UNIVERSITY OF MYSORE CREDIT BASED TEACHING MECHANISM B.A. FUNCTIONAL ENGLISH
TOTAL CREDITS-40
SEMESTER PAPER CODE
CORE ENGLISHTITLE OF THE PAPER
CREDIT PATTERN
TOTAL CREDIT
I SEMESTER EnglishME0107
Phonetics and Remedial Grammar-Part-I and Part-II
2+12+1
6
II SEMESTER EnglishME0108
Phonetics and Remedial Grammar-Part-III and Part-IV
2+12+1
6
III SEMESTER
EnglishME0109
Modern English and Broadcasting Part I and II
2+12+1
6
IV SEMESTER
EnglishME0110
Modern English and Broadcasting Part III and IV
2+12+1
6
V SEMESTER EnglishME0111
Advanced Writing and Conversational skills Part-IBroadcasting and Entrepreneurial Development Part-I
2+1
2+1
6
VI SEMESTER
EnglishME0107
Advanced Writing and Conversational skills Part-IIBroadcasting and Entrepreneurial Development Part-II
2+1
2+1
6
ELECTIVES
SEMESTER ELECTIVE CREDIT PATTERN
TOTAL CREDIT
Term work Language centric
III SEMESTER Language based common paper
2+2 4
V SEMESTER Language centric Major centric Disseration
4 4
VI SEMESTER Dissertation 4 4
Total No.of credits
Core-40 Electives-12 ------- Total 52
UNIVERSITY OF MYSORE
CREDIT BASED TEACHING MECHANISM
B.A.DEGREE PROGRAMME SUBJECT- MAJOR ENGLISH (TOTAL CREDITS-40)
OPTIONAL ENGLISH
SEMESTER PAPER CODE
CORE ENGLISHTITLE OF THE PAPER
CREDIT PATTERN
TOTAL CREDIT
I SEMESTER EnglishME0101
Paper-I: Short Fiction and Types of Short fictionPaper II: Poetry and Types of Poetry
2+12+1
6
II SEMESTER EnglishME0102
Paper I: Drama and Forms of DramaPaper II: Fiction and Forms of Fiction
2+12+1
6
III SEMESTER
EnglishME0103
Paper I: Prose-Essays and Types of EssayPaper II: Literary Criticism-A Literary Criticism-B
2+12+1
6
IV SEMESTER
EnglishME0104
Paper I: Poetry and Types of PoetryPaper II: Drama (Shakespeare)
2+12+1
6
V SEMESTER EnglishME0105
Paper I: New Literatures in English Part I and IIPaper II: Fiction Literary Criticism
2+1
2+1
6
VI SEMESTER
EnglishME0106
Paper I: Twentieth Century Poetry and Practical and CriticismPaper II: Drama,Fiction and Literary terms
2+1
2+1
6
ELECTIVES
SEMESTER ELECTIVE CREDIT PATTERN
CREDIT PATTERN
TOTAL CREDIT
Language Centric/Major Centric
III SEMESTER Language based common paper
4 2+2 4
V SEMESTER Dissertation 4
4
VI SEMESTER Dissertation 4 4 Total 12
Total 12 credits Electives 40 credits Optionals
UNIVERSITY OF MYSORE
CREDIT BASED TEACHING MECHANISM
B.A/B.Sc/B.F.A./B.S.W DEGREE PROGRAMME SUBJECT- LANGUAGE ENGLISH (TOTAL CREDITS-12)
SEMESTER PAPER
CODELANGUAGE ENGLISH PAPER CREDIT
PATTERNTOTAL CREDIT
I SEMESTER
ENGLISHLA0101
Language and Prose (one credit)Language and Fiction (one credit) Part-I
2+1 3
II SEMESTER
EnglishLA0102
Language and Fiction-Part II (one credit)Language and Fiction-Part III (one credit)
2+1 3
III SEMESTER
EnglishLA0103
Language and Poetry-Part II (one credit)Language and Poetry-Part III (one credit)
2+1 3
III SEMESTER
EnglishLA0104
Language and Drama-Part II (one credit)Language and Drama-Part III (one credit)
2+1 3
TOTAL NO.OF CREDITS= 12
UNIVERSITY OF MYSORE
CREDIT BASED TEACHING MECHANISM
B.Com/BBM DEGREE PROGRAMME
SUBJECT- LANGUAGE ENGLISH (TOTAL CREDITS-12)
SEMESTER PAPER CODE
LANGUAGE ENGLISH PAPER CREDIT PATTERN
TOTAL CREDIT
I SEMESTER EnglishLA0105
Language and Prose Part-ILanguage and Prose Part-II
2+1 3
II SEMESTER EnglishLA0106
Language and Poetry Part I Language and Poetry -Part II
2+1 3
III SEMESTER EnglishLA0107
Business Communication in English Part-IBusiness Communication in English Part-II
2+1 3
III SEMESTER EnglishLA0108
Commercial Correspondence-Part-ICommercial Correspondence-Part-II
2+1 3
TOTAL NO.OF CREDITS=12
I. ENGLISHM.A. SEMESTER COURSE
ELECTIVES1. Contemporary Canadian Literature2. Literary Theory3. Indian Fiction in English and in Translation4. Contemporary Indian Theatre and the West5. Canada and the World6. Caribbean Literature7. Comparative Literature (Fiction) – I8. Comparative Literature (Fiction) – II9. South Asian Immigrant Writing in Canada : Theory and Praxis10. Feminist Theory11. Cultural Studies12. Contemporary British Drama13. Modern Kannada Fiction in Translation14. African Fiction in English 15. Commonwealth Autobiographies16. Myth and Drama17. Twentieth Century African – American Fiction18. Ecoliterature19. A Poetics of the Novel : An Introduction20. Reading Literature and Media21. Post – 1990 Indian Women Narratives – I22. Post – 1990 Indian Women Narratives – II23. Women’s Writing in India24. Indian Critical Tradition25. New Approaches to Learning English26. Dalit Literature27. European Fiction28. Indian Writing in English29. Indian Writing in English ; Poetry and Prose30. Translation Theory31. English for Written Communication32. Indian Autobiographies33. History and Literature 34. Post-Colonial Literature35. Cross Cultural Women Writers36. Indian Women Novelists37. Continental Drama38. Commonwealth Drama39. History of English Language40. Phonetics and Linguistics41. English Language Teaching42. Approaches to English Grammar43. Canadian Science Fiction By Women
CREDIT BASED TEACHING MECHANISM
B.A. HONOURS DEGREE PROGRAMME
SUBJECT- English (TOTAL CREDITS-40)
A candidate has to complete 40 credits covering hard core/soft core at least one open elective and a term work/minor project. Hard core-16 credits
SEMESTER PAPER CODE TITLE OF THE PAPER CREDIT PATTERN
PRE-REQUISITE
I SEM
ENG 101 Paper IEnglish Literature from Chaucer to Milton;Drama from Marlowe to Johnson
4(3+1) The pre-requisite to join a honors degree programme is that a candidate should have completed a Bachelors degree with English as major subject or P.G.Diploma in English
ENG 102 Paper IIRestoration and 18th century English Literature;Literary Criticism part-I
4(3+1)
II SEM
ENG 103 Paper IIINineteenth Century English Literature (Poetry and Drama)
4(3+1)
ENG 104 Paper IVIndian Writing in English(Part-I) and Literary Criticism Part-I
4(3+1)
TOTAL 16 CREDITS
One term work/Minor project-Women’s credit Paper Code
Paper Credit Pattern
ENG Term work/Minor Project 4(3+1) TOTAL= 40 CREDITS
ENG 101 Paper I English Literature from Chaucer to Milton
Geoffrey Chaucer : The General Prologue
Christopher Marlowe : Doctor Faustus
The Metaphysical Poets : Selections from John Donne,George Herbert and Andrew Marvell
John Donne : “The Good Morrow”“Go and Catch a Falling Star”“The Sunne Rising”“The Canonization”“Valediction Forbidding Mourning”“At the Round Earth’s Imagined Corners”“Death be not Proud”“Show me, dear Christ ThySpouse so Bright” “A Hymn to Christ at the Author’s Last Going into Germany”
George Herbert : Redemption; Virtue Andrew Marvell : “To His Coy Mistress”; Thoughts in a Garden”
ENG 102 PAPER II Part I Restoration and Eighteenth Century English Literature
William Congreve : The Way of the World John Dryden : “Mac Flecknoe”Alexander Pope : The Rape of the LockJonanthan Swift : Gulliver’s Travels – Book IVDaniel Defoe : Moll Flanders
ENG 102 PAPER II Part II– Literary Criticism Part I
Aristotle : PoeticsDr. Johnson : Preface to Shakespeare William Wordsworth : Preface to Lyical BalladsS.T. Coleridge : Biographica Literaria
(Fancy, Imagination & Poetic Diction: Chapter 3,4,14 & 17)
Practical Criticism : Prose and Poetry
ENG 103 Nineteenth Century English Poetry
William Wordsworth : The Prelude (Book I):“Lines Composed a few Miles Above Tintern Abbey: ;“She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways”;“A Slumber did my Spirit Seal” ; “Resolution and Independence”“The World Is Too Much With Us”
Samuel Taylor Coleridge : “The Ancient Mariner”William Blake : “The Tiger” ; “ London”;
“The Chimney Sweeper”P.B. Shelley : “Ode to the West Wind”;
“Ozymandias”. John Keats : “Ode to a Nightingale”
“Ode on a Grecian Urn”“Ode to Autumn”
Alfred Lord Tennyson : “The Lotus Eaters”Robert Browning : “Andrea del Sarto
“My Last Duchess”Matthew Arnold : “Dover Beach”
ENG 104 Paper IV Indian Writing in English-I
Poetry 1) Sri Aurobindo : “Savitri” (canto I and II)
2) Toru Dutt : “Prahlad”, “Jogadhya Uma” 3) Sarojini Naidu “Vasantha Panchami”
“Coramandela Fishers” 4) Rabindranatha Tagore : “(Selections) Gitanjali” 5) Jayanth Mahapatra : “Temple”
Prose
1) Raja Ram Mohan Roy : “Letter to Lord Amherst” 2) T.B. Macaulay : Minute on Indian Education”
Fiction
1) Raja Rao : Cat and Shakespeare 2) R K Narayan : “Grand Mother’s Tale “
3) Mulk Raj Anand : The old woman and the cow
Criticism
1) Hiriyanna : Art Experience(Selections)2)C.D.Narasimaiah : Towards an Understanding of the
species called Indian writing In English 3) Meenakshi Mukherjee : The Anxiety of Indianness
4) Susie Tharu and K. Lalitha :Introduction from Women Writing in India: 600 BC to The Present
ENG 104 PAPER IVPART II Literary Criticism II PART II
T.S. Eliot : “Tradition and the Individual Talent” “The Metaphysical Poets”
F.R.Leavis : “Literature and Sociology I.A. Richards : “Two Uses of Language”Gerard Genette : “Structuralism and Literary Criticism” Roland Barthes : “Death of the Author” Helene Cixous : “The Laugh of the Medusa”Jacques Derrida : “Structure, Sign and Play”Terry Eagleton : “Capitalism, Modernism and Post
Modernism” Raymond Williams : “Base and Supersructure”
SOFT CORE PAPERS: 16 CREDITS
(Note- A candidate should not repeat the same soft core subject of honors degree programme
Paper Code
Paper Credit Pattern
Pre-requisite
ENG0105ENG0106
Cross Cultural Women Writers Caribbean Literature
4(3+1)
ENG0107ENG0108
Indian Classics in TranslationIndian Thought
4(3+1)
ENG0109ENG0110ENG0111ENG0112
Introduction to Australian LiteratureFeminist Theory-ISouth Asian Immigrant Literature in CanadaIntroduction to Canadian Literature
4(3+1)
ENG0113ENG0114ENG0115ENG0116
Dalit Literature-I Recent Indian Poetry in EnglishDalit Literature-IIWomen writings from the Margins
ENG0117ENG0118ENG0119ENG0120
English EssayistsHumour in Indian Writing in EnglishPost 1990 Indian Women Narratives Indian Novels in English:2000 and after
ENG0121ENG0122ENG0123ENG0124
History Fiction Interface in Indian Fiction in EnglishTwentieth Century Indian Poets in EnglishContemporary Indian Regional Poetry in English TranslationRealism and Fiction
ENG 0125ENG0126ENG0127
Indian Women NovelistsAfrican Fiction in EnglishJewish American Fiction
4 CREDITS= 3 HOURS Teaching+ 1 hour i.e. 2 hrs Tutorials
ENG 0105 CROSS CULTURAL WOMEN WRITERS
Anita Desai : Cry, The PeacockJean Rhys : Wide Sargasso SeaMargaret Atwood : The Edible WomanBharathi Mukherjee : Jasmine
ENG 106 CARIBBEAN LITERATURE
George Lamming : Natives of My Person Earl Lovelace : The Dragon Can’t DanceDerek Walcot : “The Flock”, “A Tropical Bestiary”
“Crusoe’s Journal”“Crusoe’s Island”“Codicil”, “A Far Cry from Africa”, “Ruins of a Great House”(Selections from the Castaway and Other Poems)
Edward Brathwaite : “Islands and Exiles”, “The Return”, “Path-Finders”, “Arrival”, “New World”, “Limbo”, “Rebellion”, (from The Arrivants)
ENG0107 INDIAN CLASSICS IN TRANSLATION
M. Anantanarayana : The Silver Pilgrimage Amitav Ghosh : In a Glasshouse R.K.Narayan : Maneater of Malgudi Arun Joshi : The strange case of Billy Biswas
ENG0108 INDIAN THOUGHT
A.K.Ramanujam : Is there an Indian way of thinking
U R Ananthamurthy : The flowering of the front yard
Amartya Sen : On India
Selections from K.C. Nagegowda’s India the Travellers saw
ENG0109 INTRODUCTION TO AUSTRALIAN LITERATURE
A.D.Hope : “Australia” “Salabhanjika” Judith Wright : “Woman to Man”, “Typist in the Phoneix Building” Patrick White : Voss David Williamson : Dead White Males
ENG0110 Feminist Theory-I
Soshana Felman : “Women and madness: The Critical Phallacy” Elaine Showalter : The Female Tradition” Luce Irigaray : “This Sex which is not One” Julia Kristeva : “Women’s Time”
ENG0111 South Asian Immigrant Literature in Canada: Theory and Praxis
Rohinton Mistry : Squatter Apardico A. Laquian & Elenor Laquian : Racism in Canada- A search For Policy Options Ronald Skeldon from Multiculturalism to Diaspora Uma Parameshwaran: Trishanku ENG0112 Introduction to Canadian Literature
Margaret Atwood : Survival Nicole Brossard : Mauve dessert
ENG 0113 Dalit Literature-I
Short Fiction: Devanoora Mahadeva: “Those who sold Themselves” Aravinda Malagatti: “ The She buffalo on heat and He buffalo after Her” PunjabiBhura Singh Kaler: : Sacred Leaves”Prem Gorkhi : “Angel and Not Demon” (Trans. Chaman Lal)
Gujarathi:
Dalpat Chauhan : “Measure for Measure”
Pathik Parmar : “Naked feet”
II Poetry
Kannada:
Govindaiah: “ In the Soil of Tears” “ A Letter to Father Searching for Me” Trans. Abdul Majeed Khan
Laxmipathy Kolar “The Bat” Trans. M.K.Shankar
Punjabi
Gurdas Ram Aslam “For Freedom” (From the Core of an Untouchable’s heart) “Treatment of Untouchables”Manjit Quadar “A Song”
Gujarathi
Bipin Gobel “To the Fading Man I Sing” “To a Poet at a Mushables”
Kisan Sosa “The Last Man on Golgatha” “Hanging on the Tree”
“Dousing the Fire in Heart”
ENG 0114 RECENT INDIAN POETRY IN ENGLISH Arun Koltkar :” Irani Resturant Bombay”
: “Three cups of Tea”
R.Parthasarathy : “ River once” : “ Complaint”
K.N.Daruwalla : “The king speaks to the scribe” : “Mother”
Gieve Patel “ Dilwadi” “Servants” Adil Jussawala “The Waiters” “Bomb-site” Aravind Krishna Moharotra : “The sale”
Gauri Deshpande: “The female of the species” “The people who need people”
Mamta Kalia “Tribute to Pappa”
ENG 0115 Dalit Literature II/ Dalit Autobiographies
Sharan Kumar Limbale : Akkarmashi Siddalingaiah : Ooru Keri Bama : Karukku Aravinda Malagatti : Government Brahamana
ENG 0116 Women’s Writing from the Margin
Volga: The women unbound (selections) Trans by Alladi Uma Sara Joseph: Othappu (The scent of the other side)
Sara Abubakar: Breaking Ties Trans into English by Vanamala Vishwanath
Vaidehi: Gulabi Talkies and Other stories (Selections) Trans by: Tejaswini Niranjan
ENG 0117 ENGLISH ESSAYISTS
a) Introduction to the Genre
b) Maurice Hewlett (1861-1923) The Maypole and the Column
c) E.V. Lucas (1868-1938) A Funeral
d) Arthur Clutton Brock (1906-1950) The Defects of English Prose
e) Edward Thomas (1878-1917) Broken Memories
f) Robert Lynd (1879-1949) The Pleasures of Ignorance
g) A.A. Milne (1882-1956) A Village Celebration
h) Harold Nicolson (1886-1968) Men’s Clothes
i) J.B. Priestly (1894) Money for Nothing
j) Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) Tragedy and the Whole Truth
ENG 0118 HUMOUR IN INDIAN WRITING IN ENGLISH
a) Introduction to the Genre
b) S V V An Elephant’s Creed in the Court
c) R. K. Narayan Of Trains and Travelers
d) Khuswant Singh Murdering the English Language
e) K.S. Venkataramani Village Cricket
f) N. G. Joshi The Perfect Wife
g) M.K. Naik The Postman’s Knock
h) R G K Nagpur and its Oranges
i) Jug Suraiya Desi Decibels
j) C.N. Srinath Pillow-Talk
k) G.S. Balram Gupta Beware of Barbers
ENG 0119POST 1990 INDIAN WOMEN NARRATIVES
a) Gita Mehta Karma Cola
b) Ismat Chugthai : Quilt and Other Stories
c) Shashi Deshpande A Matter of Time
d) Jhumpa Lahirit Namesake
ENG 0120 INDIAN NOVELS IN ENGLISH: 2000 AND AFTER
a) Navtej Sarna The Exile
b) Bashrath Peer The Curfewed Night
c) Amitav Ghosh Sea of Poppies
d) Aravind Adiga The White Tiger
ENG 0121 HISTORY FICTION INTERFACE IN INDIAN FICTION IN TWENTIETH CENTURY INDIAN POETS IN ENGLISH
1. S.L.Bhyrappa : The Caravan.
2 Manohar Malgonkar : A Bend in the Ganges.
3. Nayanthra Sahargal : A Day in Shadow.
4, Salman Rushdie : Midnight’s Children.
ENG 0122 TWENTIETH CENTURY INDIAN POETS IN ENGLISH
1. Keki N.Daruwalla : From Ruminations Death of a bird
2. Kamala Das : The invitation : The Freaks
: The sunshine cat
3. Nissim Ezekiel : Poem of the separation : Background
: Casuall
ENG 0123 INDIAN REGIONAL POETRY IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION
1 K.Satchidanandan: Bertolt Brecht and Gautama Buddha. [Malayalam]
2. Sitanshu Yashaschandra : Magan’s Insolence. [Gujarathi]
3. Sitakanth Mahapatra : Song of The Hunter Java. [Oriya]
4. Sunil Gangopadhyay : I Turned Up Late. [Bengali]
5. Mahadevi Varma : No Matter the Way Be Unknown. [Hindhi]
6. Hiren Bhattacharya : These My Words. [Assamese]
7. Vinda Karandika : The Guide, The Wheel. [Marathi]
8. M. Gopala Krishna Adiga : Do Something Brother. [Kannada]
ENG 0124 REALISM AND FICTION
Thomas Hardy : Jude the ObscureMark Twain : The Adventures of Towm SawyerKuvempu : Bride of the HillWilliam Faulkner : The Sound and the Fury
ENG 0125 INDIAN WOMEN NOVELISTS
Anita Desai- : Where shall we go this summer?Anita Nair - : Ladies CoupeShashi Deshpande : Roots and ShadowsManju Kapur : Difficult Daughters
ENG 0126 AFRICAN FICTION IN ENGLISH
Chinua Achebe : Things Fall ApartNadine Gordimer : The Lying DaysJames Ngugi : A Grain of WheatJ.M. Coetzee : Waiting for the Barbarians
ENG 0127 JEWISH AMERICAN FICTION
Saul Bellow : HerzogJ D Salinger : The Catcher in the RyeMalamud : The FixerPhilip Roth : The Counter life
OPEN ELECTIVES- 4 CREDITS
Paper Code
Paper Credit
ENG0153ENG0154ENG0155ENG0156
Course in Written and spoken EnglishAn Introduction to English Literature
4 (3+1)
COURSE IN WRITTEN AND SPOKEN ENGLISH SYLLABUS
1.1 Communicative English-I
1. Introduction to LanguageVarieties of English
2. The parts of Speech: A Preliminary Outlinea) Nounb) Pronounc) Adjectived) Adverbe) Verbf) Prepositionsg) Conjunctionsh) Interjectionsi) I) Articlesj) Punctuation
3. Using Dictionaries4. Building Vocabulary5. Idiomatic Expressions and Proverbs
1.2 Communicative English-II
1. Phrase, Clause and the Structure of Kernal clauses2. Tense, Aspect, Modality and Phrasal Verbs3. Direct and Indirect Speech, Degree of Comparison, Active
And Passive Voice4. Transformation of Sentences5. Note-taking and Note-making, editing
2.1 Communicative English-I1. Word- formation
a) Suffixesb) Prefixesc) Rootsd) Abstract Nouns
e) Compound Adjectivesf) Compound Nounsg) Words with interesting originsh) Onomatopoeic wordsi) Words commonly mispronouncedj) Homonyms
2. Sentence Formation
a) Order and Cohesionb) Problems of Agreementc) Problems of Cased) Topic Sentencee) Some Basic Sentence Patterns
3. Paragraph Writing
1) Unity of Thought2) Order3) Coherence and Relevance4) Variety
4. Essay Writing
a) Descriptiveb) Narrativec) Discursived) Dramatice) Imaginative or Creative
2. Prose Comprehension
2.2 Communicative English-IV
1. Critical Prose Comprehension2. Writing reports3. Writing Reviews4. Letter Writing5. Precis Writing
2.2 Communicative English-II
1. Phrase,Clause and the Structure of Kernal clauses
2. Tense, Aspect, Modality and Phrasal Verbs3. Direct and Indirect Speech, Degree of Comparison, Active and Passive Voice4. Transformation of Sentences5. Note-taking and Note-making, editin
ENG 0155 AN INTRODUCTION TO ENGLISH LITERATURE POETRY
1. Shakespeare: “Let me not to the marriage2. John Donne : Good Morrow3. John Dryden : Alexander’s Feast4. William Blake : Tyger5. A.K.Ramanujam: Striders6. Judith Wright : Woman to Man7. John Keats : Ode to Autumn8. Wole Soyinka : Telephone Conversation9. Derek Walcott : A Far cry from Africa
DRAMA
1. Arthur Miller : Death of a Salesman FICTION
SHORT STORIES
1. Chekov : Sorrow 2. Hemingway : The snows of Kilimanjaro 3. James Joyce : Dubliners 4. Ismat Chugtai : The Veil 5. Camin : The Renegade 6. Gogol : Overcoat CREDITS
I Sem II Sem8-Hard core 8 Hard core
Total= 16 Open Electives= 4 credits
24 +16= Total 40 credit
CREDIT BASED TEACHING MECHANISM
MASTERS DEGREE PROGRAMME
SUBJECT- ENGLISH (TOTAL CREDITS-36)
A candidate has to complete 36 credits covering hard core/soft core a term work/minor project.
Hard core-16 creditsPaper Code Paper Credit
PatternPre-requisite
I SEMENG0201
ENG0202
II SEMENG0203
ENG0204
Poetry from W.B.Yeats to Ezra Pound ; Drama from Aeschylus to Chekhov
American Literature; New Literatures in English
European Classics ;Indian Literatures in Translation
Indian Writing in English-II
4(3+1)
4(3+1)
4(3+1)
4(3+1)
The pre-requisite to join a Masters degree is that a candidate should have successfully completed a Honours degree in the discipline or a Bachelors degree of 4 years duration.
INDIAN WRITING IN ENGLISH-II
Hiriyanna M : Art Experience (selections)Aurobindo : Chapter on Romantics from The Future PoetryNehru : An AutobiographyKamala Das : “An Introduction”, “Afternoon”Arun Kolatkar : Jejury-From Ten Indian Poets ed. R.Parthasarathy
A.K.Ramanujan : “Obituary”, “Small scale Reflections”Nissim Ezekiel : “The Night of the Scorpion”, “Good bye to Miss.T.S.Pushpa”Jayanta Mahapatra : “A Rain of Rites” “On the Bank of Ganges”Dattani : Final ResolutionArundhati Roy : God of Small Things
SOFT CORE PAPER
(Note- A candidate should not repeat the same elective subject of honours in Masters degree programme)
Paper Code
Paper Credit Pattern
Pre-requisite
ENG0205ENG0206ENG0207ENG0208
Folklore & Literature IFolklore & Drama-IMyth and Drama-IMyth and Drama-II
4(3+1)
ENG0209ENG0210ENG0211ENG0212
Cultural TheoryCanada and the worldFeminist Theory-2Australian Poetry
4(3+1)
ENG0213ENG0214ENG0215
Folk Epics of KarnatakaPostcolonial TheoryWriters from the African Diaspora
4(3+1)
ENG0216ENG0217ENG0218ENG0219
Travel WritingCanadian Science Fiction by WomenTheories on Culture: An IntroductionPostcolonial Criticism
4(3+1)
ENG0220ENG0221ENG0222ENG0223
Travel LiteraturePopular Culture and CensorshipAdventure NovelsNovels and the Metropolis
4(3+1)
ENG0224ENG0225ENG0226ENG0227
Short Fictions of Russia and USAContemporary Indian Novels in EnglishRegional Short Fictions in English TranslationIndian Vernacular Fiction in English Translation
4(3+1)
ENG0228ENG0229
Novels of ChildhoodHybrid Muse and Fiction
4(3+1)
One term work/Minor project-Women’s credit Paper Paper Credit Pattern
CodeENG0256 Term work/Minor Project
TOTAL= 36 CREDITS
ENG0205: Folklore and Literature I
Prof. Handoo : Introduction to Folklore A.K.Ramanujam : Folktales from India Alan Dundes : Folklore and Literature Data Analysis I
ENG0206 Folklore and Drama I
Handoo : FolkloreA.K.Ramanujam : The speaking Tree Theories of Folklore : Vladimir ProppData Analysis II
ENG0207 Myth and Drama I
Theories of Myth : Percy CohenNagamandala : Girish KarnaadThe Savage Mind : Claude Levi-StraussData Analysis III
ENG0208 MYTH AND DRAMA II
Levi-strauss : Mythologies:Chandrasekhar Kambar : SirisampigePercy Cohen : Theories of MythData Analysis IV
ENG0209 CULTURAL THEORY
Raymond Williams : The Analysis of Culture” Louis Althusser: : “Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses” Walter Benjamin: : Art in the Age of Mechanical reproduction” Stuart Hal : Notes on Deconstructing the Popular” Paul Virilio: : The Third Interval”
ENG 0210 CANADA AND THE WORLD
Shani Mootoo: Cereus Blooms at Night W.D.Valgardson: God is not a Fish Inspector Jenice Kulyk Keefer: The green library Free Wah Diamond Grill
ENG 0211 FEMINIST THEORY-2
Susan S.Lanser: “Toward a Feminist NarratologyNancy Armstrong: “The Rise of the Domestic Woman”Julia Kristeva : SelectionVandana Shiva: “Women’s Indigenous Knowledge and Biodiversity Conservation”
ENG 0212 AUSTRALIAN POETRY
Dame Mary Gilmore: “Old Botany Bay”A.D.Hope: Observation CarHenry Lawson: “If you fancy that your people came from a better stock than mine”Les Murray: “Flowering Eucalypt in Autumn”Rodney hall Poem to be selectedA.B.paterson: “A Bush ChristeningDouglas Stewart: The SilkwormsJudith Wright: “South of my Days”
ENG0213 Folk epics of Karnataka (Selections)
Male Mahadeshwara } Mante Swamy } Oral Epics Junjappa } Mylaralinga } ENG 0214 POST COLONIAL THEORY
Edward Said: : Orientalism Gayatri Spivak: : “Can subaltern speak” Homi Baba: : “On Mimicry “ Leela Gandhi : “ The limits of postcolonial Theory”
Chinua Achebe: “Racism in Conrad’s Heart of Darkness” Frantz Fannon: : “On Black consciousness” A Nandi: : Decolonizing the Mind (selections) P.Chatterjee: : “Nation and its Fragments
ENG 0215 WRITERS FROM THE AFRICAN DIASPORA
Achebe : Anthills of Savanha Ngugi : A Grain of wheat Wole Soyinka : Madmen and specialists J P Clark : Song of a Goat
ENG 0216 TRAVEL WRITING
a) Introduction to the Genre
b) Jonathan Swift Gulliver’s Travels Book III-
: The Voyage to the Land of Laputa
c) Che Guevara : The Motorcycle Diaries (1952)
d) Vikram Seth : From Heaven’s Lake-
: Travels through Sinkiang and Tibet (1983)
e) Amitav Ghosh : In an Antique Land ENG 0217 CANADIAN SCIENCE FICTION BY WOMEN
a) Introduction to the Genre
b) Elizabeth Vonarsburg : The Silent City
c) Nalo Hopkinson : The Midnight Robber
d) Margaret Atwood : FreeforAll
e) Phyllis Gotlieb The Other Eye
f) Ursula Pflug The Black Lac
ENG 0218 THEORIES ON CULTURE: AN INTRODUCTION
a) F.R. Leavis Mass Civilization and Minority Culture
b) Raymond Williams Culture and Society
c) Pierre Macherey A theory of Literary Production
d) Colin Macabe Realism and Cinema
e) Laura Mulvey Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema
f) Theodore Adorno On Popular Music
g) Paul Hamiltion Historicism (Introduction)
h) Jacques Lacan The Mirror Stage (From Ecrits)
i) Sigmund Freud On Dreams (Selections)
k) Michel Foucault Discipline and Punish
l) Gayatri Spivak Displacement and the Discourse of Woman
m) Vandana Shiva Survival: Women Ecology …..(Introduction)
ENG0219 POSTCOLONIAL CRITICISM
a) Helen Tiffin et al. The Empire Writes Back (Introduction)
b) Chinua Achebe Essay on Conrad’s Heart of Darkness
c) Ngugi Wa Thiong Decolonizing the Mind
d) Homi K. Bhabha Nation and Narration (Introduction)
e) Gayatri Spivak Can The Subaltern Speak?
f) Edward Said Culture and Imperialism (Introduction)
ENG 0220 TRAVEL LITERATURE
Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara: Motorcycle DairiesSalman Rushdie: Jaguar SmilePico Iyer: Cuba and the NightDiane Thomas: Romancing the Stone
ENG0221 Popular Culture and Censorship
Niccolo Machiavelli: The PrinceTaslima Nasrin : ShameD.H.Lawrence : Lady Chatterley’s LoverGeorge Orwell : Nineteen Eight Four
ENG0222 Adventure Novels
Edward Sylvester Ellis : The Land of MysteryDaniel Defoe : Robinson CrusoeJoseph Conrad : NostromoV.S.Naipaul : A Way in the World
ENG0223 Novel and the Metropolis
Michael Ondaatje : In the Skin of a LionCharles Dickens : A Tale of Two CitiesDominique Lapierre : City of Joy
Eduardo Mendoza : The City of Marvels
ENG 0224 SHORT FICTIONS OF RUSSIA AND USA
Ivan Turgenev : The District Doctor
Leo Tolstoy : The Long Exile.
Feodar Dostoievsky : The Charismas Tree and The Wedding
Anton Chekhov : The Bet.
Maxim Gorky : One Autumn Night
Nikolai Gogal : St.John’s Eve.
Washington Irving : The specter Bridegroom
Nathaniel Hawthorne : Mrs. Bullfrog
Edgar Allen Poe : The Tell-tale Heart
Henry James : The Story in It
O’Henry : Supply and Demand
James Branch Campbell : A Brown Woman
ENG 0225 CONTEMPORARY INDIAN FICTION IN ENGLISH
Vikram Chandra Love and Longing in Bombay
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni The Mistress of Spice
S.L.Byrappa Daatu
U.R.Ananthamurthy Bharathipura
ENG 0226 ENGLISH FICTIONS IN REGIONAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION.
1. Rashid Jehan She
2. Gopinath Mohanty Paraja
3. O.V.Vijayan The Rocks
4. Vijay Chauhan Birthday
5. Bhabendra Nath saikia Rats
6. Shymal Gangopadhyay The Road from the Previous Birth
7. Arun Joshi Kanyakumari
8. Mrinal Pande The Home Coming
9. Baburao Bagul : Death is Getting Cheaper
10. Sirshendhu Mukhopadhyay : Dear Madhuban
11. Krishna Kumar : Lankapuri
ENG 0227 INDIAN VERNACULAR FICTION IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION
1, Basavaraj Kattimani : Upon the Volcano
2. Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai : Chameen
3. K. Shivarama Karanth : The Woman of Basrur
4. S. L Byrappa : Saksi5. Jhaverchand Meghan : Earthen Lamps
ENG 0228 NOVELS OF CHILDHOOD (KTS)
R.K.Narayan : Swami and Friends Wole Soyinka : Ake George Laming : In the Castle of My skin V.S.Naipaul : A House for Mr.Biswas
ENG 0229 : HYBRID MUSE AND FICTION (KTS)
Derek Walcott : Selected PoetryA.K.Ramanujam : Selected PoetryMargaret Atwood : SurfacingJhumpa Lahiri : Interpreter of Maladies
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