Syllabus for

The Novel

ENG 353G // Sec. 1
Credit: 3 Hours / CHPL 232
Fall 1999/ M-W-F.

Time: 3:00 - 4:00

Instructor: Dr. Anderson M. Rearick III

Dr. Rearick's Office: Founders Hall 214

(Within 219: Lit., Lang., & Comm. Dept.)

Office Hours: MWF 8:00-10:10 & T-Th. 8:00-9:00 / 1:30-4:00

or by appointment

Office Ext. 3508

Home Phone 392-3738

(but please do not call after 8:00--Andy and Laura are hopefully in Bed)

email: anderson.rearick@mvnc.edu

(checked twice daily)
Checked Daily Morning and Evening

Course Description:

The purpose of ENG 153-G, The Novel, is to expose students to the nature of the genre by reading a selection of works and analyzing them in discussions based on the text, historical elements and critical theory.

Power Point on Writing a Literary Paper

Class Procedure:

ENG 153-G The Novel: This class will meet three times a week to discuss the nature of the novel using the below reading list as raw material as well as a series of handouts to be dispersed during the semester. Discussions will center around the nature of book-long fiction, some of its techniques, innovations and its use as a vehicle for truth by the artists.

The following reading list is not exclusive and, in fact, several important works (probably including your favorites) have been excluded. This class can only function as an introduction, not an exhaustive study.

Students will be expected to keep an on-going journal of their responses to both the reading and the class discussion. Specific details from the readings will be quizzed on through a series of tests. There will also be a mid-term and final which will include essays. Furthermore, each student will be involved in a Writing Project (30%) composed from a series of assignments all leading up to a major literary paper handed in towards the end of the semester on some element within the study of the genre.

Class Objectives:

  1. To develop in students the ability to listen receptively, think critically, reason clearly, evaluate objectively, and communicate clearly.
  2. To encourage students toward acquiring attitudes which stimulate awareness of self and environment, enabling them to respond creatively and positively to the various perspectives represented in the novels included in this course.
  3. To encourage students toward the maximum development of communication skills and abilities both through experience from reading and in discussing and writing about the novels.
  4. To promote within students the vision and ability to apply communication skills and knowledge to enhance personal relationships, human society and God's kingdom.
  5. To enable students to improve written communications through directed experience.
  6. To develop in students the skills needed to enjoy and evaluate creative writing without the assistance of a critical history.
  7. To acquire a knowledge of the assigned content matter.
Tools:

One Loose-leaf Notebook divided into three (3) parts

A-Handouts, B- Class-notes, C-Journal
How I Grade

91 to 100 is an "A" Exceptional! A cut above--unusually good.

81 to 90 is a "B" Well Done! A fine Job!

71 to 80 is a "C" Good, a concrete understanding of the subject

60 to 70 is a "D" Passing but weak

59 and below is an "F" Fell short of required understanding of material

Texts:

  1. Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe [E-text available]
  2. Joseph Andrews by Henry Fielding [E-text available]
  3. Pride and Prejudiceby Jane Austen [E-text available]
  4. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte [E-text available]
  5. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens [E-text available]
  6. Moby Dick by Herman Melville [E-text available]
  7. The Death of Ivan Ilych by Leo Graf Tolstoy [E-text available]
  8. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  9. The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
  10. Grass Dancer by Susan Power
  11. Contact by Carl Sagan
Evaluation:

Each student must produce four typed writing exercises which will lead to a final paper. The combination of these assignments will be used to give the grade for the Writing Project. (30%). Throughout the semester there will be a series of tests based on details from the assigned readings and class events (10%). There will be a mid-term (20%) and a final (20%) both of which will include essay questions. Finally, students will also maintain an on-going journal (20%).

Journal:

Your journal is IMPORTANT! You should write in it at least three (3) times a week. It is your personal repository for what you think about the works you are reading and about the material being covered in class.

I will be looking for the following in your journal:

1. Three entries per week (totaling 38 by the end of the semester). Going beyond that entries could indicate to the instructor the kind of student who will achieve a high grade. If you do only what I require--and do it

well--you will receive a 90 [B+]. Going beyond the teacher's expectations

is what earns an A.

Please note that writing in your journal is not connected with days in class. In fact to reach the required entries you may have to write on Saturdays. It is also allowable to write two entries on a day as long as both are adequately developed.

A. Periodic class checks will determine the currency of your journal entries. Always bring your journal with you to class.

B. Journals will be handed in three times during the semester: Feb. 26,

April 9 and May 7.

2. A table of contents made from the sentence found in each entry.

3. Journal entries must be at least 2/3 of a page long. Furthermore, if

you are one of those individuals like St. Paul with BIG handwriting--

"Ye see how large a letter I have written unto you with mine own hand" (Gal. 6:11)--then you should plan to write more than what I have suggested. I've seen some fill up 2/3 of a page with "I've been thinking about our reading."

4. All entries should be numbered and dated

(For Example: Entry # 14; Jan. 20th).

5. Although I will not be grading the journal harshly concerning mechanics

and restarts of thought (which require a single line to cross out some material), I do expect the final product to be neat and legible. Also you should write full sentences within paragraphs--no fragmented stream of consciousness experiments. "Split from society--bad."

I will be especially looking in your journal for. . .

1. Development of ideas. Remember that it is not necessary to finish a

work to have a good idea. In fact waiting till you have finished can be overwhelming. Keep your journal handy while reading.

2. Interconnectedness of journal entries. This means that an idea you examine

at one point in your journal might have relevance to another work discussed later. Works in literature should not be thought of in a vacuum.

A journal is NOT. . .

1. A diary. Your entries should be a mixture of commentary concerning what you read and what you discuss in and out of class about literature. I do not want to read (as I have in the past) what you had for lunch or who is presently percolating your hormones.

2. A place for notes. Class notes belong in the section provided for them in

your loose leaf. I should not see your actually writing in your journal during class. This also means that a journal is not a re-hashing of what is covered in class ("today in class we talked about. . .etc etc.").


REMEMBER: Your journal accounts for 20% of your grade. That's the same as your final: DO NOT PUT OFF TO THE LAST MINUTE: DO NOT "BLOW IT OFF!"


The Paper

You will be asked to analyze a novel either by gender issues, class structure,

historical elements, or some other mechanism. Your work should prove your idea by quoting from the text, histories and or critical articles. Your paper will be 10 to 13 pages long with a least four sources besides the actual work.

The Process

To be certain that individuals do not find themselves trying to pull this together at the last minute, students will submit elements of the paper in progress.

Each stage of the above process will be graded so that the process will account for 40% of the Writing Project grade and the finished paper will account for 60%.

Tests, Midterm and Final

There will be four tests throughout the semester on basic class discussion and plot

points of the novel. The Midterm will be strongly based on the first two tests. The final will be inclusive of the whole semester but will lean heavily on the second half. Also there may be an essay on the final.

Class Participation:

Attendance:

The most effective way of learning, as Socrates long ago discovered, is by trying one's ideas out on another and seeing what the response is. Since expressing your ideas is vital to do well in this class, you are expected to attend all class sessions. Three un-excused absences will mean three points off your final grade. The pattern will continue if the absences continue until the student has reaches seven. At that point the student may be asked to drop the class.

Discussion:

If a student sits like a silent lump of protoplasm there is no way for the other class members, the professor, nor the student him or herself to realize what insights the student has. Do not be surprised when I call on the quiet ones. Pragmatically I need the input to create an accurate grade, but it's also part of the fun of this class.

Remember, swimming is a joy, but you have to sometimes flounder a bit before you develop a strong stroke. Also I have been known to add extra credit to those students who constructively add to class discussion.

Class Etiquette

As a meeting of adults, the class is to be personified by respect for one another and for the instructor. Behavior which is excessively disruptive (private talking, passing notes, chewing gum like a cow, etc.) will not be tolerated. Also no hats will be worn during class sessions--this is not a ball park. "When I was a child I thought as a child but when I became a man (or woman) I put away childish things." Individuals who are not able to abide by these guidelines will be asked to drop the class.

Readings:

The student should try to be deep into the novels by the first date assigned. I know that this is not always possible, but the instructor shall go on faith that the student will read the novels in their entirety. Also it should be noted that especially as we begin to examine works of the 20th century the worldviews will be become ones in which Christian readers will become less and less comfortable.

The Web:

As we make our way through the readings you may wish to visit my web page,

Dr. Rearick's Reading Corner, located at

http://nzr.mvnc.edu/nzr/faculty/trearick/index.html

I have tried to place some ideas and even sometimes some test questions connected with our class readings within these files. Also in several cases there are links to study guides, e texts, and even connections to relevant web pages on the net. Note that every work is connected to a page which gives biographical information about the author taken from the Encyclopedia Britanica.

If you wish to make your way through the front door and see what other faculty

are up to check out the MVNC internal web page at http://mvnc.edu/nzr which for some reason comes up on my computer with the address http://nzr.mvnc.edu/nzr/
 


Class Calendar


Week One

Feb . 3 Introduction

Feb. 5 Robinson Crusoe

Week Two

Feb. 8 Robinson Crusoe

Feb. 10 Robinson Crusoe

Feb. 12 Robinson Crusoe

Week Three

Feb. 15 Joseph Andrews

Feb. 17 Joseph Andrews and Submit a Topic

Feb. 19 Joseph Andrews Test One

Week Four

Feb. 22 Joseph Andrews

Feb. 24 Joseph Andrews Jr. Sr. Testing Day but we still meet

Feb. 26 Joseph Andrews and 1st Journal Evaluation (11 entries expected)

Week Five

March. 1 Pride and Prejudice

March 3 Pride and Prejudice and Submit an annotated bibliography of at least four

sources

March 5 Pride and Prejudice Test Two

Week Six

March 8 Pride and Prejudice

March 10 Jane Eyre Spring Revival

March 12 Jane Eyre

Week Seven

March 15 Midterm EXAM

March 17 Jane Eyre

March 19 David Copperfield Submit a thesis

Week Eight

March 22

March 24 Easter and Midterm Break

March 26

Week Nine

March 29 David Copperfield

March 31 David Copperfield

April 2 Good Friday No Class

Easter Break

Week Ten

April 5 Easter Travel Day

April 7 David Copperfield and Submit First 2 pages of Paper

April 9 Moby Dick and hand in 2nd Journal Evaluation (26 entries

expected in total)

Week Eleven

April 12 Moby Dick Test Three

April 14 Moby Dick

April 16 Moby Dick

Week Twelve

April 19 Moby Dick

April 21 Moby Dick

April 23 The Death of Ivan Ilych
 

Week Thirteen

April 26 The Death of Ivan Ilych

April 28 The Unbearable Lightness of Being

April 30 The Unbearable Lightness of Being

Week Fourteen

May 3 To the Lighthouse

May 5 To the Lighthouse Paper Due

May 6 Blue Green Day

May 7 The Grass Dancer and Final Journals Due (38 entries expected in

total)

Week Fifteen Final Week

May 10 The Grass Dancer

May 12 Contact Test Four

May 14 Contact
 

FINAL EXAM Monday May 17, 1:00-2:50

Have a Glorious Summer and a Grand Time of Renewal!
 
 

Works Cited

Allen, Walter. The English Novel. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co, 1954.

"The Art of Literature: Novel." Encyclopedia Britanica On-line: n.pag. On-line: WWW. Internet. Sept. 5, 1996. Available. http://www.eb.com:

Doody, Terrence. Confession and Community in the Novel. Baton Rouge : Louisiana State University Press, 1980.

Forster, E.M. Aspects of the Novel. San Diego: Harvest/ HPJ, 1955.

Kundera, Milan. The Art of the Novel. New York: Grove Press, 1988.