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Kingsborough
Community College
The City University of New York
Professor Steven Amarnick
Syllabus
College Now Course: The Comic Spirit in Literature and Culture
Course
Description:
This course will explore the function of comedy in a variety of works.
Though the main focus will be on short stories and drama, you will look
at the use of humor in many different forms of both "low" and "high"
culture. You will also explore how humor functions in texts that range
from those that are explicitly comedic (The Importance of Being Earnest)
to those that are quite serious, tragic even ("A Good Man Is Hard to
Find"), but that still contain a perhaps surprising amount of comedic
elements. Moreover, you will generate your own theories of comedy at
the same time as you are exposed to brief excerpted theories. There
will be three class trips: to the Museum of Modern Art, to Broadway
to see the play Well, and to the Brooklyn Academy of Music to
see a production of The Importance of Being Earnest. Through
reading, class discussion, oral presentations, extensive journal writing,
and other forms of writing, including one creative project partially
modeled on what you have read, you will develop the ability to look
deeply at texts and to articulate your ideas.
Informal Writing:
All, or nearly all, classes will include writing. Sometimes this will
mean quizzes based on the reading. At other times you will write in
your journals in preparation for class discussion. You will also do
inkshedding, in which you write for a few minutes, then pass your paper
to a classmate who responds, who then passes the paper to a third writer
who responds; and there will be various other writing activities.
Class Trips:
Museum of Modern Art - Wednesday, March 1, 2006.
Broadway (Lisa Kron's Well) - Saturday afternoon, March 25, 2006.
Brooklyn Academy of Music (performance of The Importance of Being
Earnest) - Saturday afternoon, April 29, 2006.
Grading:
Classwork
and Journals (includes journal writing done at home and in class; other
informal in-class writing; class participation; quizzes; oral presentation
on short story): 40 percent.
Creative assignment (detailed storyboard of a short story, play, or
illustrated children's book, either a prequel, sequel, or updated version
of something we have read in class; or a story, play, or illustrated
children's book inspired by one of the paintings we explore at MOMA.
Grade to be based on effort, including willingness to revise, not on
talent): 20 percent.
Midterm: essay based on Lisa Kron's Well: 20 percent.
Final exam (includes character identifications, short answer questions
identifying quotations and analyzing them, and an essay): 20 percent.
Unit 1
What makes aspects of a text (defined broadly) humorous? What
do we as readers or listeners or observers need to know to "get" the
humor? Why do so-called serious artists use comedy in their work?
First day of class: cartoon interviews. You will be given a cartoon
from The New Yorker magazine, and will go around the classroom
doing a focused interview. What do you think of this cartoon? Do you
find it humorous in any way? Why or why not?
Thereafter:
You will bring in something (anything that can be shared quickly, like
an ad or comic strip or T shirt or short poem or song) that you find
humorous and make a brief presentation about it.
The Simpsons, "Bart Gets an F"
Poetry by Shel Silverstein: "Messy Room," "Melinda Mae," "The Dragon
of Grindly Grun," "Anteater," and "Sick"
Songs: "I'm Calm" (from A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the
Forum')
"Old McDonald Had a Farm," sung by Frank Sinatra
"Miss Otis Regrets," Cole Porter (sung by Bette Midler)
"I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus," sung by the Jackson Five
"Teenage Lobotomy," the Ramones
"I'm Too Sexy," Right Said Fred
Children's fiction: Amelia Bedelia, by Peggy Parish
Short story: "Good Country People," by Flannery O'Connor
Art: Visit to Museum of Modern Art (MOMA).
Unit 2
Well, by Lisa Kron
In this part of the semester we will begin to talk more explicitly about
basic literary terms-the kinds used in a typical Introduction to Literature
course.
You will have done much informal writing by this point, analyzing aspects
of the texts and linking the texts to your personal experience. Your
analytical essay will bring these strands together in a more polished
piece about Lisa Kron's Well. Two possibilities: to talk about your
own concepts of wellness and compare those concepts to those of Kron
and her mother in the play; or to discuss what you imagine a healthy
parent-child relationship would be like once the child is an adult,
and to explore whether Kron and her mother indeed have such a healthy
relationship in the play.
Portions of these classes will be devoted to acting out scenes from
the play.
Unit 3
The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde
As we use Wilde's play to further our exploration of the importance
of imagination, you will begin your creative projects. You will brainstorm
ideas as you consult with me and one another.
You will also be offered an opportunity to revise your midterm essays
and will continue to write informally at home and in class.
Portions of these classes will be devoted to acting out scenes from
the play.
Unit 4
Short stories plus brief oral presentations (from The Story and Its
Writers, Sixth Edition, Ann Charters)
"Girl," Jamaica Kincaid
"Everything That Rises Must Converge," Flannery O'Connor
"A Good Man Is Hard to Find," Flannery O'Connor
"Why I Live at the P.O.," Eudora Welty "
The Man Who Was Almost a Man," Richard Wright
(The class will choose from among the following):
"The Kugelmass Episode," Woody Allen
"The Overcoat," Nikolai Gogol
"Rip Van Winkle," Washington Irving
"How to Become a Writer," Lorrie Moore
"A Conversation with My Father," Grace Paley
"The Conversion of the Jews," Philip Roth
"The Secret Life of Walter Mitty," James Thurber
"The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County," Mark Twain
"Harrison Bergeron," Kurt Vonnegut
Oral presentations
You will also share drafts of your creative projects, and for those
who wish to participate, we will print up the final storyboards in a
class magazine.
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