Course Syllabus
ISI Website | indepst@uidaho.edu | 208-885-6641
ENGL 278 American Literature II
Sponsoring Institution: Lewis Clark State College
3 Credits
Instructor Information
Course Instructor: Courtney Kammers
- Email: cskammers@lcsc.edu
- Phone: Instructor phone
- Office Hours: By email
- Copy the ISI office at indepst@uidaho.edu on all communications.
I'm Courtney Kammers (she/her). I earned my M.A. in English from the University of Idaho and have been teaching for six years. I currently teach ENGL 101 and 103 at LC State and have also taught at Moscow High School. When I’m not in the classroom, I’m usually out running or working through my yearly goal of reading a minimum of 150 books - usually made from a mix of novels, memoirs, nonfiction, and self-actualization.
My classes are built around a simple idea: do the least amount of work for the results you actually want—as long as those results are worthwhile. If your goal is just to check a box and earn credits, this course might not be the best fit. But if you're curious about how American authors wrote and shaped the culture, political systems, and ideologues of America from the 19th century to today, then welcome to class! Let’s dig in.
Course Description
Topics and issues in American literature, from the 1870s to the present. Writing integrated. Pre-requisite: ENGL-102 or ENGL-109.
Course Learning Outcomes
The course surveys representative works of American poetry, fiction, and criticism written from the 1870s to the present. These works are grouped into nine categories on the bases of chronology, authorship, and literary technique and theme. Each of these nine groups of works forms a lesson. Students are asked to study each work in light of (1) its intrinsic literary features, (2) its contribution to American literary history, (3) its reflection of outstanding ideas from the time, and (4) its concern with particular human experiences that may be viewed as universal to humankind. The course aims at balancing the acquisition of knowledge about American literature and American cultural history with the practice of the basic skills of literary analysis and criticism. Students will:
- Understand significant developments in American literary history and their relation to broader cultural contexts.
- Read exemplary works of American literature with insight, empathy, and aesthetic appreciation.
- Apply personal, historical, and critical perspectives to the understanding of literary works.
- Identify and analyze literary genres, their structural elements, and literary meaning.
- Critically examine American cultural myths and the way they are represented in literature.
- Develop strong analytical writing skills through structured responses to literary texts.
Required Materials
McMichael, George, general editor. Anthology of American Literature. Volume II, Realism to the Present. 7th ed. Prentice Hall, 2000. ISBN-10: 0130838152, ISBN-13: 9780130838155
Crane, Stephen. Maggie: A Girl of the Streets. A library or paperback copy.
Course Rules and Requirements
Assignment & Lesson Guidelines
- Submit 1 assignment at a time, max 2 per week.
- Use instructor feedback to improve future work.
- Do not batch submit assignments or journals. Label answers clearly by question number and restate the prompt.
- Each lesson and exam is made up of two basic activities:
- Participating in the experience offered by the literature and responding to it from your own personal perspective, i.e., reading and writing to and for yourself
- Observing and reconceptualizing the literature from a critical perspective, which is necessarily more detached, social, and intellectual, i.e., rereading and writing to and for a broader audience.
- For a student to gain a full and lasting understanding of either an individual work or a body of related literary works, both levels of reading and responding must take place.
- The first provides the private dimension of meaning and the second provides the broader public dimension. Both dimensions of meaning are required before genuine understanding and knowledge are achieved.
Exam Guidelines
- Wait for feedback before taking the next exam.
- Each exam has 4 micro-essay questions.
- Exams are closed-book except for the course textbook.
- Time limit: 80 minutes.
Personal Journal
Reflect on your reactions to readings. Submit your journals on Canvas with each exam. You can earn up to 12 extra points per exam based on journal quality. A thorough and thoughtful journal is critical to achieving an “A” grade on each of the exams. (See Grading for details on grading policy.)
Critical Reading Assignment
Write from an analytical/scholarly perspective. Evaluate authors’ perspectives, compare viewpoints, and support your insights with evidence.
Micro-Essay Assignment
Write a 200-word paragraph focused on a controlling idea supported by specific textual evidence. While you should use citations from course readings please avoid lengthy quotations.
Grade Information
Journals are mandatory and contribute up to 12% of your exam grade. Journal and micro-essay scores combine for your final exam score. To count, journals must be submitted on the same day as you take your exam.
Grade Weights:
- Lesson 1 = 8% of grade
- Lesson 2 = 8% of grade
- Exam 1 = 14% of grade
- Lesson 3 = 9% of grade
- Lesson 4 = 9% of grade
- Exam 2 = 15% of grade
- Lesson 5 = 10% of grade
- Lesson 6 = 10% of grade
- Exam 3 = 17% of grade
Grading Scale:
- A = 90–100
- B = 80–89
- C = 70–79
- D = 60–69
- F = below 60
Course Policies
Academic Integrity
Acts of academic dishonesty, including cheating or plagiarism are considered a very serious transgression and may result in a grade of F for the course.
Plagiarism is the dishonest representation of language from another source as your own—phrases, sentences or paragraphs, without indicating in quotation marks and a citation in your text, what your source is, whether print or internet.
The penalty for plagiarism in this course is SEVERE. ONE example of your use of language from another source without acknowledging it in quotation marks and the citation of the source will earn you a failing grade in this course. Note: only one example is all it takes.
In case of such a determination, you will receive notice from your course instructor of a pending failing grade in the course. You will have 3 das to respond to this notice before your grade will become final.