Monday, 27 January 2020

Revised Syllabus Madurai Kamaraj University


MADURAI KAMARAJ UNIVERSITY

(University with Potential for Excellence)
B.A. English Literature - Semester
Revised Syllabus for Part III English/Choice Based Credit System)
(For those students who join B.A., Branch XII (b) English Literature from June 2018 and afterwards)
Objectives:
1. To enable students to gain presidency in the use of English language.
2. To expose them to classics in English literature.
3. To enable them gain knowledge of the social and literary history of England, the literary genres, the literary movements, and the various schools of thought in literary criticism.
4. To develop their vocabulary and English language skills so as to enable them perform well in competitive examinations, like Public Service Commission Examination, TOEFL & GRE.
5. To expose them face challenges in mass media.
6. To help the students to develop career-oriented skills through elective courses.
7. To develop the skills the students really like to develop through choice based credit system.
8. To enable the students through skill based elective courses and non-major elective subjects to have a good deal of freedom and to be employable immediately on completion of their degree programme.

V SEMESTER
CORE PAPER 8
 DRAMA
Objective:
To expose the students to the various socio-economic and political scenario of the world through the study of modem drama of different continent and also to appreciate the literature.

UNIT – I
Girish Karnad - The Dreams of Tipu Sultan

UNIT – II
Asif Currimbhoy - Goa

UNIT – III
Osborne - Look Back in Anger

UNIT – IV
Eugene O’Neill - Mourning becomes Electra

UNIT – V
Wole Soyinka - A Dance of the Forests

V SEMESTER
CORE PAPER — 9
AMERICAN LITERATURE
Objectives:
1. l. To help learners get acquainted with the richness of American literature through representative works of poets, essayists and novelists.
2. To introduce learners to important aspects in various genres of American literature

UNIT – I PROSE
Henry David Thoreau - The Battle of Ants
Abraham Lincoln - The Gettysburg Address

UNIT – II POETRY
West Running Brook - Robert Frost
On the Beach at Night alone - Walt Whitman
Happiness - Carl Sandburg
I Felt a Funeral - Emily Dickinson
Brahma - Emerson

Book recommended:
Prose & Poetry — Mainspring Publishers, Chennai

UNIT – III SHORT STORIES
The little Match girl - Hans Christian Anderson
An Angel in disguise - S. Arthur

UNIT – IV DRAMA
The Glass Menagerie - Tennessee Williams

UNIT – V FICTION
Beloved - Toni Morrison

Books recommended:
Anuchitra Publications, Chennai

V SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT — 10
NEW LITERATURES IN ENGLISH
Objectives:
1. l. To introduce students of English to the great body of contemporary world literature beyond the Western literature.
2. To expose them to the ideas of Colonialism and Post-colonialism and their effects through literature.
3. To develop their awareness about multi-culturalism and contemporary global politics.
4. To administer a student centric, skill based curriculum in literature that involves participatory learning.

UNIT – I PROSE
Decolonising the Mind - Ngugi Wa Thiong’o
The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain - Langston Hughes

UNIT – II POETRY
A far cry from Africa - Derek Walcott
Siren Song - Margaret Atwood
Woman to Man - Judith Wright
Words - Edwin Thamboo

UNIT – III SHORT STORIES
The Wild Buffalo - Piyaseeli Wijemanne
How we fled when I was a girl - Molly Nungarrayi
Dear Life - Alice Munro
The Man to send rain clouds - Leslie Marmon Silko

UNIT – IV DRAMA
Kongi’s Harvest - Wole Soyinka

UNIT – V POST COLONIALISM IN PRACTICE
Translation:
Translate modern Tamil
English poems
Folk songs
Short stories
Essays into English/Tamil
Study the reasons for difficulties in the process

Comparative study:
Identify a story or poem similar to the ones in Tamil literature and study the similarities and reasons behind such similarities.

Report:
Prepare expository essays
Short reports on your local festival
Special sport
Custom
Food
Arts
Disappearing nature (plants, insects, fish, etc)
Customs
Tradition
Culture
Travel experience, etc.

Books recommended:
1. ‘Wordscapes: An Anthology of New Literatures in English’, Ed. S. Annapoorni, Aparna Srinivas, Mainspring Publishers, Chennai 2016.
2. Colonial & Post-colonial Literature, Elleke Boehmer, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2008, Price Rs. 195/-.
3. ‘Ch. 24 Post colonialism, Ch.25 Race, nation, and Ethnicity, an Oxford Guide, Literary Theory and Criticism’, Ed. Patricia Waugh, Oxford University Press, New Delhi 2007.
4. Kongi’s Harvest, Wole Soyinka.

V SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT — 11
WOMEN’S WRITING IN ENGLISH
Objectives:
1. To sensitize students of both genders about issues surrounding Women’s life
2. To create awareness about feminism as a socio-political ideal through literature.
3. To help students understand human rights from gender point of view and develop empathy towards Women’s emotional needs.
4. To help promote gender sensitivity and equality among student

UNIT – I PROSE
Introduction to the Second Sex - Simone De Beauvoir

UNIT – II POETRY
Lot’s Wife - Kristine Beatty
Draupati - Supata Bhattacharya
Still I Rise - Maya Angelou
Combing - Gladys Cardiff

UNIT – III FICTION
Heat and Dust - Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

UNIT – IV DRAMA
Top Girls - Caryl Churchill

UNIT – V NON-FICTION-GENDER AND SOCIETY
Biography: Study the successful life and works of personalities like Anne Frank, Indra Nooyi, Kalpana Chawla, boxer Mary Korn, first Woman IPS Officer Kiran Bedi, Wangari Mathaai (A Kenyan environmentalist who won Nobel for peace for afforestation), Malala, etc. Third/transgender & their problems: Successful transgender, persons in Tamil Nadu.

Right & Violations:
Gender rights in Universal Declaration of Human rights, Indian Constitution, female foeticide & infanticide, rape, domestic violence, public violence against women & third gender, eve teasing, dowry, sexual harassment at work & public places, dowry problem, etc.
Portrayal of women and transgender in media: Advertisements, cinema, TV, soaps, etc.

Books recommended:
1. l. Shifting Perceptions: An Anthology of Women’s Writings’ — Ed. S. Annapoorni, V. Bharathi Harishankar, Mainspring Publishers, Chennai 20l6,.Price Rs. 155/ —
2. Feminist Criticism: Beginning Theory: An introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory’. Peter Barry. Mancheter University Press, Chennai 2006, Price 295/-.
3. Ch.23 ‘Feminisms’, Ch. 32’Mixing Memory and Desire: Psychoanalysis, and trauma theory’ & Ch. 33 Theories of Gaze’, An Oxford Guide: Literary Theory and Criticm, Ed. Patricia Waugh, Oxford University Press, New Delhi 2007, Price 345/ -.

V SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT - 12
JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION
Objectives:
1. l. To introduce the students to one of the most applicable areas of English language and literature studies.
2. To stimulate their interest in Journalism and Mass Communication for higher studies and / or for a career
3. To develop transferable skills in writing which would be useful for employment.
4. To administer a student centric curriculum that involves participatory learning

UNIT – I PRINCIPLES OF JOURNALISM
Introduction
Inside a Newspaper
What is News?
The Reporter
The Sub-Editor
Language and Style

UNIT – II PRINCIPLES OF MASS COMMUNICATION
Advertisements
Websites/blogs
Social media, film & documentation

UNIT – III PRINCIPLES OF WRITING
Note making
Pre-writing
Different ways of presenting information
Maps, tables, charts, expository essays

UNIT – IV JOURNALISTIC WRITING
Articles
Reports
Advertisements
Books and film reviews
Social media
Web content

UNIT – V MASS COMMUNICATION PROJECTS
Prepare a 5 page report on any one of the following:
Pulitzer Prize
Man Booker Prize 3
Nobel for Literature
Addison & Steele and birth of journalism with images, tables, charts, diagrams, where necessary
(Teachers may choose more topics)
Read English / Tamil newspapers and magazines and analyse the various sections, including the EDITORIAL, and discuss in the class.
Collect different advertisements from newspapers, magazines and TV and discuss their l.
Appeal, 2. Effectiveness, 3. Reasons for your likes or dislikes for them 4 Parts and Sections

Books recommended:
1. ‘Basic Journalism’ — Rangaswamy Parthasarathy Trinity Press, Bengalureu 2016, Chapters – 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8 & 11, Price Rs.l58/-.
2. ‘Creative Writing’ — Board of Editors, Orient Blackswan Pvt. Ltd, Bangalore 2014, Chapters 5, 6, 7, 9, l0 Price Rs.60/-
3. ‘Written Communication Skill in English’ — Sarah Freeman, Orient Blackswan Pvt. Ltd,
4. Bangalore’Cambridge English for the Media’. Nick Ceramella, Elizabeth Lee. CUP, New Delhi 2008. Price Rs.420/-.

ELECTIVE SUBJECT - III
LITERARY CRITICISM I
Objectives:
1. l. To introduce the students to the origin and development of literary criticism.
2. To help them understand the critical evaluation from ancient to the modern.
3. To make the students to demonstrate an ability to grasp and synthesize ideas.
4. To enable the students the critical ability to analytically evaluate literature.

UNIT – I
The contributions of Plato and Aristotle to literary criticism

UNIT – II
The contributions of Horace, Quintilian, Longinus and Dante to the development of literary criticism.

UNIT – III
The contributions of Elizabethan critics: Sir Philip Sydney and Ben Johnson

UNIT – IV
The contributions of Neo-classicist, John Dryden, Joseph Addison, Alexander Pope and Dr. Samuel Johnson

UNIT – V
The contributions of Romanticist: William Wordsworth and ST Coleridge

Books recommended:
1. An Introduction to Literary Theory and Criticism, Anand B. Kulkarni and Ashok G. Published by Orient Black Swan Pvt. Ltd, Chennai.
2. An Introduction English Criticism by Prasad, Trinity Press

VI SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT — 13
SHAKESPEARE
Objectives:
1. l. To help students get a bird’s eye view of the Shakespearean canon
2. To expose the students to the types of Shakespearean plays — Tragedy, comedy and
History…
3. To enable students gain knowledge of the socio-political scenario as manifested in the plays
4. To sensitize the students on Shakespeare’s contribution to the realm of English language
5. To help learners understand the evolution of drama with special reference to the features of Shakespearean theatre

UNIT – I
The Tempest

UNIT – II
Richard II
UNIT – III
Macbeth

UNIT – IV
A Midsummer Night’s Dream

UNIT – V
General Shakespeare

Books recommended:
General Shakespeare, Anna Kurian, Orient Black Swan Pvt. Ltd, Chennai

VI SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT - 14
ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING
Objectives:
To expose learners to various approaches and methods, aspects and strategies of teaching English
1. To help learners understand the essential components and concepts of language teaching

UNIT – I
Introduction Strategies:
1. Lesson Plan Preparation
2. Teaching / Learning material preparation

UNIT – II
The Teaching of Prose, Composition and extensive reader

UNIT – III
The Teaching of reading and writing and the Teaching of listening and speaking

UNIT – IV
Activities in English Teaching:
Work sheets preparation
Question paper setting
Teaching Practice

UNIT – V
a) Equipment and sources of English Room: Charts, flash cards, PPTS
b) Audio Visual Aids: Using Mobile phones & Speakers

Books recommended:
1. The Teaching of English: Dr. S. Vincent
2. Approaches and methods in Language Teaching: A Description and Analysis Cambridge University Press.
3. Baruah. T. C. The English Teacher’s Handbook, Sterling Publishers, 1991 New Delhi

V SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT — 15
TRANSLATION THEORY AND PRACTICE
Objectives:
1. To introduce translation as a kind of genre to enable the students appreciate the total essence of literature with aesthetic pleasure.
2. To enable the student to translate any given passage or stanza without any literary inhibition.

UNIT – I
Introduction to translation (Pl-9)
History of translation (P10-27)

UNIT – II
Kinds of translation (P.28-29)
Problem of translation

UNIT – III
The qualities of a translator (P.97-103)
Translator and the act of translating (P. 104-1 l 1)

UNIT – IV
Translation Theories — An introduction
Translation Theory in the Indian, Context

UNIT – V
Tirukkural English translations (first two chapters)
கடவுள் வாழ்த்து
வான் சிறப்பு
Abridged Version of Shakespeare’s plays
The Tempest
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Books recommended:
1. Das Bijay Kumar, ‘A Handbook of Translation Studies’, 2013 Atlantic Publishers, New Delhi
2. Lamb, Charles & Mary Lamb ‘Tales from Shakespeare’.

VI SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT — 16
HOURS-3                                           CREDIT-3
I INTRODUCTION TO LITERARY THEORIES
Objectives:
To make the students understand the different avenues and perspectives in reaching the genre by
Way of various literary theories propounded by leading creative writers of different ages.
To enable the learner appreciate the theories of modern literature.

UNIT – I
Contemporary Theory and Structuralism Criticism

UNIT – II
Post Structuralism and Deconstruction

UNIT – III
Post Modernism

UNIT – IV
Post-Colonial Criticism

UNIT – V
Reader Response Criticism and Feminist Criticism
Cultural studies
Digital humanities

Books recommended:
1. M.S. Nagarajan: English Literary Criticism and Theory — An Introductory History, Orient Blackswan.
2. Peter Barry: Beginning Theory : An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory, Viva Books

VI SEMESTER
CORE SUBJECT — 17
ENGLISH FOR EMPLOYMENT
Objectives:
By the end of the course the students would be aware of the patterns of various competitive examinations and would improve the skills needed for employment in various sectors.
Specific objectives:
The students will be aware of the competitive exams that would enable them to make entry into jobs.

UNIT – I
SPOTTING ERRORS
1. Concord / Subject Verb agreement
2. Sentence splice / run-on sentence
3. Fragments
4. Misplaced / dangling modifiers
5. Rambling / Long sentences

UNIT – II
PUNCTUATION AND SPELLING

UNIT – III
VOCABULARY
1. Idiomatic Expressions
2. Synonyms
3. Antonyms
4. Homonyms, homophones
5. Portmanteau
6. Neologisms

UNIT – IV
SENTENCE FORMATION
1. Sentences with Jumbled Words
2. Passages with Jumbled sentences
3. Sentence Completion, Conversion (active, passive, etc.)

UNIT – V
COMPREHENSION & COMPOSITION
1. Comprehension Cloze (reading comprehension)
2. Paragraph and Essay Writing
3. Resume Preparation

Books recommended:
1. Lewis, Norman. Word Power Made Easy. New Delhi: GOYL Saab Publishers and Distributors- Millennium edition revised & expanded, 2006.
2. Murphy, Raymond. Intermediate English Grammar. New Delhi: Cambridge University Press- Second Edition, 1994.
3. Hashem, Abul & RPH Editorial Board .Gupta R. General English For all Competitive Exams Ramesh Publishing House. ISBN 978-93-5012-834-3.
4. R. Gopalan,V. Rajagopalan & Roopkumar Balasingh: General English for Competitive examinations McGraw-Hill Education. India Pvt. Ltd. UP.2008

ELECTIVE PAPER IV
LITERARY CRITICISM II
Objectives:
1. To introduce the students to the origin and development of Literary Criticism
2. To help them understand the critical evaluation from ancient to the modern
3. To make the students to demonstrate an ability to grasp and synthesize ideas
4. To enable the students the critical ability to analytically evaluate literature

UNIT – I
Victorian Critics - Matthew Arnold and Walter Pater

UNIT – II
Modem Critics - T.S. Eliot, I.A. Richards and F .R. Leavis

UNIT – III
Moralistic approach
Biographical criticism
Textual and Formalistic criticism

UNIT – IV
New Criticism
Sociological criticism
Marxism

UNIT – V
Psychological criticism
Archetypal approach
Historical criticism
New Historicism

Books recommended:
An introduction to Literary Theory and Criticism, Anand B Kulkarni and Ashok G published by Orient Black Swan Pvt. Ltd, Chennai.
An Introduction to English Criticism by Prasad, Trinity Press
Wilbur Scott: Five Approaches to Literary criticism.

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