Dr. Roberta Seelinger Trites438-4572

Office: STV 207; Office hours TR 8:30-9 and by

English 375: Studies in Literature for Adolescents

Course objective: In this class we will define the concept of adolescence, discuss characteristics of young adult literature and literary criticism, and use that criticism to analyze texts for adolescents.

Required texts:Alexie, Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian

Butler, Parable of the Sower

Cisneros, The House on Mango Street

Cormier, The Chocolate War

Hinton, The Outsiders

Le Guin, A Wizard of Earthsea

Mosley, 47

Nelson, Carver: A Life in Poems

Salinger, Catcher in the Rye

Twain, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Webster, Daddy-Long-Legs

Wiesel, Night

Yang, American Born Chinese

Critical readings available through Milner Library Electronic Reserves:

Course requirements:Mid-term exam:25%

Book analysis & bib:15%

Term paper: 25%

(Undergrads = 2500 words; Grads = 5000 words)

Final exam:25%

Daily grade/participation: 10%

Policies:

  • Students are expected to attend class. Three absences will adversely affect your ability to do well on the exams, and it is impossible to imagine students with five absences having the knowledge to pass the final.
  • Any assignment that is late will be penalized one letter grade per day that it is late.
  • I expect you to have read the assignments listed on the syllabus before you come to class. (All novels need to be read entirely before class begins on Wednesday.)
  • Theoretical articles, listed on the reading schedule by author’s last name, must also be read before class the day they will be discussed.
  • Please word process out-of-class papers double-spaced with standard margins on standard white paper. Proofread everything you turn in, because grammar, organization, and mechanics are a substantial part of every grade you receive.
  • Plagiarism, collusion, or any act of cheating is intolerable. I will report such incidences to the Dean of Students’ office.
  • I will not discuss any evaluation I have given your work until at least twenty-four hours after you have received the evaluation.

Do not even begin to think about texting or receiving calls during class. TURN YOUR PHONES OFF. You do NOT want to see me irritated by what I consider to be the extraordinarily rude behavior of paying more attention to your phone than class.

  • You earn your grade by performance, not by negotiation. Unless I have made an error of computation, please do not ask me to raise your grade.
  • Any student needing to arrange a reasonable accommodation for a documented disability should contact Disability Concerns at 350 Fell Hall, 438-5853 (voice), 438-8620 (TTY).

Communication:

I consider communication between the student and the instructor a key factor in maximizing students’ learning. Please feel free to email me at the address above; I find email exchanges with students very fruitful.

I also encourage you to drop by my office during office hours or to contact me to set up an appointment. Students are my top priority; don’t be afraid to contact me!

I expect students to treat each other respectfully at all times both in class and outside of class. Sometimes, discussions will touch on controversial topics. When we treat each other with as much civility and professionalism as possible, our discussions will generate the best possible learning environment for all students.

Webpage:

ASSESSMENT

Author papers and bibliography

Each student will write a term paper analyzing 3-5 works by one author of young adult novels. YOU MUST GET PERMISSION FROM ME BEFORE YOU CHOOSE YOUR AUTHOR! I will provide you with suggestions, and I will discourage people from duplicating one another's topics. You may not count any book we are reading in class as one of the 3-5 novels you analyze for your paper. (The goal is to write about books we have not discussed in class.)

OnSeptember 22, you will turn in the first stage of your paper: a straightforward literary analysis of ONE novel by your author and a thorough bibliography of criticism about your author. (For undergraduates, this paper will be 3-4 pages long; for graduate students, 5-6). You may revise and include this paper in your final paper, if you wish to do so. Effectively, this is two different assignments to be turned in on the same day: 1) a paper on ONE topic of your choice that does not need to include any literary criticism AND 2) a separate bibliography listing all the literary criticism available on your author. You need not incorporate any literary criticism into your paper, but you do need to compile a thorough list of the resources that will be available to you for your final paper. You can find bibliographic information in the MLA online index,in ERIC, and among the Teaching Materials Center's reference books (6th floor Milner). I recommend that you begin with two encyclopedias: Something About the Author and Children's Literature Review, both of which are located among the TMC's reference materials.

Your final term paper, due November 17, will be a literary analysis of three to five novels by one author. You will write on one aspect of the author’s writing that applies to all of these novels. You may write on any of a number of topics, including such things as analyses of recurring issues, recurring themes, recurring (or shifting) ideologies, OR developments in the writer's style. You may also choose to analyze the novels in light of one or more of our critical readings. (Pick one of these topics; do not attempt to do them all. Well-focused papers are better than shallow papers that attempt to cover too much material.) I AM NOT INTERESTED IN BIOGRAPHIES OF AUTHORS! We will discuss the paper throughout the course of the semester, but PLEASE do not hesitate to ask me your questions about it, either before class or during office hours. Please plan to have approximately 50% of the paper written for our in-class writing workshop on November 10. (Your participation in the workshop counts as two daily grades: one grade for having a draft and another grade for your peer review.)

Examinations

Both the mid-term and the final exam will be essay exams. The final will be comprehensive. Please purchase 2 examination “blue books” and bring one to the mid-term and one to the final. DO NOT MARK YOUR NAME ON YOUR BLUE BOOK, as blue books will be collected and redistributed the day of the test.

READING CALENDAR FOR 375, FALL 2010

August 25:Introduction

September 1:Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

and From Norton Critical Edition of Huck Finn: David L. Smith, “Huck, Jim, and American

Racial Discourse” (all students); Jane Smiley, “Say It Ain’t So, Huck” (grads only)**

[Please note: neither Smith nor Smiley article is available on e-reserves]

September 8:Webster, Daddy-Long-Legs

Kornfeld & Jackson, “Female Bildungsroman . . .” *

September 15:Catcher in the Rye

Cadden, “The Irony of Narration in the Young Adult Novel” *

September 22: The Outsiders

book analysis and bibliography due

September 29:The Chocolate War

Tarr, “The Absence of Moral Agency in Robert Cormier’s The Chocolate War” *

October 6: The House on Mango Street

October 13: Midterm

October 20:A Wizard of Earthsea

Gooderham, “Children’s Fantasy Literature” *

October 21:Extra-credit opportunity (2 points added to midterm)! (Dr. Trites will deliver the College of Arts & Sciences Lecture at 7:30 p.m. in the Prairie Room of the Bone. She will speak on “The Pixar Maturity Formula.”)

October 27: Parable of the Sower

Altmann, “Welding Brass Tits on the Armor”

November 3:47

Cadden, “Simultaneous Emotions” *

November 10:Night

Coats, “Abjection and Adolescent Fiction” (from Looking Glasses and Neverlands)*

Writing workshop (bring at least 5-10 pages of your paper for peer review)

November 17:Carver

Term papers due

December 1: American Born Chinese

Trites, “Paradox of Authority” from (Disturbing the Universe)*

December 8: Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian and review

FINAL EXAM AS DICTATED BY THE UNIVERSITY’S SCHEDULE

* =Electronic reserves for all students, available on the Milner homepage under “Find Course Reserves” and “Trites” (

† =Electronic reserves for graduate students only

** = Please note differential assignment for grads and undergrads