Readings/Assignments for Thursday, April 7 2005
Reminder: Class is canceled on Thursday, March 31, as I will be out of town for a conference. Please use the additional time to work on the rough draft of your 10-12 page paper, which will be due at our next class meeting on Thursday, April 7. Blogs will not be due on Wednesday, March 30, but you can do extra credit blogging this week (up to two posts). You can use the memoir prompt given below, and/or write a post on readings you haven't discussed in blog format yet, or submit a "freestyle" blog of your choice.
Extra credit memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box for extra credit blogs due by Wednesday, March 30:
Describe a significant event that brought you closer to, or further away, from your religious devotions. The spiritual life can come upon a person in a sweeping moment or over the course of a long period of time. Have you ever experienced visions or other moments of a spiritual nature? If you had a single moment that you can recall, describe the details leading up to and following that epiphany. How did it change your life afterwards? If you slowly gravitated to a religious tradition or a way of thinking about the divine, show in a series of snapshots how you were brought closer and closer to the spiritual over that time.
For Thursday, April 7, 2005:
Don't forget that rough drafts of your paper are due today!
Please print out and read the following full-text articles which can be located via Project Muse, in the USD Library Research Databases. To access the articles, Click Here to go to USD's library page, click to the Research Databases link in the right column, and then type in Project Muse in the Search by Database prompt. (If you are working off-campus, note that you will be prompted for your Network ID and Password prior to being given access to the Research Databases). Once in Project Muse, you can search for the articles using title or author's last name, etc. The articles are available in both HTML and PDF format:
"Elizabeth Bishop and Containment Policy," by Steven Gould Axelrod, American Literature, Vol. 75, No. 4 (December 2003), pp. 843-867.
"Elizabeth Bishop's Impersonal Personal," by Bonnie Costello, American Literary History, Vol. 15, No. 2 (2003), pp. 334-366.
Please also read the following poems from Elizabeth Bishop's Complete Poems: 1927-1976:
"Arrival at Santos," p. 89
"Brazil," p. 91
"Questions of Travel," p. 93
"Electrical Storm," p. 100
"The Armadillo," p. 103
"First Death in Nova Scotia," p. 125
"Filling Station," p. 127
"Visits to St. Elizabeths," p. 133
"Giant Toad," p. 139
"Strayed Crab," p. 140
"Giant Snail," p. 141
"Under the Window," p. 153
"In the Waiting Room," p. 159
"Crusoe in England," p. 162
"The Moose," p. 159
"One Art," p. 178
"Santarem," p. 185
"Pink Dog," p. 190
"Sonnet," p. 192
"Exchanging Hats," p. 200
And finally, here is this week's memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box for blog posts due on Wednesday, April 6:
Write about a strange family member. Were you frightened of this person or were they frightened of you? Were they funny? Did they look strange or behave strangely? Do you still carry on a relationship with that person? Write a scene in which that person is doing or exhibiting the things that made them strange. Are you involved in this scene?
