This syllabus is not set in stone, but it will give
you a good idea of the sequence of events as well as the course readings and
requirements. Email me with questions, but please be patient as the
beginning of the semester is always chaotic.
I HAVE APPLIED FOR A WEBCT COMPONENT FOR THIS COURSE TO SIMPLIFY THINGS BUT IT
WILL TAKE SEVERAL WEEKS TO GET.
COURSE
NUMBER:
ENGL 3362
COURSE TITLE:
WOMEN IN LITERATURE
PROFESSOR: Dr. Sandy Jordan (note: you will see Dr. Charlotte Berkowitz on the tapes)
EMAIL
ADDRESS: jordan66@swbell.net
OFFICE HOURS: by appointment only
COURSE DESCRIPTION: This course will focus on the representation of women
in the literature listed below. The theory governing our discussion will
be post-Freudian,i.e., concerned with the way
literary texts can critique and transform social identity by representing woman's
desire for the repressed memory of connection to the mother and through her to
all life.
TEXTBOOKS:
Required (any edition): Virginia Woolf, A Room
of One's Own
Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse
Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God
Willa Cather, My Antonia
F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness
Cynthia Ozick, The Shawl
Recommended
Reading:
Feminisms, ed. Warhol, etal.
Feminist Literary Theory, ed. Eagleton
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
Email requirements:
All students must have a deliverable email address.
Student
Information Sheet:
The first week of class students must email the following information:
o Name
o ID Number (Social Security Number)
o Mailing Address
o Telephone
o Email Address
o Major
o List any English or Women's Studies
courses previously taken
o Share a few sentences about why you
are taking this course
Course
Requirements: Students
must complete all of the following assignments; failure to complete any one assignment
is grounds for being dropped from the course.
o Reading all required texts
o Weekly responses to the tapes
o Midterm examination
o Mandatory midterm meeting for paper topic
approval
o Term paper (10 pages)
o Final examination
Evaluation/Grading Policy: This course is interested in
literary and cultural analysis of women in literature, the concerns of women
authors and women readers in society, the representation or nonrepresentation
of women in literature, the social dynamics that create and are affected by
these conceptions. Student responses, papers, and essays are expected to
be actively engaged in these issues. Discussion and assignments should
not be argumentative in nature and should pursue a thoughtful, reflective,
scholarly approach to the material.
Writing matters such as grammar, coherence, etc. will significantly affect the
grades of all assignments. This is an upper division English course
conducted at the major level. While all majors are welcome, and
encouraged to bring their knowledge of their disciplines to the assignments,
upper division standards of English writing and research apply. Papers
should follow MLA (Modern Languages Association) format.
Weekly responses may be turned in electronically put the response in the text of the email,
NOT as an attachment.
State the tape numbers clearly in your subject line and include your full
name at the beginning of the email. Responses are expected one week
from the tape's airing.
Research papers may
not be turned in
electronically. Printed research papers should dropped off to my
mailbox on campus in the English Department: Dr. Sandy Jordan, Department
of English, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204. In order for
papers to be returned, they must be submitted to me with a self-addressed
stamped envelope with adequate postage.
Make-ups for exams will not be offered, except in cases of family or personal
emergency. Check your calendars in advance and plan accordingly. In
all cases inform me of impediments to your progress.
As an adjunct (that is not full time) professor, I do not give
incompletes. A grade of W may be obtained in case of medical
withdraw.
Final grades will be available through the university's electronic
system. Please do not request early grade reports.
ASSIGNMENTS/GRADE
BREAKDOWN
Weekly responses
20% NO CREDIT IF MORE THAN ONE WEEK LATE
One typed, double-spaced page of engaged, thoughtful response to that week's
tapes (no response the week of the midterm, Thanksgiving, or the final). Total
of 13 responses due. If responses are sent electronically, put the response
in the text of the email, NOT as an attachment. State the tape
numbers clearly in your subject line and include your full name at the
beginning of the email.
Tapes air on
Friday in the early morning; the response for that week is due by 8 a. m. the
following Friday. Send via email (jordan66@swbell.net)
When a webct component becomes available, all discussion responses will be
submitted through the discussion board provided on the web. Chats will be held as necessary. Once webct is enabled, we may be able to have
our mandatory meeting online through chat at a time of mutual convenience to
discuss the topic of the research paper.
Midterm
20%
Short identification and short essay, followed by mandatory meeting on
paper topics.
Term Paper 30%
Topic must be approved in advance (at the mandatory midterm meeting) and must
be on one of the texts covered in the course. The research paper should
engage in literary analysis and actively consider an aspect of women in
literature (authorship, representation, cultural conceptions, etc.) Three
outside sources are required, one of which must be a scholarly
article. A suggestion is to use the MLA database in the library to locate
scholarly articles in journals of literary, feminist, and cultural criticism.
10 pages is the required length. Use MLA Style. DO NOT email research papers. A
hard copy should be mailed to me at UH or dropped off in my mailbox on
campus. Include a SASE (self-addressed stamped envelope) to have papers
returned to you, making sure the postage is adequate.
Final examination 30%
A two-hour essay examination.
Class Schedule
TAPE # (please consult broadcast schedule for air
dates)
ORIENTATION: Saturday, August 21st
1-2: Course Overview; new theory and ancient
paradigms
3-4: Theory and paradigms
5-6: Theory and paradigms 7-8:
A Room of Ones Own; Their Eyes Were Watching God
9-10: Their Eyes Were Watching God
11-12: Their Eyes Were Watching God; To the Lighthouse
13-14: To the Lighthouse
15: To the Lighthouse
MIDTERM: October 9, Saturday, 2--4PM
16-17: My Antonia
18-19: My Antonia; Heart of Darkness
20-21: Heart of Darkness; The Great Gatsby
22-23: The Great Gatsby
24-25: The Shawl
TERM PAPER: Due November 13th
26-27: The Shawl; Rethinking the issues
28: Review of the texts
FINAL: Saturday, December 11th room to be
announced