Fall 2001

David Walker

English 228(4127)

Rice 24, (440) 775-8584

MWF, 1:30-2:20, King 341
E-mail: David.Walker@oberlin.edu

Office hours: M,F 2:30-4:00
Th, 1:30-3:00, & by appt

MODERN BRITISH AND IRISH FICTION

Texts:

Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness and The Secret Sharer (Bantam)
Ford Madox Ford, The Good Soldier (Oxford World's Classics)
D. H. Lawrence, Selected Short Stories (Dover)
James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (Bedford)
Katherine Mansfield, Stories (Vintage)
E. M. Forster, A Passage to India (Harcourt Brace)
Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse (Harcourt Brace)
Molly Keane, Devoted Ladies (Virago)
Graham Greene, Brighton Rock (Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics)
Muriel Spark, The Comforters (New Directions)

Course requirements: regular attendance and active participation, weekly small-group meetings in preparation for Friday's class, two short papers (3-4 pages each), and a longer paper (10-12 pages). I will expect to see you whenever you have questions or problems you'd like to talk about. My office hours are MF 2:30-4:30, Th 1:30-3:00, and other times by appointment. I also regularly check my email (david.walker@oberlin.edu).

The class has a CourseInfo page at http://cinfo.oberlin.edu. I intend to post online materials and provide links to useful websites there; the site also provides opportunities for a course bulletin board and email links to me and the rest of the class. We'll talk in class about how we want to use it, but please get into the habit of checking CourseInfo regularly.

Preliminaries: This course has three primary goals: (1) to engage in close textual analysis of selected novels written during the Modernist period (roughly 1900-1945) in Great Britain and Ireland, (2) to use these texts to investigate the nature of Modernism more broadly, and (3) to train you in methods of literary analysis through reading, discussion, and writing. It will explore a number of complex philosophical, psychological, and political issues, including the nature of the self, the understanding and representation of consciousness, the devastating effects of the First World War as they were reflected in literature, and the response to the decline of Britain's prestige as a world power. Fundamentally, though, this is a literature class, by which I mean that we will treat the texts as distinctively imaginative creations, rather than simply as products of social and historical forces. I've chosen these particular books because I hope they will all repay attention to their artistic qualities, and I'll be asking you to pay close attention to their experiments in language and form as well as to their thematic content. We will certainly raise theoretical questions about the nature and dynamics of fiction, and I will be asking you to do some reading in the criticism, but the bulk of our attention will be on the primary works themselves. Please be sure that's the sort of course you want to take.

There are a couple of other issues I'd like you to consider carefully before deciding to take this class. The reading load is fairly heavy; I hope it won't feel unfair or burdensome, but it's crucial that you have the time to do all the reading carefully and thoughtfully, so I would urge you not to take this class concurrently with another course in the novel. My teaching tends to be quite text-centered; you should bring the book under discussion to class every day and prepare to refer to it frequently.

I will expect active participation in discussion from each member of the class; this means, first of all, preparing carefully, noting issues in the day's reading that seem to you particularly worth talking about. (I strongly encourage you to write all over your text as you read: making notes to yourself, marking passages that seem especially important or problematic, etc.) It also means listening and responding thoughtfully to each other in class, not just talking to hear yourself talk. Good discussion in a class this size doesn't usually happen automatically; it depends on everyone's willingness to cultivate the skills required. I'd like this class to feel like a genuine community, and for each of you to be committed to bringing that about.

A note on protocol, to spare the embarrassment of pointing it out later (I'm sorry to have to say these things, but recent experience has suggested that it's necessary): I will expect you to be in every class except in the case of illness or genuine emergency. (If you're sick, please don't come to class and infect the rest of us: just email me or let me know when you return.) More than three unexcused absences will adversely affect your final grade. I would like to start class on time without waiting for latecomers to straggle in -- lateness is rude to the rest of us and will be construed as such. So is leaving the room in the middle of class, except in the case of an emergency. We have lots of ground to cover, and fifty minutes isn't a very long time; if you think you might need to go to the bathroom during that time, then please do it before class starts.

Schedule of class meetings and assignments:

W 9/5

F 9/7

M 9/10

W 9/12

F 9/14

M 9/17

W 9/19

F 9/21

M 9/24

 

W 9/26

F 9/28

Preliminaries

Introduction to Modernism

Heart of Darkness (1902), pp. 3-64 (midpage)

pp. 64-132

"The Secret Sharer" (1910)

The Good Soldier (1915), parts 1-2

part 3

part 4

short paper #1 due in class
Class meets in art museum: discussion of Modernism in painting, led by Stephan Jost, Curator of Academic Programs and Exhibitions.

Lawrence stories: "The Shadow in the Rose Garden," "The White Stocking," "Second-Best"

"Odour of Chrysanthemums," "The Prussian Officer"

M 10/1

W 10/3

F 10/5

M 10/8

W 10/10

F 10/12

M 10/15

W 10/17

F 10/19

10/20 - 28

M 10/29

W 10/31

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), ch. 1

ch. 2

ch. 3

ch. 4

ch. 5

Read pp. 235-67; Panel discussion on psychoanalytic criticism

Read pp. 268-325; Panel discussions on reader-response and feminist criticism

Read pp. 326-90; Panel discussions on deconstruction and new historicism

short paper #2 due in class

FALL BREAK

Mansfield stories: "Prelude"

"Bliss," "Je Ne Parle Pas Français," "The Man Without a Temperament"

F 11/2


M 11/5

W 11/7

F 11/9

M 11/12

W 11/14

F 11/16

M 11/19

W 11/21

F 11/23

M 11/26

W 11/28

F 11/30

"The Stranger," "The Daughters of the Late Colonel," "The Garden-Party," "Marriage à la Mode"

A Passage to India (1924), ch. I-VIII

ch. IX-XXII

ch. XXIII-XXXII

ch. XXXIII-XXXVII

To the Lighthouse (1927), Part I, ch. 1-10

ch. 11-19

Part II; Part III, ch. 1-3

ch. 4-13

(Thanksgiving break)

Devoted Ladies (1934), ch. I-III

ch. IV-V

ch. VI-VII

M 12/3

W 12/5

F 12/7

M 12/10

W 12/12

F 12/14

Th 12/20

Brighton Rock (1938), parts 1-2

parts 3-6

part 7

The Comforters (1957), ch. I-III

ch. IV-VI

ch. VII-IX

longer paper due