Crime and Punishment in American Literature (352:351) Spring 2010
Professor H. Bruce Franklin Office: Hill 515. Phone:
353-5444. Office hours: Mon. 1:00-2:00; Wed. 2:30-3:30; and by appointment.
E-mail: hbf@andromeda.rutgers.edu
Web page: http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~hbf
REQUIRED TEXTS: (Editions listed
are those ordered at
Narrative
of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave. Penguin.
Herman Melville, Billy Budd & Other Stories. Barnes
& Noble Classics. (OK to substitute as long as text for Billy
Budd, Sailor is the one edited by Hayford and Sealts.)
Upton Sinclair, The Jungle. New American Library.
Dashiell Hammett, Red Harvest. Vintage paperback.
Neal Stephenson, Zodiac. Bantam or Grove.
H. Bruce Franklin, Prison Writing in 20th-Century
Tim O'Brien, In the
Donald Goines, Dopefiend.
All
Héctor Tobar. The Tattooed Soldier. Penguin.
[RECOMMENDED Any
one of the following widely available books would be very helpful in
understanding the prison system in
Scott
Christianson, With
David Cole, No Equal Justice: Race and Class in the American Criminal
Justice System.
New Press.
Elliott Currie, Crime and Punishment in
Joy James, States of Confinement. Palgrave.
Christian Parenti, Lockdown
Jeffrey Reiman, The Rich Get Richer and the
Poor Get Prison. Allyn & Bacon.
Daniel Burton Rose, Dan Pens, and Paul Wright, eds., The Celling of
look at the
Elihu Rosenblatt, ed., Criminal
Injustice: Confronting the Prison Crisis. South End
Press.]
Assignments must be completed by the indicated dates:
January 27 Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of an American Slave. (1845)
February 1 Herman Melville, "Benito Cereno" (1855)
February 3 Herman Melville, "Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street" (1853)
February 8 Herman Melville, Billy Budd, Sailor (1891)
February 15 Upton Sinclair, The Jungle (1906)
February 17
In Prison Writing in 20th-Century
Foreword by Tom
Wicker
Editor's Introduction
"Autobiography of an Imprisoned Peon" (1904)
Songs of the Prison
"Go Down Old Hannah"
"Midnight Special"
"Easy Rider"
February 22
In Prison Writing in 20th-Century
Jack London
"'Pinched': A Prison Experience" and "The Pen" (1907)
Agnes Smedley "Cell
Mates" (1920)
Kate Richards O'Hare from Crime and Criminals
(1921)
Patricia McConnel
"Sing Soft, Sing Loud" (1989)
March 1 Dashiell Hammett, Red Harvest (1929)
March 3
See the movie
March 8
In Prison Writing in 20th-Century
Malcolm X
from The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965)
Etheridge Knight "The Warden Said to Me
the Other Day" (1968)
"Hard Rock Returns to Prison
from the Hospital for the Criminal Insane" (1968)
George Jackson from Soledad Brother (1970)
Mshaka "Formula for Attica
Repeats" (1974)
March 10
In Prison Writing in 20th-Century
Jack Abbott
from In the Belly of the Beast (1981)
Edward Bunker from Little Boy Blue (1981)
March 22 Donald Goines, Dopefiend (1971)
March 24
In Prison Writing in 20th-Century
Norma Stafford "In
"The Gone One" (1973)
William Wantling
"from Sestina to San Quentin" (1973)
"Poetry" (1973)
"Who's Bitter?" (1973)
Carolyn Baxter "
"35 Years a Correctional
Officer" (1979)
"On Being Counted" (1979)
Kathy Boudin
"Our Skirt" (1997)
"The Call" (1997)
Jerome Washington
"Diamond Bob" (1994)
"The Blues Merchant" (1994)
"Nobody's Hoss" (1994)
"Barracuda and Sheryl" (1994)
"Shing-a-Ling and
March 29 In Prison
Writing in 20th-Century
Jimmy Santiago Baca "The New Warden" (1979)
"The
"Past Present"
(1992)
Assata Shakur
from Assata (1987)
Nathan C. Heard from House of Slammers (1983)
Dannie Martin
"AIDS: The View from a Prison Cell" (1986)
"A Prescription for Torture" (1990)
"A
Mumia Abu-Jamal
"B-Block Days and Nightmares" (1990)
"
"Already Out of the Game" (1994)
April 5 Neal Stephenson, Zodiac (1988)
April
14 Tim O'Brien, In the
April 26 Héctor Tobar, The Tattooed Soldier (1998)
May 3 Final day for submission of original short story or essay (minimum length 2,500 words). Do not leave the writing or printing of this project for the last minute. A hard copy is due in class. You must also submit a digitized copy, either on a disk or by e-mail, within 24 hours of this class.
There will be frequent brief tests on the readings, usually on the day they are due. These are not meant to be ambushes but aids for reading and for our discussion. There will be a final examination but no mid-term.
In determining the grade for the course, approximately equal weight will be given to (1) the brief tests, (2) the short story or essay, and (3) the final examination. In addition, each student's work will be evaluated on overall performance, with attention given to attendance, participation in discussion, and the level of knowledge and understanding ultimately reached.
Instructions for Writing Project
The essay or short story you are writing for this course is an opportunity for an original, valuable achievement. Think of it as something you are preparing for publication. That is, you are addressing an audience of reasonably intelligent strangers whom you must entice to read your work and who should be convinced after they have read it that it was well worth their time. Most questions about form and content can be answered easily if you put yourself in your readers' shoes. The essay or story should also contribute to our understanding of some aspect of the subject matter of the course.
The minimum length is 2,500 words. If you are having difficulty reaching this length, you can be sure there is some problem in your conception and development of your essay or story.
On proper use and
acknowledgement of sources, be sure you have a copy of the
The physical appearance of your work should be attractive and professional looking. It should be double-spaced throughout, and the print should be very black (not gray and faded) and pleasant to read. There is no adequate excuse for frequent errors in spelling, punctuation, or grammar. So allow yourself ample time for spell checking and proofreading.
Extensions without penalty will be granted only for medical or other emergencies. Be sure to keep a back-up copy of your paper. Barring any catastrophe, the graded paper will be returned to you at the time of the final examination. The comments on your paper (which may be extensive) are intended for your benefit, not as a rationale for the grade; please study them with care.