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School of English/Department of Composition and Literature
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LIT226: Introduction to the Novel
Course Description: This course is an introduction to the novel as a literary genre from its
beginnings to the present. Authors to be studied may include, but are not limited to, Lady
Murasaki, Cervantes, Richardson, Fielding, Voltaire, Austen, Melville, Dickens, Eliot, Flaubert,
Dostoevsky, James, Joyce, Garcia Marquez, Achebe, Mahfouz, and Bolaño.
Prerequisite: Successful completion of WRT101.
Student Learning Objectives:
As a result of meeting the requirements of this course, students will be able to:
1. Identify the basic characteristics of prose fiction, such as point-of-view, plot, and
characterization.
2. Analyze the development of the novel as a literary form, from its beginnings with such
types as the epistolary novel, through the Romantic period, on to Realism, Naturalism
and Modernism, and finally the Post-Modern novel.
3. Employ theoretical approaches to the study of the novel including (but not limited to)
Feminist, New Historicist, Psychoanalytic, and Marxist theory and criticism.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of the historical, aesthetic, and literary aspects of the novel
through both oral and written assignments.
5. Produce a properly formatted written evaluation of selected novels; and demonstrate
competency in both research methodologies and literary analysis.
Course Texts:
Sample Required Texts:
Selected Paperbacks, such as Lady Murasaki’s The Tale of Genji, Richardson’s Pamela,
Austen’s Persuasion, Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground,
Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, and Garcia-Marquez’s Love in the Time of Cholera
Sample Supplementary Reading:
Bloom, Novelists and Novels
Booth, The Rhetoric of Fiction
Fish, How to Write a Sentence
Forster, Aspects of the Novel
James, The Art of the Novel
Moretti, Modern Epic
Watt, The Rise of the Novel
Wood, How Fiction Works
Course Content:
This course will trace the trajectory of the novel—from its progenitors like the epic (the Odyssey
and so on) as well as ancient examples of satire—to Cervantes’ iconic Don Quixote, and
eventually to the postmodern landscapes of such writers as DeLilio and Bolaño. Students will
consider form—from the 17th century epistolary novel to the 21st century nonlinear and graphic
novel. Students will also consider genre—the Romantic, the Realistic, the Satirical. The course
will look at theme—the bildungsroman, the picaresque, the postcolonial; and it will likewise
consider setting and imagery, dialogue, point-of-view, and other traditional considerations. As
the course proceeds, students will read novels in various forms.
Evaluation will be calculated as follows:
Critical Essays: 40%
Examinations: 25%
Journal entries and/or quizzes: 25%
Class participation: 10%
Written assignments must be formatted according to MLA standards. You will find citation
guides on our library’s website (www.bergen.edu/library). BCC’s Writing Center is located in
L125, and you are encouraged to work on your papers with our faculty and professional writing
tutors. Please note that the center is indeed a tutoring center—you are not to drop off your paper
for proofreading as this is not a function of the center.
Attendance Policy:
BCC Attendance Policy: “All students are expected to attend punctually every scheduled
meeting of each course in which they are registered. Attendance and lateness policies and
sanctions are to be determined by the instructor for each section of each course. These will be
established in writing on the individual course outline. Attendance will be kept by the instructor
for administrative and counseling purposes.”
ADA Policy:
Students with documented disabilities who require accommodations by the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) can request support services from the Office of Specialized Services of
Bergen Community College located in room L 115 of the Pitkin Learning Center.
http://www.bergen.edu/pages1/Pages/5175.aspx
A note on plagiarism: Please give credit where credit is due! Honesty is expected of you. It is
expected that the work you hand in will always be your own, and that you will never copy
sentences, phrases, paragraphs, or whole essays from any other person's work, for that is
plagiarism. If you are ever unclear about how to cite another person or author's ideas, come see
me or consult your manual. If you do plagiarize, you will receive an F for the assignment
under review. If you plagiarize more than once, you will fail the course and may be reported
to the college’s judiciary committee.
Class Schedule:
(This is a model/example of how this course will proceed.)
Week 1: Introduction to the novel
This week we will discuss the history of the novel, which will begin with a brief discussion of
Homer’s Odyssey as a foundational model. We will also discuss the following literary elements
and genres: epic, satire, bildungsroman, picaresque, epistolary, Romantic, Victorian, Modern,
Postmodern, and Postcolonial; and context/setting, plot, characterization, symbolism, imagery,
metaphor, allegory, and point-of-view.
Week 2: The Classic Bildungsroman as Satire
Voltaire Candide
Week 3: The Romantic
Mary Shelley Frankenstein
Critical Essay #1 Due—2-3 page essay in which you discuss Candide as both a satire and also
as a classic bildungsroman. You will be expected to examine the various literary elements—
metaphor, symbolism, etc.—that Voltaire used in the novel
Week 4: Frankenstein
Week 5: The Victorian Novel: A Portrait of Nineteenth Century Economics and Social
Policy
Charles Dickens Hard Times
Week 6: Hard Times
Week 7: Modernity & Women
Gustav Flaubert Madame Bovary
Midterm Review—the midterm examination will be a series of short essays based upon both
class discussion and our readings. The examination will be due during week nine.
Week 8: Madame Bovary
Week 9: Madame Bovary
Midterm Examination Due!
Week 10: Existentialism & Order in the Nineteenth Century
Fyodor Dostoevsky Notes from Underground
Critical Essay #2—2-3 pages in which you compare the persona of Madame Bovary to
Dostoevsky’s lone paradoxalist. How do both protagonists offer a dire picture of modernity?
Week 11: A Revolution in Form: Joyce’s Stream of Consciousness & High Modernism
James Joyce Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
*Final Paper Proposals Due: this week you will submit the author and title of the novel that
you will use as the basis for your term paper along with a list of secondary sources. Please note
that you may choose one of the novels from the approved list below, but you are not required to
do so.
Week 12: Portrait
Week 13: Colonialism & its Discontents
Gabriel Garcia Marquez Love in the Time of Cholera
Critical Essay #3—2-3 pages in which you compare the form of Notes from the Underground to
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
Week 14: Love in the Time of Cholera
Week 15: The Graphic Novel
Marjane Satrapi Persepolis
*Final Papers Due.