Deck your summer with boughs of holly and enjoy the Christmas season early with Charles Dickens! If you’d like a full semester credit this summer, Mrs. Nicholson is offering an optional literary analysis paper that extends the course.
“Marley was dead, to begin with…” Dickens’ A Christmas Carol has such a deep cultural importance that most of us probably are familiar with its opening lines. To unpack this familiar and yet widely misunderstood work, we will proceed backward chronologically, exploring three of the most important Christmas stories ever written. As we become more intimately acquainted with the great writer and the period in which he lived, we will gain through him a deeper appreciation for the sacred mystery of Christmas. In addition to cultivating artistic appreciation and a love of reading, this course facilitates the development of critical reasoning, the disciplined use of the imagination, and a strong knowledge of historical and literary context.
Day 1 (July 11): The Cricket on the Hearth (first half)
Day 2 (July 12): The Cricket on the Hearth (second half)
Day 3 (July 13): The Chimes (first half)
Day 4 (July 18): The Chimes (second half)
Day 5 (July 19): A Christmas Carol (first half)
Day 6 (July 20): A Christmas Carol (second half)
Course materials: Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, The Chimes, and The Cricket on the Hearth. Any edition is acceptable (e.g. ISBN-13:978-1593080334, https://amzn.to/3BD47uu), just make sure, if you select a Christmas Stories collection, that these three stories are included. These are also available for free online via Project Gutenberg, https://www.gutenberg.org/.
Homework: Expect to spend 1-3 hours per week reading. Each week we will have an identification quiz (12 questions, multiple choice, open book). At the end of the course, we will have a review quiz and a concluding thoughts assignment. There is an optional paper project that can be taken up during the course and concluded after the course (by August 1st). This paper project can increase the suggested credit for the course to a full semester.
Class dates: Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, July 11, 12, 13, 18, 19, and 20, 2023
Starting time: 2:30 PM Eastern (1:30 Central; 12:30 Mountain; 11:30 Pacific)