HUM 3085: Special Topics in Humanities

Britain through the Looking Glass

Spring 2010

Professors Perdigao and Ruane

class time: M W F 2:00 pm

office hours: M W F 3:00-4:15 pm (P); M W F 1:00-1:50 pm (R)

or by appointment

offices: 626 Crawford (P), 625 Crawford (R)

phone: 321-674-8370 (P); 321-674-8797 (R)

email: ;

website: my.fit.edu/~lperdiga

Course Description:

In this course, we will explore storytelling in and about Britain. As we examine how Britain is constructed and reconstructed through historical and literary accounts, we will analyze the relationships between the texts and their contexts. Our constructions of Britain will lead us on a journey from escapist fantasy to grisly realities, working from children’s literature’s Neverland to crime scenes, both in Doyle’s Holmesian world and in Jack the Ripper’s grisly work on the streets of London. Exploring the many representations of Britain—from flights of fancy to otherworldly occurrences to murderous mayhem—we will work to examine what it means to define and preserve notions of a place through historical accounts and literature.

Texts:

A.N. Wilson, London: A History, Modern Library, 2006

Judith R. Walkowitz, City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late-Victorian

London, U of Chicago Press, 1992

Lewis Carroll,Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Norton Critical, 1992

Frank Beddor, The Looking Glass Wars, Speak, 2007

J. M. Barrie,Peter Pan, Penguin, 2004

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,The Coming of the Fairies (Illustrated Version), U of Nebraska Press,

2006

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,The Complete Sherlock Holmes, vol. 1 and vol. 2, Bantam Classics,

1986

Michael Diamond, Victorian Sensation: Or, the Spectacular, the Shocking, and the Scandalous in

Nineteenth-Century Britain, Anthem, 2004

Stewart P. Evans, The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Companion: An Illustrated

Encyclopedia, Skyhorse Publishing, 2009

Oscar Wilde,The Picture of Dorian Gray, Norton Critical, 2007

Abbreviated Titles:

London: London: A History

CDD: City of Dreadful Delight
Alice: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

LGW: The Looking Glass Wars

PP: Peter Pan

CF: The Coming of the Fairies

SHv1: Sherlock Holmes, volume 1
SHv2: Sherlock Holmes, volume 2

VS: Victorian Sensation
JtRC: The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Companion

DG: The Picture of Dorian Gray

Requirements:

Questions15%

Quizzes25%

Midterm30%

Final project30%

Throughout the course,for each class, students will turn in one multiple choice question and one essay questionpertaining to the day’s reading. Students will also provide the answers, bolding the proper answer in the multiple choice question and providing
bullet points to be covered in the essay.

A quiz will focus on the day’s assigned reading(s), occurring every two weeks. The multiple choice questions submitted by the students will constitute the basis of the quizzes. As regular attendance is mandatory, make-up quizzes are unlikely.

The midterm will consist of two parts: a take-home exam with essay questions pertaining to the literary, historical, and critical texts and a shorter in-class exam. The questions submitted by the students will be the foundation for both parts of the exam. It must be typed, using a standard 12-point font with margins of approximately 1¼ inches (about 250-300 words per page), and contain proper documentation for all works referenced.

The final project consists of at least 10-12pages written in MLA format and includes a works cited page. The essay must be typed; use a standard 12-point font with margins of approximately 1¼ inches (about 250-300 words per page). Students will present their projects at the final exam.

For the midterm and the final project, students are required to submit their papers to on the assigned date; failure to submit the paper to turnitin.com and/or to turn in the hard copy in class on the due date will lead to a failure of the assignment. Our class ID is3063545and the password is Watson.

Academic Dishonesty will be handled in accordance with Humanities and Communication Department policy. Cheating and plagiarism will result in failure of assignment and/or failure of course and will be reported to the Dean of Students and recorded in your permanent student file. Dishonest conduct may lead to formal disciplinary proceedings. Be certain that you are familiar with Florida Tech’s academic dishonesty policy: (

Cell phone policy: If your phone rings, if you try to make an outgoing call or text messages are sent or received (translation: basically any variation of playing with your phone when you should be paying attention) you are responsible for bringing pizza (or an acceptable alternative) to the following class.

Attendance is required. Absenteeism and tardiness will adversely affect your final grade. Excessive absenteeism could lead to failure of the course. You are responsible for all of the work you miss.

Course Schedule:

January 11Introduction

January 13The Setting—Victorian London (CDD, Introduction, Ch. 1, London, Prelude, Ch. 7, 8)

January 15The Setting—Victorian London (handouts provided, VS, Introduction, London, Ch. 9, 10)

January 18Martin Luther King Jr. Day—no class

January 20Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland: A Fantastic England through the Looking Glass (Alice, Ch. I-V [pp. 7-44])

January 22Alice, Ch. VI-IX (pp. 45-77)

January 25Alice, Ch. X-XII (pp. 78-99)

January 27Alice, Backgrounds: Parents and Childhood, School, Oxford (pp. 237-

248); Child Friends (pp. 261-263); Alice’s Recollections of Carrollian Days (pp. 273-278); C. L. Dodgson: Mathematician (pp. 294-302)

January 29Adapting Alice (Alice, Fairy Tales with a Purpose, Fairy Tales for

Pleasure [pp. 321-327]; Escape [pp. 327-334]; Blessed Rage: Lewis Carroll and the Modern Quest for Order [pp. 398-404])

February 1Alice through a Postmodern Looking Glass (LGW, Prologue-Ch. 12 [pp.

1-79])

February 3LGW, Ch. 13-25 (pp. 80-177)

February 5LGW, Ch. 26-42 (pp. 178-267)

February 8LGW, Ch. 43-56 (pp. 268-358)

February 10Peter Pan: From Neverland to Barrie’s World (PP Introduction [pp. vii-

xxvii]; Ch. 1-V [pp. 5-56])

February 12PP, Ch. VI-XII (pp. 57-107)

February 15Presidents Day—no class

February 17PP, Ch. XIII-XVII (pp. 108-153)

February 19Peter Pan—from Peter and Wendy to KensingtonGardens

February 22Finding Neverland

February 24The Coming of the Fairies: Rise of Supernaturalism, Magic, and the

Occult in Late Victorian England (CDD, Ch. 6, CF, Introduction [pp. v-XXIV]; Ch. 1-2 [pp. 13-58])

February 26CF, Ch. III-V (pp. 59-122)

March 1Fairy Tale: A True Story

March 3CF, Ch. VI-VIII (pp. 123-196)

March 5Midterm Exam: in-class exam and take-home portion due

Alice… Tim Burton!!!!!!

March 8Spring Break

March 10Spring Break

March 12Spring Break

March 15Sherlock Holmes: From the Fantastic to the Real

The Real Sherlock Holmes (handouts provided)

Introduction (SHv1 or SHv2)

March 17The Early Cases (SHv1)

A Study in Scarlet (SHv1, pp. 1-120)

The Sign of the Four (SHv1, pp. 121-237)

The “Gloria Scott” (SHv1, pp. 584-604)

March 19Mysterious Science (SHv2)

The Adventure of the Devil’s Foot (SHv2, pp. 465-491)

The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans (SHv2, pp. 398-428)

The Adventure of the Creeping Man (SHv2, pp. 652-673)

The Adventure of the Blanched Soldier (SHv2, pp. 538-558)

March 22Explainable Supernatural (SHv1, SHv2)

The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire (SHv2, pp. 593-610)

The Musgrave Ritual (SHv1, pp. 604-622)

The Adventure of the Solitary Cyclist (SHv1, pp. 832-852)

March 24Murderous Mayhem (SHv1)

The Reigate Squire (or Puzzle), (SHv1, pp. 623-643)

Silver Blaze (SHv1, pp. 521-545)

The Crooked Man (SHv1, pp. 644-662)

The Adventure of the Golden Pince-Nez (SHv1, pp. 964-987)

March 26Adapting Sherlock Holmes

A Scandal in Bohemia (appearance of Irene Adler, SHv1, pp. 239-263)

March 29The Final Days (SHv1, SHv2)

The Final Problem (SHv1, pp. 736-757)

The Adventure of the Empty House (SHv1, pp. 759-781)

His Last Bow (SHv2, pp.491-509)

The Adventure of the Lion’s Mane (SHv2, pp. 673-693)

March 31Sex and Murder in Late Victorian Britain

Sexual Scandals (VS, Ch. 4, CDD, Ch. 3, 4)

April 2Murderous Mayhem (VS, Ch. 5)

April 5Jack the Ripper: 1st Serial Killer? (CDD, Ch. 7, JtRC Intro, Ch.43, 44)

April 7Jack the Ripper: Victorian Britain's Great Unsolved Mystery

April 9Introducing Jack’s Work (JtRC, Ch. 3, 4, 5)

April 12Double Murders (JtRC, Chp 7, 8, 9, 10)

April 14Bloody Conclusion (JtRC, Chp 18, 21, 37)

April 16Writing Sensations (VS, Ch. 6, Afterword)

The Picture of Dorian Gray: A Supernatural Society (DG, Preface-A

Note [pp. IX-XV]; Preface-Ch. 5 [pp. 3-63])

April 19DG, Ch. VI-XII (pp.63-129)

April 21DG, Ch. XIII-XX (pp. 129-184)

April 23DG, Backgrounds (pp. 307-308); Reviews and Reactions (pp. 353-368);

Sexual Politics and the Aesthetics of Crime: Oscar Wilde in the Nineties (pp. 409-429); Character Design in The Picture of Dorian Gray (pp. 439-460)

April 26Fin De Siécle Mentality: Lessons Learned from Dorian Gray

April 28Conclusions

April 30Final (8-10 am)