Below is another example of a presentation and group project. It requires groups to read a text not assigned in class and then give a presentation on it using specified criteria. Following the assignment, you will find a list of potential texts for students to choose from as well as a sample grade sheet:
E238
Spring 2009
Collaborative Paper & Presentation
Fifteen percent of your semester grade will be determined by a collaborative paper (1,200-1,800 words) that you write with two or three of your classmates (10%), and a 15-20 minute presentation that you perform in front of the class to demonstrate what you learned while writing the paper together (5%). The paper should address a twentieth-century writer, novel, or story collection that we weren’t able to read together as a class, but whose work would readily fit into our discussions. What lasting contributions have this writer and his or her writing made to the world? Why, in a future twentieth-century fiction class, should this writer’s work be included as required reading?
A list of potential writers and books is available in the Writing Studio FILE FOLDERS, but if your group would prefer to study a different writer or book, please contact me. Your group should arrange to meet somewhere during the next class period to discuss its interests and options. Please email me by Friday with your group’s chosen author so that I can help you begin to think about research possibilities.
Each paper must include the following basic features:
Each presentation must include:
Each member of the group will receive the same grade on both research paper and presentation (unless someone fails to participate in the presentation, which = 0%), so the group must ensure that everyone does a fair share of the required work.
Twentieth-Century Fiction
E238.11, TR 4:00-5:15
Some Notable Twentieth-Century Authors
Author |
Some Prominent Works |
Abish, Walter |
Alphabetical Africa; Minds Meet; In the Future Perfect |
Aiken, Conrad |
Blue Voyage |
Alison, Dorothy |
Bastard out of Carolina |
Anderson, Sherwood |
Winesburg, Ohio; Dark Laughter |
Apple, Max |
Zip; Free Agents |
Auster, Paul |
City of Glass; In the Country of Last Things; Moon Palace |
Baldwin, James |
Go Tell It on the Mountain; Giovanni’s Room; Another Country |
Banks, Russell |
Success Stories; Affliction; The Darling |
Barnes, Djuna |
Nightwood |
Barth, John |
The Floating Opera; The Sot-Weed Factor; Giles Goat-Boy; Chimera |
Bellow, Saul |
Henderson the Rain King; Herzog; Humboldt’s Gift; A Thief; Ravelstein |
Bowen, Elizabeth |
The Death of the Heart |
Bowles, Paul |
The Sheltering Sky; Let It Come Down; Three Tales; Too Far from Home |
Boyle, T. C. |
Greasy Lake; The Tortilla Curtain; Drop City; Talk Talk; Tooth and Claw |
Buck, Pearl S. |
The Good Earth |
Bukowski, Charles |
Tales of Ordinary Madness; Ham on Rye; |
Bulgakov, Mikhail |
The Master and Margarita |
Burroughs, William S. |
The Naked Lunch; The Ticket that Exploded; Nova Express; Cities of the Red Night |
Capote, Truman |
Other Voices, Other Rooms; In Cold Blood |
Carr, Caleb |
The Alienist |
Cather, Willa |
O Pioneers!; My Anotnia; Death Comes for the Archbishop |
Chabon, Michael |
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay |
Chandler, Raymond |
The Big Sleep; The Long Goodbye |
Cheever, John |
The Short Stories of John Cheever |
Conrad, Joseph |
Heart of Darkness; Lord Jim; The Secret Agent; The Secret Sharer |
Coover, Robert |
Pricksongs & Descants; The Public Burning; A Night at the Movies |
Cortazar, Julio |
Hopscotch; Blowup and Other Stories |
DeLillo, Don |
White Noise; Libra; The Body Artist; Falling Man |
Dixon, Stephen |
Fall & Rise; Garbage; Love and Will; Gould; 30: Pieces of a Novel |
Doctorow, E. L. |
The Book of Daniel; Ragtime; World’s Fair; The Waterworks; City of God |
Dos Passos, John |
Manhattan Transfer; The 42nd Parallel; Mid-Century |
Dreiser, Theodore |
Sister Carrie; Jennie Gerhardt; An American Tragedy |
Elkin, Stanley |
Boswell; A Bad Man; The Living End; George Mills; The Magic Kingdom |
Ellison, Ralph |
Invisible Man |
Erdrich, Louise |
Love Medicine; The Beet Queen; Tracks |
Ford, Richard |
The Sports Writer; Rock Springs |
Forster, E. M. |
A Passage to India |
Gardner, John |
Grendel; The Sunlight Dialogues; Mickelsson’s Ghosts |
Gilchrist, Ellen |
In the Land of Dreamy Dreams; Vistory Over Japan |
Gordimer, Nadine |
July’s People |
Gordon, Mary |
Men and Angels; Temporary Shelter; Spending; Pearl |
Greene, Graham |
The Heart of the Matter; The Power and the Glory |
Gurganus, Allan |
Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All; Plays Well With Others |
Hammett, Dashiell |
The Maltese Falcon; The Thin Man |
Heinlein, Robert H. |
Stranger in a Strange Land |
Heller, Joseph |
Cath-22; Something Happened |
Irving, John |
The World According to Garp; A Prayer for Meany Owen |
Ishiguro, Kazuo |
Remains of the Day |
James, Henry |
The Wings of the Dove; The Ambassadors; The Golden Bowl |
Jong, Erica |
Fear of Flying; How to Save Your Own Life; Inventing Memory |
Joyce, James |
Dubliners; A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man |
Kennedy, William |
Ironweed |
Kesey, Ken |
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest; Sometimes a Great Notion |
Kingston, Maxine Hong |
The Woman Warrior |
Lawrence, D. H. |
Sons and Lovers; The Rainbow; Women in Love |
LeGuin, Ursula |
A Wizard of Earthsea; The Left Hand of Darkness |
Lessing, Doris |
The Golden Notebook |
Lewis, Sinclair |
Main Street; Babbitt |
Llosa, Mario Vargas |
The Time of the Hero; The Green House; The War of the End of the World; Death in the Andes |
London, Jack |
The Call of the Wild; Martin Eden |
Lowry, Malcolm |
Under the Volcano |
Lurie, Alison |
Imaginary Friends; Foreign Affairs |
McCarthy, Mary |
A Charmed Life; The Group; Cannibals and Missionaries |
Mailer, Norman |
The Naked and the Dead; The Deer Park; An American Dream; The Armies of the Night |
Malamud, Bernard |
The Natural; The Magic Barrel; The Fixer |
Momaday, N. Scott |
House Made of Dawn; The Way to Rainy Mountain |
Moore, Lorrie |
Self-Help |
Munro, Alice |
Lives of Girls and Women; Open Secrets; The Love of a Good Woman |
Naipaul, V. S. |
A House for Mr. Miswas, A Bend in the River |
O’Connor, Flannery |
Wise Blood; A Good Man Is Hard to Find; Everything that Rises Must Converge |
Olsen, Tillie |
Tell Me a Riddle |
Ozick, Cynthia |
The Cannibal Galaxy; Shawl |
Paley, Grace |
The Little Disturbances of Man; Later the Same Day |
Percy, Walker |
The Moviegoer; Love in the Ruins; The Second Coming |
Piercy, Marge |
Woman on the Edge of Time; Fly Away Home |
Pynchon, Thomas |
V.; The Crying of Lot 49 |
Rand, Aynd |
Atlas Shrugged; The Fountainhead |
Reed, Ishmael |
The Free-Lance Pallbearers; Mumbo Jumbo; Flight to Canada |
Robinson, Mailynne |
Housekeeping; Gilead |
Roth, Philip |
Portnoy’s Complaint; The Great American Novel; The Plot Against America; Everyman |
Rushdie, Salmon |
Midnight’s Children; The Satanic Verses |
Silko, Leslie Marmon |
Ceremony |
Singer, Isaac Bashevis |
Grimpel the Fool; The Manor; The King of the Fields |
Smith, Lee |
Fair and Tender Ladies; Me and My Baby View the Eclipse |
Stegner, Wallace |
Big Rock Candy Mountain; Angle of Repose; Crossing to Safety |
Stein, Gertrude |
Three Lives |
Steinbeck, John |
Of Mice and Men; The Grapes of Wrath; East of Eden |
Stone, Robert |
Dog Soldiers; Children of Light; Bear and his Daughter |
Styron, William |
Lie Down in Darkness; Sophie’s Choice |
Sukenick, Ronald |
The Death of the Novel and Other Stories; Blown Away |
Tan, Amy |
The Joy Luck Club |
Taylor, Peter |
Collected Stories; Summoned to Memphis |
Theroux, Paul |
The Mosquito Coast; The London Embassy; Chicago Loop |
Toole, John Kennedy |
A Confederacy of Dunces |
Updike, John |
Rabbit, Run; The Centaur |
Vidal, Gore |
The City and the Pillar; Myra Breckinridge; Hollywood; Creation; Live from Golgotha |
Vonnegut, Kurt |
Cat’s Cradle; Slaughterhouse-Five; Galapagos |
Walker, Alice |
Meridian; You Can’t Keep a Good Woman Down; The Color Purple |
Warren, Robert Penn |
All the King’s Men |
Waugh, Evelyn |
A Handful of Dust; Scoop |
Welty, Eudora |
A Curtain of Green |
West, Nathaniel |
Miss Lonelyhearts; The Day of the Locust |
White, Edmund |
A Boy’s Own Story; The Beautiful Room is Empty |
Wideman, John Edgar |
Damballah; Philadelphia Fire |
Wolfe, Thomas |
Look Homeward, Angel; You Can’t Go Home Again |
Wolff, Tobias |
The Barracks Thief |
Woolf, Virginia |
Mrs. Dalloway; To the Lighthouse |
Yates, Richard |
Revolutionary Road; Young Hearts Crying |
E238-11
NAMES
Tom, Dick, and Harry
Collaborative Presentation Feedback
3-- Writer’s Significance (X5): Demonstrates the importance of the writer and his work to both twentieth-century literature in general and to at least one specific novel we’ve discussed in class by carefully comparing dominant themes, artistic struggles, critical approaches, and/or reception by critics.
5-- Critical Context (X3): Presents historical, biographical, and cultural background that helps the audience to situate the writer in the important world events and artistic questions of his time.
4-- Presentation Mechanics (X2): Group members each present for a roughly equal portion of 15-20 minutes, and the visual aid(s) presented to the audience effectively help to inform and expand the audience’s grasp of the writer’s “Significance” and/or “Context,” above.
TOTAL 38 / 50pts 76%
Comments: The critical context provided on Hunter Thompson’s rise to cult status and the impact of the 1960s counter-culture on his writing, especially on Fear and Loathing, was the strongest and most compelling portion of this presentation. Each member spent a little over five minutes presenting this information, but the visual aids, pictures from Thompson’s youth, added only a little to the critical context of the presentation. More interesting might have been examples of the artwork done by Ralph Steadman that you mentioned several times has been associated with Thompson’s writing and his “Gonzo journalism” in general. The presentation also might have made stronger connections between Thompson’s work and those of his contemporaries and others who came later to be associated with the “New Journalism” his work helped to define—Joan Didion, Truman Capote, Norman Mailer, Tom Wolfe, and much more recently William T. Vollmann and David Foster Wallace. New Journalism was hardly mentioned, in fact, much less defined or described. And what was Thompson’s connection to the work we’ve discussed this semester? To the “magical realism” of Garcia Marquez, for instance, or Fitzgerald’s portrait of the “American Dream” sought in The Great Gatsby?