ENGL 5562:
Victorian Literature
Professor Sigler
Research Project for ENGL 5562: Victorian Literature
One-Page Proposal and Annotated
Bibliography for Research Essay
Must be turned in to Professor Sigler's mailbox in H410 on March 26, 2009 by 2:00 pm
Requirements:
Requirements:
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Length:
12-15 pages (undergraduates) or 15-20 pages (graduates).
Your research essay must make use of seven (or more) scholarly sources. No more than three of these may be scholarly Web resources; the rest must be scholarly text sources (scholarly books and/or articles published in academic journals or books).
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A topic proposal must be submitted and approved in a face-to-face meeting with the professor (see above) before submitting the finished essay. In other words, your essay cannot be accepted or graded without an approved topic proposal.
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The essay should strictly observe the Modern Language Association (6th ed.) format. See the MLA Style Manual or the Purdue Online Writing Lab MLA Formatting Guide for specifics on quoting and citing, and on developing a Works Cited page.
- Although
there are several different options described below, you're encouraged to
develop your own topic. Any topic
you choose must make use of at least 7 scholarly sources (no more than 3 may be
electronic sources), and must apply some of the theoretical and conceptual
materials from the course to explore an aspect of one (or at the most two) of
the assigned texts.
- Analyze the ways in which one of the authors we have read (e.g. Dickens, Stevenson, Stoker) interrogates science and technological advance. You might consider how science and art are related. Are they in conflict? Why or why not?
- Consider how theories of progress and/or history function (or fail to function) in the work of one or at most two of the Victorian authors which we have read. How does the author construct and interrogate a notion of progress? How does s/he use rhetorical devices to try to shape the reader's response to it? To what is it compared, and why? Does it offer hope? Anxiety? Both? How does the author suggest we should read it in relation to the past?
- Analyze the way in which a Victorian author(s) represents an encounter with a person or group of people "other" to the main character or speaker. You might consider Stoker's representations of race or gender in Dracula, or Bront‘'s in Jane Eyre. You might examine depictions of class in Hard Times and/or The Importance of Being Earnest. You might consider Carroll's representations of gender and/or childhood; Dickens's representations of women and/or his treatment of poverty and "The Hands"; Stoker's portrayal of the "New Woman" and/or the reverse colonization of the vampires. Analyze the characterization and argue for an interpretation of its significance to the work as a whole. How are form and content related?
- A number of works on the syllabus utilize conventions of what is often described as the "Female Gothic." This powerful tradition of women's writing uses Gothic themes--terror, destruction, haunting, persecution, doubling--to articulate some of the restrictions, terrors and conflicts of the female experience, both physical and psychological, and to dramatize the particularly female experiences of marginalization, isolation, and women's relation to the body, birth, and death. Discuss the uses of this tradition in a Gothic text or texts (e.g. Bront‘, Braddon, Gaskell). What do these writers use Gothic conventions to express and or critique?
- Choose a film version (or perhaps some key scenes in several film versions) of any work we've read and compare it to the original work in terms of characters, plot, and theme. There are many adaptations of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland , for instance, as well as multiple adaptations of Dracula, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Jane Eyre, and The Turn of the Screw. Consider how the film re-interprets the work to reflect the cultural values of the historical period in which the film was made. What does the adaptation revise, omit, or add, and (more importantly) why?
- The nineteenth century was a period that developed a more sustained and self-conscious myth of childhood than any that had gone before. Discuss the treatment of children in one or at the most two works. Consider the importance of the subject of childhood in each work as a whole.
- Compare or contrast a Victorian adaptation, revision, imitation or parody of one of the works we've read in relation to the "original." You might, for example, consider Bront‘'sJane Eyre with Dinah Mulock Craik's Olive; the published Alice in Wonderland with Carroll's original manuscript, Alice's Adventures Underground or alongside one of many Victorian Alice revisions, such as Christina Rossetti's Speaking Likenesses, Frances Hodgson Burnett's "Behind the White Brick," or Juliana Ewing's "Amelia and the Dwarfs"; Doyle's "A Scandal in Bohemia" with another late-Victorian Holmesian detective (e.g. Catherine Louisa Pirkis's "Loveday Brooke, Lady Detective," or Baroness Orczy's "The Old Man in the Corner" or "Lady Molly of Scotland Yard").
- Examine the Victorian fascination with fairy tales and fairy mythology by tracing an author's use of fairy folklore and mythology and/or of particular fairy tales as thematic elements, structural devices and/or motifs in a particular work or works (e.g. Jane Eyre, A Christmas Carol, Hard Times, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland , Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde). How does the writer use fairy or fairy-tale imagery to express, critique and/or subvert the social codes of the time?
- Until late in the nineteenth century, English common law decreed that in marriage, two people became one, and that one was the husband (hence the legal term, femme covert ). Choose one (or at the most two) women writers to examine how they either support or subvert this notion of the marriage relationship.
- Elaine Showalter describes the nineteenth-century fin de siˇcle as a time of "Sexual Anarchy," as "New Women" and male "decadents" and aesthetes challenged traditional Victorian laws that had governed sexual identity and behavior. (Indeed, in April 1895, a Punch magazine satirist lamented: "A new fear my bosom vexes; / Tomorrow there may be no sexes!") Analyze representations of this "sexual anarchy" in one or two late-Victorian texts (e.g. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dracula, The Importance of Being Earnest, The Turn of the Screw , or "A Scandal in Bohemia").