
Course Calendar, HUM 212-03 and 212-04, Fall, 2002
Wed. 8/21 Introduction to the course and the major themes
Unit One: Self
How do we learn who we are or who we want to be? Stories in Unit One dramatize moments when characters learn or test their values. In these readings, we will move from examples of decisive (if not always deliberate) characters to those who, for reasons we will explore, cannot quite decide the course their lives should take.
Fri. 8/23, Updike, A & P and Housman, Terrence, This Is Stupid Stuff
Mon. 8/26, Jewett, A White Heron; Bishop, The Fish and Wright, A Blessing
Wed. 8/28, Mason, Shiloh ; E. B. Browning, How Do I Love Thee
Fri. 8/30, Silko, Yellow Woman and Buzzati, The Falling Girl
Wed. 9/4, Joyce, Eveline, and Plath, Daddy
Fri. 9/6, Min, The One Who Goes Farthest Away and Lee, The Gift
Mon. 9/9, AustenPride and Prejudice
Wed. 9/11, AustenPride and Prejudice
Fri. 9/13, AustenPride and Prejudice
Unit Two: Individual and Society
The readings in this section focus on the tension between the individual and the social environment. Faulkners story A Rose for Emily dramatizes numerous issues, such as gender, class, sexuality, race, power, love, and alienation, emphasized by other readings. The selections are arranged to allow for progression from an examination of the outcast to representations of an indifferent community and then to various individuals reactions to the community, which may vary due to racial and cultural differences, sexual orientation, and gender, among other factors.
Mon. 9/16, Faulkner, A Rose for Emily
Wed. 9/18, Poetry: Browning, My Last Duchess, Keats, La Belle Dame Sans Merci, Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, Yeats, Sailing to Byzantium PAPER I DUE
Fri. 9/20, Nietzsche, Happiness Is Having Power
Mon. 9/23, Conrad, Amy Foster,
Wed. 9/25, Allende, And of Clay Are We Created; Auden, Musée des Beaux Arts & Frost, Mending Wall
Fri. 9/27, Walker, Everyday Use;
Mon. 9/30, Poetry: Hughes, Theme for English B & Dove, The House Slave
Wed. 10/2, EXAM I
Fri. 10/4, Grahn, Boys at the Rodeo & McCann, My Mothers Clothes
Mon. 10/7, Glaspell, A Jury of Her Peers
Wed. 10/9, Ibsen, A Dolls House
Fri. 10/11, Ibsen A Dolls House
Unit Three: Certainty and Doubt
This section explores one of the central issues of our timethe quest for certainty. Through philosophical arguments as well as fiction and poetry, writers explore the nature of humans desire for answers and direction.
Mon. 10/14, Benedict, Ethics Are Relative, Ngugi, A Meeting in the Dark & Arnold, Dover Beach
Wed. 10/16, Stace, Ethics Are Not Relative & Yeats, The Second Coming
Mon. 10/21 OConnor, A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Thomas, Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night,
Wed. 10/23, Tan, Half and Half & Stevens, Anecdote of the Jar
Fri. 10/25, Housman, To an Athlete Dying Young,
Mon. 10/28, Dickinson, Poems #465 and #712
Unit Four: Moral Choice
In this section we explore some of the ways in which philosophy and literature confront the problem of good and evil. As we consider several ethical philosophies and literary dramatizations of moral dilemmas, we are able to look more closely at our own concepts of morality.
Wed. 10/30, Gaines, A Gathering of Old Men
Fri. 11/1, Gaines, A Gathering of Old Men
Mon. 11/4, Gaines, A Gathering of Old Men
Wed. 11/6, EXAM II
Fri. 11/8, Bentham, "Happiness Is to Do What Is Good for All People"
Mon. 11/11, Shelley, Ozymandias, Wordsworth, "The World is Too Much With Us"
Wed. 11/13, Kant, "Duty is Prior to Happiness"
Fri. 11/15, Kant continued. PAPER II
Mon. 11/18, OBrien, The Things They Carried; Jarrell, The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner,
Wed. 11/20, Jackson, The Lottery
Fri. 11/22, Sartre, Existential Ethics
Mon. 11/25, Sartre, continued.
Mon. 12/2, Hemingway, "Hills Like White Elephants," & Brooks, "the mother"
Wed. 12/4, Poe, The Cask of Amontillado,
Fri. 12/6, Catchup
Final Exams:
HUM 212-03 Thurs. 12/12, 10:30-12:30
HUM 212-04 Tuesday, 12/10 10:30-12:30