B.A English
B.A English
B.A English
1. Of Delay0
2. Of Wisdom for a Man’s Self
3. Of Friendship
4. Of Expense
( Bacon’s Essays - Emerald Publications)
Unit II Poetry
Unit IV Drama
Unit V - Drama
SEMESTER - I
Unit II Poetry
Unit IV Drama
Unit V Fiction
SEMESTER - I
1. The conflict between the monarchy and the parliament and the establishment
of
the supremacy of the parliament through the reigns of James I, Charles I,
Charles II James II and the its culmination in the Glorious Revolution,
2. Life in the Protectorate England and in the Restoration England
3. The Coffee Houses and their social relevance
Note ; Only a broad and extensive understanding of the major social and political
events that impacted the social life and literature is aimed at.
Scope of study as in The Social History of England - Prof. Xaviar
SEMESTER - II
Unit II Poetry
Unit IV Drama
Unit V - Fiction
SEMESTER - II
Unit II Poetry
Unit IV Drama
Unit V Fiction
SEMESTER - II
1 Subjective Poetry – The Lyric, the Sonnet, the Elegy, the Ode
2. Narrative Poetry - Ballad, Epic , Satire, Dramatic Monologue
6
Unit II - Prose
Unit IV – Novel
III SEMESTER
Unit II Prose II
Reference
Essays of Orwell ( Macmillan)
Highlights of Modern English Prose –Ed. M. G. Nayar ( Macmillan)
Perspectives –Ed. Veloo ( Anu Chitra)
7
Unit IV Drama II
Prepositions, Articles,
Phrases
Nominal Phrase, its structure – Modifier ( Determiner, Pre determiner, Adjectival, Nominal,
Numeral, Verbal, Intensifier, Possessive), Qualifier ( Adverbal, Prepositional, Verbal,
Clause) Head, Gerund
Prepositional Phrases
Clauses
Independent Clause,
Simple, Compound and Complex sentences – Transformation - Co- Ordinating and Sub
ordinating Conjunctions
Conditional Clauses
Sentence
Common Errors
The aim of the paper is to give the students a firm grounding in grammatical applications.
The stress is more on practice then on theorizing.
SEMESTER IV
Unit II Poetry II
Reference
Unit IV Novel II
Important landmarks in the evolution of English - The reasons for the erection of the
landmarks
Unit II
Old English – Anglo Saxon invasion, Viking invasion, , Wessex Dialect , Vocabulary ,
Spelling and Pronunciation, Inflection, Word Order, Gender, I Mutation and Vowel
Gradation
Middle English - Norman Invasion and the evolution of English, East Midland dialect,
Vocabulary, Inflection, Word Order, Spelling changes, Pronunciation, Gender
Unit III
Foreign Influences - Latin and Greek, French, Scandinavian
Unit IV
Word Makers - Spenser, The translators of the Bible, Shakespeare, Milton
Unit V
The growth of dictionaries
Standard English , Received Pronunciation, Received Standard, Modified Standard,
Regional standard, The role of BBC , Concept of correctness
American English
English as a world Language, Basic English, Anglican
Reference
C. L. Wrenn – The English Language
11
V SEMESTER
PAPER IX – SHAKESPEARE I
( Credits 4 )
Unit I
Unit II
Julius Caesar
Unit III
Unit IV
Unit II Poetry 1
Unit IV Drama -1
Unit V - Novel
Unit II Prose II
3. Martin Luther King – I Have a Dream
4. Robert Frost –The Figure a Poem Makes
5. Alan Tate - The Man of Letters in the Modern World
Unit IV Drama II
Unit I
General
What is Linguistics? – Linguistics as a science – Synchronic and Diachronic approaches –
Branches of study
Language
Definition – Uses of language - Phatic communion
Properties of language– Species specific and species uniform, Symbolic system,
Arbitrariness, Duality of Structure, Productivity, Displacement, Cultural Transmission,
discreteness, Inter changeability, Specialization, Non directionality
Origin of Language – Divine Source, Natural sound source, Oral Gesture, Glasso Genetics
Unit II
Language
Development of Writing –Pictographic, Ideographic, Locographic, Rebus Writing, Syllabic
Writing, Alphabetic Writing
Language Variation – Dialect, Standard and Non – Standard, Isoglasses , Dialect
Boundaries, Bilingual, Bidialectal, Idiolect, Register, Lingua Franca, Pidgin, Creole,
The Post Creole Continum
Language Change – Protos – Family relationship - Cognates – Comparative Reconstruction
Unit III
Grammar
What is Grammar ? Misconceptions regarding grammar - The development of English
grammar - Objections of modern grammarians to traditional approach – Nominative Rules -
Latinate Fallacy – Logical Fallacy – - Historical Fallacy – Descriptive and Prescriptive
approaches – Concept of correctness and social acceptability – Form and substance - Speech
and Writing
Unit IV
Morphology, Syntax and Word Meaning
Word - Morphemes – Free Morphemes and bound Morphemes – Prefix and suffix –
Inflectional and Derivational – Allomorphs - Zero morphemes – Morphological Study of
words
14
Exercises
Morphological Analysis of words using tree diagram
IC analysis( simple sentences)
Use of IC analysis to disambiguate simple sentences
Deep and surface structure
Reference
George Yule – The Study of Language ( Chapters 1, 2, 3, 8,9,10, 19,20)
Wallwork - Language and Linguistics – (Chapters 1, 2, 6 ,7 )
Palmer – Grammar ( Chapter 1)
S.K Verma, N.Krishnaswamy -Modern Linguistics – An Introduction
Dr. Varshney - An Introductory Text book of Linguistics and Phonetics
Adrian Akmajian & others- Linguistics – An introduction to Language and Communication
VI SEMESTER
PAPER XIII – SHAKESPEARE II
(Credits 4)
Unit I
Unit II
Macbeth
Unit III
Unit IV
The Tempest
15
Unit I Poetry - I
Unit II Poetry - II
Reference Books
Unit IV -Novel -
The unphonetic character of English Orthography and the need for a phonetic script
Unit II
Description of Consonants – Air Stream Mechanism, Position of the Vocal Cords, Position of
the Soft Palate, Place of Articulation, Manner of Articulation –Articulation of individual
Consonants
Unit III
Description of Vowels – Pure vowels- Three Term label, Cardinal vowel , Vowel Chart,
Description of individual Vowels
Unit IV
Syllable, Syllabic division, Syllabic Structure, Consonant clusters, Arresting and Releasing
consonants
Transcription – Simple words with stress , Sentences marking stressed and unstressed
syllables
Reference books
ALLIED PAPERS
Semester III
Allied- Paper – III - HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE
– 1500 – 1798 .
CREDITS -5
General Guidelines
The scope of the paper is to help a student to develop a broad understanding of the ages, their
characteristics, major literary movements with reference to the major writers.
Unit I - Prose
Early Prose - More, Ascham, Sidney, Lyly, Bacon,
The Authorized Version of the Bible
Unit IV - Novel
Reference books
ALLIED PAPERS
Semester IV
Allied- Paper – IV HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE 1798 –
PRESENT DAY
CREDITS -5
The scope of the paper is to help a student to develop a broad understanding of the ages, their
characteristics, major literary movements with reference to the major writers.
Essay questions on individual authors to be avoided.
Unit I Prose
19
Unit II Poetry
Unit IV Novel
20th Century - Conan Doyle, Wells, Lawrence, Orwell, Virginia Woolf, Conrad,
Maugham, Greene, Golding
Reference books
ELECTIVES
V SEMESTER - PAPER I – POST –COLONIAL LITERATURES IN
ENGLISH
( Credits 5 )
Unit I
Unit 1I Prose
Unit IV Drama
Reference
21
The Arnold Anthology of Post Colonial Literature in English Ed. John Thieme
Readings in Commonwealth Literature - William Walsh
An Anthology of Commonwealth Poetry – Ed., C. D. Narasimhaiah
ELECTIVES
VI SEMESTER - PAPER II - INDIAN LITERATURES IN
TRANSLATION
( Credits 5)
Unit 1 Prose
Unit II Poetry
Unit IV
Unit V
22
ELECTIVES
VI SEMESTER - PAPER III - JOURNALISM ( Credits 5)
Unit I
What is Journalism?
A Short history of Journalism in India
Principles of Journalism
Press Codes and Ethics of Journalism
The role played by journalism as part of the mass media
Unit II
Unit II
Unit IV
Exercises
Editing , Proof Reading , Feature Writing, News Reporting, Planning interviews, Reviewss
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Section C ( 30 Marks)
FIRST SEMESTER
Title of the
Course / Paper
Poetry I
Objectives of The Objective of this paper is to familiarize students with English Poetry starting from
the Course Medieval England to 17th Century focusing on the evolution of Poetic forms such as
Sonnet, Ballad, Lyric, Satire, Epic etc.,
26
The Knight
The Prioress
The Monk
UNIT 2
Spenser’s Prothalamion
sonnets
UNIT 3
Metaphysical Poetry
Ecstasy
27
UNIT 4
Satire
UNIT 5
Epic
Recommended Texts:
1. 1973, The Oxford Anthology of English Literature Vol. I. The Middle Ages Through the 18th
century. OUP, London
Reference Books:
1. T.S. Eliot, 1932, “The Metaphysical Poets” from Selected Essay; Faber and Faber limited,
London.
2. H.S. Bennett, 1970, Chaucer and the Fifteenth Century, Clarendon Press, London.
28
3. Malcolm Bradbury and David Palmer, ed., 1970 Metaphysical Poetry, Stratford - upon –
Avon Studies Vol. II, Edward Arnold, London.
4. William R. Keast, ed., 1971, Seventeenth Century English Poetry: Modern Essays in
Criticism, Oxford University Press, London.
5. A.G. George, 1971, Studies in Poetry, Heinemann Education Books Ltd., London.
6. David Daiches, 1981, A Critical History of English Literature Vols. I & II., Secker & Warburg,
London.
7. Thomas N. Corns, ed., 1993, The Cambridge Companion to English Poetry: Donne to
Marvell, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
8. H.J.C. Grierson, “Metaphysical Lyrics and Poems of the Seventeenth Century” OUP, 1983,
London.
http://www.english/.org.uk/chaucer/htm
29
Title of the
Course /
Paper Drama I
Objectives of The objective of this paper is to acquaint the students with the origin of drama in
the Course Britain and the stages of its evolution in the context of theater and culture through a
study of representative texts from the Elizabethan and Jacobean Periods..
Course UNIT I
Outline
Everyman
UNIT 2
Thomas Kyd
UNIT 3
UNIT 4
UNIT 5
Jacobean Drama
Reference Books:
31
1. Bradbrook, M.C., 1955, The Growth and Structure and Elizabethan Comedy, London.
3. Una Ellis-Fermor, 1965, The Jacobean Drama: An Interpretation, Methuen & Co.,
London.
4. John Russell Brown and Bernard Harris, eds., Elizabethan Theatre, Stratford - upon -
Avon Studies Vol 9., Edward Arnold, London.
http://www.clt.astate.edu/wmarey/asste%
http://eb.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
32
(qualified search results on Elizabethan Theatre, Restoration Drama, Comedy of Manners, realism,
naturalism, Abbey Theatre, Gaelic Revival, Modern Celts, Epic Theatre, Political Theatre,
Experimental Theatre, etc. and on individual authors.)
http://www.questia.com
Title of the
Course / Paper
Fiction I
Objectives of The aim of this course is to familiarize the students with the origin and development of
the Course the British Novel upto the 18th Century. The contents of the paper are meant to throw
light on various concepts and theories of the novel.
Novel as a Form, Concepts and Theories about the Novel; Poetics of the Novel –
definition, types, narrative modes: omniscient narration.
UNIT 2
UNIT 3
UNIT 4
Picaresque Novel
UNIT 5
Reference Books:
1. Wayne C. Booth, 1961, The Rhetoric of Fiction, Chicago University Press, London.
2. F.R. Leavis, 1973, The Great Tradition, Chatto & Windus, London.
35
3. Ian Watt, 1974, Rise of the English Novel, Chatto & Windus, London.
4. Frederick R Karl, 1977, Reader’s Guide to the Development of the English Novel till the
18th Century, The Camelot Press Ltd. Southampton.
5. Ian Milligan, 1983, The Novel in English: An Introduction, Macmillan, Hong Kong.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/novel
Title of the
Course /
Paper Indian Writing in English and in Translation
Objectives of The objective of this course is to enable the students to understand the evolution of
the Course Indian Writing in English with its dual focus on the influence of classical Indian
tradition and on the impact of the West on it through representative texts in the
different genres. It also enables them to get a glimpse of the rich diversity of culture
and literature in the regional languages through translation in contemporary times.
UNIT I
Course Indian Classical literary Tradition; impact of English Studies on India; Colonialism;
Outline Nationalism; Nativism and Expatriatism; Socio-Cultural issues such as gender, caste
and region
36
UNIT 2
Poetry
to Thee
me known to friends
A Scratch
UNIT 3
Drama
in Session
UNIT 4
Prose
47-54)
Fiction
UNIT 5
Poetry
The following Selections from A.K. Ramanujan’s “Love and War” (The Oxford Indian
Ramanujan, ed., Molly Daniels, OUP, 2004).
Short Story
The following selections from Routes: Representations of the West in Short Fiction
from South India in Translation eds. Vanamala Viswanatha, V.C. Harris, C. Vijayashree
and C.T. Indra (Macmillan 2000).
Kannada
Malayalam
Tamil
Reference Books:
1. K.R. Srinivasa Iyengar, 1962, – History of Indian Writing in English, Sterling Publishers,
New Delhi.
4. Subhash Chandra Sarker, 1991, Indian Literature, and Culture, B.R. Publishing
Corporation, Delhi.
5. M.K. Naik & Shyamala A Narayan, 2001, Indian English Literature 1980-2000: A Critical
Survey , D.K. Fine Art Press (P) Ltd., New Delhi.
6. Tabish Khair, 2001, Babu Fictions: Alienation in Contemporary Indian English Novels.,
OUP.
7. Rajul Bharagava Ed., 2002, Indian Writing in English: The Last Decade, Rawat
Publications, New Delhi.
9. P.K. Rajan ed., 2004, Indian Literary Criticism in English: Critics, Texts, Issues, Rawat
Publications, New Delhi.
10. Bruce King, 2001, Modern Indian Poetry in English, OUP, New Delhi.
11. Amit Chandri, 2001, The Picador Book of Modern Indian Literature, Macmillan,
London.
12. A.K. Mehrotra, 2003, An Illustrated History of Indian Literature in English. Permanent
Black, New Delhi.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wik/indian_wring_in_english
41
Objectives of the The paper aims at familiarising the students with the Ancient
Course Indian Theatre and Classical Greek Theatre. It also intends to draw
the attention of the students to the Socio, ecnomic, cultural factors
reflected in Indian, European and Russian Literatures. The parallel
growth of the European and Indian Literatures from ancient to
Modern periods is focused for the understanding of the learner.
UNIT 2 Poetry
UNIT 3 Prose
Thakazhi
UNIT 5 Drama
Reference Books:
Website : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drama
Objectives of the The course aims at equipping the students in the skills of oral
Course communication.
Recommended Reading:
Study Speaking: A Course in Spoken English for academic purposes. Kenneth Anderson, Joan Maclean and Tony Lynch. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2004
44
SECOND SEMESTER
Title of the
Course /
American Literature
Paper
Objectives of To familiarize the students with the origin and development of American Literature from
the Course the time of the settlers and colonies to the post modern and multi cultural literature.
Course UNIT I
Outline
UNIT 2
Poetry
town
UNIT 3
Drama
UNIT 4
Fiction
UNIT 5
Prose
Recommended Texts:
2. Mohan Ramanan ed., 1996, Four centuries of American Literature, Macmillan India Ltd.,
Chennai.
Reference Books :
1. John Russell Brown and Bernard Harris, ed., 1970, American Theatre, Edward Arnold.
2. Daniel Hoffman ed., 1979, Harvard Guide to Contemporary American Writing, Oxford
University Press, New Delhi.
Owen Thomas, 1986, Walden and Civil Disobedience: Norton Critical Edition ed., Prentice – Hall &
Indian Delhi.
www.gonzago.edu/faculty/cample/enl311/litfram.html
Objectives of The objective of this course is to familiarize the students with English Poetry starting
the Course from the Augustans to the beginnings of the Romantic Period in English Literature. In the
process it also attempts to sensitise the students to certain exclusive poetic qualities of
these two periods.
Course UNIT I
Outline
Classicism and Augustan Ideals: Wit, Taste, Decorum, Propriety, Purity of Genre and
Poetic Diction; Heroic Couplet; Verse Satire and Urbanism; Romantic Revolt; Pre-
Raphaelites
UNIT 2
Augustan Satire
UNIT 3
Transitionists
Night
London
UNIT 4
Romantics
Immortality
UNIT 5
Victorians
Recommended Texts:
1. 1973, The Oxford Anthology of English Literature Vol. II. , OUP, London.
Reference Books:
2. Shiv K. Kumar, 1968, British Romantic Poets: Recent Revaluations, University of London
Press Ltd., London.
51
3. A. E. Dyson, ed., 1971 Keats ODES, Case Book series, Macmillan Publication Ltd., London.
5. Graham Hough, 1978, The Romantic Poets, Hutchinson & Co., London.
6. David Daiches, 1981, A Critical History and English Literature Vols. II & III. Secker &
Warbarg, London.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_poetry
Title of the
Course /
Paper Drama II
Objectives of The objective of this course is to give students the experience of different forms of
52
the Course drama from the Restoration period to the Twentieth Century and to familiarize them
with current trends in drama in the context of changing socio-cultural values
Course UNIT I
Outline
UNIT 2
Restoration
UNIT 3
World
53
UNIT 4
Epic Theatre
Children
Comedy of Menace
UNIT 5
Post-Modern Drama
Reference Books:
1. Raymond Williams, 1968, Drama From Ibsen to Brecht, Chatto & Windus, Toronto.
2. Harold Love, ed., 1972, Restoration Literature; Critical Approaches, Methuen & Co . Ltd,
London.
5. Una Ellis – Fermor, 1977, The Irish Dramatic Movement, Methuen and Company Ltd.
7. Banham, Martin, 1995, The Cambridge Guide to Theatre, Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge.
9. Innes, Christopher, 2002, Modern British Drama The Twentieth Century, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge.
10. Rabey, David Ian, 2003, English Drama Since 1940, Pearson Education Ltd., London.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_drama
http://eb.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
(qualified search results on Elizabethan Theatre, Restoration Drama, Comedy of Manners, realism,
naturalism, Abbey Theatre, Gaelic Revival, Modern Celts, Epic Theatre, Political Theatre,
Experimental Theatre, etc. d on individual authors.)
http://www.questia.com
Title of the
Course /
Paper Fiction II
Objectives of The scope of this paper is to extend the objectives stated for the paper Fiction I. The
the Course 19th and 20th Centuries by virtue of advancement of knowledge in general have
contributed to the denseness of fiction, particularly during the 20th century. Therefore,
this paper focuses its attention first on several technical issues associated with Fiction per
se such as narrative technique, characterization and space-time treatment and secondly
on the rich cultural, social and political backdrop which contributed to the diversity of
fictional writing.
Course UNIT I
Outline
UNIT 2
UNIT 3
Women’s Issues
UNIT 4
UNIT 5
Quest
Reference Books:
1. Arnold Kettle, 1967, An Introduction to English Novel Vol. II, Universal Book Stall, New
Delhi.
2. Raymond Williams, 1973, The English Novel: From Dickens to Lawrence, Chatto & Windus,
London.
4. Ian Watt, 1991, The Victorian Novel: Modern Essays in Criticism, OUP, London.
5. Dennis Walder, Ed., 2001, The 19thCentury Novel; Identities, Roultledge, London.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_literature
58
59
Objectives of the Course To equip students with the necessary competence required for
emerging areas in the field of Knowledge Management; to develop
mastery over presentation skills.
UNIT 2
UNIT 3
UNIT 4
Reference Books :
61
3. T.M. Farhatullah, 2002, Communication Skills for Technical Students, Orient Longman.
4. 2004, Write to the top – Writing for Corporate Success; Deborah Dumame; Random
House