ENG245: Images of Women in Literature
Professor van Slyck: vanph@lagcc.cuny.edu
E103N x5660
Office Hours T/TH 10:30 and by appt.
Blog:Eng245ImagesofWomeninLit.blogspot.com
Course Pack Table of Contents and Sequence of
Readings
1.
Syllabus
2.
Strong Writing Guidelines
3.
Blog Scoring
4.
Anatomy of an Essay
5.
Essay Outlines
INTERROGATING 19TH CENTURY IMAGES
6.
Trifles, Susan Glaspell (and background)
7.
“The Story of An Hour,” Kate
Chopin (read in class—day 1)
FILM SCREENING: Double Indemnity
FILM SCREENING: Double Indemnity
8.
“Desiree’s Baby,” Kate Chopin
9.
“Rapaccini’s Daughter,” Nathaniel
Hawthorne (and criticism)
10. “The Necklace,” Guy de Maupassant
11. Washington Square, Henry James (film)
12. “The Lady with the Little Dog,” Anton Chekov
13. “The Yellow Wallpaper,” Charlotte Perkins Gilman (and “Feline
Behavior in YW”)
14. “Victorian Women: The Gender of Oppression
INTERROGATING
POSTCOLONIAL IMAGES:
15. “Everyday Use,” Alice Walker (YouTube images; essay by Walker)
16. “The World’s Greatest
Fisherman,” Louise Erdrich
17. “1937,” Edwidge Danticat
18. “Life,” Bessie Head (and notes on exile/identity)
20. “The Youngest Doll,” Rosario Ferre (and background article)
21. "The Danger of a Single Story," Adichie (YouTube);Postcolonialism Glossary
21. "The Danger of a Single Story," Adichie (YouTube);Postcolonialism Glossary
Film Screening: Moolade
INTERROGATINGMODERN/CONTEMPORARY IMAGES:
22. “Boys and Girls,” Alice
Munro
23. “Where Are You Going, Where
Have You Been?” Joyce Carol Oates
24. “A and P,” John Updike
25. “On Meeting My 100% Woman
One Fine April Morning,” Haruki Murakami
26. “We Should All Be Feminists," Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (YouTube)
Film Screening: Girlhood or Her
ENGLISH 245: Images of Women in Literature
ENGLISH 245: Images of Women in Literature
Catalogue Description
This course is designed to
familiarize the student with the ways in which the role of women has been
portrayed in literature. By identifying various stereotypes and certain
recurrent themes, students will be made aware of how literature reflects and
sometimes determines societal expectations. Works by both male and female
authors will be examined including such authors as Henrik Ibsen, D.H. Lawrence,
Ernest Hemingway, Tennessee Williams, Edward Albee, Sylvia Plath, Mary Gordon,
Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, and Audre Lorde.
WRITING ASSIGNMENTS AND GRADE DISTRIBUTION:
1.
Blogs (approximately 6): a set of
questions will be posted for most readings and film screenings 20% (blogs not
accepted after due date for class discussion)
2.
Essay #1:
comparison/contrast—a theme in two texts:
20%
3.
Essay #2: visual
essay—incorporate an image; connect to text:
20%
4.
Final reflection: 20%
5.
Class presentations/participation: 20%
TENTATIVE SYLLABUS: SUBJECT TO
REVISION
Tuesday, Jan. 5
Introduction: Our
images of women: pictures, poems and a text: “American Girl,” “Barbie,”
“Phenomenal Woman,” ” “Biosexist Observations”and “The Story of an Hour.”
Joining our blog: create gmail
account.
Thursday Jan. 7:
Film screening: Double Indemnity
Homework for Tuesday: “Trifles”
and “Desiree’s Baby” (going forward homework will always be what is listed for
next class)
Tuesday, Jan. 12
“Trifles” and “Desiree’s Baby”—questions
in course-pak
blog due Midnight Jan. 11
blog due Midnight Jan. 11
Thursday Jan. 14
“Rapaccini’s Daughter”
Blog post due Wed. Jan. 13,
midnight
Tuesday, Jan. 19
“The Necklace”
Film screening: Washington Square, Henry James
Thursday, Jan 21
“The Lady with the Little Dog” and
“The Yellow Wallpaper”
Post paper thesis on blog for
Tuesday
Tuesday, Jan. 26
“Everyday Use” and first essay
planning (see coursepak)
Thursday, Jan. 28
Essay due
Film screening: Moolade
Tuesday, Feb. 2
“The World’s Greatest Fisherman”
and “1937”
Thursday, Feb 4
“Life” and “The Youngest Doll”
Introduction to Essay #2 (see
coursepak)
Tuesday, Feb. 9
“Boys and Girls” and “A and P”
Essay thesis on blog for in-class
review (no submission—points off essay)
Thursday, Feb. 11
“Where Are You Going; Where Have
You Been?”
Essay #2 due—peer critique;
revision due Feb 16
Tuesday, Feb. 16
Last class: film screening: Her or Childhood
Thursday, Feb 18
Submit reflection based on 3 texts:
What are most important things you learned in this
class? Refer to at least three texts and
support your reflection with examples.
Alice Rosario images
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