Spring,1998, WWW Section
Palo Alto College
Department of English
English 2327 World Wide Web
American Literature I I
Spring,1998, WWW Section
Spring,1998, Readings on Line are on this page. Scroll down to "Required Readings" and view "The Seventeenth Century," and "The Epic as Cosmopoesis" by clicking on the URL.For Both the WWW Section and the Lecture-Discussion Sections
Michael S. Seiferth
Faculty Office Building, 131
Telephone: 921-5049 (Office)
Telephone: 824-4136 (Home)
Telephone: 824-1564 (FAX)
![]()
Internet Addresses
If you have access to an online service (AOL, TexasNet, etc.) or if you are a registered user of the District's online service, you can use your e-mail account to write to me concerning your inquiries and concerns. I shall respond as quickly as possible.
http://lonestar.texas.net/~mseifert/
mseifert@texas.net
mseifert@accdvm.accd.edu
![]()
OFFICE HOURS (INCLUDING OPEN COMPUTER LAB)
Schedule for Spring 1998 Including Office Hours
The Palo Alto College Teaching Center, funded in part through Title III, has made it possible for me to develop cogent and centrally significant materials, which will help my students conceive of literature in terms of the historical, aesthetic, the historical, and philosophical dimensions which inform the periods and the works of the men and women writing in or about America beginning in the late fifteenth century through the American Civil War. I am grateful for the opportunity not only to expand central texts and, thus, understanding, but also to study the use of electronic media in developing a WWW Home Page for my courses. Further, my participation in the History Forums held in 1995, 1996, and 1997, underwritten by The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, challenged my understanding of the problems of the new immigrants to Colonial America in the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, interrogated the implications of the First Amendment to the Constitution in Colonial and Revolutionary and Federal times, and teased out the "American Family that Never Was." I am able to include this wealth of information in this course. During the Summer of 1996 I had the opportunity to study Carl Jung and archetypes of dream at the Pacifica Graduate Institute. My reading of the major texts written in America has been profoundly affected by this experience. Finally, I am grateful to the NEH for its grant given to me during the summer of 1994, where I spent a delightful semester at LSU, Baton Rouge. It is here that I learned the nature of tragedy and comedy, both ideas, of course, which inform and generate the power of The Scarlet Letter and Moby Dick! Many thanks to Susan Hammond of the Teaching Center for her making it possible for these significant release-time grants. Finally, I thank my students enrolled in the first and second classes on the WWW who served as part of this experiment. Lori Seiler designed the first page as part of the Requirements for English 2322. You are invited to visit her page on King Lear.
Other students offered annotated versions of the key essays on the epic and on comedy. You are invited to visit their pages which are linked from the main index found at Student WWW Projects.You can go directly to the projects by clicking on the links, below: