empire map

Paper 4 Assignment

Length: 7-9 pages, 2000-2500 words. Note: All of these options can be completed as either group projects or as individual projects. If you are working in a group, one person should send the proposal and tell me the names of the people in your group.

Deadlines:
Proposal for Paper 4 Due: November 12. Send a short email message of 50-100 words to me at campbelld@wsu.edu telling me about your topic.
Final Paper Due: December 3, 2015.
Presentations for Final Papers:http://public.wsu.edu/~campbelld/engl372/presentation.htm

Proposal: Your proposal (50-100 words) indicating works to be discussed and a possible thesis should emailed to me on the proposal date. It will receive comments rather than a grade, but if you do not send a proposal, your final paper will lose about ½ of a letter grade, or 5 points.

Guidelines

1. For this paper, you will want to use either secondary sources (i.e., literary criticism in the form of books and journal articles) or additional primary sources--stories, poems, plays--beyond the ones we've read in class.

2. If you want to, you can develop and expand on a previous short paper for the final paper.

3. Remember, Wikipedia and "student help" sites are NOT legitimate sources for this paper. The phrase "secondary sources" means "journals and library books," along with some legitimate literature web sites. Ask me if you're not sure whether a site counts as a legitimate source.

4. Web pages are someone's intellectual property and ALL WEB PAGES MUST BE CITED just as journal articles must be. Copying without attribution is plagiarism, and you will receive an F for the paper even if your paper is only partly copied from a source without attribution. See the syllabus for more information on the consequences of plagiarism.

5. Style counts as well as substance, so edit and proofread your paper carefully. If you have questions, meet with me before turning in your paper.

6. Check the various guidelines carefully:

Citing Sources http://public.wsu.edu/~campbelld/cited.htm
Formatting Papers: http://public.wsu.edu/~campbelld/format.htm

7. All of these can be completed as group projects rather than individual projects, if you prefer.

Requirements

Option I. Texts in Context Paper

Examine the periodicals in which one of the works appeared (Holland Library has many of these in their original bindings) and read selections from the other works included in the same volume. You’ll probably want to choose 3-4 pieces from the volume and analyze them in detail.

You may instead want to work with the primary source materials to which you were introduced when we visited the MASC. You might also choose to look at a work's reception in the popular news outlets of the day or to compare it with a popular story on a similar topic.

1. Open question. Here are some questions that you may want to consider, although you don't have to address them all in your paper.

  1. How do the works of this author compare with those of his or her now-forgotten contemporaries?
  2. What was the context within which this work was originally read? What works surrounded it—travel articles, short stories, author profiles, opinion and commentary, or some other form of writing?
  3. What kinds of fiction appear in the same volume with the work? Do they address similar themes? Do you notice a preponderance of one kind of story or setting (e.g., dialect stories, stories about the West, stories about courtship, and so on)?
  4. In what kind of publication does the work appear?

2. At the MASC or in the library, look through contemporary periodicals and books and choose a few that present the West or imperial expansion in positive terms. (The MASC has a lot of these materials.) Analyze one of the works on the British empire or the West in the context of these materials.

3. The MASC has copies of The Yellow Book and other materials important to the Aesthetic and Decadent movement, and copies of Punch and other periodicals of the time are available in Holland/Terrell Library. Analyze The Picture of Dorian Gray or another late-century work in the light of these materials.

4. Oscar Wilde toured the Western U.S. in 1882.  Can you find materials in the MASC that describe his lectures and the reception he received on this tour?

Option II: Traditional Critical Analysis Paper

These are broad topics and are only suggestions; you will need to shape and to limit them.  I encourage you to stop in to see me well before the paper is due. If you want to write on a topic that does not fit under one of these topics, please let me know.

  1. Choosing one of the authors we've read this semester, explore the varying ways in which the author was perceived in his or her own time and at the present time. You may want to look at contemporary book reviews of the author's work for this paper.
  2. Compare The Picture of Dorian Gray and The Awakening. What do their protagonists learn, and in what ways does each constitute a novel of "awakening"?
  3. In what ways are stories of empire such as "The Man Who Would Be King" similar to or different from the classic Western?
  4. Analyze one of the works we've read by comparing it to another work by the same author, preferably one with similar themes.
  5. If you have special knowledge of some aspect of the culture of this era (e.g., paintings, sculpture, fabric or decorative arts, or music; the landscape or vegetation discussed in the work; the architectural features; etc.), analyze one of the works in terms of this knowledge. You might find good information at the Library of Congress's American Memory Home Page, Harpweek, or other sites (see http://www.wsu.edu/~campbelld/amlit/sites.htm).
  6. The literature of this era is sometimes seen as furthering the nation's imperialist and expansionist aims; according to some writers, it implicitly promotes an agenda that is racist and anti-immigrant and that seeks to affirm the aims of white America. Write an essay in which you support or refute this idea using historical information as well as analysis of the works.
  7. If you would like to continue to explore the ideas in a previous paper, do some additional research in critical or historical sources to expand the paper for your final project.
  8. Analyze in depth a pattern of imagery, symbolism, theme, or feature of one or two works (such as architecture or music).
  9. Your own topic.

Option III.  Annotated Web Version of Text

Texts produced:

Option III asks you to prepare an annotated hypertext (web site) or wiki version of works studied this semester. Your web site or wiki will define words, analyze images and themes, create a coherent interpretation, and provide a brief bibliography of works consulted. If you choose this option, your prospectus will outline your plans for the project.  You may work in a group if you choose this option; all participants will share in the final grade. 

Your web text will provide an interpretation, so you might want to focus on a theme or idea. Some examples: water or clothing imagery in The Awakening, art and the artist in The Awakening or The Picture of Dorian Gray, and so on.

Requirements

1) Probably the easiest way to create a web text is to set it up as a blog in Wordpress and use the Pages feature for your annotations. The links would be really easy to create in that way.
2) Another possibility is a wiki like pbworks.com.
3) Use Wix.com, weebly.com, or Google Sites to create a web site. These are all free and easy to use.

Presentation

Length: About 5-10 minutes for the presentation. (No additional written work must be turned in for a grade.)

Presentation signup is on the blog: http://english372.wordpress.com

Presentation schedule is here: http://www.wsu.edu/~campbelld/engl372/presentation.htm


As part of your final assignment, you'll be presenting your original research to the class during one of two presentation days at the end of the semester. You may also choose to present your research on a different, but most people will probably want to combine the presentation with their research for the final paper.

Your purpose is to inform the class about some facet of your research project. If you've done the "texts in context" paper, for example, you may want to discuss what you've discovered about the periodical or author you focused on for the paper. If you've completed a web project, you may want to show that project on the screen and discuss it with the class. If you've worked with someone else on the project, you can present your research together.

Although this presentation will be based on your final project, you shouldn't simply read your paper to the class, although you can present portions of your paper in your presentation. Instead, you should feel free to bring in film or music clips, use PowerPoint or pictures, ask students questions, and otherwise make your presentation lively and informative for the class. You can also present your research in innovative ways.