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371 sp19 Midterm Project

This midterm project asks students to research a type of writing done by women that has historically been excluded from the category of "literature". Students must provide examples of this writing from different historical and cultural contexts, discuss why it was excluded, and make an argument for its inclusion as a legitimate literary form. The goal is for students to think critically about how women's contributions to writing have been marginalized and to develop an understanding of "literature" as a socially constructed category.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views2 pages

371 sp19 Midterm Project

This midterm project asks students to research a type of writing done by women that has historically been excluded from the category of "literature". Students must provide examples of this writing from different historical and cultural contexts, discuss why it was excluded, and make an argument for its inclusion as a legitimate literary form. The goal is for students to think critically about how women's contributions to writing have been marginalized and to develop an understanding of "literature" as a socially constructed category.

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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Midterm Project

Because the literary establishment has been dominated by men, and women’s contributions to
literature were generally viewed askance, the definition of “literature” has been shaped by sexist
assumptions about the role of women in relating the human experience.

Research one variety of writing women have done that has been excluded from the category of
“literature,” collect examples of this from a variety of historical and national contexts, discuss why it
was excluded, and make an argument for its inclusion alongside of traditional literary forms.

Assignment Goals

 Apply skills of close reading and analysis to the texts in this course,
 Demonstrate how the literary texts in this course both shape and are shaped by their historical,
cultural, and intertextual contexts,
 Conduct independent literary (and other types of) research, using appropriate resources and
technologies,

Purpose

 To think carefully about the ways that women have historically contributed to the written
world,
 To analyze the ways in which their contributions have been marginalized,
 To develop a sense of “literature” as a constructed category, alongside of “gender” and “sex”
 Recount the history of women's contributions to literature and argue about how those
contributions, and literature, have been shaped by the construction of “the woman,”

Basics

 1500 original words (not including samples)


 Provides at least 5 (and no more than 10) samples of this type of writing/communication
 Samples should be either originals or scans/copies of originals
 Close reading of the language/images used in the texts
 Well-developed connections between forms of writing that are “not literature” and
contemporary literature by women
Organization

 Discusses definitions of literature, including those remarked on in class as well as research on


“literature” and “the canon”
 Identifies a historical or contemporary category of writing engaged in by women that has been
excluded from the category of “literature,”
 Explains what stylistic or thematic elements might have contributed to this category’s exclusion,
as well as social and historical pressures that may have influenced popular perceptions of this
type of writing/communication
 Conducts a close reading of at least two of the 5-10 samples,
 Explains how this type of writing/communication can be understood as literature, drawing
parallels with women’s writing we have discussed in class, as well as drawing parallels beyond
class
 Develops an argument from the definitional negotiation, the historical contextualization, the
close reading, and the conversation between the new category and the existing literature that
effectively asserts the place of the new category alongside of more traditional literary forms

Possible topics include

 Recipes
 PTA meetings/book clubs/similar gatherings (that produce writing in some form)
 Letters
 Advice columns
 Diet fads
 Self-improvement groups
 Etiquette books
 Women’s magazines (fashion, housekeeping, etc.)
 Scrapbooks/albums

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