COURSE CALENDAR FOR AML 4213 Summer B 2011

 

 

 

Date

Lectures

Topics & Readings

Assignment Due Dates/Instructions 
           &
Miscellaneous Reminders

Please note: each week below is divided into two blocks to help you apportion your study time.

Prof = lectures. Click on them. They are required reading.

NR=Not Ready=I haven’t completed the lecture yet.

All E-texts (click on them), professor lectures, and our major authors/books (the ones ordered for the course) are required reading.

Especially in a summer term, things can get very busy—so pay attention to the ebb and flow of the workload and apportion your time accordingly!

Week 1: June 27-July 3
(see below as well)

 

Prof: Vespucci, etc.

The “Discovery”



E-text: Columbus

E-text: Vespucci

E-text: Montaigne

E-text: on Vespucci

E-text: on Columbus—just read Columbus part


Week one continues below!!!! Each block (1/2 week) equals what would be a week Fall or Spring term.

CLICK THE "Prof...." LINKS TO THE FAR LEFT FOR MY LECTURES. YOU SHOULD LOOK AT THESE BEFORE, DURING, AND/OR AFTER YOU READ OUR MAIN AUTHORS (IT'S UP TO YOU, ACCORDING TO YOUR LEARNING STYLE).

THE E-TEXTS ARE MANDATORY READING.

DID YOU FORGET TO TAKE THE DIAGNOSTIC EXAM???!!!! IT HAS BEEN EXTENDED TO 11:59pm 7/5 

Week 1:

continued

 

Prof: Tempest

 

IMAGINING THE NEW WORLD


Shakespeare, The Tempest


The Wiki. article below is better than the intro. to our edition (which I found meandering and thus not required reading).

E-text: on Utopia

E-text: on Renaissance

E-text: on Great Chain

E-text: Wiki on Tempest (you can skip/skim sections on “Afterlife” etc—various interpretations 18th century+)


Required Diagnostic (grade doesn’t count) Exam Instructions:
1-Hour, to be taken b/w Saturday July 2nd 9:00pm & Monday July 4th 11:59pm

DID YOU FORGET TO TAKE THE DIAGNOSTIC EXAM???!!!! IT HAS BEEN EXTENDED TO 11:59pm 7/5 

 

 

 

Remember to contribute to the Discussion Groups; and remember to cut-and-paste your substantial postings in an accumulating file, which you will turn in at the end of the semester.

I cannot emphasize too strongly: Discussion Group participation is equivalent to attending class; it is very easy to procrastinate on this, and, as it is a major requirement, you will not pass the course if you don’t submit postings throughout the semester per the instructions on the Syllabus.

Week 2:

July 4-10 (see below as well)

Prof: Puritan

PURITAN COMMUNITIES & BELIEFS

.


E-text: Winthrop

E-text: Bradford

E-text: on Puritans

DEAR SOME STUDENTS: SOME OF YOU HAVE NOT BEEN CHECKING YOUR EMAIL WITHIN THE BLACKBOARD SYSTEM FOR IMPORTANT MESSAGES.  AND SOME OF YOU HAVE NOT BEEN READING OR INITIATING POSTS.  YOU GET TO BOTH AREAS OF THE SYSTEM BY CLICKING ON THE ICONS ON THE FAR LEFT OF THE BLACKBOARD MENU. WE’RE NOW IN THE SECOND WEEK, AND VERY SOON THE “SOME” SHOULD BE REPLACED WITH “ZERO”!

Required Online Exam#1 Instructions:
1-Hour, to be taken b/w

Saturday July 9th  9:00pm & Monday July 11th 11:59pm

Week 2:

continued

Film: either “The Black Robe” or “The Mission”

The “Black Robe” is a fictional but historically accurate depiction of relations b/w a Quebec Catholic priest and a northern Indian tribe family.  “The Mission”—also fictional, but historically accurate—is about an adventurer turned penitent, involved in a South American Catholic mission.

It would be nice to read actual native American selections, but such requires somewhat “intensive”
anthropological prepping (not practical in the summer term context).  So these film representations of Indian “otherness” will have to suffice.

These—along with the 2 films at the end of the semester—should be commonly available via Netflix, Amazon, etc.

You may (if you like film and have some expertise in writing about film from other classes) elect to write on either for the major essay for this course

Week 3:

July 11-17 (see below as well)

Prof: Rowlandson

17TH/18TH-CENTURY NARRATIVES OF CAPTIVITY & ASSIMILATION


Rowlandson, "A Narrative of the Captivity ..." (in Journeys)


I suggest that you read the first pages of the editor’s introductory historical material, pages 13-20, before you read Rowlandson's narrative, pages 31-65 (the preface by a Puritan minister immediately before can be skipped); and the last pages of the introduction 21-26, after you read her work.
 

Week 3:

continued

Prof. Equiano

Equiano, The Life of...: Editor’s Note or Introduction (not the Preface written by Equiano himself!!!); Chapters I-III, IV (first several pages), V, VII-VIII, X-XI, XII (first several pages; last several pages), & Preface (Preface only makes sense after you've read the narrative)

 

E-text: on Equiano #1/read 1st “next” links  


E-text: on Equiano #2/read only after reading Equiano per se (CORRECTED LINK)

Important: Please remember that although some lag time is acceptable (working students often post on the weekend following the week's readings) in respect to the Discussion forums, being chronically out of season is not acceptable.  To mix the metaphor: you don’t want to join the party, when the party has moved on to another locale.

Week 4:

July 18-24 (see below as well)

Prof. Ashbridge

 

GREAT AWAKENINGS: DECLARATIONS OF INDEPENDENCE--SELF AND NATION MAKING

 

  

Ashbridge, Autobiography (in Journeys book)

 

Read the introductory material on Quakers in our edition (121-23) before reading Ashbridge's account (147-70).

Read the remaining interpretive material (119-21 & 124-29, skipping the too technical 130-44) after you read Ashbridge. You do not need to read the secondary accounts, from friends and husband, that follow Ashbridge's memoir.

Please note July 21st Thursday is the last day to drop the course with a DR grade.

 

Week 4:
continued

NR-Prof. Franklin

Franklin, Autobiography of B. Franklin (Parts One & Two)

E-text: on Franklin

 

Again: Please remember that although some lag time is acceptable (working students often post on the weekend following the week's readings) in respect to the Discussion forums, being chronically out of season is not acceptable.  To mix the metaphor: you don’t want to join the party, when the party has moved on to another locale.

Instructions for Essay: Due Tuesday July 26th Midnight

 
Required Online Exam#2 Instructions (NOT READY):1-Hour, to be taken b/w Saturday July 23rd 9:00pm & Monday July 25th 11:59pm 

Week 5:
July 25-31 (see below as well)

NR-prof: Wieland

THE DANGERS OF INDEPENDENCE: AMERICAN GOTHIC

 

 

Brown, Wieland (do not read Memoirs of Carwin)

Read complex/dense Fliegelman introduction only after you’ve read the novel, as it assumes that you have read the novel). 

Week 5:

continued

Wieland continued

Week 6:
Aug 1-7 (see below as well)

NR-Prof: Crev. & etc.

 

THE PASTORAL/SUBLIME TRADITION: GOING INTO THE WOODS & GOING WEST

 

E-text: Crevecoeur

E-text: DeTocqueville

 

Week 6:

continued

NR-Prof. Irving

E-text: Irving

E-text: Emerson

E-text: on Irving
 

Outside site on Emerson (read just 1st several paragraphs)  (E-text)

Required Online Exam#3 Instructions (NOT READY:
1-Hour, to be taken b/w

Saturday Aug 6 9:00pm & Monday Aug 8 11:59pm 

Week 7:

Aug 8-11 (see below as well)


Film: “Last of the Mohicans” (Daniel Day Lewis)

This is a romanticized version of the 1840 novel by James F. Cooper

Link for Instructions (NOT READY): For Discussion Forum
Due Tuesday Aug. 9th by Midnight

Week 7:

continued  


Film: “Shane”--THE classic American Western!

Aug 11: Official last day of class

 


Aug 17: Grades submitted

Aug 18: Grades available in the Panthersoft grade kiosk

Aug 22: Fall term begins