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British Literature II
Section 2233-1
Room: MH 2.02.22
The University of Texas San Antonio
Fall 2012
Instructor: Barbara J. Millis, Ph.D
Instructor Contact Information
Office: JPL: 4.04.08C
Phone: 458-7371
Home Phone: 698-5113: M-F, 10:00am-5:00pm. Weekends only for emergencies
Email: Barbara.millis@utsa.edu
Home Email: barbmillis@aol.com
Office Hours: M and W: 10:00-11:00; T and Th: 10:00-11:00 and by appointment.
Required Textbooks
The Norton Anthology English Literature
Volume D: The Romantic Period
Volume E: The Victorian Age
Volume F: The Twentieth Century and After
Graham Greene, The Power and the Glory, 1940, Penguin Classics
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Course Description
The primary purpose of the course is to familiarize you with readings by selected British writers
from the nineteenth century to the present. We will explore major trends of the Romantic,
Victorian, and Modern literary periods in works of fiction, poetry, and drama. We will approach
the readings not only as individual works of art to be read creatively and enjoyed imaginatively
and intellectually, but also as representatives of major cultural movements of the past two
hundred years in the English-speaking world.
This course is designed to help you enjoy the literature of this period more thoroughly; to
improve your ability to appreciate literature of any period; to think critically and discuss your
responses confidently; and to write clear analytical essays.
Course Objectives
At the end of this course, students will be able to
Discuss the works of major British writers in the following contexts:
Literary periods (Romantic, Victorian, and Modern Literature (Twentieth Century)
Literature as an expression of human values within an historical and social context
Students will demonstrate the following intellectual competencies:
Reading – the ability to analyze and interpret a variety of printed materials, books,
documents, and articles
Writing – the ability to produce clear, correct, and coherent prose adapted to purpose,
occasion, and audience (above 12th
grade level)
Critical Thinking – the ability to think and analyze at a critical level
Course Requirements
Assignments
Three in-class essays in Romanticism, Victorianism, and Modernism/Twentieth Century
Literature (30-minutes each; closed book; closed notes)
Friday, September 18th
Wednesday, November 7th
Friday, December 7th
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Three out-of-class essays on Romanticism, Victorianism, and Modernism/Twentieth
Century Literature (timed for one-hour, open book, open notes, plus 15 minutes for
proofreading)
Due: Monday. October 1st
Due: Wednesday. November 7th
Due: Friday: December 7th
Cumulative final examination (closed book; closed notes): Two-and-a-half hours
Tuesday, December 18th: 7:30-10:00am
Pre-class assignments and/or scheduled reading quizzes due virtually every class meeting
Class participation and attendance
Grading Criteria
In-class essays (50 each) 150 total
Out-of-class essays (75 each) 225 total
Final 300 total
Pre-class assignments 275 total
Class attendance & participation 50 total
1000 Pts
Grading Scale:
A+ = 97% = 4.00 GPA 1000-970 points
A = 93 = 4.00 969-930 points
A- = 90 = 3.67 9-29-900 points
B+ = 87 = 3.33 899-870 points
B = 83 = 3.00 869-830 points
B- = 80 = 2.67 829-800 points
C+ = 77 = 2.33 799-770 points
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C = 73 = 2.00 769-730 points
C- = 70 = 1.67 729-700 points
D+ = 67 = 1.33 699-670 points
D = 63 = 1.00 669-630 points
D- = 60 = .67 629-600 points
F = <60 = .00 0-599 points
Note that “C” means “Average” university work. It means you have performed acceptably; you
have met the minimum standard. It does not mean you have failed or that you are a failure as a
human being. I understand that many of you must maintain a certain minimum GPA to retain
scholarships or other financial aid. To achieve this GPA you should plan on working hard, rather
than asking me to give you a grade higher than the one you earned.
How to Succeed in this Class
Read with energy, interest, and pleasure. Approach reading as an exchange of questions
between yourself and the text. Take copious notes. I underline key passages but also note at the
top of the pages and in the margins any important ideas or questions that occur to me. I also
keep an intensive, ongoing index at the front of the book where I note ideas with page numbers
under categories such as foreshadowing, themes, characterization, etc. This index enables me to
readily find textual support when preparing essays.
Come to class prepared to engage with your texts, your colleagues, and me—that is, read
the assigned works and look at the designated web pages or videos by the date indicated on the
schedule and be ready to discuss them. Prepare the in-class assignments. Arrive with
interpretations and questions you want answered. I do not plan to lecture. Instead, I hope to
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facilitate discussions and debates in a relaxed, friendly atmosphere. I will also provide
opportunities for you to build on the knowledge you acquired through the pre-class assignments
by structured cooperative learning activities.
View your writing as a process. Jot down notes and consult your self-created index
before you start writing the essays. Come to my office to discuss ideas, research, drafts, and
rewrites. Use your colleagues as readers and sources of feedback.
If you have questions or concerns about readings, assignments, grades, or anything else
connected with the course, please feel free to see me. I like getting to know students better. I am
available during the office hours listed above and by appointment.
Class Procedures
I have deliberately designed this course to result in deep, rather than surface learning.
You can read about deep learning in a paper I wrote, Promoting Deep Learning:
http://www.theideacenter.org/sites/default/files/IDEA_Paper_47.pdf. Basically, deep learning is
predicated on four premises: motivation, active learning, student-student interaction, and deep
foundational knowledge based on concepts. Thus, I will regularly expect you to complete pre-
class assignments (“homework”) based on extensive reading and web page and video viewings.
These assignments will receive pass-fail points (all or nothing) if you bring to class a satisfactory
response to the assignment. Unlike homework, which is often stuffed into a teacher’s briefcase,
pre-class assignments will actually be used in class for discussions and for in-class activities.
Thus the motivating pre-class assignments will be processed more deeply in class using active
learning and student-student interactions through cooperative learning activities. You can read
more about cooperative learning in a paper I wrote, Enhancing Learning—and more!—Through
Cooperative Learning:
http://www.theideacenter.org/sites/default/files/IDEA_Paper_38.pdf.
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The process of expecting students to come to class fully prepared with a deep knowledge
base they have acquired out-of-class that can be deepened through in-class discussions and
activities is currently referred to as the “flipped” or “inverted” classroom model. Educause
describes flipped/inverted classrooms as follows: “The flipped classroom is a pedagogical
model in which the typical lecture and homework elements of a course are reversed. The
notion of a flipped classroom draws on such concepts as active learning, student engagement,
hybrid course design, and course podcasting. The value of a flipped class is in the repurposing
of class time into a workshop where students can inquire about lecture content, test their
skills in applying knowledge, and interact with one another in hands-on activities. Although
implementing a flipped classroom places different demands on faculty and forces students to
adjust their expectations, the model has the potential to bring about a distinctive shift in
priorities—from merely covering material to working toward mastery of it.”
Seven Things You Should Know about Flipped Classrooms (Educause Learning Initiative—ELI)
http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7081.pdf
Class Policies
Attendance and Make-up Exams/Late Work:
Students must not only attend every class, but they must also arrive on time, be prepared (all
reading, viewing, and pre-class assignments complete), and take an active part in class (see
Participation, below). You are expected to attend all class for the full duration of each
instructional session. Once you get to class, you are expected to stay in the classroom until the
class is over. Leaving class early or getting up in the middle of class is disruptive. Students may
be required to sign in at the beginning and/or end of each class session to verify their attendance.
If you have more than three (3) unexcused absences, I will have the option of lowering your final
grade 5% for each absence, including the first three. If you miss more than ten (10) classes for
ANY reason you should withdraw from the class. If you must miss class for school activities
such as athletics, band, etc., you must bring to me a list, signed by the appropriate faculty or
athletic department member, of the date(s) this absence(s) will occur. Medical emergencies,
validated by a doctor’s note, are excusable. Regular scheduled doctor or dentist appointments
made in advance are not. Absences due to oversleeping, defective alarm clocks, heavy traffic,
lack of parking, etc. are likewise not excusable.
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You are responsible for getting the notes from your colleagues for any class you miss. If you
miss or are late to (unexcused) any test or final examination, you will be able to take a later
replacement essay test or examination only at my discretion and at a time and place of my
choosing; you will be penalized 10% of the total possible points on the assignment. You can
take a makeup test or final examination you missed due to an excused absence with no penalty—
just be aware a makeup tends to be more difficult than the one you missed. Quizzes missed for
any reason cannot be made up.
Students unable to attend class should contact me regarding their absence in advance or as soon
as they return to school. Excessive absences or repeated tardiness will result in a lowered grade
and may result in failure of the course at the instructor’s discretion.
All assignment deadlines and scheduled exam dates are provided at the beginning of the
semester; therefore, late exam papers will be penalized by one-half of a letter grade drop grade
per day late. I will not accept excuses such as “crashed computers,” “lost flash drives,” or
“empty printer ink cartridges.” Save all computer work on your computer’s hard drive with a
back-up on a flash drive or removable storage device. Because the pre-class assignments are
actively used in the class period they are due, no late submission are possible. You will lose the
points that each missed assignment is worth, which will significantly impact your final grade.
Participation:
In addition to careful reading, I expect active participation and good attendance from everyone. I
believe in the educational benefits of a dynamic, interactive classroom. Students learn more,
absorb more, and remember more in classes where they respond actively to the course materials.
Thus, lack of preparation for class and irregular attendance will hurt your grade; good attendance
and active participation in class discussions will improve your grade.
Because students have different ways of actively contributing to the class, I try to be flexible and
open-minded about how I evaluate participation. In general, however, I will generously reward
students who contribute week after week to the class discussions with intelligent, thought-
provoking comments that demonstrate careful reading of the texts and thoughtful attention to
what others have said. If you miss class you obviously cannot contribute to class discussion, so
this will be reflected in your grade. If you attend class regularly (fewer than three unexcused
absences) but never participate, you will receive a C (30/50 pts.) for your
attendance/participation grade.
I am strong believer in the value of group work to promote learning and help students feel
connected to other students in class. Therefore, I will place students in semi-permanent groups
where you can complete a number of in-class activities.
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Plagiarism and Cheating:
Plagiarism includes copying or paraphrasing another’s words, ideas, or facts without crediting
the source; submitting a paper written by someone else, either in whole or in part, as one’s own
work; or submitting work previously submitted for another course or instructor. Plagiarism,
cheating, or other forms of academic dishonesty on any assignment will result in failure (a grade
of zero) for that assignment and may result in further disciplinary action, including but not
limited to failure for the course and expulsion from the University.
Scholastic dishonesty is a serious offense at the University (UTSA Student Code of Conduct,
Sections 202 and 203 -- http://www.utsa.edu/infoguide/appendices/b.cfm).
Any assignments that show evidence that they have not been completed directly by the student,
any act designed to give unfair advantage to a student or the attempt to commit such acts will not
be accepted and could result in automatic failure in the course. Scholastic dishonesty also
includes but is not limited to cheating, plagiarism, and collusion. Academic misconduct makes
the student subject to possible consequences from the University. Behavior that is not consistent
with the guidelines presented in the SCC will be addressed by the instructors and referred to
Student Judicial Affairs for review. Additional information and resources area available for
students and faculty at
http://www.utsa.edu/osja/scholastic.cfm
Disabilities Statement
If you need accommodation related to a disability, please make an appointment during my
office hours to discuss your needs. Students requesting accommodation must be registered with
Disability Services (www.utsa.edu/disability) and provide me with an accommodation letter.
THE UNIVERSITY CATALOG: All regulations regarding academic conduct, responsibilities,
and rights, as they appear in the current university catalogue, apply in this course.
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The University of Texas at San Antonio is a community of scholars, where integrity, excellence,
inclusiveness, respect, collaboration, and innovation are fostered.
As a Roadrunner, I will:
Uphold the highest standards of academic and personal integrity by practicing and
expecting fair and ethical conduct;
Respect and accept individual differences, recognizing the inherent dignity of each
person;
Contribute to campus life and the larger community through my active engagement; and
Support the fearless exploration of dreams and ideas in the advancement of ingenuity,
creativity, and discovery.
Guided by these principles now and forever, I am a Roadrunner!
The Roadrunner Creed
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Course Schedule This schedule may be altered to strengthen the learning process.
NA = Norton Anthology
Background reading is indicated in black text.
Original works of literature are indicated in red.
Online supplementary readings and videos are indicated in blue.
Examinations are indicated in brown and bolded.
Session/Date Assigned Readings or Viewings Homework
Due
Session 1
Wed, Aug 29
Session 2
Fri, Aug 31
The Romantic Period: 1785-
1832, NA, pp. 3-30;
C1-C-8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=oJnTTlgjVso
Brief Overview of
Romanticism: 7 minutes
Balladry and Ballad Revivals,
NA, pp. 31-32
Lord Randall, p. 32 http://www.bing.com/images/searc
h?q=lord+randall&view=detail&id
=3036CA14D6A760804CFEFBC7
2C4B16E728AE1568&first=1
Play the ballad at the bottom of
the webpage
Bonny Barbara Allen, p. 33 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=3uLCANPVIJg&feature=related
The Wife of Usher’s Well, pp.
34-35 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=EbdTHqlZMZI&feature=related
The Three Ravens, pp. 35-36 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=-z9TBsCvZ2o&feature=related
Sir Patrick Spens, pp. 36-37 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=bt6ZlpEWUFE&feature=related
The Daemon Lover, pp. 35-36 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=1CAQDqYtgEY&feature=related
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Session 3
Mon, Sept 3 NO CLASS
LABOR DAY
Session 4
Wed, Sept 5
The Slave Trade and the
Literature of Abolition, NA, pp.
88-89
Olaudah Equino, NA, pages 98-
99
From The interesting narrative
of Olaudah Equiano, or
Gustavus Vassa, the
African,Written by Himself, pp.
99-105. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=KEsvtNrkOmk&feature=related
Brief BBC Clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=HZk41mzDGNc&feature=related
Podcast: 5 minutes, 28 seconds
Session 5
Fri, Sept 7
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=oJnTTlgjVso&feature=relat
ed
7-minute Overview of
Romanticism
William Blake: 1757-1827, NA,
pp. 112-1116
From Songs of Innocence and
Experience, pp 118-135 (Omit
the following: The Divine
Image, Holy Thursday, On
Anothers Sorrow, Earth’s
Answer, Holy Thursday, To
Tirzah, a Divine Image) http://etc.usf.edu/lit2go/109/selecte
d-american-and-british-
poems/5234/laughing-song/
Play Blake’s Laughing Song http://etc.usf.edu/lit2go/109/selecte
d-american-and-british-
poems/5417/piping-down-the-
valleys-wild/
Play Blake’s Piping Down the
Valleys Wide
The Marriage of Heaven and
Hell, NA, pp. 148-149.
Session 6
Mon, Sept 10
Robert Burns: 1759-1796, NA,
pp. 165-167
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Green Grow the Rushes, p. 167;
Auld Lang Syne, pp. 173-174;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=86_tlA9maA0&feature=rela
ted
Original Words and Music, 3
minutes, 30 seconds
A Red Red Rose, p. 181.
The Revolution Controversy
and the “Spirit of the Age,” NA,
pp. 183-184
Mary Wollstonecraft: 1759-
1797, NA, pp. 208-211
From A vindication of the
Rights of Women, From The
Dedication to M. Talleyrand-
Perigord and Introduction , pp.
211-217 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=Hf9XdPPjJeI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=dFVoQBX2BxQ&feature=relmfu
Karla Carter on Mary
Wollstonecraft, Parts 1 & 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=Zg5H7y0waXU&feature=related
Mary Wollstonecraft, a
Londoner
Session 7
Wed, Sept 12
William Wordsworth: 1770-
1850, NA, pp. 270-272 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=3PdDHzBq7h4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=aC9rZYSQvlA&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=rpg5XJGHNuk&feature=rel
mfu
Three-Part Documentary with
works read by Ted Hughes, 5
minutes each http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=-NKZn9n4HiQ&feature=related
Wordsworth & Romanticism, 6
minutes
We are Seven, pp. 278-279; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=6D7Rc52RX3k&feature=related
13
Lines Written in Early Spring,
p. 280; Lines, Composed a Few
iles above Tintern Abbey, pp.
288-292 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=UvGT94NjML4&feature=related
Documentary with poems read
aloud, approximately 11
minutes
Preface to Lyrical Ballads
(1802), NA, pp. 292-293
“Emotion Recollected in
Tranquillity,” NA, pp. 303-304
Strange Fits of Passion Have I
Known, p. 305; She Dwelt
Among Untrodden Ways, pp.
305-306;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=LTbPYfPzQrE&feature=rel
ated
The Lucy Poems with reading
of She Dwelt Among
Untrodden Ways, 2 minutes
I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud,
pp. 334-335; My Heart Leaps
Up, p. 335; Ode, Intimations of
Immortality from Recollections
of Early Childhood, pp. 337-
341; Composed upon
Westminster Bridge, September
3, 1802, pp, 344-345; The
World is Too Much With Us, p.
347; Surprised by Joy, p. 347
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=F8HbRVV7khY
Analysis, approximately 5
minutes
The 1805 Prelude, NA, pp. 349-
351
14
Session 8
Fri, Sep 14
Wordsworth, Continued
Sir Walter Scott: 1771-182, NA,
pp. 418-420
The Lay of the Last Minstrel,
pp. 420-422
Session 9
Mon, Sept 17
Samuel Taylor Colderidge:
1772-1834, NA, pp. 437-439
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=F7NS4So4k-
Q&feature=related
9-minute Overview
The Rime of the Ancient
Mariner, pp. 443-459 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=RGH4p4z4s5A&feature=relmfu
Richard Burton: Part 1, 11
minutes
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=1Aa1Fj9pPYI&feature=fvw
rel
Richard Burton: Part 2, 10
minutes http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=Tp7q6o7Z3rw&feature=fvwrel
Richard Burton: Part 3, 9
minutes
Kubla Khan, NA, pp. 459-460
Kubla Khan, pp. 460-461
Session 10
Wed, Sept 19
Jane Austen: 1775-1817, NA,
pp. 523-525
The Gothic and the
Development of a Mass
readership, NA, pp. 584-585
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=PvYdeYRmwuE
5-and-a-half minute written
biography with music
Horace Walpole: Castle of
Otranto, pp. 586-589
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=irN8v7mkNkM
8 minutes, images and music
only
Internet:
Emma
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Session 11
Fri, Sept 21
George Gordon Byron,: 1788-
1824, NA, pp. 612-616
She Walks in Beauty, pp. 617-
618 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=I_zCOJOgd4U&feature=fvwrel
Percy Bysshe Shelley: 1792-
1822, NA, pp 748-751 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=G2AwOKP4okM&feature=relate
d
Eight minute overview of
Shelley, including a reading of
Ozymandias abd Ode to the
West Wind
Mutability, pp. 751-752; To
Wordsworth, p. 752;
Ozymandias, p. 776; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=zsP3xfQELFY&feature=related
(optional)
To Sidmouth and Castlereagh,
pp. 790-791; Ode to the West
Winds, pp. 791-793 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=ovDd02aVYbk&feature=related
(optional)
The Cloud, p. 832; To a
Skylark, 834; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=SoHAdTa6aqA&feature=related
A Defense of Poetry , p. 856
16
Session 12
Mon, Sept 24
Shelley, Continued
John Keats: 1795-1821, NA, pp.
901-903 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=CyMRO0cmcaY&feature=relmfu
8 minute overview with short
readings including When I have
Fears that I May Cease to Be
When I have Fears that I May
Cease to Be, p. 911; The Eve of
St. Agnes, pp.912-922; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=iNMT_cPgN6U&feature=fvwrel
26 minutes
La Belle Dame sans Merci: A
Ballad, pp. 923-924; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=qL-L8ExX3kQ&feature=related
Ode to a Grecian Urn, pp. 930-
931;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=0gOShpPL3Ds&feature=rel
ated
Ode to a Nightingale, pp. 927-
929;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=Xri3eQsMT7A&feature=fv
wrel
Ode on Melancholy, NA, P. 931
Ode on Melancholy, pp. 932-
933 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=TdphtMWjies&feature=related
Session 13
Wed, Sept 26
Keats, continued
17
Session 14
Fri, Sept 28
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley:
1797-1851, NA, pp. 981-983
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=NzrjNTy2glM&feature=rela
ted
8 minutes, 33 second overview
of the novel’s creation
In-class Essay Examination
on Romanticism
Session 15
Mon, Oct 1
The Victorian Age: 1830-1901,
NA, pp. 1017-1043
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=LsOgxgrZa1g
8 minute Overview, U of
Delaware, lipsynching off
Out-of-class
Essay on
Romanticism
Session 16
Wed, Oct 3
Thomas Carlyle: 1795-1881,
NA, pp 1044-1048
The Everlasting No, pp.
pp.1048-1053
John Henry Cardinal Newman:
1801-1890, NA, pp. 1076-1078
The Idea of a University, pp.
1078-1086
Session 17
Fri, Oct 5
John Stuart Mill: 1806-1873,
NA, pp. 1086-1088 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=tdLTX9K0bBA
12 minute overview with
challenges
The Subjection of Women, NA,
pp. 1104-105
Subjection of Women, pp.
1105-1115
Elizabeth Barrett Browning:
1806-1861, NA, pp. 1123-1124
From Sonnets from the
Portuguese, pp. 1129-1130;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?feature=player_embedded&v=
B8xByF8RTZE
Minute-and-a-half reading of
How Do I love Thee
The Runaway Slave at
Pilgrim’s Point, pp. 1130-1137
18
Session 18
Mon, 8
Alfred Lord Tennyson: 1809-
1892, NA pp. 1156-1159
The Lady of Shalott, pp. 1161
-1166;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?NR=1&v=k0rVNQw1DQM&f
eature=endscreen
11 minutes, song
The Lotus-Eaters, pp. 1166-
1120; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=xe7Gjd7jJJU
Ulysses, pp. 1170-1172; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=bmDoT1TXV3k
From The Princess: Tears, Idle
Tears, p. 1183;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=bPEYdCRDR7E&feature=g
-vrec
Tennyson Reading his own
poem
In Memoriam A. H. H, NA, p.
1186
In Memoriam A. H. H (1-5), pp.
1187-1190; The Charge of the
Light Brigade, pp. 1245-1236; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=uzCOL6ewpPw&feature=related
Crossing the Bar, p. 1869
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=2sDsUNFCUuo&feature=re
lated
Session 19
Wed, Oct 10
Tennyson, Continued
Robert Browning: 1812-1889,
NA, pp. 1275-1278
Porphyria’s Lover, pp. 1278-
1279; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=fE6PjB1kn4w&feature=related
My Last Dutchess, pp. 1282-
1283
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=DZxq3r7TlHo
19
Session 20
Fri, Oct 12
Emily Bronte: 1818-1848, NA,
pp. 1275-1278 http://www.youtube.com/watch?fe
ature=player_embedded&v=dehm
UqIxgjU#!
Brief 10-minute overview
George Eliot: 1819-1880, NA,
pp. 1353-1355 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=3eJYlv8WgIY&feature=related
Approximately 5 minutes of
insights
Internet:
Wuthering
Heights
Session 21
Mon, Oct 15
Matthew Arnold: 1822-1888,
NA, pp. 1369-1373
Lines Written in Kensington
Gardens, pp. 1379-1380; Dover
Beach, 1387 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=q7aKMHq9iN4
The Dover Bitch
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=xAx92p2Z8FY
Pre-Raphaelitism, NA, pp.
1463-1466
Dover Bitch
Session 22
Wed, Oct 17
Dante Gabriel Rossetti: 1828-
1882, NA, pp. 1471-1472
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=Vx4MYXK0c7M&feature=
relate
Pre-Raphaelite Painters:
Pictures, approximately 8
minutes
Soul’s Beauty, p. 1488
Christina Rossetti: 1830-1894,
NA, pp. 1489-1490
Goblin Market, pp. 1496-1508 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=ujjWplm3UTQ
22 minutes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?fe
ature=player_embedded&v=J9N0I
O3Z-P0
Minute-and-a-half biography
20
Session 23
Fri, Oct 19
William Morris: 1834-1896.
NA, pp. 1512-1513 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=X3kLR4N10Qg
15-minute biography
Walter Pater: 1839-1894, NA,
1512-1513
Gerard Manley Hopkins: 1844-
1889, NA pp. 1546-1548
God’s Grandeur, p. 1548;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=K9ygJh0ZCzE&feature=plc
p
The Windhover, p. 1550; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=jz1ZHccoTms
Carrion Comfort, p 1554
Visuals
Session 24
Mon, Oct 22
Hopkins, Continued
Victorian Issues, NA, pp1560-
Charles Darwin, NA, pp1560-
1561
Charles Dickens, from Hard
Times, pp. 1599-1600
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=jpDPxplPndA
7 minute book review of the
novel http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=hQeXXiwUq3Q&feature=related
3-minute overview of Dickens
by Claire Tomilin
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=DSSK-m3-
xGU&feature=related
Three-minute reading of Mr.
Bounderby describing his life
Session 25
Wed, Oct 24
Late Victorians, NA, pp. 1668-
1671
Robert Louis Stevenson: 1850-
1894, NA pp. 1675-1671
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde, pp. 1677-1719
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=L2GX3AgkJog
3 minute overview
21
Session 26
Fri, Oct 26
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde, Continued
Session 27
Mon, Oct 29
Oscar Wilde: 1854-1900: pp.
1720-1721 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=cqRwZz7n8o8&feature=relmfu
8 minute, Bio 1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=gehpDtxANEE&feature=relmfu
7 minute, Bio 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=O6S0AmZFw7k&feature=relmfu
7 minute, Bio 3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=nSkNvzbgS_E&feature=relmfu
8 minute, Bio 4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=ABrGNothfP0&feature=relmfu
3-and-a-half minute, Bio 5 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=bk_TstA7cK4&feature=watch_re
sponse_rev
1 minute, 45 second. Bio 6 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=5GNvQL3Iwgs&feature=relmfu
7-and-a-half minute, Bio 7
The Importance of Being
Ernest, pp. 1733-1777 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=qGJfOCCIx5E
3 minutes, Portal Players ad
Session 28
Wed, Oct 31
The Importance of Being
Ernest, Continued
Session 29
Fri, N ov 2
Bernard Shaw: 1856-1950, NA,
pp. 1780-1783 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=g3aoDAAa1bU&feature=related
3 minute film clip
Mrs. Warren’s Profession, pp.
1783-1829 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=Uy77dTVjFMI
7 minute scene from play
22
Session 30
Mon, Nov 5
Mrs. Warren’s Profession,
Continued
Session 31
Wed, Nov 7
Rudyard Kipling: 1865-1936,
NA, pp. 1851-1853
If, p. 1882; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=tK4HDCIr_E8
2 minute reading
Danny Deever, pp. 1877-1879
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=CUZvAlupOzI
2 minute reading
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=BJ4hU_vXfjs
4 minute reading of Gunga Din
In-class Essay Examination
on Victorianism
Gunga Din
Clips from The
Man Who
Would be King
Out-of-Class
Essay
Examination
on
Victorianism
Session 32
Fri, Nov 9
Twentieth Century and After,
NA, pp. 1887-1913
Thomas Hardy: 1840-1928, NA,
pp 1914-1915
Hap, p. 1932;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=kMXkEroSwxc
3 minutes + Lecture and
Reading
Drummer Hodge, p. 1933;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=y3RexBioZxo
I minute reading or
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=o276oJSHFhs
3 minute musical version by
Garth Baxter
The Ruined Maid, pp. 1934-
1935;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=d7hF_T0KYNU
2 minute, 45 second reading
with brief intro
In Time of Breaking of Nations,
p. 1946 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=gw7pgIz53P8&feature=related
1 and a half minute reading of the
The Man He Killed
23
Session 33
Mon, Nov 12
Joseph Conrad: 1857-1924, NA
pp. 1947-1948
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=fdLd_8jkCWM
3 minute biography about the
Congo
Heart of Darkness, pp. 1953-
2012
Session 34
Wed, Nov 14
Heart of Darkness, Continued
Session 35
Fri, Nov 16
A. E. Housman: 1859-1936,
NA, pp. 2011-2012
Loveliest of Trees, p. 2012; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=fj8SrxeXZ5w&feature=related
51 second reading
When I Was One-and-Twenty,
pp. 2012-2013;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=9gIVA8u7pYE&feature=rel
ated
50 second reading
To an Athlete Dying Young, p.
2012;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=8Y88SaP4orc&feature=relat
ed
Reading
Terrence, This is Stupid Stuff,
pp. 2014-2015
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=Nbz4IUNrhBA
Reading
Voices from World War I, NA,
pp. 2016-2018
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=5IsMPoUDR98&feature=rel
ated
3 minute reading of Is My
Team Ploughing
24
Session 36
Mon, Nov 19
Siegfried Sassoon: 1886-1967,
NA, p. 2023
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=f3-
qSV6zPDE&feature=related
4 minute, 40 second overview
of war poets
They, pp. 2012-2024; The Rear
Guard, p. 2024;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=cURQxuEDS9A
1 minute, 40 second reading
The General, pp. 2024-2025;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=FTEYCt4_zcU&feature=rel
ated
1 minute reading
from Memoirs of an Infantry
Office (the Opening of the
Battle of the Somme), pp. 2026-
2027
Wilfred Owen: 1893-1918, NA,
2034
Dulce Et Decorum Est, p. 1931
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?feature=player_embedded&v=
aEUAD9-308Q
7minute clip from BBC movie
starring Sam West as Wilfred
Owen: two poems read
Robert Graves: 1895-1985, NA,
p. 2045
From Goodbye to All That, pp.
2045-2048
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=c0pO6zIaj-Y
Approximately 5 minute
reading
25
Session 37
Wed, Nov 21
Modern Manifesto, NA, pp.
2056-2058
William Butler Yeats: 1865-
1939, NA, pp. 2082-2085 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=8rO2MgvRTpU&feature=related
4-minute views of Sligo
The Lake Isle of Innisfree, pp.
2087-2088; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=u2FT4_UUa4I&feature=fvwrel
8 minutes of Yeats reading his
own poems
When You Are Old, p. 2088;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=Jf_b0eModBw&feature=fv
wrel
No Second Troy, p. 2091;
September 1913, pp. 2092-
2093; Easter 1916, pp. 2093-
2094; The Second Coming, p.
2099;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=4EUIc4ZwVp0&feature=fv
wrel
Cyril Cusack
http://www.youtube.com/wat
ch?v=yThL4eaQ4Bg&featur
e=fvwrel Leda and the Swan, 2012;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=aVHDJsuBhz0
Sailing to Byzantium, pp. 2102-
2103;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=_1_MF_3U-
Zc&feature=related
2 minute reading
Byzantium, pp. 2107-2108;
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=LlEZDFqCcAk
3-and-a-half minute reading
Crazy Jane Talks to the Bishop,
p. 2108; Lapis Lazuli, pp. 2109-
2110;
26
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=s3HqfFUA3wE
3 minute+ reading (gay means
joyful)
Under Ben Bulben, pp. 2011-
2013
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=EXoM0Ze-9xE
4 minute, 18 second reading
Session 38
Fri, Nov 23
NO CLASS
THANSGIVING HOLIDAY
Session 39
Mon, Nov 26
Yeats, Continued
E. M. Forster: 1879-1970, NA,
pp. 2121-2122
Virginia Woolf: 1882-1941,
NA, pp. 2143-2144
Modern Fiction, pp. 2150-2155-
Session 40
Wed. Nov 28
James Joyce: 1882-1941, NA,
pp. 2276-2278
Araby, pp. 2278-2282; The
Dead, pp. 2282-2311
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=6isUZAw0CQQ&feature=f
vwrel
4-and-a-half minute
reenactment of the conclusion
Jigsaw
27
D. H. Lawrence: 1885-1930,
NA, pp. 2481-2482
Odour of Chrysanthemums, pp.
2483;
Session 41
Fri, Nov 30
T. S. Eliot” 1888-1965, NA, pp.
2521-2524
The Love Song of J. Alfred
Prufrock, pp. 2524-2527
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=JAO3QTU4PzY&feature=f
vwrelEliot
Eliot reading Prufrock, 8
minutes
George Orwell: 1903-1958, NA,
pp. 2604-2605
W. H. Auden: 1907-1973, NA,
pp. 2677-2678
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?feature=player_embedded&list
=PLEBF3242F4C26CC1D&v=
vwNpsUZlZpo
Twelve Poems
Dylan Thomas: 1914-1953, NA,
pp. 2697-2698
The Force that through the
Green Fuse Drives the Flower,
pp. 2698-2699; Do Not Go
Gentle into that Good Night, p.
2703 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=s1fTlIsUGks&feature=fvwrel
Anthony Hopkins http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=2Z-ZuguSrQQ&feature=related
Richard Burton reads Fern Hill
(3 minutes, 43 seconds)
Session 42
Mon, Dec 3
Graham Greene, The Power and
the Glory
28
Session 43
Wed, Dec 5
Graham Green, Continued
Session 44
Fri, Dec 7
Graham Green, Continued
Voices from World War II, NA,
pp. 2704-2706
In-class Essay Examination
on Twentieth Century
Out-of-Class
Essay
Examination
on Twentieth
Century
Session 46
Mon, Dec 10 NO Class: Student Study Day
Exams Returned
Tuesday, Dec 18
0730am-1000am FINAL EXAM
Cumulative; Comprehensive
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