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| Preliminary Tasks complete as soon as possible |
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| Journal of Responses to Readings 10% of Final Grade |
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As indicated on
the schedule of readings, most classes
in the course require that students "write Important features of a journal:
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| Paper 1 (due May 3 in class) 30% of Final Grade |
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Write a 5-page critical essay on an issue or work covered in the course so far. The essay must closely examine at least one work in the syllabus. "Critical essay" means that the essay cannot be only a summary, description, paraphrase, or survey of topics and works. Instead, think about the work so as to build an analytical, interpretive argument about it. Some of the best critical arguments are those that study some tension, contradiction, or puzzle. That is, they do not start off with a single, inflexible thesis and then proceed to flatten everything in their path to demonstrate that thesis. Rather, they note that an issue or work seems to turn upon an important inner tension (e.g., "hypertext, like information, 'wants to be free,' " but "hypertext can also be very controlling and structured") and then try to think through the implications or premises of that tension. Or again, they note how putting a work into a different context reveals something different about it (e.g., "hypertext looks very experimental when compared to traditional narrative, but how does it look when compared to lyric poetry?"). The essay should have a useful title (not just "Paper One"), endnotes or footnotes, and a bibliography. For the notes and bibliography, you are free to follow any standard reference style recognized by the humanities, social sciences, or sciences (so long as you are consistent). If you have no reason for choosing one style over another, then by default please follow the documentation style set out in the MLA Handbook (the dominant style guide for publications in the field of English literary studies; available at the bookstore). For other styles, consult the Chicago Manual of Style. For online citation guides, see Karla's Guide to Citation Style Guides (which includes the MLA guide to citing works on the Web). When citing works in the Course Reader, please consult the full citations included in the reader (the Reader's table of contents with citations are available online). For resources on critical writing and writing style, see: Transcriptions Guide to Online Resources for Writing and Speaking and Resources for Writers and Writing Instructors (Jack Lynch, Rutgers U.) Important: except by previous arrangement with the instructor, papers must be handed in during the class in which they are due (papers turned in after missing class or otherwise late will be marked down). |
| Paper 2 (due May 31 in class) 30% of Final Grade |
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Write a 5-page critical essay on an issue or work covered in the course from Class 10 on. See under Paper 1 above for description of assignment. Important: except by previous arrangement with the instructor, papers must be handed in during the class in which they are due (papers turned in after missing class or otherwise late will be marked down). |
| Online Hypertext Project (Team Project)
(due June 5-7 in class) 30% of Final Grade |
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Early in the quarter, students will break into teams of two to four students each. Teams are required to create and put on the Web a small but interesting hypertext construct. The construct can be scholarly, critical, fictional, poetic, artistic, documentary (or any combination). It is not expected that students can within a few weeks master the medium and the tools needed to create extensive, highly intricate, or gorgeous works to match some of those studied in the course. Rather, the idea is for students to try out the medium to see what it can do that is intellectually or aesthetically interesting. Something small but intriguing is better in this regard than, say, a large essay ported to the Web with rudimentary hypertext. (See the Course Technology page for technical resources and assistance for the project.) Distribution
of Responsibilities:
Schedule of
Project Tasks: |
| Class Attendance and Participation |
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Attendance will be taken in each class, and more than three absences will result in a diminishment in the final grade. Frequency and quality of participation in class discussion will also count in the following important way: good or poor participation will be decisive when a student's final grade (as is often the case) ends up hovering "between" grades. For example, a student hovering between "B+" and "A-" will receive an "A-" if participation has been good. A student in similar circumstances with poorparticipation will receive the lower grade. |

