his narrator, or are the views of the narrator meant to represent
those of the author?
-- In an October 1991 interview, Daniel Bourne made the following comment
to Tim O'Brien:
Speaking of credibility, in The Things They Carried there
are numerous devises--come ons, enticements, snares for the reader--such
as starting out stories with "It's time to be blunt" or "this
is true," having one story supposedly give the facts about the evolution
of another story, or naming the narrator after yourself. It seems to me
that an appropriate metaphor for talking about this aspect of the book would
be that you're seducing the reader, and that obviously the reader can have
ambivalent feelings toward such a seduction. Do you see that?
O'Brien replied to Bourne's comment in this way:
I'd say that maybe it is an appropriate metaphor, probably
not one I would use, but it's certainly appropriate. I guess that's what
I was trying to do, to make the reader feel those sorts of ambivalences.
Hearing a story, being seduced, then having the seducer say "by the
way, I don't love you, it all isn't true." And then doing it again.
And then saying, "that also isn't true, just kidding," and doing
it again. It's not just a game, though. It's not what that "Good Form"
chapter is about. It's form. This whole book is about fiction, about why
we do fiction. Every reader is always seduced by a good work of fiction.
That is, by a lie, seduced by a lie. Huckleberry Finn did not happen, but
if you're reading Huckleberry Finn you're made to believe that it is happening.
If you didn't believe it, then it would be a lousy work of fiction. One
wouldn't be seduced. And I'm trying to write about the way in which fiction
takes place. I'm like a seducer, yet beneath all the acts of seduction there's
a kind of love going on, a kind of trust you're trying to establish with
the reader, saying "here's who I am, here's why I'm doing what I'm
doing. And in fact I do truly love you, I'm not just tricking you, I'm letting
you in on my game, letting you in on who I am, what I am, and why I am doing
what I am doing." All these lies are the surface of something. I have
to lie to you and explain why I am lying to you, why I'm making these things
up, in order to get you to know me and to know fiction, to know what art
is about. And it's going to hurt now and then, and you're going to get angry
now and then, but I want to do it to you anyway. And for you. That's the
point of the book.
Comment on this exchange. How did you react to being “seduced” as
you read the book?
-- Why do you think O'Brien chose to end his collection with "The
Lives of the Dead"? Is this even a war story? What does it add to the
collection as a whole? Do you think O'Brien made a good choice in concluding
with this story?
Possible Topics:
--What do you think happened to Kathy Wade? Which scenario in the book is
most persuasive to you? Explain.
--Explore the role of the narrator, or reporter, who is telling the story.
What are we to think of him? Why do you think O’Brien includes this figure?
What function does he serve in the book?
--What do you think about the metaphor of magic in the book? Why is John
Wade called Sorcerer, for instance? Why the details about his obsession
with magic as a child? How does this theme relate to larger issues of the
Vietnam War, the nature of evil, human love, etc. in the book?
Possible Topics:
--Which story in the collection do you feel is the strongest? Why?
--Do you think that Butler, a white American male, does a good job of getting
inside the skins of characters very different from himself—Vietnamese, women,
children? Do you find the voices of his characters believable?
--What recurring themes do you see in Butler’s work? Briefly discuss a thematic
concern that you feel develops over more than a single story.
--How does Butler use both traditional Vietnamese myths and tales and American
myths and tales in his work?
--How do you read the ending of the puzzling last story in the collection,
the title story?
Possible Topics:
--What do you think of the device of the voice-over, Chris’s letters home
to his grandmother? Do these work well, or are they corny, unbelievable,
melodramatic, as some critics argue?
--Discuss some of the racial, class, and even regional tensions that Stone
depicts among the men in Chris’s platoon. Do you think Stone does a good
job with this?
--Explore the significance of the characters Elias and Barnes, or Chris’s
“two fathers” as he calls them. What does each represent? Can we read them
symbolically as many film critics have done? What do you think of Stone’s
depiction of these characters—is it successful, persuasive, interesting,
or is it overly dichotomized, simplistic, melodramatic?
--What do you think about the depiction of the Vietnamese themselves in
the film? How does it compare to portrayals of Vietnamese we’ve seen elsewhere
this semester? Perhaps pay special attention to the brutality in the Vietnamese
village, sometimes called the “My Lai scenes” of the film.
Possible Topics:
--Why do you think Mason relies so heavily on images from popular culture
in the novel (tv shows, rock songs, movies, etc.)? Does American popular
culture help Sam understand the war, or does it hide the truth of what happened?
--How is this specifically a woman’s book about the war? Does Mason address
gender stereotyping in the novel? What does she have to say about it?
--Why all the recurring images of dead and/or mangled babies?
--Explore the sub-theme in the novel of the changing American South, the
homogenization of small town life. What kinds of changes are occurring in
Hopewell, KY? Are these changes good or bad?
--Finally, do you think Sam can ever come to any kind of substantive understanding
of what happened in the war? Is her quest successful? Or, does Mason reinforce
what’s become a cliché of Vietnam War literature—if you weren’t there, you
can’t possibly understand what happened?
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The written portion of this assignment has two parts: 1)you will write an annotated bibliography of at least ten outside sources on your book; and 2you will identify and briefly explain what seem to you to be the two or three dominant themes or recurring concerns in the criticism regarding the book.
Part I
Some types of sources that you may want to use in your bibliography include the following:
1. Background Source Material: One or two of your sources (no more) may be from standard research works that examine multiple authors. Works you'll probably find particularly useful include Contemporary Authors and The Dictionary of Literary Biography.
2. Reviews: Book reviews can be good sources for early reaction to the book. However, you need to use the type of review usually called the "essay-review”—these are longer and more analytical than standard reviews. The reviews which appear in The New York Review of Books, The New York Times Book Review, The Village Voice, The Nation, and other such journals may be particularly useful. Reviews which appeared in large newspapers such as The New York Times, The Boston Globe, or The Washington Post are available on the Lexis-Nexis database.
3. Published Interviews: Interviews can be a good source for understanding what authors may have intended in particular works, or how they understand their own works. A good source for both book reviews and recent interviews is the InfoTrac Academic Index, which often includes full text for the articles cited.
4. Critical Articles: The most useful items to your research will likely be published critical articles on the works. Look for critical articles in periodical indexes, especially InfoTrac and the MLA Index (which you can find on-line in the College’s list of databases). If you need help wading through the large number of articles you might find, don’t hesitate to come see me in my office. Often, the best or most influential articles about a work or author are collected together and published in book form. So don’t forget to search for books on the authors.
5. Books on Vietnam War Literature: Our library has numerous books on Vietnam War literature in general. Many of these have specific chapters on works we’re reading this semester.
6. Historical Source Material: One option you may not have considered yet is researching a particular historical sub-text in your work. For instance, you might be interested in the history of war journalism and how Dispatches fits in. Or you might want to explore historical incidents of fragging and apply these to a work or works. Historical sources such as these are fine to use.
The sources that you include should appear in bibliography format (alphabetized, of course!), with their MLA-style citation first, followed by a brief paragraph summarizing the source's main argument.
Part II
For the second part of this assignment, you'll need to identify and explain two or three of the main themes or concerns you discover in the criticism of your work. What are the main issues the critics discuss? How do they agree or disagree about these issues? What I’d like to see you do in this section is some synthesis of the criticism—group together and discuss the varying views. Don’t, though, try to account for EVERYTHING in the criticism—choose two or three key strands to focus on.
Examples
So you'll have an example of the kind of written work I'm expecting on this assignment, here is a sample entry from an annotated bibliography on Tim O’Brien’s Going After Cacciato, followed by a discussion of the main themes in the criticism of the work.
Sample Annotated Bibliography Entry
Bates, Milton J. “Tim O’Brien’s Myth of Courage.” Modern Fiction Studies 32.2 (Summer 1987): 263-279.
Bates sees Paul Berlin’s decision not to desert in a positive light, praising what he perceives as O’Brien’s “myth of courage [that] combines masculine endurance with feminine commitment” (278). Initially, Berlin is seen as lacking courage because of his physical fear and rather passive inertia. He cannot follow Cacciato, who represents freedom, because of other qualities: a love for family and a sense of obligation to society. This obligation overrides even a consideration of what is just. The strength of Berlin’s choice is in his courage to commit to the “human community, flawed as it always is” (278). Bates simultaneously looks at the role of women in Berlin’s decision. Despite the Army’s “contempt for the feminine principle,” Bates says Berlin exhibits some compassion in caring for the wounded little girl he encounters (270). Sarkin Aung Wan is compared to Catherine Barkley from A Farewell to Arms, but ultimately, Berlin has no obligation to her because she is imagined; though he cannot confidently say that staying in Vietnam is the right choice, Bates believes it is an act of true courage.
Part II: Overall Themes in the Criticism
Several critics discuss the novel’s structure, with most agreeing with Tim O’Brien’s own comment that the ‘Observation Post’ chapters act as the fulcrum on a teeter-totter which swings back and forth between past events and an imagined future. Dean McWilliams, Maria Bonn, Tobey Herzog, and Eric Schroeder, for instance, all agree that the actual present time of the novel takes place during the six hours Paul Berlin stands watch in the observation post by the sea. Dean McWilliams offers the fullest reading of the novel’s structure, actually untangling and charting the chronology for readers. McWilliams argues that Berlin’s confused sequencing is an attempt to avoid memories of “mutiny and mayhem,” specifically his culpability in the death Lt. Sidney Martin. Other critics argue that the intricate structure reflects Berlin’s attempts to impose order on his chaotic and frightening war memories. Interestingly, at least two critics, Michael Raymond and Jack Slay, disagree with the critical consensus on the overall structure of the novel, arguing that the observation post chapters are also imagined, that they too, like the journey to Paris, represent Berlin’s attempt to find a “safe place” in the midst of war.
Another recurring theme in the criticism is O’Brien’s take on gender issues, especially through his presentation of Sarkin Aung Wan. Several critics see Sarkin Aung Wan as important only in what she tells us about Berlin himself. Milton Bates, for example, denies any consideration of her as an actual human being since Berlin creates her in his imagination. For Bates, Sarkin Aung Wan exists in order to allow Berlin to exhibit his capacity for compassion and love. Maria Bonn, quite similarly, sees Sarkin Aung Wan as a necessary step in Berlin’s moral education; she is merely the explored possibility that Berlin can reject when he recognizes his true obligations. Other critics, though, have problems with O’Brien’s depiction of Sarkin Aung Wan, often arguing that this character in the novel reinforces gender stereotyping and a patriarchal world view. Susan Jeffords sees Berlin as an example of a defeminized veteran who seeks to reshape American culture without the input of women. Katherine Kinney argues that since Berlin only uses Sarkin Aung Wan to examine his own desires and needs, his cultural viewpoint is a reactionary turn toward the “displacement of the women’s movement . . [and] a revitalization of traditional patriarchal and capitalist values” (649). Kali Tal believes that, although Berlin recognizes the need to reincorporate his femininity, the gulf of traditional gender roles remains in place. These last three critics look at O’Brien in the context of Vietnam War literature in general, arguing that he shares some of the sexism evident in this genre.
Finally, nearly every critic discusses the end of the novel and Paul Berlin’s decision to stay at the war. There is a great deal of disagreement, though, about whether Berlin’s choice is courageous or cowardly. Bates praises Berlin’s decision to stay as a true act of courage, which demonstrates a commitment to humanity and a love for family and home. While Bonn concludes that O’Brien’s war stories should not uplift, she does suggest that Berlin learns what is best for him; if he never had a real choice, then his action is less blameworthy. Herzog also believes that Berlin makes the correct decision at the end, citing O’Brien’s own comment that “Berlin’s fantasized run for Paris would have been an unhappy experience—it wasn’t compatible with his background, personality, his beliefs” (98). Yet, nearly as many critics take an opposing view. McWilliams sees Berlin’s rejection of Sarkin Aung Wan’s plea to step into his imagination and flee the war as an act of cowardice. He condemns Berlin’s final decision, saying its implications are deterministic” (253). Kali Tal agrees, arguing that Berlin’s choice to stay at the war represents a failure to connect to his feminine side; instead he falls back on the “hypermasculine stance” of a stereotypical soldier (88). Arthur Saltzman similarly reads Berlin as making the wrong decision at the end of the novel because he finally seems to embrace the American cause, which, to Saltzman, is simply another fantasy. A third set of critics take more of a middle ground about the end of the novel. Vera Froelich perhaps best represents this view when she writes that Berlin’s decision to keep fighting is “understandable,” though it does not provide a happy conclusion.
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Description: Your major essay in the class is an approximately 15-page research paper
that should present a specific, well-focused, argument (your thesis) about
some fairly narrow topic within a work or works appearing on the class
syllabus. While the main point of the paper is for
you to provide your own
argument about your focused topic, you should also place this argument
within a critical context or conversation.
The paper should be constructed so as to carefully support your
argument--to persuade your readers that your interpretation is plausible,
interesting, original, well-thought-out, and well-researched.
Due Dates:
A rough draft of the paper is due the last Monday of
class (April 25). The final
version of the paper is due Monday, May 2 (in my office by 5:00).
Format: The paper should be typed, double-spaced, and free of grammatical errors.
Sources should be cited according to MLA guidelines--a system of internal
citations and works cited page at the end. You needn’t cite every source listed in your annotated bibliography—use
only what’s applicable.
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You will also be asked to present to the class Part II of your annotated bibliography. I will expect you to carefully and completely explain the two or three main concerns you’ve identified in the criticism, which critics take what views, and what evidence they cite to support themselves. You will need to prepare a one-page handout so that your presentation will be easy for the class to follow (this handout might simply be the same as the paragraphs you write for Part II of the bibliography, or you might want to tailor it a bit for the class—whatever you think will work best). In your presentation, you should not simply go through the works on your bibliography, summarizing each one-by-one. You must identify two or three main concerns in the criticism and limit your comments to these. Your presentation should last no more than fifteen minutes.
The final exam will consist of identifies, short answers, and longer essay questions. I'll give you more information about the final near the end of the semester.
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