| English 336: Women Writers |
Dr. Susan Farrell
26 Glebe Street, #205
Phone: 953-5785
e-mail me at: farrells@cofc.edu
Office Hours (Spring 2006):
Books:
Course Description:
This course examines selected poetry, fiction, and non-fiction by American and British women writers in its historical and social context. Issues we will explore in this course include the relationship between women's writing and the traditional literary canon, the role and position of the female artist, the importance of family and community as well as individual autonomy to female identity, and the ways that racial and class affiliation affect women. The course should increase your appreciation for and enjoyment of the works we study, while developing your skills in critical thinking and in written and oral expression.
Coursework:
Required work for the course includes careful reading of all assigned material and active participation in class discussions. Please come to class prepared with questions and comments about the assigned reading for each day--the success of the course depends on your involvement.
You will write two formal papers in the course. The first, shorter paper (approximately four typed pages) will summarize a critical article, which you will choose (or be assigned) early in the semester. Along with a partner, you will present this summary paper to the class on the scheduled day. The written portion of the paper is due on the day that your presentation is scheduled. The final paper in the course will be a longer essay (approximately eight pages) due at the end of the semester. This essay should incorporate both your own readings of a particular text or theme, as well as a certain amount of outside research. I will give more detailed instructions about each of the papers and the presentation well in advance of their due dates.
Our in-class discussion of
the works we read this semester will be supplemented by an e-mail discussion.
You must respond, via the e-mail discussion group, to 8 of the questions
listed on the syllabus during the course of the semester. You choose which 8 to respond to and which
to skip. Each response you submit must be at least 200 words long to receive
credit. Each must be submitted
before class on
the date it is due. No late
responses will be accepted. You
may respond either to the question itself or, even better, to a comment
made by another student concerning the question. The point of this discussion
is to get classmates to talk to each other about the works we are reading,
not to have simply a question-and-answer session with me.
There will be a mid-term and a final exam. I will give you more information about the exams before you take them.
Grading:
Your final grade will be determined according to these percentages:
Letter grades assigned will have the following numerical values:
Attendance:
Regular attendance and participation are requirements to pass the course. You may take 3 absences without being penalized (although I don't recommend it--it's best for you to be in class every meeting). I don't distinguish between excused and unexcused absences, so you should save your 3 absences for when you're really sick or out of town. For each absence over 3 (for any reason--excused or unexcused), I will automatically subtract 3 points from your final course average. You are responsible for all work covered during your absence. Don't come to my office and ask what you missed. Find out from a fellow student.
Late Papers:
Late papers will be penalized five points for each day or fraction of a day they are late. You may not make up late position paper. Your presentation must be given on the scheduled date. If you're not prepared on your scheduled day, you will receive a zero for this assignment.
Make-up exams will not be given except in rare circumstances when the student has documentation to prove a serious accident or illness. If at all possible, you must notify me in advance when a make-up exam is necessary.
Plagiarism:
All work submitted must be your own. You may discuss writing assignments and prepare for tests with your classmates (in fact, I strongly encourage you to do so), but all that you write should be yours. Incorporating others' words or ideas in your essays without proper acknowledgment, or any other form of academic dishonesty, will result in an "F" for the entire course.
You will be responsible
for having read at least the portions of the works listed below before coming
to class for that day. Readings
with internet links are available through my web page.
| Week 1: | |
M 9 Jan |
Course Introduction |
W 11 Jan. |
Early American Poets (internet links): Bradstreet, "The Prologue," “In Honor of . . . Queen Elizabeth. . .,” “The Author to Her Book," "To My Dear and Loving Husband," "A Letter to Her Husband, Absent upon Public Employment," "Here Follows Some Verses upon the Burning of Our House" Wheatley, "On Being Brought from Africa to America," "To the Right Honorable. . . “ |
| Week 2: | |
M 16 Jan. |
No Class--MLK Day |
W 18 Jan. |
Early British Poets (internet links): Behn, "The Willing Mistress," "Love Armed," "The Disappointment," "To the Fair Clarinda, Who Made Love to Me" Finch, "The Introduction," "The Answer" Killigrew,
"Upon the Saying that My Verses Were Made by Another." |
E-Mail Discussion: Comment on Aphra Behn's "love"
poetry. What types of metaphors
does she use to describe love? What do you think her view of romantic love is like? Does she believe in it or not? Did anything in her poetry surprise
you or change your preconceptions of what women in 17th century England
were like? OR: Both Anne Finch and Anne Killigrew use their poetry to comment on the role of the woman literary artist. How does each characterize women who write? Do these two poets seem apologetic for their vocation or do they defend it? |
|
| Week 3: | |
M
23 Jan. |
Mary Wollstonecraft, from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (Intro., pp. 6-10; Chapter II, pp. 18-36; Chapter XIII, Section 2, pp. 190-193). |
| E-Mail Discussion: In the excerpts from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, Mary Wollstonecraft comments on the education of women, the relationship between the sexes, and her views of what a mature marriage should consist of. Very briefly summarize Wollstonecraft's ideas, then comment on whether or not you think any of her observations are still relevant or valuable to women today. How far have we come since 1792, when this treatise was first published? | |
W 25 Jan. |
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein (Author's Introduction-Chapter 6, pp. 1-46) |
| Week 4: | |
M 30
Jan. |
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein (Chapters 7-21) Report: Ellen Moers, "Female Gothic: The Monster's Mother." |
W
1 Feb |
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
(Chapters 22-end) |
| E-Mail Discussion: Does Shelley want us to believe that
Victor is right or wrong to destroy his female creation? Remember--you're not simply stating
whether or not YOU believe Victor acts correctly (although you're certainly
entitled to your opinion), but I'd like you to consider what conclusion
about Victor's behavior SHELLEY wants us to come to. You should base your response to this question on textual
evidence from the novel. |
|
| Week 5: | |
M 6Feb. |
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre (through Chapter 15) |
W 8Feb. |
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre (through Chapter 28) Report: Adrienne
Rich, "Jane Eyre: The
Temptations of a Motherless Woman." |
| Week 6: | |
M 13 Feb. |
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre (finish the novel) Report: Sandra
M. Gilbert, "A Dialogue of Self and Soul: Plain Jane's Progress." |
| E-Mail Discussion: Now that you've finished Jane Eyre, comment on its ending, the very last chapter, titled "The
Conclusion." Were you
satisfied with the way the book ended? Did this ending seem appropriate based on everything we find
out about Jane through the course of the novel? Or did it seem to you an unsatisfactory
ending? (Was it, for instance, unrealistic? Overly optimistic about the
possibilities of romantic love? Overly pessimistic about these same possibilities?) Can you imagine some other possible
endings and comment on why or why not such alternatives would have worked? |
|
W 15 Feb. |
Rebecca Harding Davis, "Life in the Iron Mills" (in Great Short Stories by American Women) Report: Sharon M. Harris, "Rebecca Harding Davis: From Romanticism to Realism." |
| E-Mail Discussion: What do you think the Korl woman represents? Possibly consider the following questions: Who made the woman and why? How is she posed? Why is it important that she is a statue? What is the meaning of art in the world that Davis depicts? What is the significance of Korl? Why does the statue represent a woman? Does the meaning of the Korl woman change over the course of the story? | |
| Week 7: | |
M 20 Feb. |
Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom's Cabin (through Chapter 13) |
W 22 Feb. |
Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom's Cabin (through Chapter 28) Report: James Baldwin, "Everybody's Protest Novel." |
| Week 8: | |
M 27 Feb. |
Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom's Cabin (finish the novel) Report: Gillian
Brown: "Getting in the
Kitchen with Dinah: Domestic
Politics in Uncle Tom's Cabin." |
E-Mail Discussion: In his essay, "Everybody's Protest
Novel," James Baldwin writes that,
Uncle
Tom's Cabin is a very bad novel, having,
in its self-righteous, virtuous sentimentality, much in common with Little
Women. Sentimentality, the ostentatious parading of excessive and
spurious emotion, is the mark of dishonesty, the inability to feel; the
wet eyes of the sentimentalist betray his aversion to experience, his
fear of life, his arid heart; and it is always, therefore, the signal
of secret and violent inhumanity, the mask of cruelty.
Jane Smiley, however, in her recent article about Mark Twain's
Huckleberry Finn, argues that Uncle
Tom's Cabin is powerful because it
marries "brilliant analysis" to "great wisdom of feeling,"
and that it presents "the hard-nosed, unsentimental dialogue about
race that we should have been having since before the Civil War." Smiley goes even further, arguing that
American literature might have done better to pay more attention to the
lessons taught by Stowe's novel than those taught in Huckleberry Finn. |
|
W 1 Mar. |
Mid-Term Exam |
| Week 9: | |
M 6 Mar |
Spring Break |
W 8 Mar. |
Spring Break |
| Week 10: | |
M
13 Mar. |
Emily Dickinson, 214: "I taste a liquor never brewed--," 249: "Wild Nights--Wild Nights!," 303: "The Soul selects her own Society," 465: "I heard a Fly buzz--when I died--," 712: "Because I could not stop for Death--," (internet links) Report: Stanley Orr, "Dickinson's 'I taste a liquor never brewed--.'" Report: James L. Dean, "Dickinson's 'Wild Nights.'" |
W
15 Mar. |
Emily Dickinson, 448:
"This was a Poet--It is That--,"
613: They shut me up in Prose--," 632: "The Brain is Wider than the Sky,"
657: "I dwell in Possibility--,"709:
"Publication--is the Auction," 1052: "I never saw a Moor--," 1072:
"Title divine--is mine!" 1129:
"Tell all the Truth but tell it slant--" (internet links) |
| E-Mail Discussion: Choose one of Dickinson's poems that
we HAVEN'T discussed in class yet and very briefly explicate it. Begin by asserting what you believe
the poem is saying on a large, thematic level. Then briefly go through the poem, line-by-line if necessary,
explaining how you come to this conclusion about the poem's meaning. |
|
| Week 11: | |
M
20 Mar. |
Charlotte Perkins Gilman,
"The Yellow Wallpaper" (in Great Short Stories by American
Women) Report: Conrad
Shumaker, "'Too Terribly Good to Be Printed': Charlotte Gilman's 'The Yellow Wallpaper.'" |
| E-Mail Discussion: Who is the woman that the narrator sees in the wallpaper? You may approach this question however you want. You might want to explain what the narrator sees on a literal level, if you think the question can be explained this way. Or you might want to discuss the symbolic ramifications of the woman in the wallpaper. You might address both the literal and symbolic levels. Or you might want to consider whether the identity of the woman in the wallpaper changes or remains the same throughout the story, or what happens to the wallpaper woman at the end. | |
W 22 Mar. |
Kate Chopin, The Awakening (through Chapter 16) |
| Week 12: | |
M
27 Mar. |
Kate Chopin, The Awakening (finish the novella) Report: Ruth Sullivan and Stewart Smith, "Narrative Stance in Kate Chopin's The Awakening." Report: Cynthia Griffin Wolff, "Thanatos and Eros: Kate Chopin's The Awakening." |
| E-Mail Discussion: Readers and critics have consistently
debated how we're supposed to view Edna Pontellier. Discuss your view of Edna, paying particular attention to
how the novel ends. Is Edna
a weak character who retreats into romantic fantasy? Or is she a character who truly "awakens" to some
kind of self-fulfillment, self-knowledge by the end? Is she both? Neither? |
|
W 29 Mar. |
Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own (Chapters 1-3) |
| Week 13: | |
M 3 April |
Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own (Chapters 4-6) Report: Margaret J. M. Ezell, "The Myth of Judith Shakespeare:
Creating the Canon of Women's Literature." |
E-Mail Discussion: What material conditions does Woolf
believe are necessary for the production of great art? Do you agree with her about these conditions?
Is it true that "intellectual freedom depends
upon material things" (108)? Explain why you agree or disagree with Woolf on this point. OR: Does Woolf believe that the essential natures of men and women are the same or different? How does this view compare to that of Wollstonecraft? Do you agree with Woolf or not? Do you think men and women are fundamentally the same or fundamentally different? |
|
W 5 April |
Virginia Woolf video |
| Week 14: | |
M 10 April |
Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching
God (through Chapter 9) |
W 12 April |
Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God (finish the novel) Report: Curena N. Pondrom, "The Role of Myth in Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God."
|
| E-Mail Discussion: How do you believe Hurston wants us
to feel about the relationship between Tea Cake and Janie? Are we supposed to like Tea Cake or dislike
him? Are we to view this relationship
as a loving, satisfactory romance for Janie? Or does Hurston not want us to see it
this way? Base your response
on textual evidence from the novel itself. |
|
| Week 15: | |
M 17 April |
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior ("No Name Woman" & "White Tigers") |
W 19 April |
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior
("Shaman" & "At the Western Palace") Report: Paul
Outka, "Publish or Perish: Food, Hunger, and Self-Construction in
Maxine Hong Kingston'sThe Woman Warrior" |
| Week 16: | |
|
M 24 April |
Last Day of Class Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman
Warrior ("Song for a Barbarian Reed Pipe") |
| E-Mail Discussion: Why do you think the final story about
Ts'ai Yen is included in the book? What is Kingston getting at here? Is
translation between cultures, between generations, finally possible or not? |
|
W 26 April |
Due: Final
Research Papers (in my office by 5:00) |
| Final Exam: Wednesday, May 3, 12-3 p.m. |
|
Go To:
Susan Farrell's
home page
Department of English home
page
College of Charleston home
page