ENGL 2000 - B Ways of Reading

Date

2021-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

YU Faculty Profile

Abstract

Who decides what texts mean? Are some interpretations better than others? Does the author's intention matter? How does language work? In this foundational course, we will study texts of the cultures around us, as well as literature. Required for the English Major and Minor. 3.000 Credit hours __ This course is more about how we read than what we read. The goal is to show how meaning is created through critical reading and to help you learn to read and interpret works contextually and closely. To this end, our course has several objectives: students should leave this course with a clear sense of the variety of theoretical approaches available to them as readers of texts; have a sense of why these approaches matter in apprehending all different kinds of texts; and be able to manifest their ability to read texts in different ways through verbal and written modes of communication. You may find that the issues and texts – and the language in some of the readings – difficult at first. But the course will help you gain some of the skills you’ll need to read and write critically about all kinds of texts, not just literary ones. We will read poems, short fiction, a novel and a play. Each section of the course takes up a number of major issues of concern in literary and cultural studies, like authorship, language, reading, subjectivity, ideology, aesthetics, and history. General Education Goals: • Practice skills in close reading and interpretation • Understand the vocabulary and conventions of four genres of literature (poetry, short fiction, novel, play) • Express ideas in writing and practice revising your work • Read secondary critical articles and integrate them into your work Goals of the Course: • Practice the skills of close reading of literature • Explore literary interpretation and critical analysis • Write four thesis-driven essays using claims and evidence structure • Practice a variety of critical perspectives interpreting literature

Description

SCW syllabus / YU only

Keywords

reading, critical reading, author's intention, literary interpretation

Citation

O'Malley, Seamus. (2021, Spring), Syllabus, ENGL 2000 - B Ways of Reading, Stern College for Women, Yeshiva University.