Fall 2023  |  ENGL 1031 Section 002: Introduction to the Short Story (20579)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
3 Credits
Grading Basis:
Student Option
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
Completely Online
Class Attributes:
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Freshman Full Year Registration
Online Course
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/05/2023 - 12/13/2023
Off Campus
Virtual Rooms ONLINEONLY
Enrollment Status:
Closed (184 of 180 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
English literature boasts some of the most powerful, beautifully crafted short stories in world literature. In this class, we will use the short story as a path for understanding the craft of writing: how writers use language to present a vividly imagined world in a short number of pages. We will also examine the importance of genre: how, for example, a detective short story differs from a slice of life story. This is a lecture course, but will involve substantial student discussion.
Class Description:
English literature boasts some of the most powerful, beautifully crafted short stories in world literature. In this class, we will use the short story as a path for understanding the craft of writing: how writers use language to present a vividly imagined world in a short number of pages. We will also examine the importance of genre: how, for example, a detective short story differs from a slice of life story, as well as how genres such as detective and science fiction invite us to examine how narratives are constructed.

This course is divided into three units: I. Origins and definitions of the short story. II. Elements of Narrative. III. Additional genres of the short story

We will read approx. 4-5 short stories a week (some quite short), save for the last two weeks, during which we'll read an author collection by sf/f writer Ted Chiang.

Our short stories will contain a mix of classics of 19th-c and 20th-c American fiction (Poe, Twain, Anderson, Melville, Hawthorne, Du Bois, Hemingway, etc.); classics from early 20th-century world literature by Franz Kafka, Anton Chekhov, Jorge Luis Borges, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez; and an assortment of 20th-century fiction by celebrated authors working in a wide range of genres, modes, and locations (Ursula K. Le Guin, Angela Carter, Tanith Lee,Toni Cade Bambara, Lorrie Moore, Kelly Link, Sherman Alexie, Chinua Achebe, Sandra Cisneros, Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, George R. R. Martin, Neil Gaiman, Haruki Murakami, Luisa Valenzuela, Nalo Hopkinson, and others).

Presentation: Collaborative Class Story

Along with 4-5 members of the class, you will be asked to present on a topic pertaining to the class's collaborative short story. (Yes, we will write a short story together!) We will use this short story to better understand the features and effects of several key narrative elements, as well as to discuss how genre affects the construction and reception of a text. If you don't consider yourself a creative writer, don't panic--your group will be responsible for only a few paragraphs of fiction. The real challenge of the presentation will be to explain to the class why you made the authorial choices you did, given that week's topic (e.g., a topic such as tone, plot, setting, or characterization).

Textbooks (Required)

1. Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang, ISBN: 9781101972120

2. The Short Story: An Introduction, by Paul March-Russell, ISBN: 978-0-7486-2774-5

3. The Story and Its Writer, ed. Ann Charters, 8th edition, ISBN: 9780312596231 (or the 9th edition, if necessary)

I've tried to keep the cost of textbooks below $50. All of the texts above are currently available on Amazon or other online booksellers as used books for less than $10 each. All textbooks will also be available at the bookstore.

Who Should Take This Class?:

Anyone drawn to the short story as a genre or to the study of fiction, in general. Majors and non-majors welcome. No prerequisites required.


ENGL 1031 satisfies the Literature Core requirement.

Learning Objectives:
_____________________

I. ANALYTICAL SKILLS: This course will use the short story to teach you about the importance of a liberal education by engaging with three major issues: (1) the development of arguments that use reason and evidence to come to a conclusion; (2) the acquisition of analytical skills that will allow you to respond to stories written in a variety of cultural contexts; and (3) the ability to recognize more and less valid modes of approaching literary analysis.

II. WRITING SKILLS: Most of the assignments, including the presentation, involve writing (analytical, argumentative, expository, and a limited amount of creative writing). We will also spend one week on "reading and writing about literature" during which our non-fiction readings will introduce you to strategies and insights that will assist you in writing a literary analysis for a literature course.

III. LITERARY HISTORY AND TERMINOLOGY: Students will learn the key elements of narrative and will examine classic texts from several major literary periods through class discussions, handouts, and targeted non-fiction readings.

Grading:
20%........Paper 1 (4-5 pages) (close reading essay on a story of your choice)
25%........Paper 2 (5-6 pages) (final paper: compare/contrast paper on two stories of your choice)
20%........Participation (all discussion and misc. assignments, including any in-class group work)
15%........Group presentation (on your section of the class's collaborative short story)
10%........Attendance
5%..........Quiz 1 (midterm)
5%..........Quiz 2 (at conclusion of course)
------
100%
Exam Format:
Final paper (paper 2)
Class Format:
In-person class sessions on East Bank campus.
Workload:
Moderate to heavy reading load. Moderate writing load. Minimal in-class group work. One group presentation.
Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/20579/1239
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
8 August 2018

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