Department of English
Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University
2202235 Reading and Analysis for the Study of English Literature
Puckpan Tipayamontri
Office: BRK 1106.1
Office Hours: M 1–3 and by appointment
Phone: 0-2218-4703
Section 1
BRK 307
M 11–12, Th 8–10
Detailed Schedule
* asterisked
works are mandatory
Week 1 |
Oct. 28 |
Reading
and Seeing
1: Learning Art
and Life
Reading
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Oct. 31 |
2:
Living Art and Life
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Week 2 |
Nov. 4 |
3: Studying History and Life Reading
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Nov. 7 |
4:
Viewing Family and School Reading
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Week 3 |
Nov. 11 |
5:
Second Chances Reading
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Nov. 14 |
6:
Discoveries and Decisions Reading
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Week 4 |
Nov. 18 |
Reading and Critiquing 7:
Shakespeare: The Drama of Sonnets
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Nov. 21 |
8: The Legacy of Shakespeare's Drama and Poetry Reading
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Week 5 |
Nov. 19 |
The Space of History and Literature
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Nov. 21 |
Lecture:
Radha Chakravarty, "Multilingual Contexts: The Indian Novel
in English" (6:00-6:30 p.m., room 105,
Maha Chulalongkorn Building) |
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Nov. 22 |
7:
Meetings of Cultures Reading
Discussion: Amitav Ghosh, Wasana Wongsurawat, and Verita Sriratana, "Amitav Ghosh: A Dialogue" (10:50 a.m.-noon, room 105, Maha Chulalongkorn Building) |
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Nov. 23 |
Lecture: Jahnavi Barua, "Looking East--From the Land of the Morning Sun" (7:30-8:00 p.m., room 105, Maha Chulalongkorn Building) |
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Week 6 |
Nov. 26 |
8: Meeting Venues
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Nov. 29 |
9:
Meeting the Inspector Reading
*Groups
perform their "Meeting the Inspector" scene from act 1 pp.
169-74
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Week 7 |
Dec. 3 |
10: Meeting
Oneself Reading
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Dec. 6 |
11:
Meeting Others Reading
*Reading response 2 due in
class (Question: In Priestley's An Inspector Calls,
which inspection session or method yields surprising
results? Who is being inspected? By whom? What insight is
revealed from the inspection?)
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Week 8 |
Dec. 10 |
Contesting Ideas
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Dec. 13 |
12: Whose
War and What's at Stake? Reading
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Week 9 |
Dec. 17 |
13:
How to Tell Truth and Fiction Reading
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Dec. 20 |
14: Newnesses: Which Means What? Reading
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Week 10 |
Dec. 24 |
No Class (Midterm week: December 24-28, 2012) |
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Dec. 27 |
Midterm
Exam (2 hours, in class) There will be three
essay-type questions that ask you to draw upon your reading
of the course materials up to and including An Inspector
Calls, class discussions, and any other relevant
thinking and exploring you have done this first half of the
semester. One essay will involve reading a passage from
Priestley's play and analyzing it. Read instructions
carefully and follow them. Decide which works you can write
well on for which topic, and pace
yourself. It is helpful to take a few
minutes to plan an outline before writing your essays.
Formulate a thoughtful idea or argument in your response
that allows you to address effectively the requirements of
the prompt. Cite specific acts,
scenes, lines, or words in support of your analysis to build
your case. For each prompt, you do
not need to answer every single question in the cluster in
order and separately. Rather, your writing should be
designed as a coherent unified piece, not unconnected
answers to different questions strung together. The multiple
questions are there to help you brainstorm on the topic and
to spark critical engagement with it. You will want to show
us your critical and analytical skills: demonstrate that you
have read closely and understood the material, that you can
critically engage with that material, with discussion in and
outside of class, and with the test question, that you can
synthesize material and knowledge gained, and that you can
write clear, effective, and compelling prose. Give your
essays a title if you like.
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Week 11 |
Dec. 31 |
No class (New Year's Eve) |
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Jan. 3 |
Reading and
Writing 15: Conrad's
Business of Writing Reading
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Week 12 |
Jan. 7 |
16:
Frost's Wildness Reading
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Jan. 10 |
17:
Beber's Live Processing Reading
Final paper consultation sign-up
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Week 13 |
Jan. 14 |
No class
(Intervarsity Games: January 14-18, 2013) |
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Jan. 17 |
No class (Intervarsity Games: January 14-18, 2013) |
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Week 14 |
Jan. 21 |
18:
Writing about the Past, Present, and Future Reading
*Reading response 3
(respond to the classmate's question that you've drawn from
the green container in front of my office and make 21 copies
to distribute for peer critique in class)
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Jan. 24 |
19:
Prior Texts and History Reading
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Week 15 |
Jan. 28 |
20:
Torture and Writing Reading
Final
paper draft due for those who want feedback for revision
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Jan. 31 |
21:
Psychological Impressions Reading
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Week 16 |
Feb. 4 |
22:
The Character of Nature Reading
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Feb. 7 |
23:
Freedom Reading
Peer critique of
reading response 3
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Week 17 |
Feb. 11 |
24:
Writing the Unwritable Reading
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Feb. 14 |
25:
Writing for the Future Reading
Peer critique of reading response 3
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Week 18 |
Feb. 18 |
1. Place and People 11:00-11:25 a.m. Presiding: Juthaporn
Jiajanpong Speakers: 1.
"The Rise and Fall of
Progress,"
Patpicha Tanakasempipat 2. 3.
"Isolation Is in the Air:
Setting and Change in Carlier and Kayerts,"
Wilasinee Siriboonpipattana 4. "Misreadings," Srirat Pornpitsuttivorakul Respondent
1: Bodindecha
Wilamas Respondent
2: Pamin
Amorntepparak Respondent
3: Mamika Mongkolsiri Respondent
4: Chorkaew Dahlan
Chanthanakorn
2. The Weight of Things 11:30-11:55 a.m. Presiding: Nattamon Amponsin Speakers: 1.
"From Waste to
Weight: Ted Lavender and Simone," Ariya Jhiinapengkad 2. "The Function of Things in 'The Things They Carried,'" Utsanee Yenchai 3.
"Games at
Twilight," Apisa Tangjattanasirikul 4. "Death in 'Games at Twilight,'" Liu Ngarmchee Respondent
1: Arpharat
Lin Respondent
2: Tonfon Bunket Respondent
3: Araya Chantarapratheap |
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Feb. 21 |
Presentations (download pdf file of forum program) Themed potluck breakfast hosted by 2202235 section 1. Currently on the menu: potato salad.
3. Active Readings 8:00-8:25 a.m. Presiding: Wilasinee Siriboonpipattana Speakers: 1.
"Simone
in Misreadings,"
Arpharat Lin 2. "Ruth's Reading," Kankanid Mitrpakdee 3.
"Misreadings,"
Tonfon Bunket 4. "Misreadings and Miscommunications: How Language Might Show You a Way to Read," Pornchanok Seetubtim 5. "Misreadings," Krittaporn Reungwattanakul Respondent 1: Laksameekanit Sukwat Respondent
2: Apisa
Tangjattanasirikul Respondent
3: Srirat Pornpisuttivorakul
4. Short Unsimple 8:30-8:55 a.m. Presiding: Apisa Tangjattanasirikul Speakers: 1.
"Reading in
'An Outpost of Progress,'" Pamin Amorntepparak 2.
"Stopping by
Woods on a Snowy Evening," Juthaporn Jiajanpong 3.
"London,"
Chorkaew Dahlan Chanthanakorn 4.
"The
Tell-Tale Heart," Laksameekanit Sukwat 5. "Free Your Mind and Fight for Freedom," Nutthida Uthikumporn Respondent 1: Pornchanok Seetubtim Respondent
2: Wilasinee Siriboonpipattana Respondent
3: Utsanee Yenchai
5. Self-Expressions 9:00-9:25 a.m. Presiding: Liu Ngarmchee Speakers: 1.
"Losing
Oneself: Ginny in 'M & M World,'" Burassakorn
Gitipotnopparat 2. "The Objects of Ideas and Actions: A Study of Ginny in 'M & M World,'" Araya Chantarapratheap 3. "Division and Egoism in 'An Outpost of Progress,'" Nattamon Amponsin 4. "Sheila Birling," Mamika Monkolsiri 5.
"Everyday
Use," Bodindecha Wilamas Respondent 1: Ariya Jhiinapengkad Respondent 2: Krittaporn Ruengwattanakul Respondent 3: Nutthida Uthikumporn Respondent 4: Nattamon Amponsin
6. Literary Readings and Variety Showcase 9:30-9:55 a.m. Speakers: 1.
"Work Title,"
Author(s) 2. "Work Title," Author(s) 3. "Work Title," Author(s) 4. "Work Title," Author(s) 5. "Work Title," Author(s) 6. "Work Title," Author(s) 7. "Work Title," Author(s) 8. "Work Title," Author(s) 9. "Work Title," Author(s) 10. "Work Title," Author(s)
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Week 19 | Feb. 28 | Final
paper due
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Week 20 |
Mar. 4 |
Final Exam (8:30-11:30 a.m.) The final covers material from the second half of the semester (from "The Things They Carried" to Waiting for the Barbarians). There will be two parts: identification and essay. Read instructions carefully and follow them. For identification, you will be given excerpts (words, phrases, passages) from the literary works we have read. You should be able to identify the title and author of the work as well as (if applicable) speaker, location within larger work (ex. the opening chapter; the very last line of the inspector in the play, in act 3), and any other relevant context (such as what or who is the quote about, what is going on). Then you will be asked to write a couple of sentences on the significance of the quotation. For part 2, you will be given three prompts to write three essays. Here is where you have the best opportunity to show not only information recall, but also thinking skills--your ability to reason, create, apply, analyze and synthesize. The prompt may consist of several questions but what the entire prompt does is give you a topic with a scope. You should formulate an argument/thesis in response to that topic within that scope and structure your essay around your argument, citing specific acts, scenes, lines, words or information to illustrate and support the points you are making. Again, you do not need to answer every single question in the prompt cluster in order and separately. Rather, your writing should be designed as a coherent unified piece, not unconnected answers to different questions strung together or a bulleted list. The multiple questions are there to help you brainstorm on the topic and to spark critical engagement with it. You should draw on your own close reading of the material, your discussion about it in and outside of class, and relevant reading and research you have done. Think critically about the material we have encountered and be prepared to think critically on the topic prompted by the test question as well. When writing, follow academic conventions and try to be as legible, clear, effective, and compelling as you can. Rest well, eat clean good food, arrive at least fifteen minutes before exam time, and make sure your student ID, watch, and writing implements are in order. Good luck!
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Last
updated January 27, 2018