Wednesday, 29 September 2021
Friday, 24 September 2021
Because I could not stop for Death by Emily Dickinson
He kindly stopped for me –
The Carriage held but just Ourselves –
And Immortality.
We slowly drove – He knew no haste
And I had put away
My labor and my leisure too,
For His Civility –
We passed the School, where Children strove
At Recess – in the Ring –
We passed the Fields of Gazing Grain –
We passed the Setting Sun –
Or rather – He passed Us –
The Dews drew quivering and Chill –
For only Gossamer, my Gown –
My Tippet – only Tulle –
We paused before a House that seemed
A Swelling of the Ground –
The Roof was scarcely visible –
The Cornice – in the Ground –
Since then – ’tis Centuries – and yet
Feels shorter than the Day
I first surmised the Horses’ Heads
Were toward Eternity –
Monday, 20 September 2021
Kerala PSC HSA English Examination Syllabus 2021
PART A
Module I : Renaissance and freedom movement Module
II: General Knowledge and current affairs Module
III: Methodology of teaching the subject
♦ History/conceptual development. Need and Significance, Meaning Nature and Scope of the Subject.
♦ Correlation with other subjects and life situations.
♦ Aims, Objectives, and Values of Teaching - Taxonomy of Educational Objectives - Old and revised
♦ Pedagogic analysis- Need, Significance and Principles.
♦ Planning of instruction at Secondary level- Need and importance. Psychological bases of Teaching the subject - Implications of Piaget, Bruner, Gagne, Vygotsky, Ausubel and Gardener - Individual difference, Motivation, Maxims of teaching.
♦ Methods and Strategies of teaching the subject- Models of Teaching, Techniques of individualising instruction.
♦ Curriculum - Definition, Principles, Modern trends and organizational approaches, Curriculum reforms - NCF/KCF.
♦ Instructional resources- Laboratory, Library, Club, Museum- Visual and Audio-Visual aids - Community based resources - e-resources - Text book, Work book and Hand book.
♦ Assessment; Evaluation- Concepts, Purpose, Types, Principles, Modern techniques - CCE and Grading- Tools and techniques - Qualities of a good test - Types of test items- Evaluation of projects, Seminars and Assignments - Achievement test, Diagnostic test – Construction, Characteristics, interpretation and remediation.
♦ Teacher - Qualities and Competencies - different roles - Personal Qualities - Essential teaching skills - Microteaching - Action research.
PART B
Module 1. Poetry
Shakespeare Sonnet 121
Donne A Valediction Forbidding Mourning
Milton On His Blindness
Gray Elegy Written In A Country Churchyard
Wordsworth Tintern Abbey
Shelley To A Skylark
Keats Ode On A Grecian Urn
Tennyson Ulysses
Browning My Last Duchess
Arnold Dover Beach
W.B.Yeats A Prayer For My Daughter
Sylvia Plath Daddy
Tagore Where The Mind Is Without Fear
Nissim Ezekiel Night Of The Scorpion
Kamala Das An Introduction
A.K.Ramanujan Obituary
Robert Frost Home Burial
Emily Dickinson Because I Could Not Stop For Death
Wole Soyinka A Telephone Conversation
Meena Alexander House Of A Thousand Doors
Margaret Atwood This Is A Photograph Of Me
David Diop Africa
Jack Davis Aboriginal Australia
Module 2. Drama
Shakespeare Macbeth
Sheridan School For Scandal
Oscar Wilde The Importance Of Being Ernest
Ibsen A Doll's House
Shaw Pygmalion
J.M.Synge Riders To The Sea
Samuel Beckett Waiting For Godot
Arthur Miller Death Of A Salesman
Tennessee Williams The Glass Menagerie
Girish Karnad Nagamandala
Module 3: Prose and Fiction
Francis Bacon Of Studies
Steele The Trumpet Club
A.G. Gardiner On The Rule Of The Road
E.M. Forster On Tolerance
Bertrand Russel Functions Of A Teacher
Dr.Radhakrishnan Humanities vs Science
Emily Bronte Wuthering Heights
George Orwell Animal Farm
Hemingway The Old Man And The Sea
Shashi Deshpande Roots and Shadows
Arundati Roy The God Of Small Things
Toni Morrison The Bluest Eye
Module 4: .Literary Criticism/ Terms
1.Rasa
2.Dhwani
3.Aristotle: Poetics
4.Wordsworth: Preface To Lyrical Ballads
5.Coleridege: Biographia Litereria Chapter 14
6.Arnold: Study of Poetry
7.Eliot:Tradition And The Individual Talent
8.Saussure: Nature Of The Linguistic Sign
Terms and Movements ( Based on the latest edition of M.H.Abrams-A Glossary Of Literary Terms Classicism, Neo-Classicism, Romanticism, Humanism, Realism, Magical Realism, Naturalism, Symbolism, Russian Formalism, Marxism, Structuralism, Post Structuralism, Deconstruction, Psychoanalytical Criticism, Feminism, Post Colonialism, Modernism and Post Modernism
Module 5: Linguistics, Phonetics and History of Language
1.Phonology
2. Morphology
3.Syntax
4.Semantics
5.Langue and Parole; Competence and Performance
6.Organs of Speech
7.Classification Of Speech Sounds
8.Stress, Rhythm, Intonation
9.Transcription
10.Indo-European Family of languages
11.Loan Words-Latin, Scandinavian, French, Indian
12.Englishes-American, Australian, Indian, and African
Module 6: Modern English Usage
1.Sentence Correction
2.Vocabulary
3.Synonyms and Antonyms
4.Give one word
5.Commonly confused words
6.Language Functions such as agreeing, complaining etc.
7.Appropriate word order
8.Appropriate sentence order
9.Idioms
10.Passage for comprehension
Module 7: Basic Grammar
1.Article
2.Prepositions
3.Clauses
4.Tenses
5.Phrasal Verbs
6.Conjunctions
7.Reported Speech
8.Voice
9.Question Tag
10.Transformation of sentences
Module 8: Teaching of English
1.Schools-Behaviourism, Cognitivism, Constructivism
2.Skills and subskills of Listening, Speaking, Reading and Writing
3.Language Acquisition and Learning, Krashen
4.Methods and Approaches: Grammar Translation; Audio-lingual; Direct Method; Structural-OralSituational Approach; Communicative Approach; Bilingual Method; Humanistic Approaches
5.Use of AV aids and ICT
6.Teaching of Prose, Poetry and Grammar
7.Testing and Evaluation
8.Learner Types
9.Teaching learners with disability
10.NCF, KCF on teaching of English
Sunday, 19 September 2021
Listen to the Poem "To Posterity" by Louise Mac Neice (Calicut University UG First Semester Common Course English Litmosphere Poem)
Hello all
Here is the audio of the poem To Posterity by Louise MacNeice.
To read a short summary of the poem, please click here
Tuesday, 14 September 2021
Summary and Analysis of the Poem 'In The Country Cottage' by Nissim Ezekiel
Introduction to the Author
Nissin Ezekiel (1924-2004) is a pioneer in modern Indian English poetry. His role as translator, editor, playwright and reviewer has contributed significantly in shaping modernist poetry in India. The modernist movement of the 1950s and 60s was known for its precise use of language, well crafted images, ironic stance, treatment of sexuality and male-female relationship. Ezekiel is often described as the father of the modernist movement and he writes introspective, ironic and humorous poems of self exploration and self formation. He has brought out seven collections of poetry; they are A Time to Change and Other Poems (1952), Sixty Poems (1953), The Unfinished Man (1960), The Exact Name (1965), Hymns in Darkness (1976), and the Sahitya Akademy award-winning Latter-day Psalms (1982).
Text of the Poem
The night the lizard came
our indolence was great;
we went to bed before
our eyes were heavy, limbs
prepared to stretch or love.
Immobile, tense and grey,
he taught us patience as
he waited for the dark.
From time to time we could
not help but glance at him
and learn again that he
was more alive than us
in silent energy,
though his aim was only
the death of cockroaches.
When we awoke the next
morning we found as we
expected that the job
was done, clean and complete,
and the stout lizard gone.
Outline of the Poem
The speaker of the poem comments that their idleness was great on the day the lizard came out. They went to bed early even though they were not physically exhausted. A sense of purposelessness keeps them inert and passive. In the second stanza, the speaker offers a detailed description of the lizard. It is described as ’immobile’, ‘tense’ and ‘grey’ and its patient waiting for the dark is highlighted. It seems that it explicitly resembles the humans in the poem as they are also immobile. Later on, the humans in the cottage realise that the lizard is far more alive than them. It possesses silent energy which humans lack, though its aim is only the death of cockroaches. The next day, they wake up to realise that the lizard has eaten up all the cockroaches neatly and disappeared.
Analysis of the Poem
In the poem, the poet contrasts animal and human worlds. The humans in the poem are idle and purposeless and they seek refuge from the toils of existence. It is common in modernist literature to have characters who fail to identify the meaning of their lives and resort to inactivity. The humans in the poem do not have any noble notions on the greatness of man and also fail to connect with their animal instincts. Cut off from the roots of tradition, modern man is caught between purposelessness of modern life and absence of instincts. These render humans helpless and passive and they resemble the Lotos-Eaters.
Interestingly, the lizard is presented in similar terms in the second stanza. It is described as ‘immobile’ like the humans, ‘tense’, ‘grey’ and ‘patient’. It waits for the prey in the dark and teaches humans patience. Though the lizard resembles the humans in its immobility and patient waiting, the humans gradually realise that its movements are directed by instincts. The ‘silent energy’ refers to the animal instincts the lizard possesses and its actions emerge from the primal forces whereas humans are separated from their instincts. Though the poet acknowledges the limits of instincts to ‘the death of cockroaches’, the humans in the poem grope in the dark and fail to perform any task neatly. The poem underscores the utter lack of convictions human beings are endowed with and the resultant inactivity. This is contrasted with neat and complete actions carried out by the lizard. In short, the poem contrasts the instinctive and energetic life of the lizard with that of the inactive lives of the humans.
Nissim Ezekiel has effectively featured many animals and birds such as scorpion, crows, cats, squirrels, monkeys, crocodiles etc.. in his poems. The introduction of Indian flora and fauna has strengthened his articulations of Indian life with an exquisite indian idiom. The comparison of a lizard with a human is also very striking as both the animals can leave their tails and survive!. It is also interesting that lizards are associated with somany superstitious stories in India.
Thursday, 9 September 2021
Calicut University BA/B.Sc/B.Com Common Course English First Semester- LITMOSPHERE: THE WORLD OF LITERATURE prescribed texts
1.To Posterity (poem)- Louis MacNeice
To read the text, please click here
2.The Rocking Horse Winner (Short Story) -D H Lawrence
To read the text, please click here
3.”Memoirs of A Mad Man (Prose excerpts from Autobiography)-Gustave
MODULE 2: Creative Thinking and Writing
1. The Thought Fox (poem)-Ted Hughes
To read the text, please click here
2. Poetry (poem)-Marianne Moore
To read the text, please click here
3. Excerpt from An Autobiography(Prose)-Agatha Christie
4. Half a Day (Short story)-Naguib Mahfouz
To read the text, please click here
MODULE 3: Critical Thinking
1. To a Reason (Poem)- Arthur Rimbaud
To read the text, please click here
2. The Adventures of the Retired Colourman-Short Story-Conan Doyle
To read the text, please click here
3. Trifles (One-Act Play)-Susan Glaspe
To read the text, please click here
MODULE 4: Perspectives
1.Body Without the “d” (Poem)-Justice Ameer
To read the text, please click here
2. Sleeping Fool (Poem)-Suniti Namjoshi
To read the text, please click here
3.The Cockroach (Short Story)-Luis Fernando Verissimo; translated by Anna Vilner
To read the text, please click here
4.About Dalit Literature” (Prose)-Sharankumar Limbale
5. Purl (Short Film)-Kristen Lester