Studies in Satire
English 556, Spring 2010
Go directly to:
January
February
March
April
Office: (973) 353-5204; 516 Hill Hall.
Hours: Monday and Wednesday, 2:304:00, and by
appointment (appointments are best).
Home: (609) 882-4642 (before 10:00 p.m.!).
E-mail: jlynch @
andromeda.rutgers.edu (the best way to reach me).
Listserv: StudiesInSatire @
andromeda.rutgers.edu (for the whole class)
Course Requirements
- Written Assignments: There will be two argumentative
and analytical papers, the first of around ten pages (2,500
words), the second either a new paper of around
ten pages, or an expansion of your first paper to
fifteen to twenty pages (3,500 to 5,000 words).
- Readings: The readings will be pretty heavy and
therefore, I'm afraid, a little expensive though not, I
hope, unmanageable. I've picked the cheapest reputable editions I
can find, and those who've looked at the reading list for the
M.A. Exam will note that I've drawn many works from it. The
following books are, or will soon be, available from New Jersey Books (not
the Rutgers Bookstore). If you already own editions of these
books, there's no need to buy them again; if you don't, though,
try to get these editions:
- Thomas More, Utopia, ed. Sacks, Bedford,
ISBN 0312101459, $15.75.
- Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels, ed. DeMaria,
Penguin, ISBN 0141439491, $8.00.
- Jonathan Swift, A Tale of a Tub, ed. Ross and
Woolley, Oxford, ISBN 0199549788, $10.95.
- Samuel Johnson, Rasselas, ed. Richard,
Broadview, ISBN 1551116014, $16.95.
- Voltaire, Candide and Related Writings, ed.
Wootton, Hackett, ISBN 0872205460, $6.95.
- Jane Austen, Emma, ed. Kinsley, Oxford, ISBN
0199535523, $7.95.
- Thomas Carlyle, Sartor Resartus, ed. McSweeney
and Sabor, Oxford, ISBN 0199540373, $12.95.
- Mark Twain, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's
Court, Modern Library, ISBN 0375757805, $8.95.
- Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49, Harper
Perennial, ISBN 0061849928, $10.00.
Other materials are available either on-line (linked from this
syllabus) or through Dana Library's on-line reserve system.
Schedule of Class Meetings
- Wednesday, 20 Jan.
- Introduction: Class business,
&c.
- Wednesday, 27 Jan.
- Horace, Satires 1.9,
2.1,
2.2,
and 2.6;
Juvenal, Satires 6
and 10;
Ulrich Knoche, "Satire: A Roman Literary Genre" and "Origin and
Name of the Satura."
- Wednesday, 3 Feb.
- Thomas More, Utopia;
Robert C. Elliott, "The Shape of Utopia."
- Wednesday, 10 Feb.
- John Dryden, A
Discourse concerning the Original and Progress of
Satire (abridged).
- Wednesday, 17 Feb.
- John Donne, Satyr
4; Alexander Pope, "The
First Satire of the Second Book of Horace, Imitated," and "The
Second Satire of the Second Book of Horace, Paraphrased";
Samuel Johnson, The
Vanity of Human Wishes; Dustin Griffin, "Theories of
Satire in Polemical Context."
- Wednesday, 24 Feb.
- John Dryden, Mac
Flecknoe and Absalom
and Achitophel; John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, "Satyr
upon Charles II," "Signor
Dildo," "Satyr
against Reason and Mankind"; Wayne C. Booth, "The Ways of
Stable Irony."
- Wednesday, 3 March
- Alexander Pope, The
Rape of the Lock, Epistle
to Arbuthnot; Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, "Verses
Addressed to the Imitator of Horace"; Howard D. Weinbrot,
"Masked Men and Satire and Pope."
- Wednesday, 10 March
- Jonathan Swift, A Tale of a
Tub, "Cassinus
and Peter," "Strephon
and Chloe," "A
Beautiful Young Nymph Going to Bed," "The
Lady's Dressing Room"; Robert C. Elliott, "Swift's Satire:
Rules of the Game." First Paper Due.
- Wednesday, 17 March
- No Class: Spring Break.
- Wednesday, 24 March
- Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's
Travels, "Verses
on the Death of Dr. Swift"; Louis I. Bredvold, "The Gloom of
the Tory Satirists."
- Wednesday, 31 March
- Samuel Johnson, Rasselas;
Voltaire, Candide;
James F. Woodruff, "Rasselas and the Traditions of
'Menippean Satire.'"
- Wednesday, 7 April
- Jane Austen, Emma;
David P. Demarest, "Reductio ad Absurdum: Jane Austen's
Art of Satiric Qualification."
- Wednesday, 14 April
- Thomas Carlyle, Sartor
Resartus; Anne K. Mellor, "Carlyle's Sartor
Resartus: A Self-Consuming Artifact"; Wayne C. Booth,
"Reconstructing the Unconstructable."
- Wednesday, 21 April
- Mark Twain, A
Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court; Everett
Carter, "The Meaning of A Connecticut
Yankee."
- Wednesday, 28 April
- Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49; Theodore
D. Kharpertian, "Thomas Pynchon and Postmodern American Satire";
Wayne C. Booth, "Infinite Instabilities." Final Paper
Due.