|
Faculty of Arts
Department of English
Bachelor of Arts (Hons.)
in English
The
courses offered by the Department of English for the
degree of Bachelor of Arts (Hons.) in English has two
concentrations: Literature and Linguistics.
Honors are spread over four years and carry a total of
129 credits.
The
program requires an extensive reading of texts of
literature in English and a familiarity with the
theoretical and critical approaches, which have shaped
English studies in recent years. The organization of the
degree offers both structure and flexibility. The
program focuses on a study of literary periods, genres
and theoretical issues, as well as a study of non-native
literature in English and literatures in other
languages. Language skills and techniques are part of
the degree. Students are thus offered the possibility of
working with texts from a number of different historical
periods and geographical areas, and are given the tools
to analyze them in a variety of ways.
For
Linguistics concentration, the program emphasizes an
extensive reading of English phonetics and phonology,
English grammar, Morphology, Syntax, applied linguistics
and Language Acquisition. These count as core courses in
the Linguistics major.
Career Information:
Students preparing to
enhance their teaching careers can select any
concentration from Literature/Language/ Applied
Linguistics and ELT. The English Literature major is the
ideal liberal arts major for students desiring to
develop capabilities in research, writing, critical
thinking, and textual analysis combined with the study
of literature and language. And students preparing to
teach English as a Second Language are advised to take
linguistics major. For pre-professional and general
liberal-arts majors, linguistics contributes to
analytical and research skills that enhance professional
résumé. Applied Linguistics and ELT are for students who
are pursuing Teaching English to Speakers of Other
Languages (TESOL) endorsement concurrently with the MA
in English.
Admission Requirements:
Every
applicant, without any exception, must fulfill the
admission requirements as laid down by IBAIS University.
Admission test and interview for admission into the
first trimester will be held three times a year. No
interim or supplementary admission test or interview
will be arranged.
A higher
secondary certificates or its equivalent in Science,
Arts, Commerce or other fields of study is the basic
educational requirement. Minimum five subjects in
O-level and two subjects in A-level education are
required. Minimum qualifying GPA to be eligible to apply
is 2.5 individually in SSC/ ‘O’ level and HSC/ ‘A’ level
examinations. The students who have completed SSC and
HSC under division system will have to have minimum 2nd
division in both SSC and HSC.
For all
foreign certificates, the University as per rules of
Bangladesh Government will determine equivalence.
Degree Requirements:
The
BA degree requirements will be as follows:
(a)
Completion of 123 credit hours courses
(b)
Completion of the dissertation with at least a ‘C+’
grade (6.0 credit hours)
(c)
Passing of all courses individually and maintaining a
minimum CGPA of 2.5
Duration:
A
student under normal work load will have 12 credit hours
per trimester for undergraduate programs. Four years
will be required for completion of a Bachelor degree.
Twelve Trimester Course Sequence
1st Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
101
|
Freshman
English-I
|
3.0 |
| MAT 102 |
Basic Algebra & Calculus |
3.0 |
| ENG 103 |
Introduction to Poetry |
3.0
|
| BANG 104 |
Introduction to Bangla Prose and Poetry |
3.0 |
2nd
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
SOC
104 |
Introduction to Social Science |
3.0 |
|
ENG 105 |
Introduction to Prose and Drama |
3.0 |
|
ENG 106 |
Freshman English – II |
3.0
|
|
ENG 108 |
Studies in English History |
3.0 |
3rd
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
109 |
Old & Middle English |
3.0
|
|
PHL
110 |
Introduction to Philosophy |
3.0
|
|
CSE
111 |
Computer Fundamentals & Programming Techniques |
3.0
|
|
CSE 112 |
Computer Fundamentals & Programming Techniques Lab |
1.5
|
|
HIST 114 |
Bangladesh Studies |
3.0 |
SOPHOMORE YEAR (Second year)
4th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
201 |
The 16th & 17th Century English
Literature – I |
3.0
|
|
ENG
202 |
The 16th & 17th Century English Literature – II |
3.0
|
|
HIST
203 |
European History |
3.0
|
|
HIST
204 |
World Civilization |
3.0
|
5th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
CSE
121 |
Structured Programming Language |
3.0
|
|
CSE 122 |
Structured Programming Language Lab |
1.5
|
|
ENG
205 |
Restoration and 18th Century Literature |
3.0
|
|
PHL
206 |
History of Western Ideas |
3.0
|
|
ECON 213 |
Economics |
3.0
|
6th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
BUS
105 |
Introduction to Business |
3.0
|
|
ENG
208 |
dvanced Reading Strategies & Writing |
3.0
|
|
ANT 209 |
Anthropology |
3.0
|
Literature Major
JUNIOR
YEAR (Third year)
7th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ACT 110 |
Principles of Accounting |
3.0
|
|
ENG 301 |
English for Professional Purpose |
3.0
|
|
PHL 302 |
Eastern Thought |
3.0
|
8th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
303 |
The Romantic Period |
3.0 |
|
ENG
304 |
High Victorian Literature (1830-1880) |
3.0 |
|
ENG
305 |
American Literature – I |
3.0
|
9th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
306 |
Late Victorian to Modernist (1880-1930) |
3.0
|
|
ENG
307 |
American Literature – II |
3.0
|
|
ENG
308 |
Postcolonial Literature – I |
3.0
|
|
ENG
309 |
Literary Criticism |
3.0 |
SENIOR
YEAR (Fourth year)
10th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
401 |
Postcolonial Literature – II |
3.0 |
|
ENG 402 |
Classics in Translation |
3.0 |
|
ENG 403 |
Introduction to Critical Theory |
3.0 |
11th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
404 |
Twentieth Century Poetry |
3.0 |
|
ENG 405 |
Twentieth Century Novel |
3.0 |
|
ENG 406 |
Twentieth Century Drama |
3.0 |
12th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ENG
407 |
Shakespeare |
3.0
|
|
ENG
450 |
Dissertation |
6.0 |
Linguistics Major
Junior Year (Third year)
7th Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ACT
110 |
Principles of Accounting |
3.0
|
|
ENG
301 |
English for Professional Purpose |
3.0
|
|
PHL
302 |
Eastern Thought |
3.0
|
8th Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ELN
303 |
Introduction to Linguistics |
3.0
|
|
ELN
304 |
English Language Teaching |
3.0
|
|
ELN
305 |
Language, Society and Culture |
3.0
|
9th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
|
ELN
306 |
Structure of English or Traditional Grammar
|
3.0
|
|
ELN
307 |
Modern English Grammar |
3.0
|
|
ELN
308 |
Language and Philosophy |
3.0
|
Senior Year (Fourth
Year)
10th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
| ELN 401 |
Introduction to Phonetics |
3.0 |
| ELN 402 |
Introduction to Phonology |
3.0 |
| ELN 403 |
Morphology and Syntax |
3.0 |
11th
Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
| ELN 404 |
Introduction to Sociolinguistics |
4.0 |
| ELN 405 |
Introduction to Psycholinguistics |
4.0 |
| ELN 406 |
Second Language Acquisition |
4.0 |
12th Trimester
|
Course
Code
|
Title of the course |
Credit Hours |
| ELN 407 |
Applied Linguistics |
3.0 |
| ENG 450 |
Dissertation |
6.0 |
Syllabus
ENG
101 Freshman English – I
The
course aims at developing proficiency in speaking,
listening, reading, and writing of English. It is
generalized as a remedial course for students who need
considerable repair in English and as a foundation
courses for ENG 105. The contents include parts of
speech, countable and uncountable nouns, articles,
agreement between subject and verb, adverbs of
frequency, tense and the sequence of tenses, active and
passive voices, types of sentences, prepositions: time,
place, action, directions, questions forms, multi-word
verbs, capitalization.
MAT
102 Basic Algebra and Calculus
Algebra:
Basic Algebraic operations, Theory of sets, Special type
of Problems, Linear Equation and Inequality, Exponential
and logarithmic functions, System of Equations and
inequalities, Sequences and Series
Differential Calculus:
Limit,
Continuity and differentiability, Successive
Differentiation of various types of function, Liebnitz’s
theorem, Rolle’s theorem, Mean value theorem, Taylor’s
theorem in finite and infinite form, Maclaurine’s
theorem’s in finite and infinite form, Evaluation of
function of L’Hospitals rule, Partial Differentiation,
Euler’s theorem, Determination of minimum and maximum
values of function and point of inflexion.
Integral Calculus:
Definitions of integration, Integration of method of
substitution, Integration by parts, Standard integrals,
Integration by the method of successive reduction,
Definite integrals, its properties and use in summing
series, Improper integrals.
ENG
103 Introduction to Poetry
Shakespeare, William : ‘My Mistress’s Eyes
are Nothing Like the Sun’
Donne,
John : ‘The Sonne Rising’
Milton,
John : ‘How Soon Hath Time’
Gray,
Thomas : ‘Elegy Written in a
Country Churchyard’
Wordsworth, William : ‘I wandered lonely as
a cloud’
Shelley,
Percy Bysshe: ‘The Cloud’
Keats,
John : ‘On First Looking into
Chapman’s Homer’
Tennyson, Alfred : ‘Tithonus’
Browning, Robert : Sonnets from the
Portuguese, No. 43
Hardy,
Thomas : ‘The Darkling Thrush’
Dickinson, Emily : Poem # 712
(Because I Could not stop for Death)
Dylan,
Thomas : ‘Fern Hill’
Eliot,
Thomas Stearns: ‘Preludes’
Hughes,
Ted : ‘Jaguar’
Heaney,
Seamus : ‘Digging’
BANG
104 Introduction to Bangla Prose and Poetry
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‡eva
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AvaywbK mvwnZ¨
cÖg_ †PŠayix
evOvjxi Drme
SOC
104 Introduction to Social Science
Scope
and nature of sociology, society, social evolution and
techniques of production, industrial revolution,
political system, social control, society and
population, standard of living, nature of social change,
urbanization and industrialization in Bangladesh, urban
ecology, society and environment and tribal people of
Bangladesh.
ENG
105 Introduction to Prose and Drama
Swift,
Jonathan : ‘A Modest Proposal’
Lamb,
Charles : ‘A Bachelor’s Complaint
of the Behaviour of the Married
People’
Joyce,
James : ‘Eveline’
Orwell,
George : ‘Animal Farm’
Woolf,
Virginia :
A Room of One’s Own
[“Shakespeare’s Sister” as in Norton]
Sophocles : King Oedipus
Shakespeare, William : The Merchant of
Venice
Wilde,
Oscar : Importance of Being
Ernest
ENG
106 Freshman English – II
Prerequisite ENG 101. This course provides a study
on the skills in English i.e. reading, writing,
listening and speaking. The course emphasizes the
practice of pronunciation, speed-reading, and effective
writing and listening. The course content also includes
the grammar parts - revision of tenses, use of idioms,
prepositions, modals, conditional sentence, use of
linking words, use of suffixes and prefixes, synonyms
and antonyms, words with multi names. Reading parts
include the skills in skimming, scanning, selecting
information. Writing parts include planning, outlining,
organizing ideas, topic sentences, paragraph writing,
essay writing, job applications, writing reports,
writing research report.
ENG
108 Studies in English History
Chaucer’s England: The Middle Ages; Stuart and Tudor
England; Shakespeare’s England; Milton’s England; The
‘Glorious Revolution’: Neo-Classical England;
Romanticism (1798-1832): Wordsworth’s England; The
Victorian age; Twentieth Century England upto World War
II.
ENG
109 Old & Middle English
Beowulf,
The Seafarer, The Wanderer, The Dream of the Road, The
General Prologue, Morte D’Arthur (last 2 Chapters)
PHL
110 Introduction to Philosophy
Philosophy: Its origin and scope; Methods of Inquiry:
the sources, nature and validity of Knowledge; Types of
Philosophy: Materialism, Idealism, Realism, Pragmatism,
Existentialism and related movements; Man and his place
in the World: The physical sciences and philosophical
problems, life and its development, The nature of man
and the Self, Problem of Mind, Is man free?
The
Realm of Values: The nature of Values, Ethics and Moral
Life, Contrasting Value systems of orient and occident,
Nature of Religion and Belief in God
CSE
111 Computer Fundamentals & Programming Techniques
Introduction to digital computers. Programming
languages, algorithms and flow charts. C programming:
variables, constants, operators, expressions, control
statements, functions, arrays, pointers, structure,
unions, user defined variables, input-output and files.
C++ Programming: introduction to object oriented
programming, classes and objects, functions and operator
overloading and inheritance.
CSE
112 Computer Fundamentals & Programming Techniques Lab
This
course consists of two parts. In the first part,
students will perform experiments to verify practically
the theories and concepts learned in CSE 111. In the
second part, students will learn program design.
HIST
114 Bangladesh Studies
Sources
of History, History in Nation Building. Ancient
Geography and trade links with other world, Pala and
Sena Dynasties. Muslim Conquest of Bengal,
Socio-economic and cultural changes – Unification of
Bengal, the Development of Bengali Language and
Literature. The Independent Sultanate in Bengal – Bengal
under the Mughals, The Nawabi Rule in Bengal
(1700-1765). British Colonial Rule and Response,
Introduction of Zamindari System and its decline,
changes of socio-economic condition, Resistance
movements, English education and its impact, Revival of
statehood in Bengal, the Growth of Indian National
Congress, the Creation of New Province of East Bengal
and Assam, Muslim League (1906), Bengal Pact (1923).
Foundation of Awami League, Language Movement of 1952,
United Front and Fall of Muslim League, the Military
Rule of Ayub Khan, Economic Disparity between the two
regions, Cultural suppression of West Pakistan, 6-point
Movement, Mass Upsurge in 1969, Rule of Yahya Khan,
Election of 1970, the War of Independence and the
Emergence of Bangladesh.
ENG
201 The 16th & 17th Century
English Literature – I
Sidney,
Philip Arcadia
Edmund
Spencer The Faerie
Queenee (Book I Cantos I)
Kyd,
Thomas The
Spanish Tragedy
Marlowe,
Christopher Doctor Faustus
Shakespeare, William Sonnets
(54, 118,130)
Francis
Bacon Essays
(Selections from the Essays)
Milton,
John Paradise
Lost, Books IX and X
John,
Ben
Volpone
ENG
202 The 16th & 17th Century
English Literature – II
Donne,
John Selections
as in Grierson’s Metaphysical Poets
Herbert,
George Do
Marvell,
Andrew Do
Henry
Vaughan Do
HIST
203 European History
Renaissance – scientific and geographical discoveries;
Reformation, Counter Reformation, English Reformation,
Thirty Year’s War, Absolute Monarchy in Europe – Louis
XIV, Rise of Russia – Peter the Great and Catherine II,
Fredrick II of Prussia (1740-1786), French Revolution
and its impact, Unification of Germany and Italy,
Enlightenment, Industrial Revolution, First World War
(1914-1918), The Bolshevik Revolution (1917), Second
World War (1939-1945).
HIST
204 World Civilization
1.
Civilization: Theories, Various stages,
Definition, Periodisation and Chronology.
2.
Ancient Civilizations: Egypt, Mesopotamia,
Persia, India, China, Greece, Rome, America: Maya, Aztec
and Inca.
3.
Medieval Civilization: Development of Human
Institutions and Revolutionary Changes. Papacy,
Monasticism, Feudalism and Chivalry, Rise of Trade and
commerce, Cities, Rise of University, Geographical
Discoveries and Colonial Empire.
CSE
121 Structured Programming Language
PREREQUISITE: CSIT 111. Overview, Structure of C
program, Data Types and Data Type Qualifier, I/O
Functions-Character I/O, Formatted I/O, Character Set,
Identifiers, Keywords and Contents, Variables,
Expressions, Statement and Symbolic Constants,
Arithmetic operators, Relational Operators and Logical
Operators, Assignment Operators, Increment/Decrement
Operators, Unary Operator and Conditional Operator.
Bit-wise Operators, Comma Operator, Precedence and
Associatively, Branching: The IF statement (break and
continue statement), Branching: SWITCH statement, GOTO
statement and operator, Looping: FOR statement (break
and continue), Looping: WHILE and DO WHILE statement,
Storage class: Automatic, Static, Register and Extern,
Functions: Access, Prototype, Argument Passing and Value
Receiving, Functions: Pass-by-value, Pass-by-reference
and Value Receiving, Functions: Command Line Parameter
and Library Functions, Arrays: Initialization, Access,
Passing and Receiving , Arrays: 2D handling, Arrays:
Sorting and Searching , String Handling , Structure:
Initialization, Access, Passing and Receiving,
Structure: Embedded Structure, Union and Bit-fields,
File: Types of File, Text File Handling, File: Binary
File Handling , File: Data File Management Program,
Pointer: Concept, Passing and Receiving, Memory
Allocation and Release, Pointer: List or Tree Management
by Self-Referential Structure, Pointer: Pointer and
Multi-Dimensional Arrays, Enumeration, Macros,
Pre-Processor and Compiler , Directives, Library,
Compiler and Linker, Segment and Memory Model, Video
Adapter, Modes and Graphics Initialization, Graphics
Functions.
CSE
122 Structured Programming Language Lab
This
course consists of two parts. In the first part,
students will perform experiments to verify practically
the theories and concepts learned in CSE 122. In the
second part, students will learn program design.
ENG
205 Restoration and 18th Century Literature
Addison
and Steele
Coverley Papers (Selections)
Swift,
Jonathan
Gulliver’s Travels
Pope,
Alexander
The Rape of the Lock
Johnson,
Samuel
Preface to Shakespeare
Congreve,
William
The Way of the World
Dryden,
John
‘Mac Flecknoe’
Defoe,
Daniel
Moll Flanders
PHL
206 History of Western Ideas
The
Greeks and the Romans: The Pre-Socratics, Plato,
Aristotle, Stoics, Epicureans, Cynics, Skeptics, The
Medieval World View, The Renaissance: Erasmus, More,
Machiavelli, Bacon, The Reformation and the
Counter-Reformation, The Rise of Modern Science:
Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, The Rise of Modern
Philosophy: Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Locke,
The Enlightenment and 18th-Century Thought:
The Philosophes, Berkeley, Hume, Burke, Adam Smith,
Malthus, Rousseau, Kant, Romanticism and the French
Revolution, Mary Wollstonecraft and the Birth of
Feminism, The Americian War of Independence and
Democracy, 19th- Century Thought: Hegel,
Marx and Socialism, Utilitarianism, Darwin and the
Theory of Evolution, Positivism (Comte), Schopenhauer,
Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Feminism. 20th-Cantury
Thought: Bergson and Creative Evolution, Pragmatism,
Modern Analytical philosophy and the Scientific
World-View, Modern Psychology (Freud, Jung and
Psychoanalysis, Behaviourism, Gestalt Psychology),
Existentialism, Feminism.
ECON
213 Economics
Microeconomics: An
introduction to the theory of individual rational choice
and operation of markets. Will include theory of
consumer choice, factor choice by firms, and cost
analysis. Includes also theory of competitive and
monopoly markets, and intermediate market forms.
Includes introduction to theory of interest groups (e.g.
unions) and role of government in regulation of economic
activity.
Macroeconomics: An
introduction of theories of aggregate economic behavior
discusses national income accounting and public
accounts. Includes theories of aggregate demand, money
and banking, international trade, and economic
development.
BUS
105 Introduction to Business
Business Concepts: Meaning of business, Basic
elements of business, Basic Features of business, its
branches and their place in the economy of Bangladesh,
Business environment, Business size, Location of
Business, Efficiency of business enterprises, Social
responsibility of business and its implications.
Management: Significance and Definition, Functions
of Management, Principles of Management, Objectives and
Importance of Management, Levels of Management, Scope of
Management, Managerial Responsibility, Skills,
Managerial Roles, Concepts of Productivity,
Effectiveness and Efficiency.
Business Organization: Forms of Business ownership
in Bangladesh, Relative position of each form of
ownership, Sole Proprietorship, Partnership, Joint-Stock
Company, Co-operatives and state Ownership, Formalities
and distinguishing features of each form of ownership,
Considerations in the choice of specific form of
Ownership.
Marketing: Marketing Defined, Core concepts of
Marketing, Marketing Management Philosophies, Goals
Finance: Definitions, Functions and Classification
of Finance, Business, Finance Functions Goals: Profit
Maximization vs. Wealth Maximization, Financial
Decisions, Investment, Financing and Dividend Decision,
Factors Influencing Financial Decisions.
ENG
208 Advanced Reading Strategies and Writing
Intensive and Extensive Reading; Critical Analysis and
Interpretation of Texts; Essays; Report Writing; Book
Reviews; Research Papers.
ANT
209 Anthropology
Anthropology as a field of knowledge; Misconceptions
about Anthropology; Subfields and integration; Social
and Cultural Anthropology, Social anthropology and
specialized subjects as Legal, economic, political,
psychological, symbolic, ecological and medical
anthropology. The anthropological perspective.
Evolution: Biological and cultural, biological
evolution, mutation random credit and natural selection,
pre-hominid evolution, Relationship between hominid and
cultural evolution. The culture concept in anthropology,
features of culture. Culture and adaptive system: the
relationship between culture individual and society,
Language and communication.
Some
basic concepts: economic system, kinship and descent,
marriage, family and community, power and politics, law
and social control, Religion and belief system,
Anthropology in the contemporary system
Literature Major
ACT 110 Principles of Accounting
Accounting generates reports and communicates them to
external decision-makers so that they can evaluate how
well the business achieved its goals. These reports to
external users are called financial statement. Financial
statements report directly on the goals of profitability
and liquidity and are used extensively both inside and
outside a business to evaluate the business success .The
course covers the basic accounting concepts, preparation
of trial balance, final statement, accounting for assets
and liabilities, accounting system and accounting
practices in different type of organization
ENG
301 English for Professional Purpose
Business
Reports; Business Letters; Job Applications; Internal
Memoranda; Translation; Editing; Developing Press
Copies.
PHL
302 Eastern Thought
Indian:
The
Vedas, The Upanishads, Buddhism, Jainism, Carvaka, The
Six Orthodox Schools, Sankhya-Yoga, Mimansa-Vedanta,
Nyaya-Vaisesikha, Bhakti, Indian Aesthetics.
Chinese/Japanese:
Taoism,
Confucianism, Zen Buddhism.
Islamic:
Schools
of Muslim Philosophy, Muslim Contribution to Western
Thought, Sufism.
ENG
303 The Romantic Period
Blake, William Songs of
Innocence and of Experience (Selections
as in Norton)
Wordsworth, William The
Prelude (Book 1); ‘Lines Composed a Few
Miles above Tintern
Abby’; ‘Ode: Intimations of
Immortality’; ‘Michael’; ‘She Dwelt Among
the
Untrodden Ways’; ‘Three Years She Grew’;
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor The
Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner; Dejection: An
Ode; Kubla Khan;
Biographia Literaria (Chapter
XIV and XVII)
Byron,
George Gordon Don Juan (Canto –1)
Shelly,
Percy Bysshe Prometheus
Unbound
Keats,
John The Odes;
‘The Eve of St. Agnes’
ENG
304 High Victorian Literature (1830-1880)
Dickens,
Charles Great
Expectations
Brontë,
Emily
Wuthering Heights
Eliot,
George Silas
Marner
Tennyson, Alfred ‘The
Lotos-Eaters’; ‘Locksley Hall’; In Memoriam;
‘Ulysses’
Browning, Robert ‘A
Grammarian’s Funeral’; ‘Fra Lippo Lippi’;
‘Andrea del Sarto’; ‘Rabbi Ben
Ezra’; ‘Prophyria’s
Lover’
Arnold, Matthew ‘Dover
Beach’; Culture and Anarchy (Chap. 1:
‘Sweetness and Light’)
Mill,
John Stuart ‘What is
Poetry?’ ‘Of individuality’
ENG
305 American Literature – I
Whitman,
Walt ‘Song of Myself’
Frost,
Robert ‘The Death
of a Hired Man’; ‘Apple Picking’;
‘Design’; ‘Fire and Ice’; ‘The
Road not Taken’;
‘Stopping by the Wood on a Snowy Evening’
Dickinson, Emily Poems
49, 130, 185, 241, 249, 435, 510, 6536
Williams, William Carlos ‘The Red
Wheelbarrow’; ‘Portrait of a Lady’;
‘Willow Poem’; ‘To Elsie’; ‘A
Sort of a Song’
Emerson,
Ralph Waldo The American Scholar
Thoreau,
Henry David Civil Disobedience
Hawthorne, Nathaniel The
Scarlet Letter
Hemingway, Earnest ‘The
Snows of Kilimanjaro’, ‘The Short Happy Life
of Francis Macomber’
O’Neil,
Eugene Long Day’s Journey
into Night
Williams, Tennessee A
Street Car Named Desire
ENG
306 Late Victorian to Modernist (1880-1930)
Hardy,
Thomas The Return of the
Native
Lawrence, David Herbert The
Rainbow
Conrad,
Joseph Heart of
Darkness
Yeats, William Butler ‘Easter
1916’; ‘The Second Coming’; ‘Leda and the
Swan’; ‘Byzantium’; ‘Crazy Jane Talks with the
Bishop’; ‘No Second Troy’
Eliot,
Thomas Stearns ‘The Love Song
of J. Alfred Prufrock’; ‘Gerontion’
ENG
307 American Literature – II
Faulkner, William As
I Lay Dying
Wright,
Richard Native Son
Morrison, Toni The
Bluest Eye
Albee,
Edward The Zoo
Story
Miller,
Arthur The
Death of a Salesman
Rich,
Adrienne ‘Double Monologue’;
‘The Knot’; ‘Orion’
Ginsberg, Allen ‘September on
Jessore Road’; ‘Howl’
Merwin,
W. S. ‘The Drunk in
the Furnace’; ‘Losing a Language’
ENG
308 Postcolonial Literature – I
Narayan,
R. K. The Guide
Naipaul,
V S A House
for Mr. Biswas
Achebe,
Chinua Things Fall
Apart
Ngugi,
wa Thiong’o The Petals
of Blood
Soyinka,
Wole The Road
Parthasarathy, Kumar Ten
Twentieth Century Indian Poets
Baier,
U.
Modern Poetry from Africa
ENG
309 Literary Criticism
Aristotle
Poetics
Plato
The Republic
Longinus
On the Sublime
Sidney,
Philip An
Apology for Poetry
Dryden,
John An Essay
on Dramatic Poesy
Wordsworth, William
Preface to Lyrical Ballads
Eliot,
Thomas Stearns ‘Tradition and
Individual Talent’
Eagleton, Terry ‘The Rise of
English in Modern Times’ (from
Literary Theory: An Introduction)
ENG
401 Postcolonial Literature – II
Ghosh
Amitav The
Shadow Lines
White,
Patrick A Fringe
of Leaves
Rushdie,
Salman Midnight’s
Children
Lamming,
George Pleasures of
Exile
Gordimer,
Nadine July’s People
ENG
402 Classics in Translation
Homer
The Iliad
Virgil
The Aeneid
Aeschylus
Agamemnon
Sophocles
Electra
Euripides
Alcestis
Aristophanes
Lysistrata
The
Mahabharata (Abridged version by C J Rajagopalachari)
ENG
403 Introduction to Critical Theory
Russian
Formalism, New Criticism, Marxist Literary Theory,
Structuralism, New Historicism, Post- Structuralism,
Psychoanalytic Criticism, Feminist Literary Theory,
Reader’s Response Theory, Deconstruction.
ENG
404 Twentieth Century Poetry
Eliot,
Thomas Stearns The Waste
Land
Pound,
Ezra ‘Hugh
Selwyn Mauberley’
Auden, Wystan Hugh ‘Shield of
Achilles’; ‘In Memory of W B Yeats’;
‘Musée des Beaux Arts’;
‘Lullaby’
Hughes,
Ted ‘Jaguar’;
‘Crow’; ‘November’
Plath,
Sylvia ‘Daddy’;
‘The Rival’
Lowell,
Robert ‘The Crucifix’; ‘The
Quaker Graveyard at
Nantucket’; ‘The Lesson’; ‘For
the Union Dead’
Wallace,
Stevens ‘The Snowman’;
‘Table Talk’; ‘Thirteen Ways of
Looking at a Black
Bird’
ENG
405 Twentieth Century Novel
Forster,
E. M. A Passage
to India
James
Joyce A
Portrait of the Artist As A Young Man
Greene,
Graham The Heart of
the Matter
Woolf,
Virginia To the Lighthouse
Huxley,
Aldous Brave New World
Kipling,
Rudyard Kim
ENG
406 Twentieth Century Drama
Shaw, G
B Major
Barbara
Synge, J
M The
Playboy of the Western World
Beckett,
Samuel Waiting for
Godot
Osborne,
John Look Back
in Anger
Ibsen,
Henrik A
Doll’s House
Brecht,
Bertolt Mother
Courage
ENG
407 Shakespeare
Richard II, Antony and Cleopatra, Macbeth, Hamlet, As
You Like It, The Tempest.
Sonnets
No. 12, 33, 55, 73, 97, 130, 138, 144, 146.
ENG
450 Dissertation
All BA
candidates should complete supervised study and research
culminating in a dissertation in their field of
specialization. The completed dissertation should be
bind and printed in accordance with the regulations of
IBAIS University.
Linguistics Major
ACT
110 Principles of Accounting
Accounting generates reports and communicates them to
external decision-makers so that they can evaluate how
well the business achieved its goals. These reports to
external users are called financial statement. Financial
statements report directly on the goals of profitability
and liquidity and are used extensively both inside and
outside a business to evaluate the business success .The
course covers the basic accounting concepts, preparation
of trial balance, final statement, accounting for assets
and liabilities, accounting system and accounting
practices in different type of organization
ENG
301 English for Professional Purpose
Business
Reports; Business Letters; Job Applications; Internal
Memoranda; Translation; Editing; Developing Press
Copies.
PHL
302 Eastern Thought
Indian:
The
Vedas, The Upanishads, Buddhism, Jainism, Carvaka, The
Six Orthodox Schools, Sankhya-Yoga, Mimansa-Vedanta,
Nyaya-Vaisesikha, Bhakti, Indian Aesthetics.
Chinese/Japanese:
Taoism,
Confucianism, Zen Buddhism.
Islamic:
Schools
of Muslim Philosophy, Muslim Contribution to Western
Thought, Sufism.
ELN
303 Introduction to Linguistics
Language: Definition and Characteristics; Origins of
Language, Society and Culture; History of English
Language and the Study of English Language Changes;
Different Branches of Linguistics: Phonetics,
Morphology, Syntax and Semantics; Relationship between
Linguistics and Literature; Role of Linguistics in
Language Teaching; Second Language Acquisition/Learning;
Recent Developments in Linguistics.
ELN
304 English Language Teaching
I.
History of ELT: Grammar-Translation Method,
Direct Method, Audio-Lingual Method, Chomskyan
Revolution and Contemporary Methods, The Communicative
Approach and the Natural Approach.
II.
Teaching and Testing the Four Skills: Listening,
Speaking, Reading and Writing.
III.
Testing: General principles of testing, different
types of tests. Designing language tests: multiple
choice, cloze tests, open-ended tests, etc.
IV.
Syllabus Design: Purpose, types, construction.
Needs Analysis and syllabus design: a learner-centred
approach.
V.
Teaching Practice: Designing lesson plans, class
observation, experimental teaching and feed-back.
ELN
305 Language, Society and Culture
Interdisciplinary introduction to language in its social
and cultural contexts.
ELN
306 Structure of English or Traditional Grammar
Nouns:
Position and Function-Noun Classes: count, non-count,
proper nouns. Determinatives: Pre-determiners, central
determiners, post-determiners. The use of Articles Verb:
Major verb classes-time, tense and the verb. Sequence of
Tenses - Conditional.
Adverbs:
Characteristics of the adverb—the adverb as a clause,
element-the adverb and other word classes-syntactic
functions of adverbs—correspondence between adjectives
and adverbs—comparison of adjectives and adverbs.
Adjectives: Characteristics of the adjective—central and
peripheral adjectives—the adjective in relation to other
word classes—syntactic function of adjectives—syntactic
and semantic sub-classification of adjectives.
Adverbial Phrases—Adjectival Phrases—Prepositional
phrases—verb phrases.
Tensed,
Non-Tensed and Verb less Clauses.
Voice—Principles of Passivization –--Voice Constraints.
Operators and traditional interpretation of the use and
usage of modals.
ELN
307 Modern English Grammar
Systematic description of English sentences according to
structuralist and transformational-generative
principles.
ELN
308 Language and Philosophy
Theories
of Meaning, Meaning and the Use of Language, Language
and Its Near Relations, Empiricist Criteria of
Meaningfulness, Dimensions of Meaning
ELN
401 Introduction to Phonetics
Phonetics—Articulatory and acoustic Phonetics; the
organs of speech; IPA symbols; description of consonants
and vowels of different languages; contrastive study of
English and Bengali speech sounds; cardinal vowels;
English short vowels, long vowels and diphthongs;
English plosives, fricatives, affricates and nasals.
Principles of phonetics studied with reference variously
to American English, French, Spanish, or German.
ELN
402 Introduction to Phonology
Introduction to the scientific study of the sound
systems of the world’s living languages. Includes
discussion of the basics of phonetic transcription and
phonemic analysis and the development of formal models
in phonology. Topics include articulatory and acoustic
phonetics, the phoneme, phonological rules and
representations, nonlinear models, harmony prosodic
morphology, and sound symbolism.
Phonology—Defining phone, allophone and phoneme.
Supra-segmental phonology—voice quality and voice
dynamics.
phonemic
transcription—stress – the nature of stress; factors of
stress prominence; weak and strong forms.
Intonation System in English; Functions of intonation;
structure of tone unit; high and low heads; pitch
possibilities in the simple tone unit; semanfics of
intonation; transcription of utterances, assigning
stress marks and showing intonation.
ELN
403 Morphology and Syntax
Introduction to the description and analysis of word
formation processes and sentence structure from a cross
linguistic perspective. Instruction in basic morphemic
analysis and constituent testing using data drawn from
languages outside the Indo-European family. Also
includes an introduction to typological analysis in the
study of morpho-syntax.
ELN
404 Introduction to Socio-linguistics
Introduction: Key terms and
approaches—relationship between language and
society—Socio-linguistics and the sociology of language.
Language, dialect and varieties: regional
dialects—social dialects—styles and register—Standard
Language and developing a standard variety.
Pidgins and Creoles: Definition—Linguistic
characteristics-from pidgin to Creole and beyond.
Choosing
a Code: Diglossia and bilingualism—definition and
relationship—code switching and code mixing—borrowings.
National Language and Language planning:
National and official languages—planning a national
language—the linguist’s role in language planning.
Language and Identity: Language and social
inequalities-attitude towards language and
speech-Language and gender. Studies in Language
Dynamics: Language change-language maintenance and
language shift-multilingual and multicultural
societies-proto Indo-European languages.
ELN
405 Introduction to Psycholinguistics
Introduction: Definition—different branches of
psycholinguistics-relationship between Psycholinguistics
and Psychology of language.
Language Acquisition in the early years:
Communicating with language—what young children talk
about—how young children use their utterances—how
adults talk to young children.
Stages in Language Acquisition: The babbling
stage—Holophrastic stage—the two-word stage.
First sounds in the child’s language: Perception
of speech sounds—production of speech sounds.
Later growth in the child’s Language: Learning,
complexity and processing—elaboration of language
structure—elaboration of language functions.
Acquisition of meaning: Early word
meanings—context and strategies—semantic components.
Theories if First Language Acquisition:
Behaviorist Theory- Innalist Theory—Cognitive
Theory—Maturation Theory.
ELN
406 Second Language Acquisition
I.
What is SLA? FLA, Acquisition vs Learning,
Competence vs Performance. Accuracy vs Fluency in SLA.
II.
Language Learning principles, conditions and
variables: the learner processes, levels of proficiency,
role of input and formal instruction materials.
III.
Theories of SLA: The Acculturation Model; the
Monitor Model; Accommodation Theory; Inter-language
Model.
IV.
The Language Learner in the classroom:
1.1
Individual learning differences: Attitude,
Aptitude, Memory, Motivation, Age, Personality,
Cognitive Style and Transfer of Training.
1.2
Learner Strategies: Social strategies, Cognitive
strategies, Communicative strategies.
1.3
Classroom Interaction: Mode of teaching—group
work, pair work, whole class, teacher talk and class
management, especially dealing with large classes.
ELN
407 Applied Linguistics
Course
in the professional application of linguistics, such as
language diversity and teaching English, Lexicography,
or English as a Second Language. May be repeated with
change of topic.
ENG
450 Dissertation
All BA
candidates should complete supervised study and research
culminating in a dissertation in their field of
specialization. The completed dissertation should be
bind and printed in accordance with the regulations of
IBAIS University.
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