|
Children's Literature
Studies at EMU
|Department of English Language
and Literature|Pray-Harrold Hall|Ypsilanti, MI|48197|
Literature 137: Harry Potter:
Literary Allusion, Children’s Literature, and Popular
Culture
General Education Knowledge of the Disciplines Humanities
Course
Professor: Dr. Annette Wannamaker
Office: 603L Pray Harrold
Office Hours: 12:15-2 p.m. Mon/Wed and5-6:30
p.m. Tuesdays
Email: awannamak@emich.edu
Personal Web Page: people.emich.edu/awannnamak
Children’s Lit Web page: http://www.emich.edu/public/english/childlit
Graduate Assistant: Jennifer
Filion
Office: 607F Pray Harrold
Office Hours: 10-11 a.m. Mondays and 12-1
p.m. Fridays
Course Description and Rationale: What is the purpose of
this course?
Since the books in the Harry Potter series are children’s
texts and a cultural phenomenon, they also have become symbols
in larger cultural battles over religious values, literacy,
and the role of children’s literature in shaping the
next generation’s beliefs about gender, social class,
race, imperialism, capitalism, and spirituality. This makes
these books an ideal model to use in a classroom to illustrate
the relevance of literature and literary studies to society.
A close study of these novels as complex literary works that
have roots in classic literature, as cultural phenomena, and
as the objects of public debates can highlight for students
all that is at stake in literary interpretation and cultural
production. Therefore, students in this course will explore
questions such as: Do the books have literary value, or are
they just commercial products? Are the books dangerous for
children to read, or do they benefit children? Where is the
line between literature, media, and mass-produced products,
and should there/can there be a line? Why are these books
so popular, and what does their popularity tell us about who
we are and what we, as a culture, believe ourselves to be?
Course Outcomes: What material will be covered? How will
material be covered? What are students expected to learn?
In order to think critically about these, and other questions,
the class will read some of the novels in the series; classic
literature, myths, folk tales, and legends alluded to in the
novels; and articles covering some of the public and academic
debates about the novels. Students will take reading quizzes,
will take two exams, and will write a position paper, and
will work in groups to research an assigned topic, assignments
that will require them to synthesize various ideas and to
apply what they have learned to their own interpretations
of the books. Ideally, by the end of the course, students
will have a better understanding of literary terms and concepts;
of the significance of literary allusion; of the role of literature
in contemporary culture; of the debates that experts have
about such issues as literary merit or ideology in literature;
and of the ways that both the form and the role of literature
are evolving within the context of Twenty-first Century global
capitalism.
Students must demonstrate competence
in each of the following outcomes to successfully complete
the course:
- Students will discuss and write about current public debates
about the novels, which can lead to an empathic understanding
of other points of view and can demonstrate for students the
role of literature in society,
- Students will learn basic literary terms and concepts and
learn to apply these to written literary analysis,
- Students will discuss and write about current debates in
the field of children’s literary studies,
- Students will learn to develop their own interpretations
of various literary texts in discussion and through informal
and formal writing assignments,
- Students will engage with a study of literature within a
specific cultural context and the ways that context affects
and reflects the meaning of a text,
- Students will learn to understand and analyze the books
in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series as complex, inter-textual
works of literature that borrow heavily from classical texts,
mythology, legend, and folktales, and
- Students will learn about and engage in current public debates
about the role of the humanities in contemporary culture,
and by writing about these issues in a variety of formats,
students will complete the course having gained a better understanding
of the roles of literature in society, of what is at stake
in the interpretation of a literary work, and of the ways
that literary texts function as cultural artifacts.
Required Texts and Materials:
Books: (Books and Course Packet available
at Mike’s Book Store)
- Colbert, David. The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter
(second edition, “revised and updated”) Wrightsville,
N.C.: Lumina Press, 2004.
- Rowling, J.K. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s
Stone. New York: Scholastic, 1997.
- -----. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
New York: Scholastic, 1999.
- -----. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. New
York: Scholastic, 2000.
- LITR 137 Course Packet: Contains academic essays
and works of literature from various sources
On-line Texts:
- Article:
Trites, Roberta. “The Harry Potter Novels as a Test
Case for Adolescent Literature”: <http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2342/is_3_35/ai_97074159/pg_7>
- Article:
Terzieff, Juliette. “Harry’s the star but Girlfriends
Also Shine”: http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3237/
- Grimm's “Cinderella”:
http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/type0510a.html#grim
- The Odyssey, Book
10: http://www.mala.bc.ca/~johnstoi/homer/odyssey10.htm
- “The Legend of Saint
George”: http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/stgeorge1.html
- Werewolf
tales: http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/werewolf.html#morbach
(Note: just read a few of these. You don't need to read
all of them).
A note about “spoilers”:
Because the Harry Potter books are part of a series, which
together create one long narrative, we will at times make
references to books later in the series. If you haven’t
read all the books in the series and don’t want the
plot “spoiled” for you by hearing what happens
in book VI or book VII the first week of class, then please
finish all the books before class begins. This is a course
concerned with literary and cultural analysis, which means
we can’t curtail academic discussions simply because
some students don’t want their reading experiences “spoiled.”
On the other hand, because I expect students to engage in
close readings of texts, we will try to focus our discussion
and analysis on whichever book in the series currently is
under discussion.
Reading, Test, and Project Schedule:
Jan 7: Introduction to course, syllabus,
attendance and behavior policies, and assignments (Download
ppt Note: ppt contains same info listed
on syllabus in different format, with only a few updates)
Harry Potter: Literary Text, Consumer
Product, or Cultural Phenomenon?
Jan 9: Let’s begin with some questions:
What is literary merit? Who decides? How are great works of
literature defined? What is at stake in labeling a work as
literary or sub-literary? What is high culture and what is
low culture? Can mass-produced popular culture also be art?
Does literature, as it has traditionally been defined, even
exist anymore in a globalized, commercial, mass media culture?
Within these contemporary contexts, who owns a text? The author?
Readers? Fans? Corporate interests? How is the nature of a
literary text and of reading re-defined when literary works
evolve into a series of films, Internet fan sites, works of
fan fiction, video games, and action figures? How might these
repetitions of representation (often oversimplified, distorted
simulations of the original narrative) affect our reading
experiences? How have public discussions and controversies
about these books shaped our perceptions of the original texts
and shaped us as readers? Download:
ppt1: definitions and questions
Jan 14: Read the essay: Borah, Rebecca Sutherland.
“Apprentice Wizards Welcome: Fan Communities and the
Culture of Harry Potter,” which is in your course packet.
In class we’ll talk about fan culture, the WB website
controversy, fan fiction, slash fiction, wizard rock, and
waiting in line at midnight to get the latest book in the
series. What do we make of all these fan(atic) activities?
Why are people so excited about these books? How do these
fan activities change and challange the act of reading and
interpreting a work of literature?
Jan 16: Read Chapter 9 from Exploring
Harry Potter, which is in your course packet. Read the
introduction to the Colbert book (15-17) and the chapter in
Colbert titled, “Where do those names come from?”
(165-184).
In class, I’ll define literary allusion and its role
in literary texts. Then I’ll explain and assign the
research project and presentation assignment.
Students will be assigned into their groups for the research
project and presentation. There will be time at the end of
class for groups to get together to exchange email addresses
and to develop plans for conducting research. Download:
ppt2: Allusion
Jan 21: No class. Martin Luther King Day.
Jan 23: Read the essay, Taub, Deborah J.
and Heather L. Servaty. “Controversial Content in Children’s
Literature: Is Harry Potter Harmful to Children?,” which
is in your course packet.
In-class discussion about the censorship of the Harry Potter
books based on religious concerns and concerns about exposing
child readers to depictions of violence and death.
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s
Stone
Jan 28: Read Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s
Stone.
Discuss literary terms, some major themes, and some characteristics
of children’s literature Download:
ppt3: Character
Jan 30: Read “Cinderella” (linked
from web site) (There are several versions on the site –
read only the Grimms’ version of the story)
Discuss literary allusions in HP1 and their functions
in text.
Meeting time for Research Project Groups during the last
30 minutes of class.
Feb 4: Read the essay, Alton, Anne Hiebert.
“Generic Fusion and the Mosaic of Harry Potter,”
which is in your course packet. Download:
ppt4: Genre
Discuss literary genres and expectations we have of texts
based on literary form.
Feb 6: Read the essay, Smith, Karen Manners.
“Harry Pottter’s Schooldays: J.K. Rowling and
the British Boarding School Novel,” which is in your
course packet.
Discuss the ways HP is influenced by the British school story.
Meeting time for Research Project Groups during the last
30 minutes of class.
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Feb 11: Read chapters 1-10 in Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
Feb 13: Read chapters 11-18 in Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
Meeting time for Research Project Groups during the last
30 minutes of class.
Feb 18: Read The Odyssey, Book
10 (on-line link from the web site).
Group
Presentation No. 1: The Odyssey, Odysseus,
and the hero’s journey
In-class discussion of Circe, pigs, wands, divine help and
other allusions to The Odyssey in the HP novels.
Dowload:
ppt5: Odyssey
Feb 20: Read the sections from Ovid about
“Narcissus and Echo,” “The Minotaur and
Ariadne” and “Orpheus and Eurydice,” which
are in your course packet. Read in Colbert the chapters titled,
“Why would Fluffy come from a Greek Chappie?”
(99-100), “Why is the third task set in a maze?”
(153-4), and “Why are mirrors magical” (159-162).
Group
Presentation No. 2: Orpheus, Cerberus, and the hero’s
journey to the Underworld
In-class discussion of Narcissus, Echo, mirrors, labyrinths,
and the Underworld. Download:
ppt6: Labyrinth
Feb 25 and 27: No Classes. Winter Break.
March 3: Read “Herakles” information
in your course packet. Read Chapter 10 from Exploring Harry
Potter, which is in your course packet. Read the chapter in
Colbert titled, “What makes Harry a Universal Hero?”
(205-218).
Group
Presentation No. 3: Herakles
Discuss the hero monomyth and its influence on HP novels.
Download:
ppt7: Monomyth
March 5: Read the chapter in Colbert titled,
“Are basilisks just big snakes?” (33-34).
Group
Presentation No. 4: Perseus
Discuss Medussa, Gorgons, and the metaphorical function monsters
play in literature.
March 10: Read in Colbert the chapters titled,
“Which creature is fit for a king?” (71-76) and
“What Character Can’t Die?” (91-94), and
Read the segments from The History of Kings of Britain included
in your course packet.
Group
Presentation No. 5: St. George, snakes, dragons,
and Christian/Pagan imagery
Discuss snakes, dragons, phoenixes, and the use of Christian
symbols in HP books.
March 12: Read T.H. White, Chapter 23 from
The Sword and the Stone, which is in your course packet. Read
in Colbert the chapters titled “Did Alchemists Really
Search for a Magic Stone?” (19-22), “Why are Harry
and Cedric like Knights of the Round Table?” (111-112),
“Are Any of the ‘Famous Witches and Wizards’
Real?” (255-264).
Group Presentation No. 6: King Arthur
and Medieval Romances
Download
Ppt8: Powerpoint with midterm review, Christian Symbolism,
and the story or Vortigern and Merlin.
Discuss wizards, swords, knights, and the influence of Arthurian
legends on HP.
March 17: Midterm Exam
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
March 19: Read chapters 1-9 in Harry
Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
March 24: Read chapters 1-22 in Harry
Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
March 26: Read online text on werewolves.
Read from Ovid “Cadmus and Harmonia” and “Arachne,”
which is in your course packet. Read the chapter in Colbert
titled, “Why would Sirius Black become a black dog?”
(41-44) and “Who was the most amazing animagus?”
(23-32).
Group
Presentation No. 7: Werewolves and animal transformations
as literary motifs and metaphors
Discuss transformations as metaphors in literature and assign
position paper.
Download ppt: Essay
Assignment (with first pre-writing activity)
March 31: Read the essay, Ostry, Elaine.
“Accepting Mudbloods: The Ambivalent Social Vision of
J.K. Rowling’s Fairy Tales,” which in the course
packet.
April 2: Read an assigned section (based
on the groups you are in for the research project and presentation)
of Margery Hourihan’s chapter “The Hero”
from Deconstructing the Hero: Literary Theory and Children’s
Literature, which is in your course packets.
Dowload ppt: EssayAssignmentPart2
Groups 1 and 2: “Race” (pages 58-62)
Group 3: “Class and Mastery” (pages 62-67)
Group 4: “Gender” (68-72)
Group 5: “Age” (72-76)
Groups 6 and 7: “Relationships” (76-88)
Groups 8: “Rationality” (88-96)
Group 9: “Action and Violence” (96-106)
Turn in homework assignment (which will
count as one quiz grade):
Write two paragraphs: The first paragraph is an objective
summary of the material covered in your assigned section
of the reading. For the second paragraph, attempt to apply
Hourihan’s discussion of heroes in literature to the
Harry Potter novels.
In class, we will discuss ways to apply research or theory
to a discussion of literary text and ways to develop a position
paper.
April 7: Read the online essay, Terzieff,
Juliette. “Harry’s the star but Girlfriends Also
Shine.” <http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3237/>
and Read the essay, Thompson, Deborah. “Deconstructing
Harry: Casting a Critical Eye on the Witches and Wizards of
Hogwarts,” which in your course packet.
Group Presentation No. 8: Position: Gender
roles (both males and females) are depicted in the Harry
Potter novels in ways that are stereotypical.
Group Presentation No. 9: Position: Gender
roles (both males and females) are depicted in the Harry
Potter novels in positive ways.
Essay Assignment pre-writing Part 3: EssayPart3
In class, we will discuss portrayals of gender in the novels
and we will continue to discuss ways to develop a position
paper.
April 9: Read the essay, Trites, Roberta.
“The Harry Potter Novels as a Test Case for Adolescent
Literature,” which is online at: <http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2342/is_3_35/ai_97074159/pg_7>
Discuss characteristics of Adolescent Literature and the
ways HPIII shifts the series from children’s literature
to adolescent literature.
HPasYALit
Powerpoint Download
April 14: Rough Draft Workshop. Bring one
copy of position papers to class for workshop.
April 16: Turn in Revised Position Paper.
April 16 and 21:Watch the film adaptation
of Harry Potter and the Prizoner of Azkaban and discuss issues
of adaptation.
April 25: 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Final Exam.
Course Requirements and Grading:
Grading Scale: 1000-940=A; 939-900=A-; 899-870=B+; 869-840=B;
839-800=B-; 799-770=C+; 769-740=C; 739-700=C-; 699-670=D+;
669-640=D; 639-600=D-; <600=F.
Points out of 1,000 and Assignments:
300: 18 Reading Quizzes worth 20 points each (possible total
of 360 points)
200: Position Paper
200: Group Research Project and Presentation
150: Midterm Exam
150: Final Exam
Exams: There will be a mid-term and a final
in this course and I will do a brief review before each exam.
The exams will be a combination of fill in the blank and short
essay questions. Students will be required to demonstrate
comprehension of materials covered in all assigned reading
(whether or not it is discussed in the class lecture), of
materials covered in class lecture and discussions, and of
materials taught by other students in presentations.
Pop Reading Quizzes: During the course of
the term, students will take 18 quizzes based on the reading
due for that day’s class. It is very important to me
that students taking a literature course actually read works
of literature and essays about literature. Therefore, completing
the assigned reading will count for a significant portion
(30 percent) of the course grade. Furthermore, students who
regularly attend class are more likely to succeed. Therefore,
the quiz grading system is designed to encourage regular and
punctual attendance.
The way the quiz/attendance/reading system works:
- Each quiz is worth 20 points.
- If you are absent, you earn a zero on that day’s quiz.
- If you come to class too late to take the quiz, you will
earn a zero on that day’s quiz.
- Quizzes cannot be made up after class and cannot be taken
early before class begins.
- It is not acceptable to take the quiz, and then leave class.
This is rude. (If you don’t want to attend classes,
then please drop the course).
- There will be 18 quizzes, which count for 300 points out
of 1,000 possible for the course.
- Therefore, if you attend every day, do all the reading,
and receive 100 percent correct on every quiz, it is possible
to earn 360 points (which would be 60 points “extra
credit”)
- Or, if, for example, you miss two days of class and then
have two other days when you don’t complete all the
reading and only earn 10 points on these two quizzes, it is
still possible to get full credit (300 points). In other words,
I assume most students will need to miss a class or two because
of illness or family matters and I also assume that most students
will not always be able to complete every bit of the reading.
Therefore, students should be able to miss two or even three
classes without any adverse effect to their grade: These are
your “excused” absences. Please plan accordingly
and use your “excused” absences wisely. If you
miss more than two or three days of class, for whatever reason,
it will lower your grade.
- The official English Department policy is that students
who miss two weeks worth of a class (four classes in a section
that meets twice a week) should expect to fail that course
and should withdraw.
Position Paper: Students will write a typed
double-spaced 5-page (12 point type) position paper that develops
an interpretation of the Harry Potter novels or some aspect
of the novels as cultural phenomenon. Students can write about
a specific theme, symbol, or issue in the HP novels of their
choosing. The essay should develop a specific thesis, which
asserts an interpretation using evidence from the novels.
The paper must be typed, error-free, and written in MLA style.
It will be graded on the quality of the writing and the ability
to apply the concepts we’ve discussed during the term
to an interpretation of literature/culture. Essays also will
be evaluated based on audience awareness, organization, correctness,
adherence to MLA citation guidelines, and on the effective
use of evidence to build a convincing argument or interpretation.
We will do several in-class pre-writing activities and will
have an in-class writing workshop so that students can have
the opportunity to revise their papers. Students who do not
attend the writing workshop, will lose 10 points from the
paper grade. Papers turned in after the due date will lose
10 points per day late. The papers are worth 200 points (20
percent of the final course grade).
Plagiarism Policy: Plagiarism is a complicated
thing: sometimes students plagiarize material because they
simply do not know they are doing so (forgetting to cite paraphrased
ideas, for example). Other times, students consciously plagiarize
by downloading an entire paper from the Internet, “borrowing”
a paper from a friend, or by copying from a book or cutting
and pasting text from the Internet into an essay. Plagiarism
will be handled on a case-by-case basis. I can usually tell
if it is accidental or purposeful. If it is an accident, the
student will be allowed to rewrite the paper. If it is done
on purpose, the student will receive a 0 on the plagiarized
assignment and may fail the entire course. We will go over
this issue in detail in class when we are working on various
essays.
Group Research Projects and Presentations:
During the course of the semester, groups of students will
work together to research an assigned topic. Groups will be
randomly assigned. There is some in-class time designated
so that groups can meet to work, but most groups may also
need to meet outside of class as well. You’ll need to
decide among yourselves how to organize and divide tasks.
The groups will present their findings on an assigned date
in two ways:
1. The Group will turn in One Written Report complete with
a Bibliography of Research conducted.
2. The Group will teach their topic to the class in a 15-minute
presentation
Grading: 200 points (or 20 percent of course
grade) which will be based on three factors: 1) The Written
Report, which will demonstrate thorough and careful academic
research, 2) The Presentation, which will creatively and effectively
teach important information to the rest of the class, and
3) Written Peer Evaluations from fellow group members, which
are meant to ensure accountability to the group.
The Written Report: Each group will receive
an assignment sheet with a general topic, and lists of sub-topics
and suggestions. The groups then will need to conduct thorough
academic research on their topic. In other words, you will
need to do more than simply surf the Internet or look at Wikipedia:
I expect students to go to the library to find academic books
and articles in respected academic journals. Suggestion: It
is fine to split up tasks, but be careful about the ways you
delegate work. For instance, if a group assigns two people
to do research and two people to write the report, then the
writers will have a hard time putting material together without
any exposure to the research. Instead, it would be a better
idea for everyone to share in all stages: two people could
research topic A, two more could research sub-topic B, etc.
and then you could all choose a date and time to get the research
together into a coherent written and oral report.
Format:
The Written Report should be at least 5 pages long
and should include a bibliography of sources citied in proper
MLA format. It need not be in essay form and can be a list
of bullet points. It must include the information you collected
and your own application of this information to the Harry
Potter novels. Because each group is covering a different
topic, assignments will vary. Each group will receive an individual
assignment sheet with further details. The report will be
graded on the quality of research collected, on the thoroughness
of information presented, and on correctness, organization,
and presentation of the written work.
The Presentation: The group will teach information
to the class in a way that is interesting, clear, and that
connects all information to the Harry Potters novels in a
meaningful way. Each group will receive and assignment sheet
with specific instructions and a list of research questions
to cover. Groups can use whatever presentation style they
think is most effective (a skit, overheads, writing on the
blackboard, Powerpoint, etc.). Be creative and have fun! Also,
it is not necessary for everyone in the group to actively
participate in the presentation. If two groups members have
horrible stage fright, they can volunteer to put together
the written report and let other group members who are more
comfortable with public speaking take the stage. The way you
want to organize and present your information is up to each
group to negotiate.
Written Peer Evaluations: After you have completed
your presentation and turned in your written report, each
member of the group will turn in a form that evaluates contributions
made by other members of the group. Most students work very
well together in groups (in some classes, groups have even
become close friends long after the class is over!). But,
every once in a while, a student will not fully contribute
to the group – they let other group members down by
forgetting to do research, by not meeting deadlines set by
the group, or even by not showing up to meetings or not contributing
at all. While it is important to learn to work together (most
jobs you get once you graduate will require you to work in
groups with other people), it is not fair for students who
do little work to take credit for other people’s hard
work. I will take the written peer evaluations into account
when calculating grades for the group project: most of the
time, everyone in the group will earn the same grades, but
sometimes it will be necessary to give a lower grade to a
student who did not contribute to the project. If this becomes
necessary, I will have an individual meeting with the student(s)
earning a lower grade.
Politeness Policies: Part of my job as a
professor is to create a learning environment where students
feel safe, respected, and able to get the most out of their
learning experiences. I promise to treat all students with
respect, but also must work to maintain a structured learning
environment. I’m assuming that the following statements
will seem obvious to most of you, but 16 years of teaching
college students has taught me that there will be some students
who need these rules of classroom etiquette spelled out in
an obvious way:
Be on time. When you come to class late,
it is disruptive to everyone around you. If you cannot make
it to my class on time (8 a.m., not 8:02 or even 8:01) please
drop the course.
Turn off your cell phone. It is not okay
for your cell phone to ring in class. It is not okay to text
message during class. If you are expecting a very important
call (your wife is about to have a baby, for instance) you
can talk to me and to your classmates before class to let
us know that your cell phone will be on and may ring during
class. Otherwise, turn it off.
Laptops are only for note taking. Students
who use their laptops during class to surf the Internet, to
poke friends on Facebook, or to play World of Warcraft will
no longer be allowed to bring laptops into the classroom.
Be respectful of the instructor and your fellow students.
These are examples of behaviors that are not respectful. When
students exhibit the following behaviors, I assume they do
not want to be in class and will ask if they prefer to leave.
- doing your math homework or reading the newspaper during
a lecture.
- coming to class unprepared. We cannot have a discussion
about a text if students have not done the assigned reading.
Since my classes are based on the assumption that students
have read the assigned material, most often, you will not
get a lot out of our discussions if you didn’t do the
reading.
- text messaging a friend on your cell phone or blackberry;
playing a game on your cell phone.
- Surfing the web or updating your Facebook profile on your
laptop.
- whispering or passing notes to the person sitting next to
you.
- putting your books into your backpack 5 minutes before class
is over.
- interrupting other students when they are speaking, telling
a fellow student to “shut up,” telling a fellow
student his/her beliefs are stupid, immoral, wrong, silly,
etc.
- Walking in and out of the classroom during class (unless,
of course, there is an emergency).
These are examples of behaviors that are
okay:
- It is perfectly okay to bring some coffee, soda, or food
into the classroom, as long as you pick up after yourself
when you leave and as long as you are not disruptive (for
example, open crinkly bags of chips before class begins).
- You can always raise your hand to interrupt me (even in
mid lecture) to ask a question or ask for clarification.
- As you will soon learn, children’s literature is a
controversial field of study (people have a lot invested in
their children, in what they think children should or shouldn’t
read, etc.). It is okay to disagree with me or with your fellow
students, but you must engage in intellectual debates in ways
that are polite and you must keep your mind open to a variety
of viewpoints.
- Is it okay to dislike a text we are reading or to disagree
with an interpretation of the text I teach (in discussion
or in writing). Indeed, that is the purpose of academic writing
and discussion: develop an interpretation of your own and
defend it with evidence.
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