LLT 180: Heroic Quest iCourse | Office: Siceluff 113 |
Section 750 | Office
Hours: 12:30-1:15 pm MWF |
Spring Semester 2017 |
Phone:
836-6601 (messages 836-5122) |
5:30 pm T, CHEK 0172 | E-mail: JosephHughes at MissouriState.edu |
Instructor: Dr. Joseph Hughes | WWW: http://cicero.missouristate.edu |
IMPORTANT NOTICE:
The instructor of this iCourse will not be held responsible for student issues arising from a student's failure to attend the mandatory orientation session at 5:30 pm, Tuesday, January 17, 2017. In such cases, the student bears sole responsibility for initiating contact with the instructor in a timely fashion.
The course lectures are available via iTunes U or via YouTube.
Course Texts are available on LLT 180 iCourse Readings Page with the exception of Vonnegut's Breakfast of Champions, which must be purchased.
Course
Description
and Objectives (per previous General Education Program)
This course
is an exercise in the telling, retelling, and explication of ancient
and modern stories involving a katabasis, or round-trip visit to the
underworld. Further detail on course objectives can be found on the Course Objective Page.
Course Description
The literary pattern of the “heroic quest,” in which a protagonist journeys to far-off lands in pursuit of an important goal, is literally the oldest story known to humankind, dating back to the Gilgamesh Epic of 2500 BCE. Beginning from a scarcely literate world with no mass media, stories about the “heroic quest” have instructed individuals and civilizations alike for millennia upon important topics such as cultural awareness, the boundaries of ethical conduct, and the necessity for leading a good life. Stories about the “heroic quest” continue to entertain and inform down to our own times. Through close study of the context and content of several such “heroic quest” stories, selected from a wide range of civilizations and time periods, students will develop an awareness of their own inherited identity of culture and language, and to address the challenge of leading an ethical and civically engaged life.
General Education GoalsCourse Policy
The student is solely responsible for obtaining any notes, assignments, or other information given in a class which he or she has missed. Students with a handicap should notify the instructor at once, so that arrangements may be made. Make-up exams will be allowed only in case of documented emergency (or through the Learning Diagnostic Center; see below).
Letter grades will be assigned on the standard Missouri State University curve: 90-100%= A; 80-89%= B; 70-79%= C; 60-69%= D; 59%-below= F.
Course Grading
There will be two Examinations over the course of the semester, each worth 50% of your final grade. Each of the three Hour Examinations will be worth 100 points. 70% of the score will be based on objective questions (identification, short-answer, matching), and 30% will be based on the essay question. Each examination will focus primarily on material covered since the previous exam, but not completely.
Nondiscrimination Policy:
Missouri State University is an equal opportunity/affirmative action institution, and maintains a grievance procedure available to any person who believes he or she has been discriminated against. At all times, it is your right to address inquiries or concerns about possible discrimination to the Office for Equity and Diversity, Park Central Office Building, 117 Park Central Square, Suite 111, (417) 836-4252. Other types of concerns (i.e., concerns of an academic nature) should be discussed directly with your instructor and can also be brought to the attention of your instructor’s Department Head. Please visit the OED website at http://www.missouristate.edu/equity.
Disability Accommodation Policy:
To request academic accommodations for a disability, contact the Director of Disability Services, Plaster Student Union, Suite 405, (417) 836-4192 or (417) 836-6792 (TTY), http://www.missouristate.edu/disability. Students are required to provide documentation of disability to Disability Services prior to receiving accommodations. Disability Services refers some types of accommodation requests to the Learning Diagnostic Clinic, which also provides diagnostic testing for learning and psychological disabilities. For information about testing, contact the Director of the Learning Diagnostic Clinic at (417) 836-4787.
Academic Dishonesty Policy:
Missouri State University is a community of scholars committed to developing educated persons who accept the responsibility to practice personal and academic integrity. You are responsible for knowing and following the university’s student honor code, Student Academic Integrity Policies and Procedures, available at the University Academic Integrity website and also available at the Reserves Desk in Meyer Library. Any student participating in any form of academic dishonesty will be subject to sanctions as described in this policy
EXAM SCHEDULE:
Midterm (Lectures 01-10) Tue, 07 Mar 2017
5:30 pm, CHEK 0172
Final (Lectures 11-22) Tue, 16 May 2017
5:30 pm, CHEK 0172
ALTERNATE EXAM DATES
If you are a Distance Learning student taking the iCourse off-campus, please email the instructor for details. Even if you already have emailed him. Make-up tests will be given ONLY in demonstrable emergencies. Email the instructor if such an emergency arises.
SEQUENCE OF READINGS
Important! To make maximum sense, the lectures should be watched and the texts read in the following order:
Midterm
Final
Welcome (Lecture 01)
Sophocles, Antigone (Lectures 11-13)
Gilgamesh (Lectures 02-05)
Vergil, Aeneid 6 (Lectures 14-15)
Homer, Odyssey 9 (Lectures 05-07)
Aeneid vs. Odyssey (Lecture 16)
Aristophanes, The Frogs (Lecture 08)
Dante, Inferno (Lectures 17-18)
Apuleius, Cupid and Psyche (Lecture 09)
Gogol, The Nose (Lectures 19-20)
Review Session (Lecture 10)
Vonnegut, Breakfast of Champions (Lectures 21-22)