ENGLISH 621:  PRINCIPLES of LITERARY CRITICISM and THEORY 
  
DR. JOLANTA W. WAWRZYCKA
   Russell Hall 106. Current
Office Hours  E-mail: jolanta@radford.edu

ABOUT THE COURSE:   The course covers selected texts of literary criticism from Aristotle and Plato to the 20th Century. The readings  are chosen on the basis of how well they contribute to our understanding of principles that govern literature and art. A  number of traditional and electronic lectures  will highlight  some aspects of historical and cultural background against which critical/theoretical thinking about language, art, and literature has developed. The lectures will also introduce key figures who fostered that thinking.  Aside from my lectures, this class will depend on in-class discussions of the assigned readings; as you read, you are expected to learn and use (and be critical of) the theoretical vocabulary present in the texts.


 TEXTBOOKS:

COURSE  REQUIREMENTS AND CLASS POLICIES:
PRESENTATIONS will be worth 20% of your final grade. Because you are required to prepare a Digital Portfolio and presentation, please, consult the Research Guidelines for Packaging Multimedia Presentations but note that presentations in this course are mainly "thematic" rather than biographical. In addition to Internet research, please include materials from course textbooks in your presentation. For your convenience, I will collect samples of your programs (week 5/6) and I will preview your presentations so please have it ready a week before you present.   
READINGS LOG PORTFOLIO
(details will follow) 30%
TERM  PAPER & Joyce Logs A-E (details will follow) 30% of your grade.
FINAL EXAM  (details will follow) 20% of your final grade.
ATTENDANCE POLICY: only 2 absences will be excused. Each additional one will come at a price of -4 points.

By accepting admission to RU, each student makes a commitment to understand, support and abide by the University Honor Code without compromise or exception.  This class will be conducted in strict observance of the Honor Code. 


WEEKLY ASSIGNMENTS:

WEEK 1: 1/19  No class: holiday.

WEEK 2: 1/26 Setting the Course Requirements

To gain a better understanding of how critical and theoretical approaches are applied to literature, we will discuss stories from James Joyce's Dubliners and use them as textual points of reference, a literary base and context for discussions of critical and theoretical schools of thought, including discussion of  Joyce's own "critical" statements about the purpose of his work (see  Dubliners volume, pages 251-279; Epiphanies, etc).

WEEK 3: 2/2  Context for Critical/Theoretical Discussions:   James Joyce  LOG 1

WEEK 4: 2/9   Context for Critical/Theoretical Discussions:   James Joyce.

WEEK 5:  2/16    History of Critical Thinking--Classical Thought  LOG 2

WEEK 6:   2/23  History of Critical Thinking--Classical & Medieval Thought  LOG 3

WEEK 7:  3/2  Transition From Romantic Critical  Thought to Victorian and proto-modern Criticism.  LOG 4

WEEK 8:    3/9 Spring Break 

WEEK 9: 3/16 Transition: From Romantic Critical  Thought to Victorian and proto-modern Criticism.  LOG 5

WEEK 10: 3/23   Psychoanalytical and Myth/Archetype Approaches  LOG 6

WEEK 11:   3/30  Structuralism Post-Structuralist and Deconstructive Thinking  LOG 7

WEEK 12:  4/6  Feminist Critical Thought  LOG 8

WEEK 13:  4/13   Marxist and New Historicist Criticism  LOG 9

WEEK 14:   4/20  Term Paper Workshop. 

WEEK 15:   4/27  Term Paper.  It's a Wrap...

WEEK 16:  FINAL EXAM: 8 pm., Wednesday, May 6

Choices for  Presentations:

Psychological/Psychoanalytic Approach to Literature:
Freudian & Lacanian Criticism. 
Ferdinand de Saussure & structuralism (Barthes; Levi-Strauss). Marxist Thinkers::
Karl Marx; Louis Althuser.
Mythological studies:
Carl Jung & Northrop Frye.
Jacques Derrida and
the Derrida Factor.
Dialogic Criticism:
Mikhail Bakhtin and the Bakhtin Factor.
  Feminist theories (TBA)  

Updated on January 22, 2009

© 2009 Principles of Literary Theory and Criticism
Jolanta W. Wawrzycka. All Rights Reserved.