HONR 101C - Honor Scholar Seminar
Dr. Arthur B. Evans, EC 204, aevans@depauw.edu
Fall 2010 - TTh 2:20-3:50 EC 019
SPECULATIVE VISIONS: THE WORLDS OF SCIENCE FICTION
class texts and materials:
Evans, ed., The Wesleyan Anthology of Science Fiction (WA)
Roberts, ed., The Prentice-Hall Anthology of Science Fiction and Fantasy
(PH)
Jules Verne, Journey to the Center of the Earth (Oxford Worlds
Classics)
online readings (*) - links available via Moodle
Moodle site: http://moodle.depauw.edu
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
In our Western society, the natural sciences and the humanities have often
been viewed as Two Cultures, as C.P. Snow once expressed it.
And with today's ongoing specialization and fragmentation of knowledge,
the gulf between them seems to be growing ever wider. This course will
examine a fictional genre that purposefully bridges these two world views:
science fiction. As a genre that routinely features extrapolation, speculation,
and thought experiments of various kinds, science fiction
has a long tradition of raising fundamental questions about how we define
ourselves, our reality, and our possible futures. Through a selection
of readings from pre-Jules Verne to post-Cyberpunk, in this course we
will focus on a variety of recurring philosophical and social themes--technology
and human values, gender and identity, alienation and the other,
cybernetics and artificial intelligence, etc. We will examine how these
important issues reflect certain evolutionary currents in today's world
and how they will probably shape the world of tomorrow.
WEEKLY SCHEDULE:
INTRODUCTION
Thurs. 8/26
- intro to course, syllabus, Moodle, course requirements, etc.
- genre theory: speculative fiction (horror, fantasy, science fiction)
- Moodle readings: What is Speculative Fiction?; Definitions & History;
Why Read and Study SF?
- (WA) Introduction
- mandatory reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on C.P. Snow, The
Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution (1959) in Moodle at:
http://moodle.depauw.edu/mod/resource/view.php?inpopup=true&id=96370
HORROR
Tues. 8/31
(*) Edgar Allan Poe, The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar
(1845)
(PH) H.P. Lovecraft, The Colour Out of Space (1927)
(PH) Shirley Jackson, The Lottery (1948)
(PH) Stephen King, The Raft (1982)
reflection paper (dues next Tues.) on Joyce Carol Oates, Reflections
on the Grotesque at http://www.usfca.edu/~southerr/grotesque.html
FANTASY
Thurs. 9/2
(PH) George MacDonald, The Gray Wolf (1871)
(PH) Robert E. Howard, The Tower of the Elephant (1933)
(PH) J.R.R. Tolkien, Riddles in the Dark (excerpt from The
Hobbit, 1937)
oral exposé on horror and/or fantasy: ___________________
reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on George MacDonald, "The Fantastic
Imagination" (1864) at
http://www.george-macdonald.com/etexts/nonfiction/fantastic_imagination.html
SF: SCIENTIFIC UTOPIAS/DYSTOPIAS #1
Tues. 9/7
(*) Jonathan Swift, excerpt from Gulliver's Travels (1726)
(*) Edward Bellamy, excerpt from Looking Backward (1888)
(*) Jules Verne, In the 29th Century (1889)
(WA) E.M. Forster, The Machine Stops (1909)
reflection paper (due next Tues.) on Nanelle and David Barash, Biology,
Culture, and Persistent Literary Dystopias at
http://chronicle.com/free/v51/i15/15b01001.htm
SF: SCIENTIFIC UTOPIAS/DYSTOPIAS #2
Thurs. 9/9
(PH) Robert Sheckley, The Store of the Worlds (1959)
(WA) Harlan Ellison, Repent, Harlequin! Said the Ticktockman
(1965)
(PH) Dean Koontz, The Undercity (1973)
oral exposé on utopias and/or dystopias: _______________
SF: ENVIRONMENT & TECHNOLOGY
Tues. 9/14
(WA) Clifford D. Simak, Desertion (1944)
(PH) Robert A. Heinlein, The Long Watch (1949)
(WA) Cordwainer Smith, The Game of Rat and Dragon (1955)
(WA) Frank Herbert, Seed Stock (1970)
Thurs. 9/16
oral exposé on ecological science fiction: _________________
exam #1
SF: COMPUTERS & VIRTUAL REALITY
Tues. 9/21
(WA) Philip K. Dick, We Can Remember It For You Wholesale
(1966)
(PH) Orson Scott Card, Ender's Game (1977)
(WA) William Gibson, Burning Chrome (1982)
(WA) Eileen Gunn, Computer Friendly (1989)
reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on James John Bell, Exploring
the Singularity at
http://www.mindfully.org/Technology/2003/Singularity-Bell1may03.htm
SF: TIME TRAVEL & ALTERNATE HISTORY
Thurs. 9/23
(PH) Marion Zimmer Bradley, Exiles of Tomorrow (1955)
(WA) Robert A. Heinlein, All You Zombies... (1960)
(WA) Kate Wilhelm, Forever Yours, Anna
oral exposé on computers or time travel: _________________
reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on Clifford Pickover, Traveling
Through Time at
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/time/through.html and
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/time/through2.html
SF: ROBOTS, ANDROIDS, CYBORGS, & CLONES #1
Tues. 9/28
web project check: initial thoughts ( at least 3 ideas)
(PH) E.E. Doc Smith, Robot Nemesis (1934)
(PH) Isaac Asimov, Robbie (1940)
(WA) Isaac Asimov, Reason (1941)
(WA) Alfred Bester, Fondly Fahrenheit (1954)
reflection paper (due next Tues.) on Charles Platt, Whats
It Mean to Be Human, Anyway? at http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.04/turing.html
SF: ROBOTS, ANDROIDS, CYBORGS, & CLONES #2
Thurs. 9/30
(PH) Eric Frank Russell, Jay Score (1941)
(WA) Brian Aldiss, Super-Toys Last All Summer Long (1969)
(WA) Ursula K. Le Guin, Nine Lives (1969)
oral exposé on robots and/or artificial intelligence: _______________
reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on Steve Mizrach, The Ethics of the
Cyborg: Should there be a limit placed on the integration of humans
and computers and electronic technology? at
http://www.fiu.edu/~mizrachs/cyborg-ethics.html
ALIEN ENCOUNTERS #1
Tues. 10/5
web project check: final proposal
(*) Cyrano de Bergerac, excerpt from The Other World: States and Empires
of the Moon (1657)
(*) H.G. Wells, excerpt from The War of the Worlds (1898)
(WA) C.L. Moore, Shambleau (1933)
(WA) Stanley Weinbaum, A Martian Odyssey (1934)
reflection paper (due next Tues.) on Brian Aldiss, Desperately Seeking
Aliens at:
http://www.physics.ohio-state.edu/~wilkins/writing/Assign/topics/alien-life.html
ALIEN ENCOUNTERS #2
Thurs. 10/7
(PH) Fredric Brown, Arena (1944)
(PH) Damon Knight, To Serve Man (1950)
(WA) Arthur C. Clarke, The Sentinel (1951)
oral exposé on aliens (1): _________________
ALIEN ENCOUNTERS #3
Tues. 10/12
(WA) Robert Sheckley, The Specialist (1953)
(WA) Robert Silverberg, Passengers (1968)
(WA) Nancy Kress, Out of All Them Bright Stars (1986)
(WA) Ted Chiang, Exhalation (2009)
Thurs. 10/14
oral exposé on aliens (2): ____________________
exam #2
[FALL BREAK]
SF: JULES VERNE
Tues. 10/26
Jules Verne, Journey to the Center of the Earth (1864)
oral exposé on Verne: ____________________
reflection paper (due next Tues.) on Bruce Sterlings Midnight
on the Rue
Jules Verne: http://lib.ru/STERLINGB/catscan01.txt
(originally published in Science Fiction Eye 1 [Winter 1987]: 62-64).
Thurs. 10/28
film: Journey to the Center of the Earth (1956)
reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on Mark Rose, Filling the Void:
Verne, Wells, and Lem (excerpt) in Moodle at: http://moodle.depauw.edu/file.php/7109/Rose_excerpt.pdf
SF: APOCALYPTIC FUTURES #1
Tues. 11/2
(WA) H.G. Wells, The Star (1897)
(WA) Theodore Sturgeon, Thunder and Roses (1947)
(WA) Judith Merril, That Only a Mother (1948)
(WA) Ray Bradbury, There Will Come Soft Rains (1950)
reflection paper (due next Tues.) on PBS Frontline: Apocalypse!
at:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/apocalypse/explanation/worldview.html
and
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/apocalypse/explanation/resilience.html
APOCALYPTIC FUTURES #2
Thurs. 11/4
web project check: resources and materials
(WA) Fritz Leiber, Coming Attraction (1950)
(PH) James Tiptree, Jr. The Last Flight of Dr. Ain (1969)
(WA) Octavia E. Butler, Speech Sounds(1983)
oral exposé on TEOTWAWKI: ___________________
reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on Francis Fukuyama, Our Posthuman
Future (excerpts) at
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2002/may/13/health.highereducation
SF: GENDER & SEXUALITY #1
Tues. 11/9
(WA) Leslie F. Stone, The Conquest of Gola (1931)
(WA) Frederik Pohl, Day Million (1966)
(WA) Samuel R. Delany, Aye, and Gomorrah... (1967)
(WA) Joanna Russ, When It Changed (1972)
SF: GENDER & SEXUALITY #2
Thurs. 11/11
(WA) James Tiptree, Jr., I Awoke and Found Me Here On the Cold Hills
Side(1973)
(PH) Octavia E. Butler, Bloodchild (1984)
(WA) Greg Egan, Closer (1992)
oral exposé on gender and sexuality and sf: ___________________
reflection paper (due next Thurs.) on You Are Cyborg - a conversation
with Donna Haraway about cyberfeminism at:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive//5.02/ffharaway_pr.html (skip "The
Cyborg Ancestry" section at the end)
Tues. 11/15
oral exposé on women sf writers: ___________________
exam #3
SF: BIOTECH
Thurs. 11/18
(WA) Nathaniel Hawthorne, Rappaccini's Daughter (1844)
(WA) Edmond Hamilton, The Man Who Evolved (1931)
(PH) Larry Niven, The Jigsaw Man (1967)
web project: present rough draft of content (homepage and other screens
of your site, identify text and graphics, etc.)
SF: SOCIAL SATIRE
Tues. 11/22
(*) Voltaire, Micromegas (1752)
(WA) William Tenn, "The Liberation of Earth" (1953)
(PH) Kurt Vonnegut, Harrison Bergeron (1961)
(WA) Bruce Sterling, We See Things Differently (1989)
oral exposé on biotech or social satire: ____________________
reflection paper (due next Tues.) on Horace Miner, Body Ritual among
the Nacirema at:
http://www.msu.edu/~jdowell/miner.html
[THANKSGIVING BREAK]
Tues. 11/30
submit final version of websites
SF: PULP MAGAZINES
origins (2 pages) - http://www.pulpworld.com/history/history_01.htm and
http://www.pulpworld.com/history/history_02.htm
brief history of - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_fiction_magazine
class visit to the DePauw Archives - Roy O. West Library - the R.D. Mullen
Pulp Magazine Collection
Thurs. 12/2
oral exposé on television sf: ____________________
oral exposé on gaming and sf: ____________________
begin review of student websites
Tues. 12/7
review of student websites
Thurs. 12/9
last day of class
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
ATTENDANCE:
Regular attendance at class, laboratory, and other appointments
for which credit is given is expected of all students according to guidelines
established by individual instructors. There are no allowed cuts
or free absences from class sessions. Faculty may drop students
from their classes or other appropriate action may be taken if absences
are too frequent. DePauw University Bulletin
INSTRUCTOR'S GUIDELINES: For excused medical absences and/or for participation
in athletic events or other university-sponsored activities, the instructor
must be notified in advance in order for the student to be allowed make-up
privileges (extraordinary circumstances excepted). Make-up work must be
completed within 48 hours from the day that the student returns to class.
Absences of longer than 3 class sessions will have arranged make-up. Family
emergencies, etc. must be confirmed by the Student Affairs Office. Plane
flights, papers due, social functions, etc. will not be excused. Work
missed on days of unexcused absence will receive the grade of 0".
Also, accumulated unexcused absences will affect the student's overall
grade in the course as follows: 4th unexcused absence: drop 1/3 letter
grade (ex. B to B -), 6th unexcused absence: drop 2/3 letter grade (ex.
B to C +), 8th unexcused absence: drop 1 full letter grade (ex. B to C),
and so forth.
TESTS (20% of final grade)
There will be 3 one-hour exams, but no final exam. The average grade of
the Moodle mini-quizzes based on the readings (which must
be completed before class) and the in-class supplemental quizzes will
count as 2 one-hour exam grades (for a total of 5)
PAPERS (20% of final grade)
There will be a total of five reflection papers (min. of 4
pages each) based on the critical readings listed on the syllabus. Start
with the topic of C.P. Snow on the Two Cultures (in Moodle)
to learn how to write them. Then choose your four subsequent topics from
among the many available on your syllabus. You do at least two of the
four during the first half of the semester and two during the second half
of the semester. Modus operandi: First summarize (1-2 pages) and then
analyze and discuss (2-3 pages) using other research sources as needed.
Topics are restricted to the week assigned to them. Papers must be submitted
5:00 p.m. on the day they are due. No early or late papers accepted. The
required paper format is as follows: 1" margins max, 12 pt. New Times
Roman font max, double-spaced (single in block quotes), name and one-line
title at the top of first page (no separate title page), no staples, print
on one side of the paper only, Works Cited at the end (do some research
before writing!), use MLA documentation format for citations and endnotes.
Papers will be graded for both content (60%) and for style (40%).
ORAL EXPOSE (15% of final grade)
This oral presentation on an assigned sf topic must be media-assisted
using PowerPoint or a similar program, be approximately 15-20 minutes
in length, and allow for student questions and/or discussion at the end.
Please provide a summary handout with links/references. The presentation
will be graded by both students and the professor as follows: content
(50%), format (25%), and delivery (25%).
DISCUSSION (25% of final grade)
This is NOT a lecture course; it is a SEMINAR. As a result, much in-class
discussion is required and expected. Sample discussion questions for each
story are listed in Moodle. Please prepare them for class. Discussion
will be graded for both quantity and quality.
SF WEB PROJECT (20% of final grade)
Students will select one of the sf-related topics described below, prepare
a research project, and present it in the form of an online website. Your
website project may incorporate material from your oral presentation.
Possible topics include:
- a specific sf author (e.g., Jules Verne, Isaac Asimov, Ursula K. Le
Guin, et al.). For this topic, the website must include the following:
a brief biography and photo of the author; an annotated listing of the
author's most important sf works; quotations by literary critics about
this authors sf; a bibliography of reference works that offer information
about this author; and a selection of links to other online resources
which focus partially or wholly on this sf author; a discussion/analysis
of at least one work by this author.
- a specific sf novel or film or TV series (e.g., The Time Machine,
Brave New World, GATTACA, comparing Blade Runner
with Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? etc.). For this topic,
the website must include the following: a general summary of the plot,
characters, and setting of the work; an analysis of one or more aspects
of its thematic content (what it says) and its narratological structure
(how it says it); an explanation of why this particular sf work is noteworthy
in the history of the genre; quotations by literary/movie critics about
this work; a bibliography of reference works that offer information about
this work; and a selection of links to other online resources which focus
partially or wholly on this work.
- a specific sf theme, as expressed in literature and/or cinema (e.g.,
aliens, sf and feminism, religion, politics, cyberpunk, postmodernism,
time travel, ecology, cloning, etc.). For this topic, the website must
include the following: a brief historical overview of how this theme has
been expressed in various sf works; a detailed analysis of no fewer than
3 works where this theme is dominant; a discussion of why this theme is
important and/or relevant in today's world; quotations by literary/movie
critics about this theme; a bibliography of reference works that offer
information about this theme; and a selection of links to other online
resources which focus partially or wholly on this theme.
These web projects should be original; they should NOT simply recycle
information, text, or graphics from other websites. They should also not
duplicate previous HoScho sf websites. Students are expected to devote
substantial time to researching and developing the content of their web
project. In many instances, it will be necessary to read a few sf novels
and/or view several sf films as well as to locate and read a variety of
reference and critical materials (all outside of class) in order to adequately
prepare this project. At several points during the semester, I will ask
you for a brief progress report about how your web project is coming along.
During the last week of classes, all student web projects will be viewed
and evaluated by your classmates and me according to the criteria of both
CONTENT and DESIGN. (For samples of previous HONR101-02 sf websites, go
to: http://fs6.depauw.edu:50080/~aevans/HONR101-02/ClassWebPages.htm
GRADING SCALES:
A 90-100
B 80-89
C 70-79
D 60-69
F 0-59
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