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Course Syllabi and Announcements LIT 165 Syllabus LIT 165 Announcements and Assignments WRT 120 Syllabus WRT 120 Announcements and Assignments
Notebook for Topics in Literature: Imaginary Worlds (Spring 2008) A Reading of THE TEMPEST
Notebook for Topics in Literature: Rites of Passage (Spring 2006) Goals of the Course Fundamental Questions about Literature Valuing Literature Critical Thinking and Reading Literature Critical Approaches to Literature Literature as ART Ambiguity Approaching the Art of Fiction Defining the Short Story Evaluating Short Fiction Craft of Fiction: PLOT Craft of Fiction: CHARACTER Small Group Exercise ARABY by James Joyce WHERE ARE YOU GOING, WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN? by Joyce Carol Oates Our RITES OF PASSAGE Theme A note about GIRL POE and the art of STORY OF A HOUR THE YELLOW WALLPAPER YOUNG MAN ON SIXTH AVENUE Notes on Innovative Fiction Assignment Sheet for Paper #1 Fiction and Ambiguity - Your Questions Writing Workshop - Short Fiction Poetry Journal Project Assignment Sheet LITERARY SYNTHESIS PROJECT Defining Poetry Reading Poetry The Craft of Poetry Drama and Tragedy Study Questions: DEATH OF A SALESMAN
Notebook for Effective Writing I (Spring 2006) Paper #4 Assignment Sheet Critical Thinking and Commentary Casebook: Evaluating Sources Worksheet Selecting Information Evaluating Arguments CASEBOOK PROJECT Assignment Sheet Approaching Persuasive Writing Topic Development - Profile Essay Generating Ideas for the Profile Essay Paper #2 Assignment Sheet Profile Exercise Analyzing THE FIVE BEDROOM, SIX FIGURE ROOTLESS LIFE Objective Writing: Selected Readings Writing Workshop: Paper #1 Expressive Writing in the NYTimes Writing Effective Introductions and Conclusions Paper #1: IDENTITY Expressive Writing Open Letter Exercise and Examples EMERSON on Individuality vs. Conformity Literature related to IDENTITY Understanding the 'Rhetorical Situation'
Go Exploring Weblog for WRT 120 Writing Assistance on the Web Blackboard at WCU WCU Homepage WCU's Francis Harvey Green Library
Notebook for Topics in Literature: Imaginary Worlds (Fall 2005) One Last Look at Imaginary Worlds Franz Kafka's BEFORE THE LAW Analyzing WAITING FOR GODOT Approaching WAITING FOR GODOT Paper #3: Assignment Sheet Paper #4: Independent Project The Problem of Stability in BRAVE NEW WORLD UTOPIA/DYSTOPIA Links Analyzing Huxley's BRAVE NEW WORLD Defining Utopia Embarking on Huxley's BRAVE NEW WORLD A Reading of Shakespeare's THE TEMPEST From today's news (11/3/05) Assignment Sheet for Paper #2 Goodbye to Dante's Imaginary World Stepping Through Dante's Inferno: Cantos 10-34 Stepping Through Dante's Inferno: Cantos 1-10 INFERNO: Questions/Analysis: Cantos 32-34 INFERNO: Questions/Analysis: Cantos 18-31 INFERNO: Questions for Analysis: Cantos 12-17 INFERNO: Structure INFERNO: Questions for Analysis: Cantos 1-5 INFERNO: Analyzing Canto 1 Relating to Dante's Inferno Approaching Dante's DIVINE COMEDY A Little Help with Dante's INFERNO Assignment Sheet for Paper #1 Notes on LEAF BY NIGGLE Responses to LEAF BY NIGGLE ON FAIRY STORIES: An Essay by Tolkien Notes on Axolotl Reading Ovid's Tales From Myth to Literature: Approaching Ovid's Tales Notes on THE EYE OF THE GIANT Functions of the Genesis Tales Analyzing Mythic Tales Defining Mythology Filtering the Introduction to FANTASTIC WORLDS Commentary on LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI by Keats Commentary on DARKNESS by Byron Handout: Imagination Poems Set What is Imagination? Our Course Theme: Imaginary Worlds LIT 165 Assignments: Fall 2005 LIT 165 Announcements: Fall 2005 Imaginary Worlds: Course Syllabus
Notebook for Effective Writing I (Fall 2005) Paper #4: Independent Thinking/Reading/Writing Casebook Preparation Checklist Casebook Assignment Schedule Evaluating Sources for the Casebook Casebook Project Assignment Sheet Notes on Rational Argument Argument Assignment Sheet: Objective Writing Reviewing Elements of the Profile Essay Writing the Profile Essay Readings: Objective Writing Assignment Sheet: Expressive Writing Rubric for Evaluation of Writing About SKIN DEEP Emerson on Individuality vs. Conformity Mind-map: Identity Understanding the 'Rhetorical Situation' Assignments Page Announcements Page WRT 120 Course Syllabus for Fall 2005
ENG Q20: Basic Writing
Go Exploring Weblog for WRT 120 Writing Assistance on the Web Blackboard at WCU WCU Homepage WCU's Francis Harvey Green Library
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~~ Go Exploring: What is Imagination? ~~
We could be very complicated about this. We could do all sorts of
research and produce fancy, extended definitions. That might be
something you choose to do as the course progresses. It’s the
kind of
question we can put out there and then entertain all semester: what is
imagination, and what do the works we read imply about it? For
now,
I’m content to come at that question less academically, more
informally, a little less rigorously, but maybe more accessibly.
Is imagination an “ability”?
• If it is an “ability,” is imagination something
innate? Some
people have it and some people don’t? Are the ones that have it the
lucky ones or the unlucky ones?
• If it’s an ability that’s not exactly innate, is it
something
individuals can develop? If so, is it something we want to
develop?
If we do want to develop our imaginations, how do we do that?
Is imagination a kind of mental tool we use for various kinds of
work
or is it something we use to entertain ourselves, more about leisure
than work?
• Does understanding imagination as something
necessary for certain kinds of work make it seem more important or
valuable?
• Does seeing imagination as something we use to
entertain ourselves make it seem less important, more frivolous?
• What do most people use their imaginations
for—entertainment or work? Do we use it for both?
Is it desirable or undesirable for
individuals to have a lot of imagination?
• What are the pros and cons to having a lot of
imagination?
• What are the pros and cons to having practically no
imagination?
The writers we’re going to examine today all have some kind of
interesting perspective on the imagination, which may come across
directly or may be implied by the vivid kinds of imaginary worlds they
create and invite us enter. One of the ways we can come at these
poems
is to tease those ideas out, give them air, hear what they have to say.
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