Syllabus


May 31 Introduction to course: readings, requirements, research component; reserve materials; oral reports-- explanation and assignments; Hal Holbrook's Mark Twain Tonight! (tape); first two short stories

June 2 6 short stories; origin of Twain's nom de plume (tape); begin The Gilded Age

June 6 [research tutorials--15-30 minutes each: 6-8:40 pm, Hibbs 328]

June 7 The Gilded Age; 2 short stories

June 8 [research tutorials--15-30 minutes each: 6-8:40 pm, Hibbs 328]

June 9 conclude The Gilded Age; 1 short story; begin Tom Sawyer

June 14 conclude Tom Sawyer; 2 short stories; midterm exam (writing assignment) distributed

June 16 1 short story; oral report #1; begin Huck Finn

June 21 oral reports #2 and #3; midterm exam due; Huck Finn

June 23 conclude Huck Finn, including selections from Life on the Mississippi and the raftsman passage; oral report #4

June 28 guest lecturer, Prof. Earle Coleman (Dept. of Philosophy) on art and morality; begin Pudd'nhead Wilson

June 30 conclude Pudd'nhead Wilson; 1 short story

July 5 oral report #5; begin Mark Twain: Public Intellectual Writings, #s 1-14

July 7 oral report #6; Public Intellectual Writings: begin King Leopold's Soliloquy; research papers due

July 12 conclude King Leopold's Soliloquy; conclude Public Intellectual Writings, #s 15-19

July 14 catch up and review (6-7 pm); Coda: Chs. IV-IX, Life on the Mississippi; optional final exam (7-8:40 pm)


Short Stories

May 31: Notorious Jumping Frog, p. 1; Grandfather's Old Ram, p. 100

June 2: "Dandy Frightening the Squatter," p. 1 of Tales, Sketches..., Vol. 1 (on reserve); Jim Baker's Blue-Jay Yarn, p. 186; Dick Baker's Cat, p. 105; Double-Barreled Detective Story, p. 478; Great Landslide Case, p. 83; Buck Fanshaw's Funeral, p. 88

June 7: Bad Little Boy, p. 7; Good Little Boy, p. 74

June 9: Cannibalism in the Cars, p. 10

June 14: Private History, p. 269; Carnival of Crime, p. 141

June 16: A True Story, p. 116

June 30: Hadleyburg, p. 400

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