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Mary E. Brown, Ph.D., Professor
Information Science

Southern Connecticut State University
501 Crescent Street, New Haven, CT 06515

Department of Information and Library Science
Fax: 1.203.392-5780 / Phone: 1.203.392-5781
Toll Free: 1-888-500-SCSU, then press 4


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ILS 300 Syllabus

Week 1 : Syllabus Day 1 (T/M) Day 2 (W/T) Day 3 (R/W) Day 4 (F/R)

Week 2 : Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

Week 3 : Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

Week 4 : Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

Week 5 : Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

UNIT 14

UNIT 14 READING ASSIGNMENT

Read in Butler the twelve poems found on pp. 239-244 and the essay "A Meditation on Children and Their Literature" found on pp. 477-483

UNIT 14 LECTURE

Realistic Fiction

Definition: Realistic fiction is stories of life in the real world (the world as we know it) and governed by the laws of the natural world as we understand them. Realistic fiction intends to provide a believable verisimilitude or plausibility to life as we experience it

  • Characters may be very ordinary or quite exaggerated.
  • Plots may be mundane or preposterous.
  • Realistic fiction is an artist's view of the world in which we live.
  • Realistic fiction can be classified by the principal focus of the realistic element.

Types of realism:

Adventure stories

  • The oldest type of fictional story.
  • Characterized by
    • exciting, fast-moving plot
    • unusual, often bizarre, characters
      • often sharply defined
      • strong and daring heroes, dastardly villains
    • frequently exotic settings.
  • Two main kinds of adventure stories
    • Survival stories
      • focus on an individual(s) pitted usually against the forces of nature
      • protagonist must either outwit or unite with nature in order to survive
    • Mysteries
      • popularized by Edgar Allan Poe in the early 19th century
      • always involves the solving of a puzzle, perhaps a crime
      • depends heavily on plot intricacies and clever twists
      • successful mystery contains cleverly planted clues and an ingenuous crime and its solution

Domestic realism or family stories

  • Focuses on the everyday manners, customs, and mores of English society
    • Prior to the mid 20th century, family scenes were romantic
    • After the mid 20th century, and the dramatic change in the family structure, the happy family unit is often replaced with emotionally charged situations broken homes, and nontraditional domestic arrangements.

Social realism

  • Forces on societal problems--poverty, crimes, education, working conditions, corruption--and how those problems affect the characters in the novel
  • Stories typically offer hope in the midst struggles.
    • message is usually if hardship is to be overcome, it will be through perseverance and determination rather than through some fortuitous event that sheds rich blessings on the protagonist
  • New Realism is a form of social realism in which frankness, absence of sentimentality, and at times a diminishing of hope are the basis of the story

Psychological novels and problem novels

  • Psychological novel
    • A product of the 20th century
    • Focuses on a single individual's emotional reaction and adjustment to life's experiences
    • Tends to be for older readers
    • Rarely carries a social message
    • Not every problem has a solution
  • Problem novel
    • A product of the 1960s
    • Focuses on a single issue of immediate concern to young people, such as divorce, first date, puberty, moving, teen pregnancy, drugs, homosexuality
    • Family is usually depicted as helpless or part of the problem--a reflection of the perceived breakdown of the modern family structure
    • Solutions come from outside the home--a sympathetic adult or a peer
    • Used in bibliotherapy--using directed reading to help young adults cope with personal problems (some authors object to this saying it encourages the individual to narrow their perspective and focus on self-pity)

Realistic animal stories

  • Originated in North America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries
  • Animals are depicted realistically, behave as animals, are not empowered with human speech, but are given a personality and a hint of human emotion

Special characteristics of realism:

  • Often seen as coming of age stories in which the main character finds greater independence, accepts responsibilities and must make decisions
  • Often stories find children moving from a position of isolation and distrust to one of reaching out to others and acknowledging a need for social interaction
  • Increases children's thinking skills



UNIT 14 QUIZ ON LECTURE

After reading and reviewing the Unit 1 lecture, please take the quiz in WebCT (SCSU Vista)



UNIT 14 WRITING ASSIGNMENT

Revise your Type Three writing as a Type Four writing based on classmates' (and others) suggestions. Type Four writings (500 words) are expected to be a substantial improvement over the Type Three assignment.



UNIT 14 PEER EDITING

IF WE USE THE WIKI: The professor will read, comment on, and score (grade) Type 4 Writings.

IF WE USE THE THREADS: After you have entered your Type Four writing, read the entry immediately before yours and make suggestions for improving the writing, based on the focus correction areas (FCAs). [First person will need to read the last entry.] NOTE: The professor will read, comment on, and score (grade) Type 4 Writings.


On this class site, every effort has been made to acknowledge the work of others. Any omission is unintentional. If anyone finds an oversight, please contact me at brownm6@southernct.edu immediately so that any error can be corrected.

           

                       

    Last Modified Wednesday, April 25, 2008

This site is maintained by Mary E. Brown, Ph.D. Art work by Valerie Samandar from photograph of the sculpture "Serie Metafisica XVIII" (1983), by Herk Van Tongeren, on Southern's campus near Morrill Hall.