Shakespeare Syllabus Fall 2013

 

English 4140 BMWA                                                                                                  Berggren

SHAKESPEARE

            We will be using the Signet Classic Shakespeare texts, individual paperbacks published by Penguin Putnam and now available at the Baruch College Bookstore and Shakespeare & Co., at 137 East 23rd Street. These are compact books, easy to carry, and every student is required to have the play for reference at each class meeting, since our method of study will include close reading of individual speeches and scenes.

The Signet editions provide notes to aid you in your first reading, but they will hardly solve all problems.  You should make it a habit to mark any materials that seem difficult or important (or both) so that you can raise questions and offer comments in class.  You are to re‑read each play at least once before we complete our consideration of it.  Before your second reading, study the editor’s introduction (which won’t make much sense before your first reading) and glance at the various articles available at the back of the book.  Some essays and source materials printed there are more valuable than others; I will recommend the best of them at the appropriate time.

Please read the general introduction (“Shakespeare:  An Overview”) that appears in each of the Signet texts for Monday, 9 September.

Learning Goals

Students who successfully complete ENG 4140 should be able to

  • interpret Shakespearean texts by paying close attention to his choice of detail, vocabulary, and style
  • articulate a critical evaluation of a play’s themes and methods
  • write critical essays employing a strong thesis statement, appropriate textual citations, and contextual and inter-textual evidence for their ideas
  • relate Shakespeare’s works to each other and to other works you have read in terms of historical period, stylistic and/or generic development, and the arc of his career

 

Tentative Reading List

A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595-96)

Wednesday, 28 August – Introduction

Monday, 9 September – Acts 1-2

Wednesday, 11 September — Acts 3-4

Monday, 16 September – Act 5

Henry IV, Part 1 (1597)

Wednesday, 18 September – Act 1

Monday, 23 September – Act 2; Scene Study 1

Wednesday, 25 September – Act 3

Monday, 30 September – Acts 4-5

Hamlet (1600)

Wednesday, 2 October —Act 1

Monday, 7 October – Act 2

Wednesday, 9 October – Act 3; Scene Study 2

Tuesday, 15 October – Act 4

Wednesday, 16 October – Act 5; Scene Study 3

Mid-Term Examination:  Monday, 21 October

Measure for Measure (1604)

Wednesday, 23 October – Act 1

Monday, 28 October – Act 2; Scene Study 4

Wednesday, 30 October – Acts 3-4

Monday, 4 November – Act 5

King Lear (1605-06)

Wednesday, 6 November – Act 1

Monday, 11 November – Act 2; Scene Study 5

Wednesday, 13 November – Act 3

Monday, 18 November – Act 4

Wednesday, 20 November – Act 5; Scene Study 6

The Winter’s Tale (1610)

Monday, 25 November – Act 1

Monday, 2 December – Act 2

Wednesday, 4 December – Act 3; Scene Study 7

Monday, 9 December – Act 4

Wednesday, 11 December – Act 5

            FINAL EXAMINATION:  Monday, 16 December,

 COURSE REQUIREMENTS

WRITING:

You will write a mid-term and a final examination, two critical essays, of which the first must be revised and resubmitted, and a third written assignment in connection with your scene study and oral presentation.  The first essay will be due on Friday, 20 September, a day when we do not meet (you may, of course, hand the paper in earlier).  NEVER CUT CLASS BECAUSE YOU ARE NOT READY TO HAND IN A PAPER.  Appointments will be made for private conferences to discuss your written work after the first essay is returned, but you are invited to stop by my office or catch me after class whenever you have questions.

SCENE STUDIES/ORAL PRESENTATIONS/BLOG:

Students will work in small groups on two related projects:  an oral presentation to the class analyzing a scene after they have videotaped their dramatic reading of the scene being discussed.   The dramatic reading and the critique will be posted to our Scene Study Blog for review by the whole class.  In class, the group will have 15 minutes to teach the class in response to questions about the scene.

CLASS BLOG:  We will have a course blog that will be set up by the end of the first week of classes.  Students should post a substantial response to three of the semester’s six plays on a schedule to be distributed on the first day of class.  In addition, please comment on at least one posting discussing a play about which you have not initiated a post.

ACADEMIC HONESTY:  The English Department fully supports Baruch College’s policy on Academic Honesty, which states, in part:

“Academic dishonesty is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. Cheating, forgery, plagiarism and collusion in dishonest acts undermine the college’s educational mission and the students’ personal and intellectual growth. Baruch students are expected to bear individual responsibility for their work, to learn the rules and definitions that underlie the practice of academic integrity, and to uphold its ideals. Ignorance of the rules is not an acceptable excuse for disobeying them. Any student who attempts to compromise or devalue the academic process will be sanctioned.”  In this class, any evidence of plagiarism, however minute it may be, will earn you an F grade on the work in question and will result in your being formally reported to the Office of the Dean of Students.

GRADING POLICIES:  You will be encouraged to revise the papers you hand in.  Exams may not be revised.  Your contributions to the Discussion Board will not be corrected, since the idea is to stimulate discussion and to emphasize the importance of careful and consistent reading.   Lively class participation is expected and will count toward your final grade, which depends as well, of course, on the writing assignments and exams mentioned above.  In determining your final grade, I will weigh your various contributions to the class in roughly these proportions:

Scene Study/Oral Presentation/Blog                                         15%

Class participation                                                                              10%

First essay                                                                                                15%

Second essay                                                                                          20%

Mid-term examination                                                                        20%

Final examination                                                                                20%

100%

OFFICE HOURS:

Wednesdays, 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m., Thursdays, 9:00-10:30 a.m., and by appointment

E-mail: [email protected]

Room 7-271, Vertical Campus

646-312-3931