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.
Texts:
Howells, A
Modern Instance [1882].
Ed. Nordloh. Penguin, 1982.
James, Portrait of a Lady [1881]. Ed. Edel. Houghton Mifflin,
1963.
Twain, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn [1885].
Eds. Fischer and Salamo. U of
Cal.
P, 2002.
Chesnutt, The House Behind the Cedars [1900].
Penguin, 1993.
Freeman, A
New England
Nun [1887] and Other Stories. Penguin, 2000.
Howells, Three Short Plays [The Mousetrap, 1886].
Feedback, 1994.
Crane, Red Badge of Courage [l895] and Other Writings. Ed.
Chase. Houghton Mifflin, 1960.
Alger, Ragged Dick [1868]. Ed.
Bode. Penguin, 1885.
Hopkins
,
Contending Forces [1900].
Oxford
U P, 1988.
Collateral
Required
Reading
—On Reserve:
Hopewells, Criticism
and Fiction [1891] and Other Essays. Eds. Kirk and Kirk.
New York
U P, 1959. (2 copies)
James,
Henry. “The Art of Fiction” [1884] in Henry James: The
Critical Muse. Ed. Gard. Penguin, 1987; in The Art of Criticism.
Eds. Veeder and
Griffin
.
Chicago
U P, 1986; in The American Tradition in Literature. Eds.
Bradley, et al. Norton, 1974; and in Henry James: Selected Literary
Criticism. Ed. Shapira. Heinemann, 1963.
James,
Henry. “The Real Thing,” in Complete Stories, 1892-1898.
Lib. of
America
, 1996; in The American Tradition in Literature. Eds.
Bradley, et al. Norton, 1974; and in The Henry James Reader. Ed.
Edel. Macmillan,1965.
Twain,
“Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offenses” [1895] in The Portable Mark
Twain. Ed. DeVoto. Viking, 1946; in
Collected Tales.... Lib. of
America
, 1992; in Selected Shorter Writings of Mark Twain. Ed. Blair.
Houghton Mifflin, 1962; and in Mark Twain at his Best. Ed. Neider.
Doubleday, 1986.
Objectives:
This course examines the
literature of the United States
from the Civil War to World War I, when the dominant genre was fiction
and the new, influential literary philosophies and techniques were
realism and naturalism. Works by representative writers will be studied
in their historical, intellectual and aesthetic contexts.
In this course, as in the literature of this time, special
emphasis will be devoted to perspectives on race, caste, and gender.
Requirements:
Attendance is required. Missed
classes must be explained beforehand when possible or promptly
afterwards for sure (please provide a note with date, or use
e-mail). Though
this does not excuse the absence, it shows seriousness about your work
in the course; failure to account for an absence jeopardizes the grade.
The quality of coursework (hence, the grade) will suffer significantly
if classes are missed.
More
than mere attendance is required for a high quality performance,
however. Participation in
class discussions is strongly encouraged, and extra credit is awarded
for good and consistent participation.
The
writing project for the course will produce a paper, 7-9 pages, that
extends beyond the class discussions and exhibits intellectual
independence. It may be
critical or historical (it may entail research paper, but that’s not
necessary). It must be
presented in the manner appropriate for an academic essay in an
upper-division English course according to the most recent edition of
the MLA Handbook for Writers.
The paper may not be on a work studied in the course.
It must treat some facet of American literature, 1860-1920.
I will help you develop your topic.
It is best if a statement of the topic, or (best of all) a thesis
statement, along with a brief outline are submitted in writing and
approved. This will help the
paper be of higher quality. The
writing (and research, if included) needs to be appropriate in quality
and quantity for a course of this level. The
due dates for approval and for the paper are marked on the course
outline. Late papers are
penalized. Papers must be
submitted in print, not online.
All works are to be read
by the day they are assigned.
As a policy, missed work cannot be made up.
Student Reports:
There will be an opportunity for some students to give a brief
oral report in class on each of our authors.
These will be in small groups of 2 or 3, and will be for extra
credit.
Around
the middle of the semester, we will undertake a special Writing Realist
Fiction project. This
optional effort will entail your
writing a short piece of fiction that accords with the realist fiction
we’ll be studying in the course. These
will be marked and graded, both by a fellow student and by me.
Along with the written comments, the grades, though they will not
count, will give you an idea of the quality.
Grading:
Final course grades will be determined
from the midterm, the paper, and the comprehensive final, as well as
from class participation (including student oral reports and the fiction
writing project, for those who volunteer for them). Consistent class
participation of a high quality will count favorably; weak class
participation will be counted negatively.
Both the midterm and the final will be composed of a combination
of short answer (35%) and essay (65%).
The midterm (±25%) and the paper (±30%) will count less heavily
than the final (±35%); class participation will count 10%.
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