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Shah Jalal University of Science & Technology

Department of English
Four-Year Course, B. A. Honours Syllabus
Session: 2008-2009 (Literature & Language Courses)

(Total Credits= 143)

First Year Semester I

Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits
Theory +
Lab.

Eng.-111 Introduction to Literature 3+0 3.0

Eng.-112 Socio-Political History of England 3+0 3.0

Eng.-113 Seminar Assignment + Viva Voce 0+2 0.5+0.5=1

Eng.-101 Basic English 2+0 2.0

Eng.-102 Basic English (Lab and Viva Voce) 0+2 1.0

BNG-101 Bangla Language 2+0 2.0

BNG-102 Bangla Language (lab.) 0+2 1.0

PSS-102 Politics and Administration in 3+0 3.0


Bangladesh

 
Total 13+6 16.0

First Year Semester II

Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits
Theory +
Lab.

Eng.-121 Greco-Roman Epic Poetry 3+0 3.0

Eng.-122 Drama: From Aeschylus to Seneca 3+0 3.0

Eng.-123 Advanced English 2+0 2.0

Dept. of English 1 Syllabus 2008—2009


Eng.-124 Seminar / Viva Voce 0+2 1

SCW-201 Social Welfare Policy & Programme 3+0 3.0

SOC-101B Principles of Sociology 3+0 3.0

Eco-103 Principles of Economics 4+0 4.0

 
Total 17+2 18.0

Second Year Semester I

Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits
Theory +
Lab.

Eng.-211 History of English Literature 3+0 3.0

Eng.-212 Old & Middle English Poetry 3+0 3.0

Eng.-213 Elizabethan & Metaphysical Poetry 3+0 3.0

Eng.-214 Seminar Article + Viva Voce 0+2 1.0

CSE-1010 Introduction to Computer Application 2+0 2.0

CSE-1020 Introduction to Computer Application 0+2 1.0


(Lab.)

MAT-101 Fundamentals of Mathematics 2+0 2.0

PAD -102 Introduction to Public Administration 3+0 3.0

 
Total 17+4 19.0

Second Year Semester II

Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits

Dept. of English 2 Syllabus 2008—2009


Theory +
Lab.

Eng.-221 Research Methodology 3+0 3.0

Eng.-222 Poetry from Chaucer to Milton 4+0 4.0

Eng.-223 Elizabethan & Jacobean Drama 4+0 4.0

Eng.-224 Seminar Paper + Viva—Voce 0+2 1.0

Introduction to English Literature


Eng.-225 4+0 4.0
(for Bangla Dept. students)

CSE-2050 Database Management & Programming 2+0 2.0

CSE-2060 Database Management & Programming 0+4 2.0


(Lab)

  17+6 20.0 (16


Total for ED)

Third Year Semester I

Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits
Theory + Lab.

Eng.-311 Poetry from Dryden to Blake 3+0 3.0

Eng.-312 17th Century Prose 3+0 3.0

Eng.-313 English Critical Theory 4+0 4.0

Eng.-314 Restoration Drama 3+0 3.0

Eng.-315 18th Century Prose 3+0 3.0

Dept. of English 3 Syllabus 2008—2009


Eng.-316 History of Ideas 3+0 3.0

Eng.-317 Viva—Voce + Seminar Assignment 0+2 1.0

 
Total 19+2 20.0

Third Year Semester II

Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits
Theory + Lab.

Eng.-321 18th Century English Novel 4+0 4.0

Eng.-322 Romantic Poetry 3+0 3.0

Eng.-323 Victorian Poetry 3+0 3.0

Eng.-324 19th Century English Novel 3+0 3.0

Eng.-325 American Poetry 3+0 3.0

Eng.-326 Viva Voce 0+2 1.0

 
Total 16+2 17.0

Fourth Year Semester I

Dept. of English 4 Syllabus 2008—2009


Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits
Theory + Lab.

Eng.-411 American Drama 3+0 3.0

Eng.-412 American Fiction 3+0 3.0

Eng.-413 20th Century British Drama 3+0 3.0

Eng.-414 20th Century British Literature 3+0 3.0

Eng.-415 Phonetics and Phonology 3+0 3.0

Eng.-416 Literature in Translation 2+0 2.0

Eng.-417 Viva Voce 0+0 1.0

 
Total 17+0 18.0

Fourth Year Semester II

Hours/Week
Course No. Course Title Credits
Theory + Lab.

Eng.-421 Shakespeare 4+0 4.0

Eng.-422 Continental Literature 3+0 3.0

Eng.-423 ELT and Teacher’s Education 3+0 3.0

Eng.-424 South-Asian Literature in English 3+0 3.0

Eng.-425 The Short Story 4+0 4.0

Eng.-426 Seminar Assignment + Viva Voce 0+2 2.0

 
Total 17+2 19.0

Dept. of English 5 Syllabus 2008—2009


DETAILED COURSE PLAN

ENG 111 INTRODUCTION TO LITERATURE

3 Hours/ weeks (3+0), 3 Credits 

1. Linguistic competence to appreciate literature—nature, need and means of attainment.

2. Rhetoric and Prosody:

3. Poetry:

a. Kinds and themes; b. Structural devices; c. Contrast; d. Illustration; e. Repetition; f. Mood;


Imagery; Tone; Principal verse forms—descriptive, narrative, lyrical, reflective, etc.;
Interrelationship; and Effect.

4. Non-fiction Prose:
a. Theme; b. Structure; and c. Style.

5. Essay:

a. Structure: Beginning, Middle, End; b. Forms: Narrative, Descriptive, and Expository; c.

Unity, Order, Coherence, Transition, Clarity, Using Examples, Comparison & Contrast, and

Cause & Effect.

6. Drama: Plot—its Structure, Action, Conflict, Characterization, Style, and Dialogue.

7. Fiction: Plot—its Structure, Point of view, Characterization, Setting, Style, Narration, and

Technique.

8. Short Story; 9. Novel; 10. Literary Terms; 11. Practical Criticism

12. i) Shall I compare thee…, by William Shakespeare; ii) Valediction Foreboding Mourning, by

John Donne; iii) The Lady of Shalott, by Alfred Tennyson; iv) The Solitary Reaper, by William

Wordsworth; i) Lispeth, by R. Kipling; ii) Shooting an Elephant, by G. Orwell; Twelfth Night, by

William Shakespeare

Books Recommended:
1. Ahmed, Sadruddin. Learning English the Easy Way.
2. Martinet & Thomson. A Practical English Grammar.

Dept. of English 6 Syllabus 2008—2009


3. Hornby, A. S. The Oxford Learner’s Dictionary of Current English.
4. Cowie & MacKin. Oxford Dictionary of Current Idiomatic English.
5. Hornby, A. S. Guide to Pattern and Usage of English.
6. Burnet and Stubbs. Practical Guide to Writing.
7. Islam, Jahurul. A Handbook of Practical Writing.
8. Imhoof, Maurice. From Paragraph to Essay.
9. Taylor, Clive. Advancing Language Skills.
10. Close, R. A. The English We Use.
11. Glover, A. J. Build Up Your English.
12. Jones, D. English Pronouncing Dictionary.
13. Quirk & Others. A Grammar of Contemporary English.
14. McRae. Chapters of Verse.
15. Leech. Communicative Grammar of English.
16. Hudson, William. An Introduction to the Study of Literature. Harrap. London. 1965.
17. Abrams. A Glossary of Literary Terms.
18. Cuddon, J. A. A Dictionary of Literary Terms. Penguin. Ed. 1984.
19. Bose & Sterling. Rhetoric & Prosody.
20. Aristotle. Poetics (with an introductory essay by Butcher, S. H.).
21. Willeck & Warren. Theory of Literature. Penguin.
22. The Norton Introduction to Literature (volumes of Poetry, Fiction, and Short Fiction).
23. The Norton Anthology of English Literature: Vols. I & II.
24. Daiches, David. Critical Approaches to Literature.
25. Ford, B. The Pelican Guide to English Literature.
26. Brooks & Heilman. Understanding Drama.
27. Brooks & Warren. Understanding Poetry.
28. Murray, P. Literary Criticism: A Glossary of Major Terms.
29. Jones, R. T. Studying Drama: An Introduction.
30. Kelsall, M. Studying Drama: An Introduction.
31. Hawthorn, J. Studying the Novel: An Introduction.
32. Forster, E. M. Aspects of the Novel.
33. Hussain, Inari. A Handbook of English Literature. An Introduction to
34. Literature. Longman. Ed. Barnet, Berman, Burto, and Cain. New York. 1997.
35. Introduction to Literature. Ed. Kennedy, X. J.
36. Legacies: Fiction, Poetry, Drama, Non—Fiction. Bogard. 1995.

ENG 112 SOCIO-POLITICAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND


3 Hours/weeks (3+0), 3 Credits
1. The Phoenicians’ Trade with the Britons—BC 200~BC 79;
2. Roman Invasion by Julius Caesar’s Legionnaires—BC 79~449 AD (?);
3. The Landing of Hengist and Horsa in Britain—449~1066 (Anglo Saxon Period);
4. The Norman Invasion—1066~1400 (Anglo Norman Period);
5. The Revival of Learning—1400~1558 (The Renaissance);
6. The Age of Elizabeth I—1550~1620;
7. The Puritan Age—1620~1660;
8. Period of the Restoration—1660~1700;
9. The Eighteenth Century—1700~1800;
10. The Union of the Great Britain and Ireland to Crimean War—1800~1854; and
11. The Victorian Age—1850~1900.

Books Recommended:

1. Mahajan, V. D. History of England.


2.History of England—See Seminar Books.
3.Long, J. William. English Literature.
4.G M Trevelyan. A Shortened History of England. Penguin Books.
5.G M Trevelyan. English Social History. Penguin Books.
6.John Thorn, Roger Lockyer, David Smith. A History of England. ATTBS Publishers and
Distributors.
7.Robert M Adams. The Land & Literature of England: A Historical Account. W. W. Norton.
8.Dr. A N Johri. A Social History of England.
9.Kemp Melone & Albert C Baugh. Literary History of England. Routledge.

Dept. of English 7 Syllabus 2008—2009


ENG.113 SEMINAR ASSIGNMENT + Viva-Voce
Hours/weeks (0+2), (0.5+0.5) = 1 Credit

ENG 121 GRECO-ROMAN EPIC POETRY


3 Hours/week (3+0), 3 Credits
1. Homer: The Iliad (Penguin Edition);
2. Virgil: The Aenied. Penguin Translation;
3. Dante: The Inferno;
4. Petrarch: Sonnets (Selected Pieces)

Note: The works prescribed are to be studied with reference to the following a, b, & c:
a.
i. Greek life and civilization; ii. The city state; iii. Position of Athens in Greek history;
iv. Greek religion and mythology; v. Epic and drama; vi. Plato, Aristotle, and literary criticism;
and vii. Classical tradition in Europe.
b.
i. Roman life and civilization; ii. Roman mythology; iii. Epic and drama; iv. Poetry, prose, and
history in Latin; and v. Influence of Latin upon European Literature.
c.
i. Literary theory

Studies in Detail:
1. Brumble, David. H. Classical Myths and Legends in the Middle Ages and Renaissance: A
Dictionary of Allegorical Meanings.
2. Zimmerman, E. J. Dictionary of Classical Mythology.
3. The Oxford Classical Dictionary. Clarendor Press.
4. Rose, J. H. A Handbook of Greek Literature.
5. Murray, Gilbert. The Rise of the Greek Epic.
6. Norwood, G. Greek Tragedy.

Book Recommended:
1. Rose, J. H. A Handbook of Latin Literature.
2. MacKail, J. W. Roman Literature.
3. Highet, Gilbert. The Classical Tradition.
4. Michael, Grant. Roman Literature. Pelican.
5. Knight, Jackson. Roman Virgil.
6. Graves, Robert. Greek Myths. Vols: I & II. Penguin.
7. Aristotle, Horace, Longinus. Classical Literary Criticism. Penguin Classics.
8. The Legacy of Greece.
9. The Legacy of Rome.
10. Landmarks in Classical Literature.
11. Williams, Gordon. The Nature of Roman Poetry.

ENG.122 DRAMA FROM AESCHYLUS TO SENECA


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. Aeschylus: Agamemnon. Penguin Translation;


2. Sophocles: Antigone. Penguin Translation;
3. Euripides: Medea. Penguin Translation;
4. Seneca: Phaedra. Penguin Translation.

Reading knowledge: The works prescribed are to be studied with reference to the following a, b
& c:
a.
i. Greek life and civilization; ii. The city state; iii. Position of Athens in Greek history;
iv. Greek religion and mythology; v. Epic and drama; vi. Plato, Aristotle, and literary criticism;
and vii. Classical tradition in Europe.
b.
i. Roman life and civilization; ii. Roman mythology; iii. Epic and drama; iv. Poetry, prose, and
history in Latin; and v. Influence of Latin upon European Literature.
c.

Dept. of English 8 Syllabus 2008—2009


i. Literary theory

Books Recommended:
1. Brumble, David. H. Classical Myths and Legends in the Middle Ages and Renaissance: A
Dictionary of Allegorical Meanings.
2. Zimmerman, E. J. Dictionary of Classical Mythology.
3. The Oxford Classical Dictionary. Clarendor Press.
4. Rose, J. H. A Handbook of Greek Literature.
5. Murray, Gilbert. The Rise of the Greek Epic.
6. Norwood, G. Greek Tragedy.
7. Rose, J. H. A Handbook of Latin Literature.
8. MacKail, J. W. Roman Literature.
9. Highet, Gilbert. The Classical Tradition.
10. Michael, Grant. Roman Literature. Pelican.
11. Knight, Jackson. Roman Virgil.
12. Graves, Robert. Greek Myths. Vols: I & II. Penguin.
13. Aristotle, Horce, Longinus. Classical Literary Criticism. Penguin Classics.
14. The Legacy of Greece.
15. The Legacy of Rome.
16. Landmarks in Classical Literature.

ENG.123 Advanced English (Eng-103)

2Hours/week (2+0), 2 Credits

ENG.124 SEMINAR/VIVA VOCE


2Hours/Week (0+2), 1 Credit

ENG 211 HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. First Glimpses; 2. The Anglo—Saxon or the Old English Period; 3. The Anglo—Norman
Period; 4. The Age of Chaucer; 5. The Elizabethan Period; 6. The Puritan Age; 7. The
Restoration Period; 8. Eighteenth Century Literature; 9. The Romantic Age; and 10. The
Victorian Age; and 11. The 20th Century Literature (with special references to Science Fiction,
Travel Literature, Colonial Writers, Whodunits, etc.)

Books Recommended: 1.Edmonds, E. W. A Historical Summary of English Literature. 2.


Hudson, W. H. An Outline History of English Literature. 3. Long, J. W. English Literature.
4.Bateson, F. W. A Guide to English Literature. Longman. 5. Concise Cambridge Bibliography
of English Literature. Ed. George Watson. 6. Legouis and Cazamian. History of English
Literature. 7. Cambridge History of English Literature. 8. Oxford History of English Literature.
9. Sampson. The Concise Cambridge History of English Literature. 10.Daiches, David. A
Critical History of English Literature. 2 Vols. 11.Ford, Boris. History of English Literature. (6
volumes).

ENG.212 OLD & MIDDLE ENGLISH POETRY


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits
A. 1. Beowulf; 2. The Seafarer; 3. The Wanderer; 4. a. 7th Century: Caedmon b. 8th Century:
Cynewulf c. 9th Century: Alfred: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
B. 1. 4th Century Lyrics: Selected Pieces from Sisam’s edition; 2. Malory: The Tale of
the Death of King Arthur. Ed. Vinaver; and 3. Anonymus: Pearl (1350).

Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following matters:

a) History and Meaning of Beowulf; b) Poetical Form; c) Dual Character of the Language; d) The
First History of England; e) The Christ; f) Andreas and Elene; and g) The Saxon Chronicle.

Books recommended: 1. Long, W. J. English Literature. 2. Gordon, R. K. Anglo—


Saxon Poetry. Everyman’s Library. 3. Penguin Classics: Beowulf. 4. Penguin Classics:
The Earliest English Poems. 5. Penguin Classics: Medieval English Verse. 6. Renwick & Orton.
The Beginnings of English Literature. 7. Wardel. Chapters on Old English Literature.8. Penguin

Dept. of English 9 Syllabus 2008—2009


Classics: The History of English Church: Bede. 9. Anderson, G. K. The Literature of the Anglo
—Saxons.

ENG-213 ELIZABETHAN & METAPHYSICAL POETRY


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. William Shakespeare: a) Full many a glorious morning I have seen b) That time of year thou

mayst in me behold

2. Sir Philip Sidney: When nature made her, chief work, Stella’s eyes

3. Donne: a) Death be not Proud; b) The Good Morrow; c) A Nocturnal upon St. Lucy’s Day; d)
The Cannonization; e) The Funeral; f) Twicknham Garden; and g) The Flea.
4. Herbert: As in Grierson’s Metaphysical Lyrics & Poems of the Seventeenth Century
5. Vaughan

6. Marvell

Note: Concerned authors should be studied with reference to—Metaphysical Poetry: Definition
and Conceits.

For Further Studies:


1. Grierson, H. J. C. Metaphysical Lyrics & Poems of the Seventeenth Century.
2. Lewis, C. S. History of the 17th Century Literature
3. Grierson. Cross—Currents in the Literature of the 17th Century.
4. Wedgewood, C. V. Seventeenth Century English Literature.
5. Willey, Basil. Seventeenth Century Background.
6. Gardener, Helen. Metaphysical Poets.

ENG.214 SEMINAR/VIVA VOCE


2Hours/Week (0+2),1 Credit

ENG.-221 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY


3 Hours/weeks (3+0), 3 Credits

Part—A:
1.Statement of the Problem; 2.Review of Literature; 3.Objectives; 4.Theoretical
Framework/Conceptual framework: a. Borrowed or b. Made on Personal Requirement; and
5.Limitations of the Research.
Part—B:
1.Methodology –Data collection, Data Analysis, Methods
Part—C:
1.Content Analysis: one of the several methods
Part—D:
1.Conclusion—Policy implication, summary, recommendation.

Books Recommended:
M.L.A. Handbook (latest edition)

ENG 222- POETRY FROM CHAUCER TO MILTON


4 Hours/Week (4+0), 4 Credits

1. Chaucer:
a. The General Prologue to the Canterbury Tales; b. The Wife of Bath; and c. Knight’s Tale. Ed.
Coffin, R. C.
2. Spenser. Faerie Queene: Book—I: Cantos: I—IV.

Dept. of English 10 Syllabus 2008—2009


3. Milton. Paradise Lost: Books: IX & X.
Note: Attention should be given to the following:

a) Primary and Secondary Epic; b) Romantic Epic; c) Puritanism and Reformation Movements;
and d) English Pastoral Poetry.

Books Recommended:

1.Bennet, H. S. Chaucer and the Fifteenth Century.


2. Ker, W. P. Mediaeval English Literature.
3. Chambers, E K. English Literature at the Close of the Middle Ages.
4. Ker, W. P. The Dark Ages.
5. Kittredge, G. L. Chaucer and His Poetry.
6. Roat, R. K. The Poetry of Chaucer.
7. Legouis, Emile. Geoffrey Chaucer.
8. The Age of Chaucer. Ed. Ford, Borris. Pelican.
9. Lewis, C. S. The Allegory of Love.
10.Rose & McLaughlin. Mediaeval Reader.
11.Bowden, Muriel. A Commentary on the General Prologue to the Canterbury Tales.
12.Power. Eileen. Mediaeval People. Pelican.
13.The Romance of the Rose. Translated by Robbins, Harry. W. Dutton Paperback.
14.Lewis, C. S. History of the 17th Century Literature.
15.Thomson, J. A. Classical Background of English Literature.
16.Tillyard, E. M. W. Elizabethan world Picture.
17.Grierson. Cross—currents in the English Literature of the 17th Century.
18.Lewis, C. S. A Preface to Paradise Lost.
19.Tillyard. Milton.
 
ENG 223 ELIZABETHAN AND JACOBEAN DRAMA (excluding Shakespeare)
4 Hours/Week (4+0), 4 Credits

1. Marlowe: Doctor Faustus;


2. Kyd: The Spanish Tragedy;
3. Ben Jonson: Volpone; and
4. Webster: The Duchess of Malfi.

Note: Teachers should take the following matters into consideration:

a. The Origin of the Drama; b. Miracle and Mystery Plays; c. Cycles of Plays;
d. The Stage and the Actors; e. Dramatic Unities; f. Two Schools of Drama;
g. The Theatre and the Stage; h. The Methods of Early Dramatists;
i. History of the Rise of English Drama since its Beginning to the 15th Century;
j. Interludes; k. The Influence of Seneca in Elizabethan Drama; l. The Use of Blank Verse in
Drama; m. The Comedy of Humors; n. Decadent Tragedy; and
o. Tragic Comedy.

Books Recommended: 1. Boas, S. An Introduction to Stewart Drama. 2. Boas, S. D.


An Introduction to Tudor Drama. 3. Bradbrook, M. C. The Growth and Structure of
Elizabethan Comedy. 4. Bradbrook, M. C. Themes and Conventions in Elizabethan Tragedy.
5. Lucas, F. L. Seneca and Elizabethan Drama. 6. Schelling F. E. Elizabethan Drama. 7.
Vaughn. Types of Tragedy. 8. Symonds, J. A. Shakespeare’s Predecessors in English Drama.

ENG.224 SEMINAR/VIVA VOCE


2Hours/Week (0+2), 1 Credit

ENG. 225 Introduction to English Literature


4+0 = 4 credits
(For Bangla Department students)

Detailed course

Dept. of English 11 Syllabus 2008—2009


1. Wordsworth W. : The Solitary Reaper; 2. Browning R.: The Patriot; 3. Lawrence D.H.: Why
the Novel Matters; 4. Forster E.M: Tolerance; 5. Kipling R.: Lispeth; 6. Orwell G.: Shooting an
Elephant; 7. Synge J..M: Riders to the Sea.

NB. Course Instructors to recommend reference books.

ENG.311 POETRY FROM DRYDEN TO BLAKE


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. Dryden: Mac Flecknoe


2. Pope: a. The Rape of the Lock; and b. Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot.
3. Johnson: The Vanity of Human Wishes.
4. Gray: a. An Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard; b. Sonnet on the Death of Mr. Richard
West; and c. Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College.
5. Blake: Songs of Innocence and of Experience.
Note: Particular attention should be devoted to: a) Neoclassicism in the Augustan Period; b)
Heroic couplet and its issues; and c) Precursors of Romanticism.

Books Recommended:
1. Butt, John. Augustan Age. 2. Stephen, Leslie. English Language and Society in the 18 th
Century. 3. Willey, Basil. The 18th Century Background. 4 .Jack, Ian. Augustan Satire: Intention
and Idiom in English Poetry. 5. Elton, Oliver. A Survey of English Literature (1730—1850). 6.
Gosse, Edmund. History of the 18th Century Literature.

ENG 312 SEVENTEENTH CENTURY PROSE


3 Hours/Week(3+0), 3 Credits

1. Bacon’s Essays: a. Of Friendship; b. Of Death ;c. Of Adversary; d. Of Marriage; e. Of Travel;


f. Of Ambition; and g. Of Studies. 2. Milton: Areopagitica; 3. Bunyan: Pilgrim’s Progress; 4.
Defoe: Robinson Crusoe.

Note: The following topics need special attention:


a) The English Essay and its Debate to Montaigne; b) Narrative Prose from Sidney to Bunyun; c)
Euphemism; d) The Prose of the Bible; and d) Pamphleteering in English.

Books Recommended: 1. Bush, D. English Literature in the Early Seventeenth Century. 2.


Willey, Basil. Seventeenth Century Background. 3. 17th Century Studies Presented to Sir Herbert
Grierson. Oxford. 4. Wedgwood, C. V. 17th Century English Literature.
ENG 313 ENGLISH CRITICAL THEORY
4 Hours/Week (4+0), 4 Credits

1. Sydney: Apologie for Poetrie; 2. Dryden: Essay of Dramatic Poesy; 3. Johnson: Preface to
Shakespeare; 4. Wordsworth: Preface to Lyrical Ballads; 5. Coleridge: Biographia Literaria; 6.
Arnold: The Study of Poetry; and; 7. Eliot: Tradition and Individual Talent.
Note: The Course is to be studied with reference to the following:
a) An outline of history of criticism from Plato and Aristotle to the present day; b) Classification
of criticism: Linguistic; Theoretical; and Descriptive; c) Criticism and a reflection of
contemporary creative practice; and d) Beginnings of English criticism: Dr. Johnson; Neo—
Classicism in the 18th Century; Criticism during the romantic revival; and Continental influence
on English criticism in the 19th Century; and Trends in the 20th Century criticism.

Recommended Reading: 1. Wimsal & Brooks. Literary Criticism: A Short History. 2.


Richards, I. A. Principles of Literary Criticism. 3. Wellek, Rene. The Rise of English
Literary History. 4. Warren, Austen. & Wellek, Rene. Theory of Literature. 5. Polts, T. D.
Poetics: Aristotle. 6. Wetson, George. The Literary Critics. Pelican

ENG 314 RESTORATION DRAMA


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

Dept. of English 12 Syllabus 2008—2009


1. Wycherley: The Country Wife; 2. Congreve: The Way of the World; 3. Dryden, John: All for
Love; 4. Goldsmith: She Stoops to Conquer

Note: Instructors should highlight the following matters:


a) King and his Followers; b) Revolution of 1688; c) French Influence; d) New Tendencies; e)
Realism and Formalism; f) Heroic Drama: Comedy of Manners; and g) Effect of the Restoration
on Literature and Morals.

Books Recommended:

1.Grierson. Crosscurrents in the Literature of the 17th Century. 2.Wedgewood. 17th Century
Literature. 3.Dobree, Bonami. Restoration Comedy. 4.Dobree, Bonami. Restoration Tragedy.
5.Nicoll, A. A History of Restoration Drama. 6 .17th Century Studies Presented to Sir H.
Grierson. Oxford.

ENG 315 18TH CENTURY PROSE


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. Swift: Gulliver’s Travels; 2. Addison and Steele: Coverley Papers; 3. Dr. Johnson: Lives of
Poets (Cowley and Milton); and 4. Boswell: Life of Johnson (abridged).

Note: Particular attention should be given to the following:


a) English Classicism in Augustan Period; b) The Rise of English Novels; c) The Domestic
Novels; d) English Biography; and e) Dr. Johnson’s Influence on English Prose.
Books Recommended:

1. Butt, John. Augustan Age. 2. Stephen, Leslie. English Literature and Society in the 18 th
Century. 3.Willey, Basil. The 18th Century Background. 4. Jack, Ian. Augustan Satire. 5. Elton,
Oliver. A Survey of English Literature (1730~1850).
6. Gosse, Edmund. History of 18th Century Literature.
ENG 316 History of Ideas
3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits
a) Paganism; b) Secularism; c) Monotheism; d) Rise of Christianity; e) Reformation; f)
Puritanism; g) Oxford Movement; h) Platonism; i) Neo-Platonism; j) Rationalism; k)
Empiricism; l) Evolution; m) Pragmatism; n) Positivism; o) Individualism; p) Freudian Concept;
q) Monarchy; r) Feudalism; s) Democracy; t) Utilitarianism; u) Renaissance; v) Colonialism; w)
Capitalism; x) Socialism.

Books Recommended: 1. Chadwick, Owen. The Secularization of the European Mind in the
19th Century. 2. Aquinas, St. Thomas. St. Thomas Aquinas on Politics and Ethics. 3. Hobbes,
Thomas. Laviathan 4. Rousseau, Jean-Jacques. Rousseau’s Political Writings.

ENG.317 SEMINAR/VIVA VOCE


2Hours/Week (0+2), 1 Credit

ENG 321- 18TH CENTURY ENGLISH NOVEL


4 Hours/Week (4+0), 4 Credits

1. Richardson: Pamela; 2. Henry Fielding: Tom Jones; 3. Lawrence Sterne: Tristram Shandy.
Note: Instructors should highlight the following issues:
a) Social Development; b) An Age of Prose; c) Satire; d) The Classic Age; e) Pope’s "Essay on
Criticism"; f) Character of Swift’s Prose; g) Addison’s Influence; and h) The English Dictionary.

Books Recommended: 1. Allen, Walter. The English Novel. 2. Forster, E. M. Aspects of


Novel. 3. Cecil, David. Early Victorian Novelists. 4. Hunter, J. Paul. Before Novels: The
Cultural Contexts of Eighteenth Century English Fiction.

ENG 322 ROMANTIC POETRY


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits
1. Wordsworth: a) Tintern Abbey; b) Ode on Imitations of Immortality; and c) Prelude: Book—

Dept. of English 13 Syllabus 2008—2009


2. Coleridge: a) Christabel; b) Dejection, an Ode; c) Rime of the Ancient Mariner; and d) Kubla
Khan.

3. Byron: a) Don Juan: Canto: I & II (as in Norton); and b) She Walks in Beauty.

4. Shelley: a) Adonais; and b) Ode to the West Wind.

5. Keats: Odes.

Note: The paper should be studied with the reference to the following:

a) Meaning of Romanticism; b) Origin of Romantic Movements in Germany and France; c)


Precursors of Romanticism in England; d) The French Revolutionary and English Poets; e)
Wordsworth’s Theory of Poetic Diction; f) Supernaturalism in English Poetry; g) Idealism in
Shelley and Byron; and h) Hellenism in Keats.

Books Recommended : 1. Hough, Graham. Romantic Poets. 2. Brailsford, H. N. Shelley,


Godwin and their Circle. 3. Elton, Oliver. Survey of English Literature: 1780—1830. 4. Bowra,
C. M. Romantic Imagination. 5. Prez, Mario. The Romantic Agony. 6. Lucas, F. L. The Decline
and Fall of Romantic Ideal. 7. Willey, Basil. Nineteenth Century Studies. 8. Grierson, G. C. The
Background of English Literature: Classical and Romantic.

ENG 323 VICTORIAN POETRY


4 Hours/Week (4+0), 4 Credits

1. Tennyson: a) The Palace of Art; b) Oenone; c) Locksley Hall; d) Ulysses; e) Tithonus; and f)
Selections from In Memoriam as in the editions of Michael Millgate (New Oxford Series).
2. Browning: a) A Grammarian’s Funneral; b) My Last Dutchess; c) Fra Lippo Lippi; d) Andrea
del Sarto; and e) Rabbi Bin Ezra.
3. Browning, Elizabeth B.: The Sonnets from the Portuguese 13, 14, 21, 22, & 43.
4. Arnold: a) Thyrsis; b) Dover Beach; c) Rugby Chapel; and d) The Scholar Gipsy.
5. Hopkins: From the selections edited by G. St: a. The Wreck of Deutschland; and
b. Felix Rendal. c. God’s Grandeur
6. Rosetti, Dante G.: The Blessed Damzel.

Note: Prescribed pieces should be studied with reference to the following:


a. Meaning of Victorianism; b. Victorian Compromise; c. Rise of science & industry in the 19th
Century; d. Pre-Raphaelitic Movement; e. Dramatic Monologue;
f. The Debate of Science & Religion; and g. Expansion of British Imperialism.

Books Recommended: 1. Walker, Hugh. The Literature of the Victorian Era.. 2. Elton, Oliver.
A Survey of English Literature(1830~1880). 3. Brandes, George. Main Currents in the 19th
Century Literature.

ENG 324 19TH CENTURY ENGLISH NOVEL


3 Hours/ Week (3+0), 3 Credits
1. Austen, Jane: Pride and Prejudice
2. Bronte, Emily.: Wuthering Heights;
3. Hardy, Thomas.: Tess of the Durbervilles; and
4. Dickens, Charles.: David Copperfield.

Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following issues of the Victorian era:
a) Democracy; b) Social Unrest; c) The Ideal of Peace; d) Arts and Science; e) An Age of Prose;
f) Moral Purpose; g) Idealism; and h) The Domestic Novel.

Books Recommended: 1. Cecil, David. Early Victorian Novelists. 2. Brandis, George. Main
Currents in the 19th Century Literature. Vol. IV. 3. Walker, Hugh. The Literature of the Victorian
Era. 4. Elton, Oliver. A Survey of English Literature: 1830~1880. 5. Forster, E. M. Aspects of
Novel. 6. Allen, Walter. The English Novel.

ENG 325 AMERICAN POETRY


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

Dept. of English 14 Syllabus 2008—2009


1. Poe: a. Annabel Lee; and b) The Raven.

2. Whitman: Song of Myself

3. Dickinson: Selections from Poems by Emily Dickinson edited by Higginson & Todd.

4. Frost: a) Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening; b) The Road Not Taken; c) The Death of
the Hired Man; d) Mending Walls; and e) Design.
5. Pound: a. In a Station of the Metro; b. The River-Merchant’s Wife: A Letter; and c. The
Canto: I

6. Langston Hughes: a) Mother to Son; b) Dream Variations; and c) Mulatto.

7. Cummings: Selected Poems

8. Adrienne Rich: a) Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers; and b) Living in Sin.

9. Allen Ginsberg: September on Jessore Road

Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following issues:


a) American Civilization; b) American History: General Tools; c) Selected Histories of Ideas in
the US; d) Psychology; e) Philosophy; f) Transcendentalism; g) Religion in the US; h) Chief
General Bibliographies of American Literature; i) Literary Regionalism; and j) Racial and other
Minorities.

Studies in Detail: 1. Moss, P. Sydney. The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu. 2. Poe: A
Collection of Critical Essays. Ed. Regan, Robert. 3. Kaplan, Justin. Walt Whitman: A Life. 4.
Kaplan, Justin. A Reader’s Guide to Walt Whitman. 5. Kaplan, Justin. New Whitman Handbook.
6. Whaitman’s "Song of Myself": Origin, Growth, Meaning. Ed. Miller, J. 7. Cook, L. Regiland.
The Dimensions of Robert Frost. 8. Smythe, Daniel. Robert Frost Speaks. 9. Mertin, Louis.
Robert Frost: Life and Talks—Walking. 10. Creeley, Robert. A Quick Graph. 11. Jarrel, Randall.
Poetry and the Age. 12. Levertov, Denise. The Poet in the World.

ENG.326 SEMINAR/VIVA VOCE


2Hours/Week (0+2), 1 Credit

ENG 411 AMERICAN DRAMA


3 Hours/Week (3+0) 3 Credits

1. O’Neill: The Emperor Jones; 2. Tennessee Williams: A Streetcar Named Desire; 3. Arthur
Miller: All My Sons; and 4. Edward Albee: Zoo Story.

Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following issues:


a) American Civilization; b) American History: General Tools; c) Selected Histories of Ideas in
the US; d) Psychology; e) Philosophy; f) Transcendentalism; g) Religion in the US; h) Chief
General Bibliographies of American Literature; i) Literary Regionalism; and j) Racial and other
Minorities.

Books Recommended:
1. Aldridge, John. After the Lost Generation: A Critical Studies of the Writers of Two Wars.
1951.
2. Hoffman, J. Freudianism and the Literary Mind. 1957.
3. Klein, Marcus. Foreigners: The Making of American Literature.
4. Singal, J. Daniel. The War Within: From Victorian to Modernist Thought in the South
1919—1945. 1982.
5. Bigsby, C. W. E. A Critical Introduction to Twentieth Century American Drama. Vol: 1.
1985.
6. O’Neil and His Plays: Four Decades of Criticism. Ed. Cargil, Oscar. 1962.
7. Miller, James. Eugene O’Neil and the American Critic. 1962.
8. Ranald, L. M. The Eugene O’Neil Companion. 1984.
9. Ed. Day, Christine and Woods, Bob. Where I Live: Selected Essays. 1978.
10. Quinn, Arthur. A History of the American Drama from the Civil War to the Present Day.

Dept. of English 15 Syllabus 2008—2009


11. Manheim, Michael. The Cambridge Companion to Eugene O’Neill.

ENG 412 AMERICAN FICTION


3 Hours/ (3+0) Week, 3 Credits

1. Mark Twain: Huckleberry Finn; 2. Hawthorn: The Scarlet Letter; 3. Hemingway: The Old
Man and the Sea; 4. S. Fitzgerald: Great Gatsby; and 5. Melville: Moby Dick. 6. Faulkner: A
Rose for Emily; 7. Steinbek: The Pearl.

Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following issues:

a) American Civilization; b) American History: General Tools; c) Selected Histories of Ideas in


the US; d) Psychology; e) Philosophy; f) Transcendentalism; g) Religion in the US; h) Chief
General Bibliographies of American Literature; i) Literary Regionalism; and j) Racial and other
Minorities.

Books Recommended:
1. Aldridge, John. After the Lost Generation: A Critical Studies of the Writers of Two Wars.
1951.
2. Hoffman, J. Freudianism and the Literary Mind. 1957.
3. Klein, Marcus. Foreigners: The Making of American Literature.
4. Singal, J. Daniel. The War Within: From Victorian to Modernist Thought in the South
1919—1945. 1982.
5. Bigsby, C. W. E. A Critical Introduction to Twentieth Century American Drama. Vol: 1.
1985.
6. O’Neil and His Plays: Four Decades of Criticism. Ed. Cargil, Oscar. 1962.
7. Where I Live: Selected Essays. Ed. Day, Christine and Woods, Bob. 1978.

ENG 413 20TH CENTURY BRITISH DRAMA


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. Shaw, G. B. : Saint Joan; 2. Synge, J. M.: Riders to the Sea; 3. Beckett, S.: Waiting for
Godot;; and 4. Osborn, J. J.: Look Back in Anger. 5. Pinter. H: The Birthday Party

Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following issues:

a) The Play of Balance; b) The Play of Dreams; c) Romantic Realism; d) Mystery Stories; e)
Representative Poets; and f) Celtic Revival.

Books Recommended: 1. Forster, E. M. The Aspects of Novel. 2. Lubbock, P. The Craft of


Fiction.
 
ENG 414 20TH CENTURY BRITISH LITERATURE`
3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. Lawrence, D. H. Sons and Lovers; 2. Forster, E. M. Passage to India; 3. Conrad, Joseph.


Heart of Darkness; 4. W. B. Yeats; 5. T. S. Eliot; 6. Auden
Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following issues:

a) The Play of Balance; b) The Play of Dreams; c) Romantic Realism; d) Mystery Stories; e)
Representative Poets; and f) Celtic Revival.

Books Recommended: 1. Forster, E. M. The Aspects of Novel. 2. Lubbock, P. The Craft of


Fiction.
ENG 415 Phonetics and Phonology
3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

Contents:
a. General Phonetics and Phonology

Dept. of English 16 Syllabus 2008—2009


Articulators and Air-system mechanism
IPA, Chart, The Cardinal Vowels and Cardinal Vowel Diagram; Vowel/Consonant,
Vocoid/Contoid, Fortis/ Lenis Distinctions; Segments; Description of vowels and
Consonants of Different Languages in relation to the IPA Chart and Cardinal Vowel
Diagram

Phonological Theories: Daniel Jones’s Theory: Prague School Phonology; Sapir’s


Theory, Bloomfield and the Post-Bloomfieldians; Distinctive Features Theory,
Redundanat/Non-disctintive Feature; Free Variation
b. English Phonetics and Phonology
Syllables: Structure of English Syllables; English Consonant, The Combinatory
Possibilities
Stress: What is Stress Language? Factors Determining Stress Placement;
Natural Stress Rules, Degrees of Stress, Levels of Stress, Placement of Stress in
Simple, Complex and Compound words, Variable Stress.

Intonation System in English: Function of intonation, Structure of Tone Unit; High


and Low Heads, Pitch Possibilities in the Simple Tone Unit, Semantics of Intonation.

Recommended Readings
1. Abercombie, David, Elements of General Phonetics
2. Varshney, Dr. R.L, Phonetics and Phonology
3. Phonology Theory and Practice

ENG 416 Literature in Translation


2 Hours/Week (2+0), 2 Credits

1. Mardruce, J. C.: One Thousand Nights and One Night. Aleppo version (Selected Pieces); 2.
Khayyam, Omar.: Selected Rubayyats (Fitzerald’s translations); 3. Jibran, Kahlil.: Selected
Poems; 4. Hussain, Taha.: The Stream of Days; and 5. Mahfouz, Naguib.: The Beginning and the
End. 6. Jalaludding Rumi: Selections

Books Recommended: 1. Badawi, M. M. A Short History of Modern Arabic Literature. 2.


Schwartz, Howard. Lilith’s Cave: Jewish Tales of the Supernatural. 3. Schwartz, Howard.
Gabriel’s Palace: Jewish Mystical Tales. 4. Mack, Robert L. (Ed.) Arabian Night’s
Entertainments. 5. Picard. (Tr.) Tales from Ancient Persia.

ENG.417 VIVA-VOCE,
(0+0) 1 Credit

ENG.421 SHAKESPEARE
4 Hours/ Week (4+0), 4 Credits

Shakespeare:

a) Hamlet; b) Macbeth; c) Antony and Cleopatra; d) The Tempest; e) Richard II; f) A


Midsummer Night’s Dream

Note: Teachers should discuss the following matters:

a) The Wonder of Shakespeare; b) Genius or Training; c) Life; d) Four Periods; e) Classification


according to Dramatic Type; f) Doubtful Plays; and g) Shakespeare’s Place and Influence.

Books Recommended: 1. Harrison, G. B.: Introducing Shakespeare. 2. Boas, S.: An


Introduction to Stewart Drama. 3. Boas, S. D.: An Introduction to Tudor Drama. 4. Bradbrook,
M. C.: The Growth and Structure of Elizabethan Comedy. 5. Bradbrook, M. C.: Themes and
Conventions in Elizabethan Tragedy. 6. Bradley, A.C:. Shakespearean Tragedy. 7. Lucas, F. L.:
Seneca and Elizabethan Drama. 8. Schelling F. E.: Elizabethan Drama. 9. Symonds, J. A.:
Shakespeare’s Predecessors in English Drama. 10.: Vaughn. Types of Tragedy.

Dept. of English 17 Syllabus 2008—2009


ENG 422 CONTINENTAL LITERATURE
3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

1. Moliere: Miser; 2. Ibsen: A Doll’s House; 3. Brecht: Mother Courage and Her Children; 4.
Camus, Albert.: The Outsider; 5. Tolstoy, Leo.: Anna Karenina; 6. Kundera, Milan.: The Joke.

Note: Instructors should lay emphasis on the following issues:

a) Psychology; b) Philosophy; c) Transcendentalism; d) Literary Regionalism; and e) Racial and


other Minorities.

More:

1. An Introduction to Literature. Ed. Barnet, Berman, Burto, and Cain. Longman. XI editation. 2.
The Norton Introduction to Literature. Ed. Jerome Beaty and Paul Hunter. 3. Webster, Mariam.
Encyclopedia of Literature. 4. Introduction to American Studies. Ed. Malcolm Bradbary. 6.
Luedike, L. S. Making America: The Society and Culture of the United States. 7. Mathiessen, F.
O. American Renaissance. 8. Lewis, R. The American Adam. 9. Tayler, M. C. History of
American Literature: 1607~1765. 10. Chase, Richard. The American Novel.

Books Recommended: 1. An Introduction to Literature. Ed. Barnet, Berman, Burto, and Cain.
Longman. XI meditation. 2. The Norton Introduction to Literature. Ed.Jerome Beaty and Paul
Hunter. 3. Webster, Miriam. Encyclopedia of Literature.

ENG 423 ELT and TEACHER’S EDUCATION


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Week
ELT (Skills & Methods)
The skills (Writing, Reading, Speaking, Listening)
The methods (Communicative, Direct, Audio-Lingual, GTM)
Teacher Education:
Theories and Principles of Teacher Education
Approaches to Teacher Training
In service and Pre-service
Lesson Plan and Evolution: Class room Observation
Criterion for Lesson Observation (Use of checklists, objective Vs Subjective observation)
Peer Observation
Counseling and Feedback
Modes of Teaching and Learning
Lecture, Seminar, Workshop, Self-Access
Micro Teaching/Practicum
Assessment of Teacher
Required Reading:
1. Wallace, J.M. 1991Training Foreign Language Teachers:
A Reflective Approach” Cambridge University Press
2. Wood word,T.1990 Models and Metaphors in Teacher Training” Cambridge University
Press
3. D. Numan (eds.) 1990 The Second Language Curriculum” Cambridge University Press
4. Freeman, Larsen D. Techniques and Principles in Language Teaching
5. Richards, J.C, Rodgers, T, Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching
6. Rivers, M.W, Teaching Foreign Language Teacher

ENG 424 SOUTH-ASIAN LITERATURE IN ENGLISH


3 Hours/Week (3+0), 3 Credits

Dept. of English 18 Syllabus 2008—2009


1. Tagore, Rabindranath.: Gitanjali (Selected pieces); 2. Rokeya, Begum.: Sultana’s Dream; 3.
Ghosh, Amitava.: The Shadow Lines; 4. Mukerjee, Bharathi: Jasmine; and 5. Choudhury, Nirad
C.: Autobiography of an Unknown Indian

ENG 425 THE SHORT STORY


4 Hours/Week (4+0), 4 Credits

Course—Plan in Detail:

1. Evolution of the genre


2. Selections: a) D.H. Lawrence: “The Woman Who Rode Away”; b) Ambrose Bierce: “An
Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”; c) Gabriel Garcia Marquez: “A Very Old Man with
Enormous Wings”; d) Chekov: “The Darling”; e) Guy de Moupassant: “The Diamond
Necklace”; f) Franz Kafka: A Hunger Artist; g) Alice Walker: “Kindred Spirits”

ENG 426 RESEARCH PAPER/VIVA VOCE


2Hours/Week (0+2), 2 Credit (1+1)
(Research Paper Word Limit: 3000)

Basic English: ENG 101 (Compulsory)


Session 2008—2009; Examination 2008
Full Marks: 50, Credits: 2 (2 periods a week), Exam duration: 2 hours

(Developing Writing, Reading, Listening, and Speaking Skills)

1. Problems with: (a) Main Verbs; (b) Tense; (c) Modals and Modal-related patterns; (d)
Causatives; (e) Conditionals; (f) Subjunctives; (g) Infinitives; (h) Have + Participle; (i) Auxiliary
Verbs; (j) Pronouns, Relative Pronouns, Nouns and Adjectives, Nouns functioning as Adjectives
and other Parts of Speech; (k) Determiners; (l) Comparatives; (m) Prepositions and prepositional
idioms; (n) Point of View for Syntactical Pattern; (o) Agreement of verbs; (p) Introductory
verbal; Modifiers; (q) Sentences and Clauses; (r) Word Choice – Vocabulary – Antonym,
Synonym, Homonym, Homograph, Homophone; (s) Wh. Questions; (t) Punctuations: Full stop,
comma, colon, semi colon, apostrophe, capital letter, hyphen, quotation marks, titles etc.; (u)
Proofreading;

2. One Reading Comprehension of 20 marks (6 questions carrying 2.5 marks each) 3. One

Paragraph

Recommended Books:
1. Barron's TOEFL: 2. Standard Grammar book of Instructor's choice

Basic English (Lab and Viva Voce): ENG 102 (Compulsory)


Session 2007–2008, Examination 2007
Full Marks: 50, Credit: 1 (2 Periods a week), Examination: Practical (Viva Voce)

Five students to be brought on the dais at a time. Other students of the class will be interrogating
and likewise every student should be brought in turn and questions should be asked from the
fields of literature, science, current politics, international affairs, games and sports, etc. The
Instructor will act as a conductor.

Dept. of English 19 Syllabus 2008—2009


Advanced English: ENG 103 (Optional, in lieu of Bangla)
Session: 2008-2009, Examination 2008
Full Marks: 50, Credits: 2 (2 Periods a week), Examination: 2 Hours

Part: A (Marks: 25)

1. IPA Symbols

2. Writing Composition (Essay, paragraph and report)

(To answer one question of 10 marks out of two)

3. Letter Writing: formal and informal, business letters, letters of opinion, application and CV
writing, fax, e-mail, memo, etc.

(To answer one question of 10 marks out of two)

Part: B (Marks: 25)

1. Short Story: ‘The Killers’ by Ernest Hemingway

2. A Rose for Emily by William Faulkner

(Five short questions will carry 4 marks each; one explanation will carry 5 marks)

Recommended Books: To be decided by the Instructor.

Advanced English: ENG 104 (Compulsory, if taken Eng 103)


Session 2008–2009, Examination 2008
Full Marks: 50, Credit: 1 (2 Periods a week), Examination: Practical (Viva Voce)

1. Wide discussion on how to prepare a Seminar or Research paper (according MLA Handbook)
on either the short story or the poem taught in Eng. 103.
2. Individual and group discussion on the stories (in the form of both lecture and interrogation) in
the class.
3. Viva Voce

Dept. of English 20 Syllabus 2008—2009

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