The Critical Essay: Beyond the Ring and the Wardrobe

From RealCTY
Revision as of 15:01, 14 July 2018 by Lukepf04 (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The Critical Essay: Beyond the Ring and the Wardrobe
Writing Course
Course CodeWR4F
Years of Operation2011
Sites OfferedCAR
Part of a series on
Realcty logo 20060831.png
CTY Courses
Category · Template · CAA Courses
Sites
Baltimore · Carlisle · Lancaster · Los Angeles · Saratoga Springs · Seattle
Humanities
Logic: PoR
International Politics ·
Ethics · Existentialism
Philosophy of Mind
Cognitive Psychology · Linguistics
Dissent
Newton, Darwin, and Einstein
The Art and Science of Filmmaking
Beyond the Binary: A Cultural History of Gender
Laws and Orders: Legal Systems Around the World
Writing
Writing Your World
Fiction and Poetry
Utopias and Dystopias
Persuasion and Propaganda
The Art of Fiction
Math
Probability and Game Theory
Number Theory · Mathematical Logic
Cryptology · Combinatorics and Graph Theory
Topology
Economics
Macroeconomics and the Global Economy
Fundamentals of Microeconomics
Computer Science
Data Structures and Algorithms
Fundamentals of Computer Science
Science
FPHS Biology · FPHS Chemistry · FPHS Physics
Astrophysics
Paleobiology · Genetics · Neuroscience
Investigations in Engineering
Introduction to Biomedical Sciences · Electrical Engineering
Special Relativity
Princeton & Berkeley
Global Politics: Human Rights and Justice
Human Nature and Technology
Politics and Film · Epidemiology
The Mathematics of Competitive Behavior
Science, Technology and Public Policy
Race and Politics · Politics in the Middle East
The Global Environment
Playing God: The Ethics of Human Subjects Research
You Will Be Offended: Satire, Comedy, and Public Discourse
Defunct Courses
Beginning Ancient Greek · German 1
German 2
Latin 2
French 1 · French 2
Great Revolutions
American History
Modern European History · Eastern European History
Music Theory
History of Western Art
Renaissance Art
Introduction to American Studies: Race and Class
Medieval Art
Twentieth Century Art · Gandhi's India
American Studies: The Sixties · Women and US Social Reform
American Studies: The Harlem Renaissance
Intermediate Ancient Greek
Islam · The Asian Pacific Rim
Russian History
TCE: Literature and the Arts · TCE: Popular Culture
The Crafting of Drama
The Crafting of Poetry · TCE: Shakespeare
TCE: Science Fiction
TCE: Beyond the Ring and the Wardrobe
Advanced Mathematical Modeling
Advanced Mathematical Reasoning
Statistics · Calculus: A Conceptual Approach
Topics in Precalculus
Set Theory · Digital Logic
Theoretical Foundations of Computer Science
Introduction to Laboratory Sciences · Archaeology
Ecology
Microbiology · Selected Topics in Advanced Biology
Selected Topics in Advanced Chemistry
Selected Topics in Advanced Physics · Physical Anthropology
Advanced Physics: Mechanics
Scientific Investigations: St. Mary's River · Genomics
Volcanoes
Etymologies · Oceanography: The Hawaiian Pacific
Life Cycle of an Island: Hawaii
The History of Disease · The Critical Essay: Film
Wicked Art: Pictures, Pixels, and Pens
Latin I
Goodwives and Witches: Women in Colonial America
Freaks and Geeks in Popular Media
The Digital Revolution
Advanced Robotics
Theory of Computation
Individually Paced Mathematics Sequence
Service, Leadership & Community Transformation
Advanced Cryptology
Law and Politics in US History
Intro to Organic Chemistry

Course Description

From the CTY Course Catalog (2011):

C. S. Lewis once told J. R. R. Tolkien: “If they won’t write the kind of books we want to read, we shall have to write them ourselves.” Thus began the writing careers of two of the twentieth century’s most famous authors. These two professors gave each other’s works praise when earned and constructive criticism when warranted. Out of their exchanges came Tolkien’s Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, and Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia. Yet both Tolkien and Lewis insisted that neither influenced the other. As Lewis famously said, “No one ever influenced Tolkien—you might as well try to influence a bandersnatch.”

Students in this course write four to six critical essays in which they delve into Lewis’s and Tolkien’s many writings. They trace each author’s influences, themes, and effects upon the other. For example, after reading The Silmarillion and The Screwtape Letters, students might write an essay contrasting Tolkien’s belief in the “long defeat” with Lewis’s notion that humans have power over temptation; alternatively, students might compose an essay explaining how northern mythology affected each author and his fiction. As they learn about Lewis’s and Tolkien’s friendship, students discover how individual writers are affected by their personal and intellectual relationships with others.