Northwest-Shoals
Community College / Spring 2003
English
272 / World Literature II
Instructor:
Michael Patrick McClung, B.A., M.A.
256/331-6313
Office:
AV-16
E-mail:
mcclung@nwscc.edu
Required Text: The Norton Anthology of World Masterpieces, Volume 2, 7th ed.
Prerequisites: English 102 or an equivalent second part of freshman composition.
Class Attendance: Students should attend all class meetings. Students who miss more than 5 class meetings (that is, more than 20% of the course) will receive an F for the course regardless of the grades they have earned thus far. Thus, students are discouraged from missing any class meeting unless a genuine emergency arises. If you are absent due to sickness, you do not need to bring a doctor’s excuse to the instructor; unlike high school, there are no “excused” absences—absent is absent for whatever reason.
Make-up Policy: Students who miss essays or exams are allowed to make up the assignment, but the missed work must be completed within one week of its due date. No work will be accepted beyond this extra time allowance.
Grades: Your final course grade will come from performance on the exams, critical essays, daily reading quizzes, and your general attitude during the course.
Conferences: Students are encouraged to speak with the instructor at any time during the semester about their progress and improvement. However, students should not at any time during the semester tell the instructor what grade they “just have to have.” Example: “Oh, Mr. McClung, I need to bring up my GPA, and I just have to have a B in this class!”
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA): It is the policy of NW-SCC to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Any student covered under this act needing and desiring reasonable accommodations for this class should notify the instructor by the end of the second week of classes. Students may not claim to have a disability at the end of the term and then request special treatment, change of grade, etc.
About Your
Professor: Mr. McClung received his B.A. degree in English from the
University of North Alabama (1993) and his M.A. degree in English from the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (1995).
He has taught in the English Departments of UAB, UNA, and NW-SCC.
Course Schedule:
1/14: Course Introduction
Seating Assignment
1/16: Introduction to the Enlightenment
Swift, 232-80
1/21: Complete Swift
1/23: Johnson, 380-414
1/28: Video of Tartuffe
1/30: Video of Tartuffe
2/4: Introduction to Romanticism
Blake, 542-48
2/6: Wordsworth, 552-560
Coleridge, 587-89
2/11: Keats, 600-608
2/13: Exam #1
2/18: Introduction to the Victorian Era
Tennyson, 659-61, 663-81
2/20: Browning, 684-87
2/25: Douglass, 696-749
2/27: Dickinson, 824-32
3/4: Video on Dickinson
3/6: Tolstoy, 1184-1222
3/11: Whitman, 753-61
3/18: Mark Twain discussion and film
3/20: Exam #2
3/25: Spring Break
3/27: Spring Break
4/1: Introduction to Modernism
Yeats, 1417-26
4/3: Assignment TBA
4/8: Faulkner Video and Discussion
4/10: Literary Analysis Research Essay
assignment (3rd major grade);
Guidelines for Writing About Literature
page
4/15: Kafka, 1640-72
4/17: Video on Kafka
4/22: Eliot, 1676-92
4/24: O’Connor, 1883-94
4/29: O’Connor film and discussion
5/1: Wright, 1950-58
5/6: Review for Final Exam
Final Exam: Tuesday,
May 13, 8:00 am – 10:00 am
** Daily Reading Quizzes**
At the beginning of most class meetings, students will be asked to respond to a few short answer questions relating to the readings assigned for that class period. At the end of the semester, the instructor will total and average these daily quiz grades to make one major grade. Students will be allowed to drop one quiz grade only; that is, Mr. McClung will drop the lowest quiz grade before he averages all the others. There will be no make-up quizzes. If you miss a quiz due to absence, then you have a zero for that day’s quiz. If you come into class late and we are in the middle of taking a quiz, you may respond to as much of the quiz as possible, but the instructor will not go back and repeat the earlier questions.