FALL, 2026

ENGL 2111, WORLD LITERATURE I, 3.0

ONLINE VIA DESIRE2LEARN

 

Instructor Information

 

Instructor:

Dr. Caesar Perkowski
[in this academic setting, please choose to address me as "Dr. Perkowski," "Dr. Caesar," "Professor Perkowski" or "Professor Caesar"]

Phone:

678.359.5233

Email:

cperkowski@gordonstate.edu

Office:

Virtual

Office Hours:

MWRF 0900-1100

 

Course Description:

A survey of important works of world literature from ancient times to the seventeenth century. DISCLAIMER: This is a standard English course at a college level; please be prepared to face themes, facts, comments, policies, etiquette, etc., prevalent in the academic setting.

 

Course Student Learning Objectives (SLOs):

1. Students will be able to identify major authors and works of American/British/African-American/world literature.

2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of basic literary and critical terminology.

3. Students will be able to demonstrate competence in close reading and literary explication.

 

Course Prerequisites:

None.

 

CORE IMPACTS Objectives:

·       Students will demonstrate the ability to utilize a combination of the composition and research skills taught in English 1101 and 1102 in order to create a document that meets institutional criteria for successful critical thinking as measured by the Facione & Facione scale. 

·       Students will communicate effectively in writing, demonstrating clear organization and structure, using appropriate grammar and writing conventions.

·       Students will appropriately acknowledge the use of materials from original sources.

·       Students will adapt their written communications to purpose and audience.

·       Students will analyze and draw informed inferences from written texts.

·       CRCs: Critical Thinking / Information Literacy / Persuasion

Core IMPACTS refers to the core curriculum, which provides students with essential knowledge in foundational academic areas. This course will help master course content, and support students’ broad academic and career goals.

This course should direct students toward a broad Orienting Question:

·         How do I interpret the human experience through creative, linguistic and philosophical works?

Completion of this course should enable students to meet the following Learning Outcome:

·         Students will effectively analyze and interpret the meaning, cultural significance and ethical implications of literary/philosophical texts in English or other languages or of works in the visual/performing arts.


Course content, activities and exercises in this course should help students develop the following Career-Ready Competencies:

·         Ethical Reasoning Information Literacy Intercultural Competence.

 
 

Course Communication:

Course Format:

Online via Desire2Learn (D2L).
This course requires the online equivalent of 600 minutes of instruction time and an additional 2,100 minutes of supporting activities. Use the estimates below to allocate your time in the course and, in addition, plan to work independently for twice the listed time (approximately).
 

Instruction

Time

Virtual meetings/chat or audio & video

600 minutes

Assignments and quizzes

2,100 minutes

 

Course Resources:


  Course Assessments:

ASSIGNMENTS

POINTS OR % OF GRADE

Syllabus quiz

Weekly assignments

Major paper

Final exam

1%

59%

30%

10%

 

The course points fall 90-100 (A), 80-89 (B), 70-79 (C), 60-69 (D) and 0-59 (F). The grades will be posted in the D2L gradebook within 7 business days after the assignment due date.
You can expect to access the course materials and grades via our course in MyCourses (Brightspace by D2L). Students should check this MyCourses (Brightspace by D2L) course daily, as changes will always be announced and recorded on the course site.

 
Late Work:

Final Exam Details:

College-wide Statements:

At the beginning of each semester, every instructor will distribute a course syllabus and clearly state his or her attendance policy. It is the student’s responsibility to inquire of the instructor if there are questions.
A WF will be assigned as the final grade if the student stops attending class after mid-term.
The instructor will notify the Registrar’s Office in writing if a student receiving veteran’s benefits is absent from a class three consecutive weeks in a fall or spring semester, two consecutive weeks in a full session summer semester, or one week in a half session summer semester.
Gordon State College related field trips and extracurricular activities which require a student’s absence from class must be approved by the Provost; however, final approval for class absences remains with the individual instructor.
Enrollment Verification: Every semester, faculty will provide electronic verification of class attendance for each student on each official class roll following procedures outlined by the Registrar. Class rolls become official at the close of the drop-add period each semester. Faculty enrollment verification is due on the tenth calendar day of fall and spring semesters and as announced for summer semester. Students reported as never attending a class by this date will be removed from the official class roll.

o   The rules stated below are (1) to assure that all College property, including, but not limited to, computer hardware and software, electronic and telephone systems are used for business purposes only, (2) to assure that all internal proprietary information is safe-guarded, and (3) to advise employees and students that College equipment is not to be used to store or transmit information or items which they consider to be private or personal. The fact that the College may not have enforced these policies in the past should not be interpreted to mean that the College cannot enforce them now or in the future.
 

o   Gordon State College Academic Dishonesty Policy — When a faculty member becomes aware of an act of academic dishonesty, the faculty member may penalize the act in one or any combination of five ways depending on the faculty member’s assessment of the severity of the infraction.
 Assign a grade of F for the assignment and/or require remedial action by the student.
Assign a grade of 0 for the assignment and/or require remedial action by the student.
      Assign a failing grade in the course.
Assign penalties as stated in the course syllabus.
Refer the matter to the Dean of the School.

§  Cheating is receiving or providing unapproved help in any academic task, test or treatise. Cheating includes the attempt to use or the actual use of any unauthorized information, educational material or learning aid in a test or assignment. Cheating includes multiple submission of any academic exercise more than once for credit without prior authorization and approval of the instructor.
§  Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s work as though it is your own. In an academic community the use of words ideas or discoveries of another person without explicit, formal acknowledgement constitutes an act of theft or plagiarism. To avoid the charge of plagiarism, students must engage in standard academic practices such as putting quotation marks around words that are not their own, employing the appropriate documentation or citation and including a formal acknowledgement of the source in the proper format. Students are expected to use the proper MLA format for citations, e.g., “quote” (21).
§  Fabrication involves inventing or falsifying any data, information or records.
§  Obstruction is impeding the ability of another student to perform assigned work.
§  Collusion comprises assisting any of the above situations or performing work that another student presents as his or her own.
§  Use of AI is explicitly forbidden in this course.
Artificial Intelligence deceives a faculty member or other individual who assesses student performance into believing that one’s mastery of a subject or discipline is greater than it is. Since writing, analytical and critical-thinking skills are part of the learning outcomes of this course, all writing assignments should be prepared by the student. Developing strong competencies in this area will prepare you for the competitive workforce. Therefore, AI-generated submissions (using ChatGPT, iA Writer, Midjourney, Claude, Gemini, Komo, Wordtune, Copilot, Jasper, Brave, Watson, Grammarly, Perplexity, Canva, DALL-E, Runway, etc.) are not permitted and will be treated as plagiarism (see above).


Miscellaneous Student Resources:

 

o   Please know that there is also a 24-hour crisis line available: 1-800-715-4225.

Library Services:  The Hightower Collaborative Learning Center & Library offers Gordon State students specialized library research assistance. Students can meet with their personal librarians for one-on-one help in each discipline, major or course to search and evaluate information sources effectively. Go to http://libcal.gordonstate.edu/ to schedule an appointment by clicking the Personal Librarian tab or click on the Presentation Practice Room tab to make a reservation. For immediate help, call 678-359-5076 or stop by the Circulation/Check-Out Desk. You can also Ask a Librarian or drop by the Circulation/Checkout Desk. Check the library’s website for hours, electronic resources and LibGuides (subject or class specific research guides).



 
Course Calendar:
  

Date

Assignments

08/20

Reading 01: The Epic of Gilgamesh
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

08/27

Reading 02: Euripides, Medea
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

09/03

Reading 03: The Analects
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

09/10

Reading 04: The Ramayana of Valmiki

09/17

Reading 05: Ovid, Metamorphoses
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

09/24

Reading 06: The Qur'an
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

10/01

Reading 07: The 1001 Nights
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

10/08

Reading 08: Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

10/22

Reading 09: Shikibu, The Tale of Genji

10/29

Reading 10: Cervantes, Don Quixote

11/05

Reading 11: Machiavelli, The Prince
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

11/12

Reading 12: Shakespeare, The Tempest
Microsoft Teams session at 1pm on Tuesday

11/19 Mandatory Rough Major Paper (link)

11/29

Major Paper (link)

12/03

FINAL EXAM

 

I reserve the right to change assignments.