0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views15 pages

SKBUugcbcsEnglish PDF

The document outlines the core course syllabus for an English Honours degree at Sidho-Kanho-Birsha University under the CBCS (Choice Based Credit System). It includes 14 compulsory courses spread across 6 semesters. Each course is divided into specific texts and authors that will be covered in a given number of class hours. Detailed syllabi are provided for each semester, listing the primary and suggested background readings for each course.

Uploaded by

Elizabeth Bennet
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views15 pages

SKBUugcbcsEnglish PDF

The document outlines the core course syllabus for an English Honours degree at Sidho-Kanho-Birsha University under the CBCS (Choice Based Credit System). It includes 14 compulsory courses spread across 6 semesters. Each course is divided into specific texts and authors that will be covered in a given number of class hours. Detailed syllabi are provided for each semester, listing the primary and suggested background readings for each course.

Uploaded by

Elizabeth Bennet
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 15

Sidho-Kanho-Birsha University

B. A. Honours in English unde r CBCS


S yllabus

Core Course
(14 compulsory courses for English Honours students)

Semes ter I

C 1. Ind ian Clas sic al Literature


C 2. European Class ical Litera ture

Semes ter II

C 3. Ind ian Writing in Englis h


C 4. Britis h Poetry and Drama: 14th to 17th Centuries

Semes ter III

C 5. Americ an Literature
C 6. Popular L ite rature
C 7. Britis h Poetry and Drama: 17th and 18th Centuries

Semes ter IV

C 8. Britis h Literature : 18th Century


C 9. Britis h Romantic Literature
C 10. British Literature: 19th Century

Semes ter V

C 11. Women’s Writing


C 12. British Literature: The Early 20th Century

Semes ter VI

C 13. Modern European Drama


C 14. Pos tc olonial Literatures

De taile d Syllabi

Se meste r I

C 1: Indian Classica l Literature

1. Kalidasa Abhijnana Shakuntalam , tr. Chandra Rajan, in Kalidasa: The Loom of Time (New
Delhi: Penguin, 1989). 118 pgs [18 class hours ]
2. Vyas a (i) ‘The Dicing’ [7 class hours ] and (ii) ‘The Sequel to Dic ing’ [5 class hours ] (from Boo k II
‘The Book of the As sembly Ha ll’), (iii) ‘The Temptation of Karna’ [6 c lass hours] (from Book V
‘The Book of Effort’) in The Mahabharata: tr. and ed. J.A.B. van Buitenen (Chicago: Brill, 1975)
pp. 106–69.
3. Sudraka Mrcchak atika, tr. M.M. Ramac handra Kale (New Delhi: Motilal Banarasidass , 1962).
[17 class hours ]
4. Ilango Ad igal ‘The Boo k of Banc i’, in Cilappatikaram: The Tale of an Ank let, tr. R. Parthasarathy
(Delhi: Penguin, 2004) book 3. [17 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Bharata, Natyashas tra, tr. Manomohan Ghosh, vol. I, 2nd edn (Calcutta: Granthala ya, 19 67)
chap. 6: ‘Sentiments’, pp . 100–18.
2. Ira vati Karve, ‘Draupadi’, in Yuganta: The End of an Epoc h (Hyderabad: Disha, 1991) pp . 7 9–
105.
3. J.A.B. Van Buitenen, ‘Dharma and Moksa’, in Roy W. Perrett, ed., Indian Philosophy , v ol. V,
Theory of Value: A Collection of Readings (New York: Garland, 2000) pp. 33–40.
4. Vinay Dharwad kar, ‘Orientalism and the Study of Indian Literatu re’, in Orientalism and the
Pos tcolonial Predic ament: Perspec tiv es on South As ia, ed. Carol A. Breckenridge and Peter
van der Veer (New Delhi: OUP, 1994) pp. 158–95.

C 2: European Classical Lite rature

1. Homer The Iliad, tr. E.V. Rieu (Harmonds worth: Penguin,1985). [17 class hours ]
2. Sophocles Oedipus the King, tr. Robert Fagles in Sophoc les: The Three Theban Plays
(Harmonds worth: Penguin, 1984). [17 class hours ]
3. Plautus Pot of Gold, tr. E.F. Watling (Harmonds worth: Penguin, 1965). [17 class hours ]
4. Ovid Selections from M etamorphoses (i) ‘Bac chus ’, (Book III), [6 c lass hours]
(ii) ‘P yramus and Thisbe’ (Book IV), [4 class hours ]
(iii) ‘Philomela’ (Book VI), [4 c las s hours]
tr. Mary M. Innes (Harm ondsworth: Penguin, 1975).
Horace Satires I.4, in Horace: Satires and Epis tles and Persius : Satires , tr. Niall Rudd
(Harmonds worth: Penguin, 2005). [5 clas s hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Aris totle, Poetics , trans lated with an introduction and no tes by Malcolm Heath, (Lond on:
Penguin, 1996) chaps . 6–17, 23, 24, and 26.
2. Plato , The Republic, Boo k X, tr. Desmond Lee (London: Penguin, 2007).
3. Horace, Ars Poetic a, tr. H. Rus hton Fairclough, Horace: Satires , Epistles and Ars Poetic a
(Cambridge Mass .: Harvard Univers ity Press , 2005) pp. 451–73.

Se meste r II

C 3: Indian Writing in English

1. R.K. Nara yan The Guide [17 c lass hours ]


2. An ita Des ai In Cus tody [17 class hours ]
3. H.L.V. Derozio ‘The Orphan Girl’ [2 c lass hours]
Kamala Das ‘Introduction’ [4 c lass hours]
Ja yanta Mahatatra ‘Hunger’ [4 c lass hours]
Niss im Ezekiel ‘The Night of the Scorpion’ [4 class hours ]
Robin S. Ngangom ‘A Poem for Mother’ [4 class hours ]
4. Mu lk Raj Anand ‘The Los t Child’ [4 c lass hours]
Khus hwant Singh ‘The Mulberry Tree’ [4 class hours ]
Salman Rushdie ‘The Commonwealth Literatu re Does Not Exist’ [5 c lass hours]
Arundhati Roy ‘The Cost of Living’ [5 c las s hours]
Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Raja Rao, Foreword to Kanthapura (New Delhi: OUP, 1989) pp. v–vi.
2. Salm an Rushdie, ‘Comm onwealth Lite rature does not exis t’, in Imaginary Hom elands (London:
Granta Boo ks , 1991) pp. 61–70.
3. Meenaks hi Mukherjee, ‘Divided by a Common Language’, in The Perishable Empire (New
Delhi: OUP, 2000) pp.187–203.
4. Bruc e King, ‘Introduction’, in Modern Indian Poetry in English (New Delhi: OUP, 2nd edn, 20 05)
pp. 1–10.

C 4: British Poe try and Drama : 14th to 17th Centuries

1. Geoffre y Chauc er The Wife of Bath’s Prologue from The Canterberry Tales [4 c las s hours]
Edmund Spenser from Amoretti: Sonnet LXXV ‘One da y I wrote her name...’ [2 class hours ]
John Donne ‘The Sunne Rising’ [4 c lass hours]
Andrew Ma rvell ‘To His Coy Mistres s’ [3 class hours ]
2. Chris topher Marlowe Edward the Second [20 class hours ]
3. William Shakespeare Macbeth [20 c lass hours]
4. William Shakespeare As You Like It [17 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Pico Della Mirandola, excerpts from the Oration on the Dignity of Man, in The Porta ble
Renaissanc e Reader, ed. James Bruc e Ross and Mary Martin McLaughlin (New Yo rk:
Penguin Books, 1953) pp. 476–9.
2. John Calvin, ‘Predestination and Free Will’, in The Portable Renaiss ance Reader, ed. James
Bruce Ross and Mary Martin Mc Laughlin (New York: Penguin Boo ks , 1953) pp. 704–11.
3. Baldas sare Cas tiglione, ‘Long ing for Beauty’ and ‘Invocation of Love ’, in Book 4 of The Courtier,
‘Love and Beauty’, tr. George Bull (Harmonds worth: Penguin, rpt. 1983) pp. 324–8, 330–5.
4. Philip Sidney, An Apology for Poetry , ed. Forrest G. Robins on (Indianapolis: Bobbs -Merrill,
1970) pp. 13–18.

Se meste r III

C 5: Ame rican Literature

1. Tennessee Williams : The Glass Menagerie [18 class hours ]


2. Earnes t Hemingway The Old Man and the Sea [18 c lass hours]
3. Edgar Allan Poe ‘The Purloined Letter’ [8 clas s hours]
William Faulkne r ‘Dry September’ [8 c lass hours]
4. Anne Brads treet ‘The Pro logue’ [5 clas s hours]
Walt Whitman ‘O Captain, My Captain’ [4 clas s hours],
‘Pass age to India ’ (lines 1–68) [5 clas s hours]
Fros t ‘Road not taken’ [4 class hours ]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Hector St John Cre vecouer, ‘What is an American’, (Letter III) in Letters from an American
Farmer (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1982) pp. 66–105.
2. Frederick Douglass , A Narrativ e of the life of Frederick Douglass (Harmondsworth: Penguin,
1982) chaps. 1–7, pp. 47–87.
3. Henry David Thoreau, ‘Battle o f the Ants’ excerpt from ‘Brute Neighbours ’, in Walden (Oxford:
OUP, 1997) chap. 12.
4. Ralph Waldo Emers on, ‘Self Reliance’, in The Selected Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson, ed.
with a biographical introduction by Brooks Atkinson (New York: The Modern Library, 1964).
5. Toni Mo rrison, ‘Romancing the Shadow’, in Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and Literary
Imagination (London: Picador, 1993) pp. 29–39.

C 6: Popular Literature

1. Michael Crichton Congo [18 c lass hours]


2. Agatha Christie Mys terious Affairs at Styles [18 class hours ]
3. Jerome K Jerom e Three Men in a Boat [17 clas s hours]
4. Durgabai Vyam and Subhash Vyam Bhimayana: Experienc es of Untouchability OR,
Autobiographical Notes on Ambedkar (For the Vis ually Challenged s tudents) [17 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Chelva Kanaganayakam , ‘Dancing in the Rarefied Air: Reading Contemporary Sri Lankan
Literature’ (ARIEL, Jan. 1998) rpt, Ma lashri Lal, Alamgir Has hmi, and Victor J. Ram raj, eds., Pos t
Independence Voic es in South Asian Writings (Delhi: Doaba Public ations, 2001) pp. 51–65.
2. Sumathi Ramaswam y, ‘Introduc tion’, in Beyond Appearanc es?: Visual Practices and Ideologies
in Modern India (Sage: Delh i, 2003) pp. xiii–xxix.
3. Leslie Fiedler, ‘Towards a Defin ition of Popular Literature’, in Super Culture: American Popular
Culture and Europe, ed. C.W.E. Bigsby (Ohio: Bowling Green Un iversity Press , 1975) pp. 29–38 .
4. Felic ity Hughes , ‘Children’s Literatu re: Theory and Practice’, English Literary History, vo l. 45,
1978, pp. 542–61.

C 7: British Poe try and Drama : 17th and 18th Centuries

1. John Milton Paradise Los t: Book 1 [20 class hours ]


2. Olive r Go ldsm ith She Stoops to Conquer [18 class hours ]
3. Aphra Behn The Rov er [18 class hours ]
4. Alexander Pope The Rape of the Lock (Canto 1 & 2) [14 class hours ]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. The Ho ly Bible, Genes is, chaps . 1–4, The Gospel according to St. Luk e, chaps. 1–7 and 22–4.
2. Nicc olo Machiavelli, The Princ e, ed. and tr. Robert M. Adams (New York: Norton, 1992) chaps.
15, 16, 18, and 25 .
3. Thomas Hobbes , selec tions from The Leviathan, pt. I (New York: Norton, 2006) chaps . 8, 11,
and 13.
4. John Dryden, ‘A Disc ours e Concerning the Orig in and Progress of Satire ’, in The Norton
Anthology of English Literature, vol. 1, 9th edn, ed . Stephen Greenblatt (New York: Norton
2012) pp. 1767–8.

Se meste r IV

C 8: British Lite rature : 18th Ce ntury

1. Richard Steele ‘The Art of Story Telling’ [7 c lass hours ]


Joseph Addis on ‘Misc hiefs of Party Spirit’ [7 class hours ]
2. Jonathan Swift Gulliv er’s Trav els (Books I and II) [22 c las s hours]
3. Samuel Johns on ‘London’ [6 c lass hours ]
Thomas Gray ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churc hyard’ [6 class hours ]
4. Ho race Walpole The Cas tle of Orlanto. [22 class hours ]
Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Jeremy Collier, A Short Vie w of the Im morality and Profaneness of the English Stage (London:
Routledge, 1996).
2. Daniel Defoe, ‘The Complete English Tradesman’ (Letter XXII), ‘The Great Law of
Subordination Considered’ (Letter IV), and ‘The Complete English Gentlem an’, in Literature and
Social Order in Eighteenth-Century England, ed . Stephen Cople y (London: Croom Helm, 1984).
3. Samuel Johnson, ‘Es say 156’, in The Rambler, in Selected Writings: Samuel J ohns on, ed.
Peter Martin (Cambridge, Mass .: Harvard Univers ity Press , 2009) pp. 194–7; Rasselas Chapter
10; ‘Pope’s Intellectual Character: Pope and Dryden Compared’, from The Life of Pope, in The
Norton Anthology of English Literature, vol. 1 , ed. Stephen Greenblatt, 8th edn (New Yo rk:
Norton, 2006) pp. 2693–4, 2774–7.

C 9: British Romantic Lite rature

1. William Blake ‘The Chimney Sweeper’ (both the poems) [8 class hours ]
‘Holy Thursday’ (both the poems) [8 c las s hours]
Walter sc ott ‘Hunting Song’ [3 clas s hours]
2. William Wordsworth ‘Tintern Abbe y’ [7 class hours ]
Sam uel Ta ylor Coleridge ‘Kubla Khan’ [8 c lass hours]
3. Perc y Byss he Shelley ‘Ode to the Wes t Wind’, ‘Oz ymandias’ [9 class hours ]
John Keats ‘Ode to a Nightingale’, ‘On First Loo king into Chapm an’s Homer’ [9 class hours ]
4. Charles Lamb ‘Dream Children’, ‘Old China’ [9+9 class hours ]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. William Wordsworth, ‘Prefac e to Lyrical Ballads ’, in Rom antic Pros e and Poetry, ed. Harold
Bloom and Lionel Trilling (New York: OUP, 1973) pp . 594–611.
2. John Keats , ‘Lette r to George and Thomas Keats, 21 Dec ember 1817’, and ‘Letter to Richard
Woodhouse, 27 October, 1818’, in Romantic Prose and Poetry, ed. Harold B loom and Lionel
Trilling (New York: OUP, 1973) pp. 766–68, 777–8.
3. Jean-Jac ques Rousseau, ‘Prefac e’ to Em ile or Education, tr. Allan B loom (Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1991).
4. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Biographia Literaria, ed . George Wats on (London: Everyman, 19 93)
chap. XIII, pp. 161–66.

C 10: British Literature: 19th Century

1. Jane Aus ten Pride and Prejudic e [18 c las s hours]


2. Charles Dic kens Hard Times [18 c lass hours]
3. Thomas Hardy The Return of the Nativ e [18 c lass hours]
4. Alfred Tenn ys on ‘Ulyss es ’ [6 c lass hours ]
Robert Browning ‘My Las t Duchess’ [7 class hours ]
Matthew Arnold ‘Dover Beach’ [3 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, ‘Mode of Production: The Bas is of Social Life’, ‘The Social
Nature o f Consciousness’, and ‘Class es and Ideology’, in A Reader in Marx is t Philos ophy, ed.
Howard Sels am and Harry Martel (New Yo rk: International Publis hers ,1963) pp. 186–8, 190–1,
199–201.
2. Charles Darwin, ‘Natural Selection and Sexual Selection’, in The Desc ent of Man in The Norton
Anthology of Englis h Literature , 8th edn, vol. 2, ed . Stephen Greenblatt (New York: Northon,
2006) pp. 1545–9.
3. John S tuart Mill, The Subjection of Women in Norton Anthology of Englis h Literature, 8th e dn,
vol. 2, ed. Stephen Greenblatt (New York: Norton, 2006) c hap. 1, pp. 1061–9.

Se meste r V

C 11: Wo men’s Writing

1. Emily Dic kinson ‘I cannot live with you’, ‘Becaus e I c ould not s top for death’. [3+3 class hours ]
Sylvia Pla th ‘Lad y Lazarus’ [3 class hours]
Eunice De Souza ‘Advice to Women’, ‘Bequest’ [3+3 c lass hours]
2. Ha rriet Beecher Stowe Unc le Tom’s Cabin [18 c lass hours]
3. Katherine Mans field ‘Honeymoon’ [7 clas s hours]
Jhumpa Lahiri ‘Interp reter of Maladies' [7 class hours]
Mahas hweta Devi ‘The Hunt’, tr. Gayatri Chakra vorty Spiva k (Seagull, 2002) [7 class hours ]
4. Virginia Woolf ‘Shakes peare’s Sis ters’, Profes sion for Woman’. [6+5 class hours]
Rass undari Debi Exc erpts from Amar J iban in Sus ie Tharu and K. Lalita, eds. Women’s Writing
in India, vol. 1 (New Delh i: OUP, 1989) pp. 191–2. [5 c las s hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own (New York: Harc ourt, 1957) chaps . 1 and 6.
2. Simone de Beauvoir, ‘Introduction’, in The Second Sex , tr. Cons tanc e Borde and Shiela
Ma lo vany-Chevallier (London: Vintage, 2010) pp. 3–18.
3. Kumkum Sangari and Sudesh Vaid, eds., ‘Introduction’, in Recasting Women: Ess ays in
Colonial His tory (New Delhi: Kali for Women, 1989) pp. 1–25.
4. Chandra Talapade Mohanty, ‘Under Wes tern Eyes: Feminist Sc holarship and Colonial
Disc ourses ’, in Contem porary Pos tcolonial Theory : A Reader, ed. Padmini Mongia (New York:
Arnold, 1996) pp. 172–97.

C 12: British Literature: The Early 20th Century

1. Joseph Conrad The Secret Agent [18 c lass hours]


2. D.H. Lawrenc e ‘Odour of Chrysenthamums ’ [7 c lass hours]
Somerset Maugham ‘The Lotus Eater’ [7 class hours ]
3. James Joyc e A Portrait of an Artis t as a Young Man. [20 class hours ]
4. W.B. Yeats ‘The Sec ond Com ing’, ‘Sailing to Byzantium’ [4+4 class hours]
T.S. Eliot ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’, ‘The Hollow Men’ [5+5 clas s hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Sigmund Freud, ‘Theory of Dreams ’, ‘Oedipus Com plex’, and ‘The Struc ture of the
Unc onsc ious ’, in The M odern Tradition, ed. Ric hard Ellman et. al. (Oxford: OUP, 1965) pp.
571, 578–80, 559–63.
2. T.S. Eliot, ‘Tradition and the Individual Talent’, in Norton Anthology of Englis h Literature, 8th
edn, vol. 2, ed. Stephen Greenbla tt (New York: Norton, 2006) pp. 2319–25.
3. Raymond Williams, ‘Introduc tion’, in The English Novel from Dickens to Lawrence (London:
Hogarth Pres s, 1984) pp. 9–27.
Se meste r VI

C 13: Mode rn European Drama

1. Henrik Ibsen A Doll’s House [17 class hours]


2. Berto lt Brec ht The Good Woman of Szec huan [18 class hours]
3. Samuel Beckett Waiting for Godot [17 class hours ]
4. Tom Stoppard Rosenc rantz and Guildenstern are Dead. [18 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Cons tantin Stanislavski, An Actor Prepares , c hap. 8, ‘Faith and the Sens e of Truth’, tr. Eliz abeth
Reynolds Hapgood (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1967) sections 1, 2, 7, 8, 9 , pp. 121–5, 137–46.
2. Bertolt Brecht, ‘The Street Scene’, ‘Theatre for Pleasure or Theatre fo r Instruc tion’, a nd
‘Dramatic Theatre vs Epic Theatre’, in Brec ht on Theatre: The Development of an Aesthetic ,
ed. and tr. John Willet (London: Methuen, 1992) pp. 68–76, 121–8.
3. George Steiner, ‘On Modern Tragedy’, in The Death of Tragedy (London: Faber, 1995) pp. 303–
24.

C 14: Postcolonial Literatures

1. Chinua Achebe Things Fall Apart [18 c lass hours]


2. Gabriel Garcia Marquez Chronic le of a Death Foretold [18 c lass hours ]
3. Bess ie Head ‘The Collector of Treas ures ’ [6 c lass hours]
Ama Ata Aidoo ‘The Girl who can’ [6 clas s hours]
Grac e Ogot ‘The Green Leaves’ [6 c lass hours]
4. Pablo Neruda ‘Tonight I c an Write’ [4 c lass hours]
Derek Walc ott ‘A Far Cry from Africa’ [4 c lass hours]
David Ma louf ‘Wild Lemons ’ [4 c lass hours]
Mamang Dai ‘The Voic e of the Mounta in’ [4 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Background Readings:

1. Franz Fanon, ‘The Negro and Language’, in Blac k Skin, White Masks , tr. Charles Lam
Markmann (London: Pluto Pres s, 2008) pp. 8–27.
2. Ngugi wa Thiong’o, ‘The Language of Afric an Litera ture’, in Decolonis ing the Mind (London:
James Curry, 1986) chap. 1, sections 4–6.
3. Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the Nobel Prize Acc eptanc e Speec h, in Gabriel Garcia Marquez: N ew
Readings, ed. Bernard McGuirk and Richard Cardwell (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press , 1987).
Discipline Centric Ele ctive Course s
(Any four courses for the English Honours stude nts, two each for semeste rs V & VI)

DSE-1: History o f English Literature (OE to 1798)


DSE-2: History o f English Literature (1798 to present)
DSE-3: Literary Critic is m
DSE-4: Modern Indian Writing in Englis h Translation
DSE-5: Science Fiction and Detec tive L iterature

De taile d syllabi

DSE-1: History of English Lite rature (OE to 1798)

1. OE to 1550 [17 class hours ]


2. 1550 to 1625 [18 c lass hours]
3. 1625 to 1700 [17 c lass hours]
4. 1700 to 1798 [18 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Readings :

1. George Sampson A Concis e Cam bridge History of English Literature


2. A.C. Baugh A Lite rary History o f England
3. Boris Ford (Ed) The Ne w Pelican Guide to English Literature: Vols 1-10
4. An thon y To yne An English Reader’s His tory of England
5. Davis Daiches A Critical His tory of Englis h Literature

DSE-2: History of English Lite rature (1798 to present)

1. Romantic age [17 class hours ]


2. Vic torian age [17 c lass hours]
3. Modern age [18 clas s hours ]
4. Post 1950s [18 class hours ]

Sugges ted Readings :

1. George Sampson A Concis e Cam bridge History of English Literature


2. A.C. Baugh A Lite rary History o f England
3. Boris Ford (Ed) The Ne w Pelican Guide to English Literature: Vols 1-10
4. An thon y To yne An English Reader’s His tory of England
5. Davis Daiches A Critical His tory of Englis h Literature

DSE-3: Lite rary Criticism

1. Wordsworth: Preface to Lyrical Ballads (1802) [8 c lass hours]


Coleridge: Biographia Litera ria (Chapters XIII & XIV) [9 c las s hours]
2. Virginia Woolf: ‘Modern Fiction’ [9 class hours ]
T.S. Eliot: ‘Tradition and Ind ividual Talent’ (1919) [9 class hours ]
3. I.A. Ric hards: Principles of Literary Criticism (Chapters 1 & 2). [17 class hours]
4. Cleanth Brooks: “The Heres y of Paraphrase”, and “The Language of Paradox” in The Well-
Wrought Urn: Studies in the Structure of Poetry (1947) [9+9 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Readings :

1. C.S. Lewis: Introduction in An Experiment in Critic ism, Cambridge University Pres s 1992
2. M.H. Abram s: The Mirror and the Lamp, Oxford University Press,!971
3. Rene Welle k, Stephen G. Nic holas: Concepts of Criticism, Connecticut, Yale University 1963
4. Taylor and Francis Eds . An Introduction to Literature, Critic ism and Theory , Routledge, 1996

DSE-4: Mode rn Indian Writing in English Translation

1. Tagore: ‘Hungry Stone’ [4 c lass hours]


Premchand ‘The Shroud’, in Penguin Book of Clas sic Urdu Stories, ed. M. Ass aduddin (New
Delhi: Penguin/Viking, 2006). [4 class hours]
Ismat Chugtai ‘The Quilt’, in Lifting the Veil: Selected Writings of Is mat Chugtai, tr. M.
As saduddin (New Delhi: Penguin Books, 2009). [4 clas s hours]
Fakir Mohan Senapati ‘Rebati’, in Oriy a Stories , ed. Vid ya Das, tr. Kishori Charan Das (Delhi:
Srishti Publishers, 2000). [4 c las s hours]
2. Tagore ‘L ight, Oh Where is the L ight?' and 'When My Pla y was with thee', in Gitanja li: A N ew
Translation with an Introduc tion by William Radice (New Delhi: Penguin India, 2011). [3+3 class
hours]
G.M. Muktibodh ‘The Void’, (tr. Vina y Dharwadker) and ‘So Very Far’, (tr. Tr. Vishnu Khare and
Adil Juss awala), in The Ox ford Anthology of Modern Indian Poetry, ed. Vina y Dharwadker and
A.K. Ram anujam (New Delhi: OUP, 2000). [3+3 clas s hours]
Amrita Pritam ‘I Say Un to Waris Shah’, (tr. N.S. Tasneem) in Modern Indian Literature: An
Anthology, Plays and Prose, Surveys and Poems , ed. K.M. George, vol. 3 (Delhi: Sahitya
Akademi, 1992). [3 c lass hours]
3. Vijay Tendulkar: Silenc e! The Court is in Sess ion. [19 c lass hours]
4. Nabarun Bhattacharya: Harbart [20 c lass hours]

Sugges ted Readings :

1. Namwar Singh, ‘Decolonis ing the Indian Mind’, tr. Haris h Trivedi, Ind ian Literatu re, no. 1 51
(Sept./Oc t. 1992).
2. B.R. Ambedkar, Annihilation o f Caste in Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar: Writings and Speeches, vol.
1 (Maharas htra: Education Department, Go vernment of Maharashtra, 1979) c haps. 4, 6 & 14.
3. Sujit Mukherjee , ‘A Link L ite rature for Ind ia’, in Translation as Disc ov ery (Hyderabad : Orient
Longman, 1994) pp. 34–45.
4. G.N. Devy, ‘Introduction’, from After Amnes ia in The G.N. Devy Reader (New Delhi: Orient
Blac kSwan, 2009) pp. 1–5.

DSE-5: Science Fiction and Dete ctive Literature

1. Mary Shelle y Fran kens tein [18 c lass hours]


2. H.G. Wells: The Invisible Man [17 class hours ]
3. Arthur Conan Doyle A Study in Sc arlet [18 class hours ]
4. G.K. Chesterton The Blue Cross [17 class hours ]

Sugges ted Readings :

1. J. Edmund Wils on, ‘Who Cares Who Killed Roger Ac kroyd?’, The New Yorker, 20 June 1945.
2. George Orwell, Raffles and Miss Blandis h, available at:
<www.georgeorwell.org/Raffles_and_Mis s_Blandish/0.html>
3. W.H. Auden , The Guilty Vic arage, available at:
<harpers .org/arc hive/1948/05/theguilty-vicarage/>
4. Raymond Chandler, ‘The Simple Art of Murder’, Atlantic Monthly, Dec. 1944, available at:
<http://www.en.ute xas.edu/amlit/amlitprivate/s cans/c handlerart.html
Ge neric Elective (GE) papers (English)
(for UG Honours students other than English)

English-1: Se le ction from English Prose and Poe ms

1. Hemingway : The Snows of Kilim anjaro [15 class hours ]


2. Katherine Mansfield : A Cup of Tea [15 c lass hours]
3. Shakespeare : Julius Caesar: The Forum Scene. [15 class hours]
4. Milton : On His Blindness [4 c lass hours]
Wordsworth : The World is Too Much with Us [4 clas s hours]
Wilfred Owen : The Send-off [3 class hours ]
Nis sim Ez ekiel : The Railwa y Cle rk [4 c lass hours]

English-2: Se le ction from English Prose and Poe ms

1. R.K. Narayan : Engine Trouble [10 clas s hours]


2. H.E. Bates : The Ox [20 class hours ]
3. Lad y Gregory : The Ris ing of the Moon [20 class hours ]
4. Shakes peare : Sonnet no.18 – Shall I Compare Thee [5 clas s hours]
Shelley : To Moon [5 c lass hours]
Tennyson : Crossing the bar [5 class hours ]
W.B. Yeats : La ke Isle of Inn isfree [5 c lass hours ]
Two Compulsory Core Course
(For all BA/ BCom (Re gular) students, irrespective of English chosen as one of the two
Disciplines)

English 1: Poetry

1. Shakes peare : Sonnet no.18 – Shall I Compare Thee


John Milton : On His Blindness
2. Wordsworth : The World is Too Muc h with Us
Keats : To One Who Has Long Been City Pent
Shelle y : To Moon
3. Tennys on : Crossing the Bar
Owen : The Send-off
Yeats : The Lake Isle of Inn is free
4. HL V Derozio : To the Pupils of Hindu College
Tagore : Where the Mind is Without Fear
Ez ekiel : The Railway Clerk

English-2: Prose

1. O. Henry : The Gift of the Magi


2. No rman Mc Kinnel : The Bishop’s Candles tic ks
3. Charles Lamb : Dream Children: A Re verie
4. Ha rold Nicholson : The Art of Living
Four Discipline Spe cific Core Courses (DSC)
(For BA (Regular) students, opting for English as one of the two Disc iplines )

Se meste r I

DSC 1A: The Individual and Society.

Selections from Vinod Sood, e t. al., eds .,The Indiv idual and Soc iety: Essays, Stories and
Poems (Delhi: Pears on, 2005).

Se meste r II

DSC 1B: Sele ctions (poems, short storie s) from Mode rn Indian Literature

Cultural Diversity. Eds. Sukrita Paul Kumar, Mac millan

Se meste r III

DSC 1C: British Lite rature : Nove l, Play

Charles Dic kens : Oliver Twist


William Sha kespeare: The Merc hant of Venice

Se meste r IV

DSC 1D: Literary Cross Currents:

Selections from Living Literatures- An Anthology of Prose and Poetry Eds .Vinay Sood, et al.
Orient Longman, Novella, Play

Short Stories: Premc hand, 'The Holy Panchayat'


R.K. Narayan, 'The M.C.C.'
Vaikom Muhammad Bas heer , 'The Card-Sharper's Daughter'
Saadat Hasan Manto, 'Toba Tek Singh'
Ambai, 'Squirre l'
Is mat Chugtai, 'Lihaaf' /'The s acred Duty'
Nove lla : Rohinton Mis try---Suc h a Long Journey

OR

T he four specific Eng lish Ho nou rs C ore course s viz.

C 7. Britis h Poetry and Drama: 17th and 18th Centuries


C 8. Britis h Literature : 18th Century
C 9. Britis h Romantic Literature
C 11. Women’s Writing
T wo Discip lin e Spe cific Elective Cou rses (DS E)
[For BA (Regular) students, opting for English as one of the two Disc iplines ]

Se meste r V

DS E-1A: So ft Skills

Teamwork
Emotional Inte lligenc e
Adaptability
Leadership
Problem solving

Sugges ted Readings :

1. English and Soft Skills. S.P. Dhanavel. Orient Blac kSwan 2013
2. English for Students of Comm erce: Precis, Com position, Essays, Poems eds . Kaushik,et a l.

Se meste r VI

DS E-1B: Acade mic Writing

1. Introduction to the Writing Process


2. Introduction to the Con ventions of Ac ademic Writing
3. Writing in one’s own words: Summ ariz ing and Paraphras ing
4. Critic al Thin king: Syn thes es , Analyses , and Evaluation
5. Struc turing an Argument: Introduc tion, Interjection, and Conclus ion
6. Citing Resources; Editing, Book and Media Review

Su ggested Reading s
1. Liz Hamp-Lyons and Ben Heas ley, Study writing: A Course in Writing Skills for Ac ademic
Purpos es (Cambridge: CUP, 2006).
2. Renu Gupta , A Course in Academic Writing (New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan, 2010).
3. Ilona Leki, Ac ademic Writing: Exploring Proc esses and Strategies (New York: CUP, 2nd e dn,
1998).
4. Gerald Graff and Cathy Birkens tein, They Say/I Say: The M oves That M atter in Ac ademic
Writing (New York: Norton, 2009).
Ab ility Enh an cement Elective Cou rse (AEE C) / Skill Enh anceme nt Cou rses (SEC)

(Two courses to be s tudied by Englis h Honours students or BA Regular s tudents who opt Englis h
as one of the two Dis ciplines)

SEC 1. Englis h Language Teaching


SEC 2. Bus iness Communication

SE C 1: Eng lish Langu age Teach in g

1. Knowing the Learner


2. Struc tures of English Language
3. Methods of teac hing Englis h Language and Literature
4. Mate ria ls for Language Teaching
5. As sess ing Language Skills
6. Us ing Technology in Language Teac hing

Sugges ted Readings :

1. Penny Ur, A Cours e in Language Teac hing: Practice and Theory (Cam bridge: CUP, 1996).
2. Marianne Celce-Murcia, Donna M. Brinton, and Ma rguerite Ann Snow, Teaching English as a
Second or Foreign Language (Delhi: Cengage Learning, 4th edn, 2014).
3. Adrian Doff, Teac h Englis h: A Training Course For Teachers (Teacher’s Work book )
(Cambridge: CUP, 1988).
4. Business Englis h (New Delhi: Pearson, 2008).
5. R.K. Bansal and J.B. Harris on, Spok en Englis h: A Manual of Speech and Phonetics (New Delhi:
Orient BlackSwan, 4th edn, 2013).
6. Moham mad Aslam , Teac hing of Englis h (New Delhi: CUP, 2nd edn, 2009).

SE C 2: Busin ess Commun ication

1. Introduction to the es sentials of Business Communic ation: Theory and prac tic e
2. Citing references, and us ing bibliographic al and research tools
3. Writing a project report
4. Writing reports on field work/visits to industries, business concerns etc . /business negotiations.
5. Summarizing annual report of com panies
6. Writing minutes of meetings
7. E-correspondence

Sugges ted Readings :

1. Sc ot, O.; Contemporary Business Communication. Biz tantra, New Delhi.


2. Lesikar, R.V. & Fla tle y, M.E.; Basic Business Communication Skills for Empo wering the Internet
Generation, Tata Mc Graw Hill Publis hing Company Ltd. New Delh i.
3. Ludlow, R. & Panton, F.; The Essence of Effective Communic ations, Prentice Hall of India Pvt.
Ltd., New Delhi.
4. R. C. Bhatia , Business Communic ation, Ane Books Pvt Ltd, New Delhi
Ab ility Enh an cement Compulsor y Cou rse (AEC C)

En glish Co mmun ication


(All BA/BSc / BCom s tudents, Honours/Regular, choosing this course and not MIL Communication)

The purpose of this c ours e is to introduc e students to the theory, fundamentals and tools of
communication and to develop in them vital c ommunication skills which s hould be integral to
personal, social and profess ional inte ractions.
In the c ontext of rapid globaliz ation and inc reas ing rec ognition of social and c ultural pluralities, the
significance of c lear and effec tive communication has subs tantially enhanc ed. The present c ours e
hopes to address this as pects through an interac tive mode of teac hing-learning process and by
foc us ing on va rious dim ens ions of communication skills . Some of these are:
1. Language of c ommunication
2. Speaking s kills such as personal communication, soc ial interac tions and c ommunic ation
in profess ional s ituations such as interviews , group discuss ions and office environments
3. Important reading skills as well as writing skills s uch as report writing, note- ta king etc.
The rec ommended readings given at the end are only sugges tive. Students and teachers have the
freedom to cons ult other materials on various units /topics given below.

De taile d syllab i:

Introduction:
1. Theory of Communic ation,
2. Types and modes of Comm unic ation

Language of Communication:
1. Ve rbal and Non-ve rbal (Spoken and Written)
2. Pers onal, Soc ial and Bus iness
3. Barriers and Strategies
4. Intra-pers onal, Inter-pers onal and Group communication

Speaking Skills:
1. Monologue
2. Dialogue
3. Group Disc ussion
4. Effec tive Communication/ Mis -Communic ation
5. Interview
6. Public Speech

Reading and Unders tanding:


1. Clos e Reading Comprehension
2. Summary Paraphras ing
3. Analys is and Interpre tation
4. Translation(from Indian language to English and vice-versa) Literary/Knowledge Texts

Writing Skills:
1. Documenting Report Writing
2. Ma king notes
3. Lette r writing

Referenc e Books
Fluency in English - Part II, Oxford University Pres s, 2006.
Business Englis h, Pearson, 2008.
Language, Litera ture and Creativity, Orient Blac ks wan, 2013.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy