Required
Texts
José
Calvo, Así vivían en el Siglo de Oro. Madrid:
Anaya, 1989.
MIguel de
Cervantes,
El ingenioso hidalgo don Quijote de la Mancha.
Ed. Andrés Amorós. Madrid: SM., 1999. (This is the only edition
will be using in the class)
Reserve Materials
Course Description
Miguel de Cervantes (1550-1616) is considered the most acclaimed
writer in Spanish. Cervantes's masterpiece , El ingenioso hidalgo
don Quijote de la Mancha (1605, 1615), is the most significant
book of the Spanish letters. What is this novel about? At the
very beginning of the first chapter we meet Alonso Quijano, a gentleman
who has no productive activity to occupy his fertile mind. He devotes
his time to reading books of chivalry, most of them bad, and this hobby
catapults him into the unreal world of those books, leaving him utterly
confused about himself and about his perception of the world around him.
The protagonist decides to become a knight-errant with the name don Quixote
de la Mancha. The protagonist of a romance of chilvary is always
young handsome, and strong. Yet, don Quixote is middle age, rides
a broken-down horse, and wears an old armor patched with cardboard.
He does not travel to exotic lands, but rather he tries to be a knight
in Spain, in the desert like and underpopulated plain of La Mancha. Knights
perform useful deeds---helping kings repel invaders and eliminating menaces
of the public order. Whereas don Quixote sets prisoners free, and attacks
windmills, armies of sheep, and wineskins. He is also a knight
in love. Don Quixote falls in love not with a beautiful noble woman,
but with a peasant girl who, according to Sancho Panza, don Quixote's squire,
has a strong voice and smells like a man.
This seminar will explore the sharp contrast between the society of Alonso
Quijano and don Quixote's idealistic and archaic world of chivalry. This
main theme originates an array of related topics such as madness, love,
parody, gender, the interaction of reality and fiction, metafiction, and
literary genres.
The capstone course, beyond providing an extensive study of a specialized literary topic, is intended to be the culminating intellectual experience for the student and should:
-- Include
ethical issues, teach research methods, develop decision-making and problem-solving
skills, and promote critical thinking.
-- Pull together
concepts, ideas, skills, and subject matter that the student has learned
in previous courses.
-- Allow students to analyze their strengths and weaknesses.
-- Allow students to demonstrate their Computer Literacy. The major paper must be written using (1) a word processor; (2) on-line library references; and (3) Internet resources.
-- Allow students to undertake a substantial research project and give an oral presentation of the material. The presentation should demonstrate the student's ability to interpret critically and analytically.
The instructor should invite at least one other faculty member to the presentation and, together, these faculty will confer on an evaluation of the student's oral, interpretative, and critical skills.
In this course you should focus on improving performance as a systematic learner, thinker, and writer; increasing your strengths and diminishing your weaknesses, not simply achieving a certain grade. If you heed this advice, you will most likely receive the grade you wish.
Calendar
Coming in November
Dr. Harry Vélez-Quiñones,
our invited speaker
Week One
August 21: Introduction & Overview La vida doméstica [Calvo 18-28]
August 23: Town & Country [Calvo 6-17]; Travelling in 17th-century Spain [ Calvo 44-49]; Working & Leisure [Calvo 58-65]
Week Two
August 28: Introducción a Cervantes [10-23; 30-32] JOURNAL 1
August
30: El tiempo de D. Quijote [Aspectos Culturales 914-23]; El ideal caballeresco
[Aspectos Culturales
924-939]
Week Three
September 4: Prólogo [41-45]
September 6: Cap 1 [51-54] Compara El tiempo de D. Quijote [Aspectos Culturales 914-23]
Week Four
September 11: Caps 2,3,4,5 [55-73] JOURNAL 2: Compara con El ideal
caballeresco
[Aspectos Culturales 924-939]
September 13: Caps 6, 7, 8, 9,10 [75-93]
Week Five
September 18: Caps 11,12, 13, 14, [94-118] JOURNAL 3
September 20: Caps 16, 17,18,19, 20 [125-162]
Week Six
September 25: Caps 21, 22, 23 [163-188] JOURNAL 4: El baciyelmo
September
27: Caps 24, 25, 26, 28 [189-234]
Week Seven
October 2: Caps 29, 30, 31,32 [234-265]
October 4: Caps 36, 37,38 [297-313]. TAKE HOME EXAM
Week Eight
October 9: JOURNAL 5: FIVE MINUTE PRESENTATION. Prepare a brief presentation about the chapter, section, passage, paragraph, that you find more interesting and why. You are expected to state and defend any judgments you've made in your journal concerning a particular topic from what we have read so far.
October 11: Caps 39, 40 [315-26]
MIDTERM EXAM DUE at the beginning of the class
Week Nine
October 18: Caps 41,42, 43, 44 [327- 59] JOURNAL 6
October 23: Caps 45, 46, 47, 48 [360-86]
Week Ten
October 25: Caps 49, 50,51,52 [387-410]
October 30: JOURNAL 6: Topics and issues of Don Quijote I. A two page description of how you envision your final proyect, and the topic you would like to write about, and the parts of the text that will be more useful for your paper. You will give a presentation on this journal assignment.
Week Eleven Don Quijote II
November 1: Pr'ologo , Cap 1 [419-431]
November 6: Caps 3, 4, 5, 6, [432-461] Dr. Vélez-Quiñones
Week Twelve
November 8: Caps 8, 9, 10 [462-470] JOURNAL 7 : A) complete outline of your final proyect. B) a good quality draft. You should include four library sources at least.
November 13: Caps 12, 13, 14 [483-502] TAKE HOME
Week Thirteen
November 15: Caps 22, 23, 24 [546- 564]
November
20: MID TERM EXAM DUE at the beginning of the class.
Class reading CapS 40 y 41
Week Fourteen
November 27: JOURNAL 8: A) improved draft; B) a four page summary of your project, this is the material that will be presenting in your oral exam.
November 29: Student Presentations / Semester Projects
Week Fifteen
December 4: Student Presentations / Semester Projects
December 6: Student Presentations / Semester Project
FINAL VERSION OF THE FINAL PAPER AND JOURNAL 9 (3 pages) (Insights about the course, an overall self-evaluation, comments about other students presentations) DUE Wed Dec 11 before noon at my office.