From the category archives:

Early British Literature

How to teach literature

by Dr Davis on November 27, 2008

Reading literature:

As an avid reader, I have enjoyed taking literature courses. My second field of study in my doctoral program was Old English language and literature.  In addition, my master’s focused on literature primarily in early British and American literature for a total of thirty-six graduate hours in literature.  I have relished the opportunities I have had to teach literature classes, both sophomore British literature through the eighteenth century and freshman writing about literature.

            In teaching a literature course, I believe that the more the students enjoy the readings in class, the more likely they are to finish the assigned texts and continue reading similar works after they finish the course.  Examining the choices available, I select works I am enthusiastic about, since enthusiasm is contagious.  Beowulf is a favorite of mine and the students benefit from studying the work with someone who enjoys it.  I have had students, even those who have studied the work before, tell me that they did not realize Beowulf was so fascinating.  I do not think the text changed, but the way they looked at it clearly did.

 

Providing background information:

I also make sure the students have the background they need to understand a particular work, including historical, linguistic, and cultural information.  For example, when teaching “The Yellow Wallpaper,” I introduce the students to the history of psychiatric care and to the changing expectations of women, specifically delineating the idea of the “weaker sex” and how that plays out in illness, relationships, and social life. Additional readings include Nellie Bly’s biography and her exposé of asylums, Ten Days in a Mad-House, while those who wish to learn more about historical responses to insanity might read Torrey and Miller’s The Invisible Plague or for a quicker overview examine posts on the topic at www.claytoncramer.com/weblog/blogger.html.  I also try to give the students related literary readings, so that they can see the work as a part of a larger canon and not as a work in isolation. When teaching Gilman’s short story, the class also reads “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin and the play “Trifles” by Susan Glaspell.  This gives the students the opportunity to compare the role of illness, both mental and physical, and the role of women in different stories written during similar time periods.  This enrichment approach to literature encourages the students to develop their own deeper insights about the works and the themes and ideas presented in them.

 

Modeling how to read literature:

Modeling how to read literature is a practice essential to my courses.  I usually begin to read the assignment with the students, since this introduces them to the work in a non-threatening way.  When a concept is new to the course, I often have the class brainstorm together; when teaching Shakespeare, the class collaborates on possible definitions for tragedy and comedy.   When I am teaching poetry and want them to practice intense reading, I allow them to choose a poem not on my assigned list and, as a class, we read through it on consecutive days, making notes and identifying our changing understanding of the work.  They expect me as the expert to know everything about a poem with the first reading and this experiment lets me show them how even someone well versed in reading poetry can learn from subsequent readings.

            If the literary work is challenging, I provide help with vocabulary lists and questions to focus on particular issues as needed.  Several of my students have said that these act as a guide for them when they are reading so they know that they understand the text when they are able to begin to answer the questions. A sample question for Gulliver’s Travels is:

Gulliver says,  “Although there were few greater lovers of mankind, at that time, than myself, yet I confess I never saw any sensitive being so detestable on all accounts; and the more I came near them the more hateful they grew, while I stayed in that country” (Bk. 4, Ch. 2).  Gulliver’s revulsion forms the basis for his intense hatred of mankind (misanthropy).  Why and to what extent is it normal for Gulliver to react to the Yahoos this way and how is his reaction problematic?

Questions like these allow the students to explore the text and its implications rather than just rush through a reading to say it is finished and perhaps miss the reading’s most important lessons.  If a student can read well, most things become accessible.

 

Goals for literature:

In my classes I also discuss the applications of literary analysis to other areas of their lives.  A character analysis can be very similar to a personnel review, for example.  It can also be useful when trying to sort out personality conflicts among friends.  In addition I try to show that other people, besides English teachers, have read the works and expect that they will have too.  To do this, I bring in comic strips or cartoons that refer to the works we are reading.  I also reference editorial letters in newspapers or magazine articles on other topics that refer to literature. It is a light-hearted way to make a serious point.  I hope that they are encouraged to keep reading long after the assignments are completed.

 

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Beowulf teaching resources

by Dr Davis on November 6, 2008

I have waded through 45 pages of Google for “teaching Beowulf,” so that you don’t have to. Here’s the useful stuff:

Beowulf@Web English Teacher

Teaching Resources

English 505 Beowulf Blog, with short critical discussions

Beowulf on the Web, including Beowulf sites, aids for learning Old English, and general medieval links

Flytes of Fancy: Boasts and Boasters from Beowulf to Gangsta Rap, an essay

The Labyrinth: Resources for teaching medieval studies, a series of links maintained by Georgetown U

The Narrative Pulse of Beowulf, a book preview online. Lots of good stuff if you take the time to read it, but not on the top. Have to read it.

Editing Beowulf: What can the study of ballads tell us? an article from Oral Tradition.

Beowulf: a slideshow

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: beowulf)

Medievalist blogs. This might be something I could use to have my students look for information. It would at least be an adventure.

The Electronic Revolution and the Teaching of Literature (2005) about teaching Beowulf and how that has changed with the internet. from the CEA Forum

EdSITEment: The Beauty of Anglo-Saxon Poetry, with lots of links and some ideas.

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Teaching Beowulf in the college classroom.

by Dr Davis on November 6, 2008

Least Tern offers some good teacher resources for Beowulf.

Jaws - Screen the old movie and, as you do, think about the epic hero, the side kick, the monster, the quest, the battle, the gore, the weapons, the questions of good and evil and faith and courage and might. By including some careful movie cuts in with your classroom readings of Beowulf, you will grab your students and liven up the class. Suggestions:

  • Jaws appears - the sound is enough - show this and then read the 1st appearance of Grendel
  • The captain appears at the town meeting - contrast this with Beowulf’s appearance at the great hall - talk about the posturing and the individual vs. the group
  • The captain dies - show this and then read Beowulf’s end (a good compare/contract exercise)

I have been wanting to bring in more modern comparisons for the works I am doing in Brit Lit 1. This would be a good way.

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The real Robinson Crusoe

by Dr Davis on November 3, 2008

300 years afterAlexander Selkirk, the real-life model for Robinson Crusoe stayed an island after a disagreement with his sea captain, archaeologists think they have found his campsite.

Archaeologists have found evidence of what they believe to be Selkirk’s presence in a part of the island known as Aguas Buenas, uncovering the remnants of a campsite constructed by an early European occupant. An article published in the journal Post-Medieval Archaeology reports the discovery of a fragment of copper alloy from a pair of navigational dividers, which would have belonged to a ship’s navigator or master. Reports from the 18th century from Selkirk’s rescuer, Captain Woodes Rogers, suggest that Selkirk fulfilled one of these roles.

David Caldwell, Keeper of Scotland and Europe for National Museums Scotland and leader of the dig, said: “The evidence uncovered at Aguas Buenas corroborates the stories of Alexander Selkirk’s stay on the island. I am satisfied that this is the place where Selkirk set up his camp. The discovery of the divider was crucial.”

Other compelling finds include two holes for posts, which suggest that Selkirk constructed two shelters by a freshwater stream and set up a viewpoint to watch for — and assess the friendliness of — approaching ships. In the end, five years passed before an English ship visited the island.

I like this… I admire Daniel Defoe’s work and though I have not yet had the opportunity to teach a class with his writing in it, I hope to some day.

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Thoughts on my Brit Lit course

by Dr Davis on October 10, 2008

I had already been working on adding more “relevance” to the course. My project for this course is, at least right now, focused on making the play Everyman more accessible to my students by introducing the concept through modern film (thanks, Joe) with a clip from Forrest Gump and modern music, including “For Everyman” by Jackson Browne and “Every Man” by Casting Crowns.

I also want to place more of an emphasis on the theme of the work, having to meet Death unexpectedly.

In order to do all this in the course, though, I am going to have to leave some things out.

That’s going to be hard. I’ve already pared the course down as far as I can stand (”and I can’t stands no more”- Popeye), but to integrate the old literature with modern life, I am going to have to either drop out some of the old or give more at-home readings. And I have found those to be very difficult to get students to actually do… Also, as a historicist, I think that the works are “better” and more easily understood, if background information is provided before and during the reading. That doesn’t happen at home for the students.

(I wonder if this is a possibility of something to do. Create an interactive text where the asides that I would say in class are available in the text… Maybe. I’ve done my own translation of Beowulf from the Old English, though it is nowhere near as good as Seamus Heaney’s amazingly alliterative alternative, and I could use it without obtaining rights from anyone…. Something to think about.)

Objectives and outcomes for Brit Lit:

Objectives:
1 To read, discuss, enjoy, and write about early English-language literature as a means of introduction to their legacy of works, both prose and poetry.

2 To write about the literature, in essays, essay exams, and literary analysis and thus enhance the students’ repertoire of writing skills.

3 To sharpen students’ writing, thinking, listening, note-taking and research skills.

4 To continue improving students’ skills through Lab work. The lab is in SFA 215.

5 To enhance student vocabularies. The use of a dictionary may be necessary.

Learning Outcomes:

• Trace, interpret, and evaluate the cultural and literary development of English literature, both in form and content, from the Old English or Anglo-Saxon period through the Neo-Classical period.

• Interpret and evaluate a literary work through understanding of the theme, situation, tone, structure and style.

• Recognize the aesthetic, moral, and intellectual values of literature.

• Recognize some of the major themes of literature.

• Understand the distinguishing characteristics of various genres such as epic poems, sonnets, plays, odes, elegies, short stories, novels, and allegories.

• Write logical, well-organized, well-supported critical responses to a literary work.

• Appropriately document material used as the result of research.

I have a problem with these outcomes/objectives. They are not as measurable as they need to be. How do you get students to enjoy and appreciate the literature? And how would you assess whether that has happened? I will work on this more and maybe repost some

How can I identify “recognize” and “understand.” I can’t. So I need to change those. “Identify three major themes of literature and demonstrate how those themes are used in two works each.” That would work. “Explain how the distinguishing characteristics of various genres such as epic poems, sonnets, plays, odes, elegies, allegories, comedies, and tragedies can be seen in at least three works read this semester.” “Demonstrate an understanding of the aesthetic, moral, and intellectual values of literature by being able to present a reasoned response and evaluation of four of the works read this semester.”

So now it will say

Learning Outcomes:
• Trace, interpret, and evaluate the cultural and literary development of English literature, both in form and content, from the Old English or Anglo-Saxon period through the Neo-Classical period.
• Interpret and evaluate a literary work through understanding of the theme, situation, tone, structure and style.
• Demonstrate an understanding of the aesthetic, moral, and intellectual values of literature by being able to present a reasoned response and evaluation of four of the works read this semester.
• Identify three major themes of literature and demonstrate how those themes are used in two works each.
• Explain how the distinguishing characteristics of various genres such as epic poems, sonnets, plays, odes, elegies, allegories, comedies, and tragedies can be see in at least three works this semester.
• Write logical, well-organized, well-supported critical responses to a literary work.
• Appropriately document material used as the result of research.

That is much better. Of course, it gives an aware student a very clear picture of the final exam now.

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Re-thinking my Brit Lit I course

by Dr Davis on October 9, 2008

Something I just realized/discovered this week, from doing the readings for Component C and the exam printout we brought in to class.

I have been testing a lot in my Brit Lit course on low-level knowledge questions. Do students recognize where quotes are from? Do they know basic symbolism in various works?

After looking over my learning objectives and outcomes in that course, I can see that what I wanted to make sure they did (the readings and notes) do not line up with what the department says they should be doing (a lot more evaluation and analysis).

So what I am doing about it?

I am going through my two exams for that course and the syllabus itself pulling out the less important works and the lower level test questions and trying to do more evaluation, analysis, valuing questions.

I still want to know that my students understand the basic plot lines in stories and such, but perhaps I can reorient my quizzes to show that? Or grade their notes?

I don’t know. I could use some good ideas for how to do that. Informal assessments without grades? (Since really any literature student ought to understand those things?)

I believe, with John Dewey, that “Education is not a preparation for life…education is life itself.” Partially because of that, I want the readings and the course to enhance the students’ lives after they leave. (The other reason I want the students to read, understand, and enjoy these works is that they have brought so much joy to my life.

My changes to my Brit Lit course:

I had already been working on adding more “relevance” to the course. My project for this course is, at least right now, focused on making the play Everyman more accessible to my students by introducing the concept through modern film (thanks, Joe) with a clip from Forrest Gump and modern music, including “For Everyman” by Jackson Browne and “Every Man” by Casting Crowns.

I also want to place more of an emphasis on the theme of the work, having to meet Death unexpectedly.

In order to do all this in the course, though, I am going to have to leave some things out.

That’s going to be hard. I’ve already pared the course down as far as I can stand (”and I can’t stands no more”- Popeye), but to integrate the old literature with modern life, I am going to have to either drop out some of the old or give more at-home readings. And I have found those to be very difficult to get students to actually do… Also, as a historicist, I think that the works are “better” and more easily understood, if background information is provided before and during the reading. That doesn’t happen at home for the students.

(I wonder if this is a possibility of something to do. Create an interactive text where the asides that I would say in class are available in the text… Maybe. I’ve done my own translation of Beowulf from the Old English, though it is nowhere near as good as Seamus Heaney’s amazingly alliterative alternative, and I could use it without obtaining rights from anyone…. Something to think about.)

Objectives and outcomes for Brit Lit:

Objectives:
1 To read, discuss, enjoy, and write about early English-language literature as a means of introduction to their legacy of works, both prose and poetry.
2 To write about the literature, in essays, essay exams, and literary analysis and thus enhance the students’ repertoire of writing skills.
3 To sharpen students’ writing, thinking, listening, note-taking and research skills.
4 To continue improving students’ skills through Lab work. The lab is in SFA 215.
5 To enhance student vocabularies. The use of a dictionary may be necessary.

Learning Outcomes:
• Trace, interpret, and evaluate the cultural and literary development of English literature, both in form and content, from the Old English or Anglo-Saxon period through the Neo-Classical period.
• Interpret and evaluate a literary work through understanding of the theme, situation, tone, structure and style.
• Recognize the aesthetic, moral, and intellectual values of literature.
• Recognize some of the major themes of literature.
• Understand the distinguishing characteristics of various genres such as epic poems, sonnets, plays, odes, elegies, short stories, novels, and allegories.
• Write logical, well-organized, well-supported critical responses to a literary work.
• Appropriately document material used as the result of research.

How do you get students to enjoy and appreciate the literature? And how would you assess whether that has happened?

Example exam questions:

• How does Beowulf conform to the epic? (Use at least five of the thirteen parts of the definition of epic as covered in class.)
This is a good question because it matches up with one of the learning outcomes.
• Discuss the background of Judith. Where did the poem come from, what influences are seen in it, and in what ways are the influences seen?
This question does ask them to trace development, but basically they would have to have taken good notes on the lecture for this and write it well. I have given them a fairly specific introduction to the three influences on the poem.

“If only one work were studied for each period, which would you recommend and why?” There are four periods that we study in this course (though there is some argument as to when the periods ought to begin and end and we talk about that, so someone who liked Paradise Lost and Gulliver’s Travels could use other dates and get both those works included).

Is this question a good one for my learning outcomes? I added it to the test after the final. (I review my syllabi and exams during the semester I am using them and take notes to improve them.) What would be better questions?

I do want the students to be able to tell me what I told them. I want them to know it. (And that is in the learning outcomes.) I think it is interesting and important to understand that multiple influences impact a text. What would be another question I could ask? Perhaps I could choose another work which we have studied which has influences I did not talk about in relation to it and ask them to identify possible influences and argue for their choices? That’s hard to do.

And this is a sophomore level course, not a majors course. While most of my students are dedicated to getting a college education at this point, especially since I teach in miniterm, I don’t want to make the questions too hard.

“One must learn by doing the thing. For though you think you know it, you have no certainty until you try.” Sophocles

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3rd C British King

by Dr Davis on September 15, 2008

Among the earliest of those Roman “kings” to defend England against invading tribes was this one in particular.  His reign is mentioned briefly by two ancient writers: Geoffrey of Monmouth and Robert of Gloucester.

 

We see this third-century king as remarkable for his era in that rulers in those days had reputations for negligence, unscrupulousness, thievery and murder.

 

Not this king.

 

Geoffrey and Robert characterize him as brave yet even-tempered, as capable yet good-humored.  So respected, so popular was he that even his daughter’s accomplishments were recorded.  [She was a skilled musician.]  Little else is known of this beneficent king.

 

Who was he?  We wouldn’t know anything else, except that someone made up a rhyme about him.  It is a rhyme which has been remembered, translated into the tongue of the day, and passed down for seventeen hundred years.  It is a rhyme which is slowly falling into obscurity as we drop the orality of our learning more and more.  My students don’t know many of the fairy tales; they certainly won’t have learned this rhyme.  

 

But I learned it.  I liked it.  I remembered it.

 

And now I will pass it on to my Brit Lit I students.

 

Old King Cole was a merry old soul,

and a merry old soul was he.

He called for his pipe and he called for his bowl,

and he called for his fiddlers three.

 

The story is quoted from Paul Harvey’s The Rest of the Story.

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A political metaphor: Everyman

by Dr Davis on August 29, 2008

Obama is lauded as everyman says the LATimes.

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Multimodal Everyman

by Dr Davis on August 20, 2008

I heard this song in church right after I taught Everyman this summer. And I want to buy the song from iTunes and play it for class next year. At least this portion:

I’m the man with all I’ve ever wanted
All the toys and playing games
I am the one who pours your coffee
Corner booth each Saturday

I am your daughter’s favorite teacher
I am the leader of the band
I sit behind you in the bleachers
I am every man

I’m the coach of every winning team
And still a loser in my mind
I am the soldier in the airport
Facing giants one more time

I am the woman shamed and haunted
By the cry of unborn life
I am every broken man
Nervous child, lonely wife

“Every Man” by Casting Crowns

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Beowulf multimodal presentation

by Dr Davis on August 20, 2008

I want to do a presentation on Beowulf, perhaps flashing pictures while we read? I don’t know. But I want to do one. So I began collecting Beowulf sites with pictures. And then, of course, I found other cool Beowulf sites.

This is not pretty at all. But there are some great pictures and sites listed here.

Images:
the fight with Grendel’s mother

drawing of Beowulf that on first glance looks like a photo

Death of Beowulf

A series of photos from a movie from Iceland called Beowulf and Grendel.

Beowulf with a short beard

An anime type Beowulf, but he looks way too young to me.

A lime green rendition of Grendel and Beowulf

A better series of photos from the same movie.

A line drawing of the beach scene when Beowulf arrives.

Line drawing of Beowulf and Grendel by Claraval, the Tolkien artist


from Corona-Online

Grendel in Heorot, with legos

Heorot with legos, after Grendel

Beowulf art from Beowulf in Cyberspace. This is an entire set, organized by sections of the work.

Here is one example:

Beowulf answering Unferth

Grendel,
with bodies

4 very different Beowulf pics

Beowulf and dragon

Much better Beowulf and dragon

Beowulf and Grendel, where Grendel has a necklace of skulls (The early goth?)

Beowulf presents himself to Hrothgar, a drawing made for an English class. (I’m glad I didn’t have to draw anything for English class. I might not have made it to grad school.)

Dragon burning Beowulf’s shield.

A frontspiece

Beowulf fights the dragon, Wiglaf included

Beowulf pictures which are development designs, so a whole series. Click on them and they get rather big.

Beowulf geography

Beowulf family trees

the Death of Beowulf

Whole site with pics:
Beowulf: The Monsters and the Hero

Other, not just images:
A Pace course on Beowulf to Lear: Text, Image, and Hypertext. But I went to the Music Files for “Dream of the Rood” and got a blank page. Oh my gosh, though, the Student Works INT had some good stuff. This is some great stuff… It was a sophomore course in Computer Science and English. Basically a class on how to make websites and an Early British lit course. That would be fun to teach. Wonder if I could interest the departments in doing that?

Beowulf translations with over 100 selections of translations. Includes stuff on alliteration, a quicktime movie of reading in OE (though I can do that myself and with much more inflection and drama), and all kinds of interesting treats.

Beowulf in Cyberspace

An assignment on Beowulf, examining translations. This actually compares three different ones and talks about them. Then it gives a table of others and asks for students to identify the parallels. It’s very interesting. This is great. I am SO going to use this. Can I use it if it’s on the web?

Beowulf: Still a Hero an online presence for a teacher/class, is a whole set of annotated links, information, etc. My favorite section is at the bottom. “Graphic Novels.” There are three.

Beowulf vs Sir Gawain offers two images and an interesting characterization of the men, then asking which is the real hero. A definition/illustration paper in the making.

A good introduction/summary of research on the poem. It includes a pronunciation guide. Dang my prelim in Old English would have been a lot easier (or a lot harder) with the internet.

A much better reading, this one of Beowulf and Wiglaf fight the dragon.

A grad class syllabus on “Beowulf, Cultural Memory, and War”

Beowulf in Hypertext has some intro, history, stuff on the manuscript, author, and more than just Blackburn’s take on Christianity in the poem. (Though not a lot more.)

Gif of Beowulf, includes OE and modern E lines at the bottom that change and a live dragon that flies through the sky

Other things I learned

There is a graphic novel (originally a series of three) called Beowulf by Gareth Hinds. I loved the covers.

Beowulf is a game for xbox and a board game. But while the pics in “Google Images” looked amazing, I couldn’t find them when I clicked to the site. It might be worth purchasing just to get some good pics. I could probably find the game at Nan’s.

I got to page 44 of Google Images for Beowulf before I quit.

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