1
Schools of Literary Criticism
Group Exercise (Course Requirement)
LIT 201- 200
Professor Sarah L. Dye
15 March 2008
SCHOOLS OF LITERARY CRITICISM
LIT 201-200Sarah L. Dye
Contents of this packet:
- Exercise Directions
- Short Stories Assignments
- “Literary Criticism: On-line Resources”
- See also PowerPoint presentation on Literary Criticism on our class website
URL:
See also RLRC page on ECC’s Home Page
URL: )
- THE Worksheet to be completed byeach student
DIRECTIONS:
The class will be divided randomly into groups. Each group will be assigned two of the short stories we have read already in the course. This is an individual exercise though it is okay if students wish to work with one another; nevertheless, they will each submit the two required forms for this exercise. First, examine the handout materials contained in this packet and learn about the thirteen schools of literary criticism. Second, review the assigned short stories and determine a minimum of two literary criticism schools or approaches which could be used to analyze each of the stories. Third, go to the Renner Learning Resource Center and find at least one resource (book, journal article, magazine article, CD-Rom reference source, Internet source, audio visual source, etc.) for each literary criticism approach which could be used in analyzing the stories by those two methods.
Your Preparation Plan for this Exercise
Beginning of class
Receive Literary Criticism assignments
Study and READ material in this packet. You will need access to acomputer and the Internet, either in the library or in one of the on-campus computers labs (ICT 125) to find and study the recommended web sites onliterary criticism.
Determine two literary approaches which could be used for each short story assigned to you.
Go to RLRC to find two resources to support theapproaches. These must be specifically applicable to the assigned stories, by the way. (List the sources in correct MLA format.)
Present the 2worksheet pages required for this LITCRIT exercise at
9:00 PM tonight
SHORT STORY ASSIGNMENTS:
Choose any two of the stories in your group assignment (see below) to use for this LITCRIT exercise.
Group 1
_____ Baldwin, “Sonny’s Blues,” p.37
_____ Bierce, “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,” p. 75
_____ Cather, “Paul’s Case,” p. 117
Group 2
_____ Hurston, “Sweat,” p. 355
_____ Lawrence, “The Rocking-Horse Winner,” p. 493
_____ Mason, “Shiloh,” p. 511
Group 3
_____ Silko, “Yellow Woman,” p. 722
_____ Tan, “Two Kinds,” p. 731
_____ Updike, “A & P,” p. 783
Other LITERARY CRITICISM On-line Resources
***Literary Criticism: An Overview of Approaches
prepared by Skylar Hamilton Burris
From
*** START HERE: This is the best site for an explanations of the various schools of literary criticism!
Online Literary Criticism Collection
The Internet Public Library's enormous database of literary criticism.
From:
Internet Public Library: Literary Criticism
You are here: Home > Special Collections > Literary Criticism. About the IPL Privacy Policy Contact Us. Sponsored by.
From:
Bibliomania - Free Online Literature and Study Guides
800+ texts of classic literature, drama, and poetry together with detailed literature study guides. Large reference book and non-fiction section.
From:
Luminarium.org
One of the finest collections of classical literary criticism on the Internet (1350 to 1660 A.D.)
From:
NovelGuide - Novel Resource Guide and Literary Analysis
Novel resource guide and literary analysis search tool, information and facts on classic and contemporary literature. Links to order books.
From:
Literary Criticism - LibrarySpot.com
Explore literary criticism online.
From:
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature
Considered the most important work of literary history and criticism ever published, the Cambridge History contains over 303 chapters and 11,000.
From:
BookSpot.com:Book reviews, book awards, poetry, literary criticism,
Authors Publishers Literary Crit. Discussion Grps. Book Assns. Book Events
Book Facts Book News for Writers Literacy...
From:
Voice of the Shuttle: Literary Theory
A directory of links to literary criticism and analysis on the Internet, mostly scholarly.
From:
NOTE: It is possible that some links may be broken and will not work.
OTHER SOURCES FORLITERARY CRITICISM FOR THE LIT CRITEXERCISES
(Follow the links contained on this site for examples of the kinds of materials you may be able to locate to support the various schools of literary criticism with which you are working this evening.)
Internet Public Library
Special CollectionsLiterary Criticism
Dino Felluga’s Introductory Guide to Critical Theory website
Warren Hedges’ Timeline of Major Critical Theory in the US
SCHOOLS OF LITERARY CRITICISM
WORKSHEET
DRAFT COPY (1st short story)
Your Name:
Title of the short story: ______
Author of the short story: ______
Identify the first school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approach (specific article if periodical or reference book):
Identify the second school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approachb(specific article if periodical or reference book):
SCHOOLS OF LITERARY CRITICISM
WORKSHEET
DRAFT COPY (2nd short story)
Your Name:
Title of the short story: ______
Author of the short story: ______
Identify the first school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approach (specific article if periodical or reference book):
Identify the second school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approachb(specific article if periodical or reference book):
SCHOOLS OF LITERARY CRITICISM
WORKSHEET (1st short story)
LIT 201-200Sarah L. Dye
Your Name:
Title of the short story: ______
Author of the short story: ______
Identify the first school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approach (specific article if periodical or reference book):
Identify the second school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approach (specific article if periodical or reference book):
SCHOOLS OF LITERARY CRITICISM
WORKSHEET (2nd short story)
LIT 201-2100Sarah L. Dye
Your Name:
Title of the short story: ______
Author of the short story: ______
Identify the first school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approach (specific article if periodical or reference book):
Identify the second school/approach which could be used:
Explain briefly why this approach would be appropriate:
Give a MLA bibliographical citation for one RLRC resource which could be used with this approach (specific article if periodical or reference book):