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Home Page for Literature & the Culture of Information, Alan Liu, English 25

Assignments
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The following are required assignments in the course. For grading policy, see Assessment: Grading Policy.

Preliminary Assignments
complete as soon as possible
Assignment Buy required books at UCSB Bookstore & reader at Alternative Copy Shop.
Assignment Purchase required work of hypertext fiction on CD-ROM from Eastgate Systems, Inc. (order by phone or online).

4-Page Essay Assignment (15% of final grade)

Image of Antique Underwood Noiseless Portable TypewriterAssignment Class 11 (Friday Feb. 2): Write a 4-page critical essay on an issue raised in the course so far. The essay must approach the issue by way of a close examination of one or two of the works 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 evidence so as to build an analytical, interpretive argument about the issues at stake. 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., "information wants to be free," but "information should be private") and then try to think through the implications or premises of that tension.

The essay should have a useful title, notes, 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 links to online citation guides, see Karla's Guide to Citation Style Guides (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 (table of contents with citations 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.)


Online, Revised Version of 4-Page Essay (Web Authoring Assignment) (15%)

Assignment Class 18 (Wednesday Feb. 21): Revise your earlier 4-page essay in light of your TA's comments and put it online in a way that takes advantage of the medium of the World Wide Web. (You must learn how to put the essay on the Web in your UWeb space) (help). This assignment can be taken to different levels depending on your technical skill:

  • Beginning Web Authors: If you are new to designing and publishing on the Web, you do not need to worry about crafting a sophisticated Web site. Put the essay online in any form and demonstrate some elementary knowledge of how to utitlize the Web as a medium (e.g., create links to your notes; create links to other sites on the Web relevant to your argument).
  • More Advanced Web Authors or Designers: If you are starting with a higher level of technical skill, then please treat this assignment as an opportunity for experimentation. Put your essay online in a way that does something interesting with the Web as a medium. For example, organize the essay hypertextually; link out to an interesting set of resources; add graphics or sound; make your site dynamic or interactive. (Please try to avoid copyright infringements when adding multimedia.)
For resources on Web authoring and design, see Transcriptions Guides to Web Authoring on the course Technology page.

Quizz (15%)
Assignment Class 22 (Friday Mar. 2): Quizz on materials in the course to date. See online demo for format of quizz.

Final 8-Page Essay (40%)
Assignment Class 28 (Friday Mar. 16): 8-page critical essay due on some issue or work covered in the course from Class 12 on. For rules regarding the nature of a critical essay and documentation style, see the explanation for the previous short essay above.

Attendance and Participation in TA Section Meetings (15%)
Regular attendance and participation in section meetings is required to pass the course and will be evaluated by your teaching assistant so as to contribute to 15% of the final grade.

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This page is part of the Transcriptions Project
Page content by Alan Liu | Graphic design by Eric Feay
(revised 2/21/01 )