| LIT 340 Term: Spring 2007 Time: 4:00-5:20 p.m. MR Room: Bliss 235 |
Prof. G. Steinberg
Office: Bliss 216 Office Phone: 771-2106 TCNJ E-mail Username: gsteinbe |
TEXTBOOK:
COURSE DESCRIPTION. In this course, we will read and analyze the Bible as a piece of literature. In particular, we will examine the historical and cultural background of the various books of the Bible with an eye to understanding the peculiarities of Biblical narrative, imagery, and style. We will read as much of the Bible as a single semester allows – from the Torah to the Gospels, from the historical books to the Second-Temple apocrypha, from the Prophets to the letters of St. Paul. Through this course, you will become conversant in the most influential images, stories, and characters of the Judeo-Christian tradition.
GOALS. In terms of my goals for this course, I want you
REQUIREMENTS. This course has the following graded assignments:
- 10 two-page response papers (worth 2% of your final grade each or 20% total),
- a mid-term exam (15% of your final grade),
- PAPER 1 (15%),
- PAPER 2 (25%), and
- a comprehensive final exam (25%).
ATTENDANCE. Regular attendance is a virtual necessity for successful completion of this class. Class discussion constitutes important, useful preparation for your graded work. If you miss a class, you will essentially lose out on that day’s contribution to your preparation, since it is never really possible to reproduce or recapture the dynamics and flow of information for a missed class meeting (even if you get notes from someone). If, however, you positively must miss a class, I expect you to find out what you missed and to come fully prepared – without excuses – to the next class meeting. And please, don’t ask, “Did I miss anything?” Check out Tom Wayman’s poem about that question.
OFFICE HOURS. My office is Bliss 216, and my office hours are from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. on MR. If you cannot see me during these office hours, feel free as needed to call my office (771-2106) or to talk to me before or after class to arrange an appointment at another time. You may also contact me by email (gsteinbe@tcnj.edu), or you may leave a message for me in my English department box in Bliss 124. Email is generally the fastest and best way to contact me.
EMAIL. I may, on occasion, want to e-mail everyone in class. I generally only have access to your TCNJ e-mail addresses, however. As a result, if you regularly use an e-mail address other than your TCNJ address, I recommend that you have mail from your TCNJ address forwarded to the address you use more regularly. That way, if I e-mail your TCNJ address, my message will be forwarded to your other address automatically. To forward mail from your TCNJ address, go to http://managemail.tcnj.edu/ and click “Mail Forwarding Manager.” Follow the directions there to set up the mail forwarding.
If you would like to send an e-mail message to one or more of your classmates, you can do so through SOCS. To access SOCS, go to http://socs.tcnj.edu and, after you have logged in with your TCNJ e-mail username and password, choose this class from the list of your courses this semester. Then, when our course page comes up, click the “Email” button. From there, you can select individual e-mail addresses or the entire class and send a message to the address(es) you’ve selected.
Accommodations. The College of New Jersey prohibits discrimination against any student on the basis of physical or mental disability or perceived disability. The College will also provide reasonable and appropriate accommodations to enable students with disabilities to participate in the life of the campus community. Individuals with disabilities are responsible for reporting and supplying documentation verifying their disability, and requests for accommodations must be initiated through the Office of Differing Abilities Services (Eickhoff Hall 159). If you require special assistance, I will make every reasonable effort to accommodate your needs and to create an environment where your special abilities will be respected.
LANGUAGES ACROSS THE CURRICULUM. A one credit Languages Across the Curriculum independent study may be added to this course for those students who have intermediate level proficiency in another language and who wish to complement the work in this course by utilizing their language skills. Please visit the LAC website at http://internationalstudies.intrasun.tcnj.edu or contact dcompte@tcnj.edu for more information. Students must meet with Dr. Compte to enroll in the LAC independent study by January 26.
RESPONSE PAPERS. In the course of the term, you are required to write 10 short, informal papers (about 2 pages each) on the readings for class. You may choose which days and which readings you want to respond to. I have posted questions about each day’s reading assignment for you to consider as the basis of your response.
Response papers will be graded Pass/Fail. I ask you to type them (so that they are easier for me to read), but they need not be a perfect, polished product. Rather, response papers should be just what their name says – a response. Think about the question(s) that I ask you to consider for a particular day’s reading assignment; then, write a response. Don’t worry about answering every question I ask in the assignment. In fact, focus on the one question that seems most interesting to you, and be as specific as you can, getting down as much as you can, as quickly as you can. Treat response papers more like a journal entry than like a formal paper. I don’t want a five-paragraph theme. Rather, I want an exploration – as detailed and specific as possible – of the reading assignment for the day. Normally, as long as you submit a response paper of suitable length, detail, and thoughtfulness (and as long as you submit it in class on the assigned day), you will receive all the credit that the response paper is worth.
You may submit more than 10 response papers in the course of the semester (to make up for any response papers that do not receive a grade of “Pass”), but no matter how many extra response papers you submit, you will not receive credit for more than 10. You may not submit more than one response paper on a single day, nor may you submit a response paper for a day that you are absent from class. (NOTE: Even if you do not submit a response paper on a particular day, you should still come to class prepared to discuss the assigned questions for that day, since we will focus on those questions in our in-class discussion of the reading assignment.)
PAPER 1. Analyze the doublet of Exodus 16 and Numbers 11. Write a short paper (4-5 pages) in which you argue a clear and specific thesis about the doublet. How would you characterize the two different versions of the story of the manna and quails? How do they relate to one another? Why do they both exist? What purpose do they each serve? What does each add to the other? Note: You need not use outside sources for this paper (that is, sources in addition to the texts of Exodus and Numbers); in fact, I would encourage you not to use outside sources (because I'd rather hear what you think than what some published scholar thinks).
Your paper will be evaluated according to the following criteria (in order of relative importance):
PAPER 2. Read the Gospel of Luke. Choose one pericope from Luke that has a parallel in one or more of the other three Gospels. From the pericope you have chosen, what can you conclude about the unique characteristics and concerns of the Gospel of Luke? Write a paper (5-7 pages) in which you argue a clear and specific thesis about the uniqueness of Luke’s perspective or style in relation to one or more of the other Gospels.
This assignment requires you to do a number of things. Your grade for the paper will depend upon how well you fulfill all the implied tasks of the assignment:
Note: You need not use outside sources for this paper (that is, sources in addition to the texts of the Gospels); in fact, I would encourage you not to use outside sources (because I'd rather hear what you think than what some published scholar thinks).
Your paper will be evaluated according to the same criteria as PAPER 1 with the following addition:
COURSE SCHEDULE. This schedule is subject to change at the discretion of the professor. Changes made after the beginning of the semester will be shown in red.
| Date | Assignment |
| M Jan 22 | Introductions |
| R Jan 25 |
Genesis 1-2 You may not do a response paper for this day. Click here for a PowerPoint presentation on Hebrew History. Click here for the same presentation in web format. For a map of the Biblical world, go to “Resources” in SOCS. |
| M Jan 29 | Genesis 3-24 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Feb 1 | Genesis 25-50 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Feb 5 | Exodus 1-25, 32-35, 40 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Feb 8 | Numbers 12-36; Deuteronomy 31-34; Joshua 1-11, 22-24 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Feb 12 | Judges and Ruth Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| T Feb 13 | PAPER 1 DUE (submit your paper in the “Dropbox” of SOCS at any point during the day) |
| R Feb 15 | 1 Samuel Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Feb 19 | 2 Samuel Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Feb 22 | 1 Kings Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Feb 26 | 2 Kings Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Mar 1 | Psalms 1-42 & 107-150 and Ecclesiastes Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Mar 5 | Job Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Mar 8 | MID-TERM EXAM |
| M Mar 12 | NO CLASS (Spring Break) |
| R Mar 15 | NO CLASS (Spring Break) |
| M Mar 19 | Amos, Hosea, and Jonah Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Mar 22 | Isaiah 1-39 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Mar 26 | Isaiah 40-66 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Mar 29 | Jeremiah 1-27 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Apr 2 | Jeremiah 28-52 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Apr 5 | Ezekiel 1-24 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Apr 9 | Ezekiel 25-48 Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Apr 12 | Daniel and Judith Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Apr 16 | Mark Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Apr 19 | Matthew Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Apr 23 | John Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| R Apr 26 | PAPER 2 DUE (submit your paper in the “Dropbox” of SOCS 1 Corinthians, Philemon, and Revelation Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. |
| M Apr 30 | Click here for the day’s response paper assignment. Luke PAPER 2 DUE (submit your paper in the “Dropbox” of SOCS before coming to class) |
| FINALS WEEK | FINAL EXAM |
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