English 213 Diaries and Diarists: Course Project
NOTE: Because
this is your major project for the course, you need to expect to devote a
minimum of 15-20 hours to its planning and completion.
Due on Monday,
April 10: Brief in-progress report on your final project: please include a
one-page typed, double-spaced in-progress report that defines the nature of your
project, outlines the source materials (e.g., diaries, letters, memoirs) that
will serve as the basis for your project, lists several questions you wish to
explore, and explains the final form (e.g., paper, web site, photo/essay) that
your project will take.
GENERAL
DESCRIPTION OF Final Project:
Select a diary (or a form of
autobiography that uses the journal/diary format as its basis) as the basis for
your analysis. The diary might be published or unpublished; it might be one of
your grand aunt's or your own from years past, Joan of Arc's or Uncle Dick's. We
suggest that the diarist or the diary - language and content - intrigues you
enough to spend sufficient time with him or her, to discover the value of the
text and the extended confidence to read and analyze, to compare and contrast to
other diaries you've read, in or out of class, to journals you've kept. Please
analyze the diary by using techniques you've learned in class and in Tristine
Rainer's THE NEW DIARY.
Include these aspects in your
analysis: 1) Define the diarist's purpose and format and audience; 2) Analyze
the diction and syntax, the changes and circumstance, the audience, the risks
the writer takes. 3) Describe the diary modes used by the diarist: Subjective or
objective, cathartic, descriptive, intuitive, reflective; 4) Compare and
contrast the devices use by the diarist with those you've already seen or used:
Lists, portraits, maps, guided imagery, altered points of view, epistles,
dialogue; 5) Evaluate ways in which the writing is affected by historical,
personal, or institutional circumstances. 6) Draw your own conclusions about the
purposes that the diary functions for its writer and for you as its reader.
This proposal should include the following:
1) Your statement of which text, a
diary or diaries, published or not, paper-bound or on-line, you have selected
for your class project. Choose one that compels the same sort of comparison and
analysis of diaries and diarists we do in class.
2) A detailed 1-2 page project proposal, including annotations of the texts and
outside sources you choose to use.
3) A brief description of roadblocks you anticipate and a hypothesis or
explicitly stated question/s you wish to ask and answer in your research and
analysis.
Due on Thursday, May 11, 2006, by 5:00 p.m. Your completed project is to be
submitted in your final portfolio for the course.
Complete your reading, your research, and your written analysis. Outside
material, historical, demographic, and cultural should be considered if
essential to a thorough reading of the writer's life. Explicate, when necessary,
as Suzanne has done in her endnotes to Caroline Seabury's diary. Use what you
know, what you discover or attempt to learn from your own journaling, from what
you systematically reveal or hide, to compare, contrast, supplement, and support
the generalizations and original assertions that you make.
THE FINAL STEP: Compose a reflective/analytical essay or create a project
(e.g., web site, photo-essay) equal to 8 - 10 pages of 12 font, Times-New Roman,
black on white, double-spaced typed material you will present to the class (hard
copies of some sort are essential to include in your final course portfolio).