Senior Seminar: The Holy Grail

Tentative Syllabus

 

ENGL 4384.01
TLC 2237

 

T, Th 3:30-4:45

 

Instructor:              Dr Micheal Crafton

Office hours:          M 4-5; T, 12:30-2:00; R 9:30-11:30, 1:00-2:00

 

Office location:       TLC 2225; Bonner House

Phone:                     770-834-7969

Email and web:       mcrafton@westga.edu http://www.westga.edu/~mcrafton

 

 

Catalogue course description: A capstone seminar designed to assess students' learning in the program.  The course will integrate literature, theory and writing, centering on an Idea, a theoretical issue or critical concern in literary studies. Required for the English major. Cannot be taken until ENGL 1101, 1102 and core area F have been completed with a minimum-passing grade of C. A minimum of 18 hours of upper level classes must also have been completed. Requires permission of the department chair.  Not offered during the summer session.

 

Course Description:  The outrageously successful recent novel The Da Vinci Code is only the latest example of the appeal of the Holy Grail (or the holy grail, depening on your religious orientation).  The class uses this text and its central metaphor as a point of departure for taking a longer look at the grail and its mythical and historical genealogy, its various literary and film manifestations and then finally as an opportunity for students to find their own “holy grails” in the texts of their interest.

 

 

 

 

Required Texts and other readings/materials:

 

Barber, Richard.  The Holy Grail: Imagination and BeliefCambridge: Harvard UP, 2004.

Brown, Dan. The Da Vinci Code.  New York: Doubleday, 2003.

Chrétien de TroyesPerceval. Trans. Burton Raffel. New Haven: Yale UP, 1999.

Coupe, Laurence.  Myth. The New Critical Idiom.  London: Routledge, 1997.

The Quest of the Holy Grail. Trans. P.M. Matarasso. London: Penguin, 1969.

 

Learning Outcomes:

 

Students will understand and apply select theoretical and practical issues in the discipline of literary studies.

 

Students will become conversant with representative texts and a selected issue in literary history that allows for integration of the aims of the discipline.

 

Students will develop the ability to work both independently and collaboratively toward the publication of an anthology of essays by class members.

 

Students will propose, research, and execute a substantive literary argument appropriate to the seminar topic.

 

Students will be able to make effective oral presentations, both individual and collaborative.

 

Students will participate in an end-of-semester exit interview to assess how the course and the major have served their professional goals.

 

 

 

Relationship to Program Goals:

 

This course fulfills one of departmental requirements for the completion of the English major.

The course will contribute to the larger goal of equipping students with a foundation in literary history and the issues surrounding literary study in contemporary culture.

Students will develop the analytical, oral and written skills to pursue graduate study or careers in teaching, writing, business and a variety of other fields.

Students will be able to define and pursue independent research agendas.

Courses seek to broaden students' desire and ability to take pleasure in their encounter with literature.

 

Tests and other assessment activities:

 

<!--[if !supportLists]-->1.   <!--[endif]-->Two Response Papers = 20 %

<!--[if !supportLists]-->2.   <!--[endif]-->Group Oral Report =  10%

<!--[if !supportLists]-->3.   <!--[endif]-->Individual Oral Report = 10%

<!--[if !supportLists]-->4.   <!--[endif]-->Participation = 10 %

<!--[if !supportLists]-->5.   <!--[endif]-->Research Essay = 50 %

 

 

Class Project: The research paper that will be edited and anthologized at the end of the term is the class project of projects.  It is intended to represent your best work as an undergraduate English major.

What is it on?

What should be the theory and method?

What are the requirements?

 

 

Class Policies

 

Attendance: Since this class meets only twice a week, attendance is all the more important. Attendance should be understood as more than merely occupying space in a passive manner; rather, it should be understand as a productive act. In fact, it should be considered a production in the way that creating a paper or report is considered as a production. In order to get full credit, your presence must be known, and it must be known as that of a prepared student working to make the class an event of learning, of intellectual and artistic exchange. 

 

Late Work: Generally, my policy for unexcused late work is that it loses a letter grade for every day it is late. There are, of course, extenuating circumstances, but these need to be made and made well. 

 

Plagiarism: Intentional plagiarism, that is, the conscious adoption of someone else's writing or ideas as your own is a profanation to everything I hold important. If a student is clearly guilty of this, the result will be an F for the class and a report to the disciplinary officials of the University. 

 

 

Daily Assignments:

All chapter references and page number references are to the texts listed above.

 

Week 1:

T 24         Introduction to class; review of critical theory.

R 26         Myth 1-20; see also web site on semiotics.

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Week 2:

T 31         Myth 21-42; T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land and “The Hollow Men”

R  2          Myth 43-89; film Apocalypse now; Jim Morrison “The End”

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Week 3:

T  7          Opening discussion of Da Vinci Code:

R  9          No class – Out of town for a conference

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Week 4:

T 14         Da Vinci Code: Group Report

R 16         Da Vinci Code: Group Report

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Week 5:

T 21         Perceval and Barber, relevant chapter; Group Report

R 23         Perceval and Barber, relevant chapter; Group Report

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Week 6: 

T 28         Quest and Barber, relevant chapter; essay # 1

R 30         Quest and Barber, relevant chapter

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Week 7:

T  5          Quest; continuations of Perceval from Barber

R  7          Quest

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Week 8:

T 12         Barber on Wolfram; handouts

R 14         No class: Out of town for a conference.

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Week 9:

T 19         Myth chapters 4 and 6

R 21         Myth chapters 4 and 6

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Week 10:

T 26         Barber: begin discussion of individual projects; Excalibur ; Essay # 2 due

R 28         Barber; continue discussion of individual projects; Excalibur

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Week 11:

T  2          Monty Python and the Holy Grail

R  4          Monty Python and the Holy Grail

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Week 12:

T   9         Individual Reports – abstracts, outlines, rough bibliographies.

R 11         Individual Reports – abstracts, outlines, rough bibliographies.

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Week 13:

T 16         Formatting issues and colloquium preparation

R 18         Partner Critique: 2 Copies of Draft 2 due in class.

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Week 14:

T 23         Draft 3 due: Prepare for Colloquium

R 25         Thanksgiving Holiday

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Week 15:

T 30         Colloquium

Presenter

Critic

Josh

Zac

Sanniya

Scott

Kris

Garrett

Amy

DeAnna

 

R  2          Colloquium; Final draft due by the end of the week.

Presenter

Critic

Zac

Josh

Scott

Sanniya

Garrett

Kris

DeAnna

Amy

 

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Week 15: Final Things

T  7          Last minute edits for the anthology; course evaluation; exit interview.  

1. Last edits on the paper: in class workshop.

 

2. Come up with a title for the Anthology -- start thinking now.  (Here is

one:  "That Obscure Object of Desire: Iterations of the Grail Quest in

World Literature")

 

3. Course evaluation.

 

4. Sign up for exit interview.

 

After class -- before the exit interview.  Turn in a final hard copy and

an e-copy of your paper.

 

The final exam period will be used for the exit interviews.  These should

be about 30 minutes each -- give or take 10.  And will be scheduled

throughout exam week, well except for when I am giving an exam.

     

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Final Exam

3:30-4:45 classes......................................................Thursday, Dec. 16, 2-4 pm

 

 Course Requirements:

 

SEMINAR PROJECT:  The seminar project will be a 10-12 page essay on a subject of your choice, in consultation with the instructor of the seminar, on a subject or using a method that is consistent with the class theme.

 

COLLOQUIUM: The penultimate stage of the research paper process will be the colloquium presentation.  Half the class will present one day and the other half the next; the half not presenting will be involved in critiquing. 

 

Each presenter will meet with the instructor to discuss the rough draft of the paper and will provide a peer reviewer with a rough draft. 

 

The student will also provide the class with a solid abstract of the paper.  This abstract could be two pages long or more, but you want to minimize your Xeroxing.

 

During the presentation, the student will read the abstract to the class and will amplify parts of the abstract by reading from the larger paper for certain parts.  This should take about 10 minutes.  Remember you want to convey the major movements of your project.

 

The reviewer then will then provide the class a written critique of the paper – strengths and weaknesses – of one page and will talk for five minutes.  The critique of the paper should highlight such things as major transitions in the paper, use of evidence, use of sources.

 

The class will then hold questions until all presentations are complete.

 

We will have to work by the clock to move through four presentations per class meeting.

 

 

1.     Because this course is a seminar, student participation (needless to say, attendance) is mandatory.  Each assignment will receive an individual grade but will then be merged into one grade for each category (for example, grades on all three response papers  will be averaged to compute one single grade for the response paper).

2.     Late work will NOT be accepted unless under dire emergency situation.  Because the process of this seminar and the collaborative nature of the work, you will receive a zero on any work not submitted on time.  Presentations may not be made up.

3.     As a senior major engaged in a serious endeavor, you should know that I expect you to come to each class prepared and willing to participate and to treat all peers with interest and respect.  In such a course, it is not enough simply to read the assigned materials but to engage them, apply them to your own experience in this discipline, question them, and be able to use them in forming

your own projects.

4.     The seminar paper is the primary demonstration of your achievement in this course.  Conception of a project, drafting, researching, and editing will be taken much more seriously than in any other course.

5.     Editing others' work, including making comments about revision of grammar, style, organization, and content, is a requirement that takes serous the notion of collaboration.  Your editing remarks will be graded in terms of serious and thoughtful assistance balanced with respect for other individual's ideas.

6.     The class project of an anthology requires that you submit your final seminar paper in an electronic format, MS Word being the preferred program.  Publication of your essay in this anthology requires that you fully complete each step in the process of writing the paper.  In order for your paper to be included in this collection, you must successfully complete all steps in this process and meet minimum criteria for the paper.

Seminar Paper (including drafts)     50%

Presentations                                   20%

Response Papers                              20%

Editing and Participation         10%