Form, Style, and Meaning in Cinema
Full
course for one semester. This course considers the cinema as a
particular media form and explores issues and methods in cinema
studies. The class focuses on questions of film form and style
(narrative, editing, sound, framing, mise-en-scène) and introduces
students to concepts in film history and theory (industry, auteurism,
spectatorship, the star system, ideology, genre). We will pay
particular attention to principles of film narration and film form that
are instrumental across the study of literature: plot vs. story,
dramatic development, temporal strategies, character development, point
of view, symbolism, reality vs. illusion, visual metaphor, and so
forth. Students will develop a basic critical vocabulary for examining
the cinema as an art form, an industry, and a system of culturally
meaningful representation. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore
standing. Lecture-conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Graphic Novel
Full course for one semester. In this course
we will consider the historical development of the genre and techniques
of the graphic novel in America. Authors will include Lynd Ward, Robert
Crumb, Will Eisner, Keiji Nakazawa, Art Spiegelman, Frank Miller, Chris
Ware, Daniel Clowes, Marjane Satrapi, Lynda Barry, Gene Luen Yang, and
others. Our reading of the graphic novel will be contextualized within
postmodernism and the changes in the notion of childhood, heroism, and
evil in 20th- and 21st-century American culture. This course is
designed to introduce students to the fundamental elements of narrative
and will include analysis of genre, panels, framing devices, layout,
speech, plot, and characterization. The course will emphasize close
reading of the texts, and there will be frequent writing assignments.
Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Literary and Visual Culture in 18th-century Britain
Full course for one semester. This course is
designed to introduce students to the literary and visual cultures
of 18th-century Britain and their connections. We will read prose by
Defoe, Johnson, Walpole and Austen, poetry by Pope, Swift, Gray,
Goldsmith, Blake, Collier and Duck, and drama by Gay. We will also study
discussions of aesthetics by Burke and Reynolds and the work of
artists Hogarth, Reynolds, Gainsborough, Angelica Kauffman and Wright of
Derby, as well as the role of patrons such as Lady Mary Wortley
Montagu. Throughout our readings and viewings we will
return to the following guiding questions: how are stories narrated,
in images as well as in words? What are the major aesthetic
categories of this period and how do they operate to construct
aesthetic experience? Do these categories span literary and visual culture,
or are they different in each form? What are their modern
legacies? Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing.
The Making of the Twentieth Century
Full course for one semester. This course will focus on
American writing produced between 1890 and 1910. Though much of our time will be
spent reading novels and short stories—in particular, examples of realist,
naturalist, and modernist fiction—we will approach the novel as just one of
many narrative arts that played a crucial role in defining the nascent
twentieth century. Other genres that we will consider include life writing, the
tale, aesthetic and cultural criticism, reportage, photojournalism and the
photo book, and protest writing. Our readings will be grouped into five
units—“American Life, Writing, and Life Writing,” “Race after Reconstruction,”
“Narrating City Life,” “Between Asia and America,” and “Modern Women”—and will
be drawn from writers such as Henry Adams, Abraham Cahan, Charles Chesnutt,
Stephen Crane, Theodore Dreiser, W. E. B. Du Bois, Sui Sin Far, Charlotte
Perkins Gilman, Henry James, Okakura Kakuzo, Jack London, Frank Norris, Jacob
Riis, and Gertrude Stein. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or
sophomore standing.Conference.
English 205 - Introduction to Fiction
Portraits of Ladies
Full
course for one semester. This course is designed as an introduction to
the basic concepts of narrative theory as exemplified in 18th- and
19th-century British novels by Ann Radcliffe, Walter Scott, Jane
Austen, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, and Henry James. We will also
focus specifically on the construction of gender, and will analyze how
and why ideas of femininity and masculinity change in relation to
authorial sensibilities that are by turn gothic, historic, and
sentimental. Prerequisites: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing.
Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The American Short Story
Full course for
one semester. This course will examine the genre of the short story, especially
its traditional and innovative narrative techniques, its various ways of
constructing authorial point of view, its mode of plot compression and the relation
of literary structure to temporality, and its range of styles from realism and
naturalism to allegory, and to impressionism. Additionally, we will see how
diverse American experience is represented through the form. Readings will be
drawn from Hawthorne, Poe, Melville, James, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Langston
Hughes, Faulkner, Flannery O'Connor, Malamud, Cheever, James Baldwin, Joanne
Greenberg, Paley, Carver, Ozick, Bharati Mukherjee, Toni Cade Bambara, as well
as a collection of Best Short Stories of 2004. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or
sophomore standing. Conference.
The Postwar and Contemporary Novel
Full course for one
semester. This course will introduce students to major North American
novelists and their work from the immediate post-World War II years to
the 1990s. As we discuss the assigned readings we will consider
questions surrounding representations of race and gender, mass culture
and consumerism, the Cold War and the nuclear age, civil rights,
feminism, technocracy, the counterculture, American regionalisms,
suburbia, linguistic experimentation, genre, postmodernism,
globalization, and the conditions of urban experience. Novelists may
include Ralph Ellison, Vladimir Nabokov, Flannery O’Connor, Thomas
Pynchon, Margaret Atwood, Toni Morrison, Don DeLillo, Leslie Marmon
Silko, Philip Roth, Ishmael Reed, Cormac McCarthy, and Jonathan
Franzen. We will also read selected critical and theoretical texts that
define the issues that structure the course and watch selected
films—such as The Manchurian Candidate (1962)—that provide cultural contexts. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Basics of the Novel
Full course for one semester. This
course serves as an introduction to the history of both the idea and
the form of the English novel, beginning in the early 18th century and
continuing through to the present day. We will look at short critical
writings by major narrative scholars in conjunction with examples of
the novel’s various subgenres, including the gothic, the marriage plot,
the Bildungsroman, the historical novel, the detective novel,
the modernist novel, and the postmodern novel. The course will cover
major novels by Daniel Defoe, Matthew Lewis, Jane Austen, Walter Scott,
Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, Virginia Woolf, and J.M. Coetzee.
There will be numerous short writing assignments. Prerequisite:
Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Lecture-conference. Not offered
2009-10.
The 19th-Century Novel: The Bildungsroman and the Courtship Novel Full course for one semester. This course examines the two dominant forms of the 19th-century novel, the Bildungsroman,
or novel of formation, and the courtship novel. In examining these two
forms we will discuss the nature and history of literary genres;
narrators and narrative structure; the function of novelistic
character; and the concept of realism. We will read a number of
critical texts by major scholars of narrative to illuminate these
discussions, along with major works by the following novelists: Walter
Scott, Jane Austen, Honoré de Balzac, Charlotte Bronte, Charles
Dickens, and George Eliot. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore
standing. Lecture-conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Genres of the Early Novel
Full course for one semester.
This course will look at the range of genres explored by novelists in
the period of the British novel in its rise from marginal status to
dominance in the 18th and early 19th centuries. We will focus on the
range of formal and expressive possibilities the novel develops in this
period, shaped by the various forms it takes (realist, gothic,
historical, sentimental, and so on), and pursue the question of how
genre conventions and individual works interact. Major authors will
include Daniel Defoe, Eliza Haywood, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding,
Laurence Sterne, Matthew Lewis, Jane Austen, and Walter Scott. Relevant
short critical readings on genre, realism, and the novel will be drawn
from Auerbach, Bakhtin, Frye, Shklovsky, Todorov, Watt, and others.
Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference. Not
offered 2009-10.
Empire and the Novel
Full course for one semester. This
course will examine the relationship between Imperialism and the novel,
primarily between British Imperialism and the modern 20th-century
novel. The course will also introduce students to postcolonial theory
and criticism. Reading major novels of authors such as Joseph Conrad,
Chinua Achebe, Rudyard Kipling, Doris Lessing, E.M. Forster, Salman
Rushdie, Jean Rhys, V.S. Naipaul, Arundhati Roy, and J.M. Coetzee, we
will reflect at length upon nationalism, the causes and consequences of
the expansion and contraction of the British empire, anticolonial
liberation movements, the cultural contexts of literary modernism, and
the ongoing debate over globalization. We will read influential
writings by theorists and critics such as Edward Said, Gayatri Spivak,
Frantz Fanon, Homi Bhabha, and Fredric Jameson. We will also screen
films such as The Battle of Algiers, Blade Runner, and Caché.
Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference. Not
offered 2009-10.
British Women Novelists since 1900
Full course for one semester. Using Virginia Woolf's
classic feminist literary polemic A Room of One's Own as our point of departure, we will in this course
read works by women novelists from the United Kingdom over the span of the last
hundred years, paying particular attention to the subgenres of the novel (such
as the realist novel, the Gothic romance, the Bildungsroman , the modernist novel, the postmodern novel, and the
postcolonial novel) and how these forms are shaped and affected by gender
considerations. Writers to be studied include Virginia Woolf, Rebecca West,
Elizabeth Bowen, Sylvia Townsend Warner, Iris Murdoch, Jean Rhys, Angela
Carter, and Jeanette Winterson. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore
standing. Lecture-conference.
"A Native Tradition"? The American Novel and the Element of Romance
Full course for one semester. American Gothic, pastoral elegy, moral
melodrama, and adventure-romance are just a few of the romance
variants we encounter in American fiction. Why did this particular mode
of narrative find such deep
root in the American novel? And what can its heightened, Manichean form
tell
us about the persistent contradictions of American culture? In this
course we will investigate the
argument that locates the defining feature of American fiction,
beginning in
the late 18th century, in its alleged resistance to formal realism.
Studying the romance genres of the
American novel, we will also entertain comparisons with similar
subgenres in
European fiction. Readings may
include works by Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel
Hawthorne,
Edgar Allan Poe, Henry James, Willa Cather, and William Faulkner.
Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference.
American Success and Failure
Full course for one semester.
An abiding concern of American literature is an obsession with
individual success, particularly the conundrum of attaining material
success at the expense of other values. Taking classic essays by
Benjamin Franklin and Ralph Waldo Emerson as our points of departure,
we will examine how 19th- and 20th-century American writers such as
Horatio Alger, Mark Twain, Edith Wharton, Frank Norris, F. Scott
Fitzgerald, and Nella Larsen have explored that obsession through the
form of the novel. We will pay particular attention to the development
of literary styles such as regionalism, realism, and naturalism as
responses to changes in American culture that likewise shape different
novelistic subgenres, such as romance, the realist novel, melodrama,
the modernist novel, and the psychological novel. Prerequisite:
Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
For Love or Money: The Victorian Marriage Plot
Full course
for one semester. This course offers an introduction to major formal
and thematic conventions of Victorian fiction by investigating one of
the 19th century’s most celebrated plot lines, the courtship narrative.
Reading selected novels and short fiction by Charlotte Brontë,
Elizabeth Gaskell, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, Arthur Conan Doyle,
and Thomas Hardy (among others), we will follow the courtship narrative
as it combines—or collides—with other dominant 19th-century plot lines,
such as the Bildungsroman, the plot of social mobility, and the
story of female self-education. We will examine how plot and
perspective link up with, and become inflected by, class and gender. We
will also consider what the marriage plot and its late-19th-century
unraveling have to tell us about evolving notions of discipline,
desire, and development in Victorian fiction and culture. Prerequisite:
Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
English 211 - Introduction to Poetry and Poetics
Full
course for one semester. This course is designed to introduce students
to the fundamental elements of a poem, such as rhythm, diction,
imagery, metaphor, tone, form, speaker, and audience. We will read
texts from a wide historical range and consider the historical
development of selected forms and techniques. The course will also
examine what some poets and critics have regarded as the nature and
function of poetry and what bearing such theories have on the practice
of poetry and vice versa. The course will emphasize close reading of
the texts, and there will be frequent writing assignments.
Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference.
English 213 - Introduction to Poetry: American Poetry
Full
course for one semester. In this class we will consider the historical
development of selected forms and techniques in the American poetic
tradition. Poets will include Anne Bradstreet, Walt Whitman, Emily
Dickinson, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Ezra Pound, Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn
Brooks, Audre Lorde, Sylvia Plath, Li-Young Lee, Essex Hemphill, and
Luci Tapahonso. In addition we will read selections from Aztec Sorrow
Songs, Corridos, and the Blues. This course is designed to introduce
students to the fundamental elements of a poem, such as rhythm,
diction, imagery, metaphor, tone, form, speaker, and audience. The
course will emphasize close reading of the texts, and there will be
frequent writing assignments. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore
standing. Lecture-conference. Not offered 2009-10.
English 242 - Introduction to Drama
Introduction to Drama
Full
course for one semester. This course studies plays from the Western canon to
focus on such essentials as the nature of plot, character, dramatic conflict,
the language of argumentation and confrontation, genre, and the relation of
individual psyches to the cultural issues represented in the play—the
conjunction of personal to political narratives. We will investigate
ways characters can be both sympathetic and unsympathetic at the same time, and
how playwrights structure their work and its dialogue to achieve such emotional
complexity. We will read many
plays, from dramatists such as Euripides, Shakespeare, Molière, Chekhov,
Strindberg, Wilde, Brecht, Beckett, Ionesco, O’Neil, Tennessee Williams,
Pinter, Tom Stoppard, Sam Shepard, and Suzan-Lori Park. Prerequisite: sophomore
standing. Conference.
Modern European VI
Full course for one semester. This
course continues from Modern European V, which covered playwrights
whose first major work appeared between 1954 and 1957. Here, we will
look at the work of playwrights whose first major plays appeared in the
late 1950s; and as always, we will look at the work in its social and
political contexts. Probable authors will include Ann Jellicoe, Shelagh
Delaney, John Arden, and Fernando Arrabal. Conference. Not offered
2009-10.
Modern European VII
Previous incarnations of this course
have looked primarily at the realist tradition in European drama from
the 1830s to the 1960s. This semester we will pause in the chronology
and go back to look at the nonrealist tradition from the 1890s to the
1960s. Likely authors will include Maeterlinck, Briusov, Kandinsky,
Marinetti, Tzara, Witkiewicz, Capek, Ghelderode, Anouilh, and Arrabal.
Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Shakespeare's Tragedies
Full course for one semester. A study of five Shakespearean tragedies, among them Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, King Lear, and Antony and Cleopatra.
The focus will be on language, dramatic structure, character, and the
conventions of the genre, as well as the role of women, the
supernatural, the politics of rule, the self-conscious employment of
theatricality, and such cultural issues as attitudes toward race. We
will also read some theories of tragedy. Prerequisite: Humanities 110
or sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Shakespeare, Text and Performance
Full course for one
semester. This course will consider the relationship between literary
analysis and theatrical or cinematic performance in several
Shakespearean plays. We will pay particular attention to images of
plays and playing in the scripts, to the different political and
ethical implications of different performances, and to changes in
conventions of representation. In addition to the normal
responsibilities of any course, students will be expected to view films
and to work up one or two staged readings of a scene. Plays to be
examined include King Lear, Othello, The Tempest, Henry V, and Much Ado about Nothing. Lecture and conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Shakespeare's Comedies
Full course for one semester. A study of several "romantic" comedies (Taming of the Shrew, As You Like It, Twelfth Night), some "problem comedies" (The Merchant of Venice, Measure for Measure), and a "romance" (The Winter's Tale).
The course will focus on such issues in the Shakespeare canon as
cross-dressing and the problematic representation of woman's power,
madness and irrationality as comic tropes, the court vs. what has been
termed "the green world," and the complex interplay between Elizabethan
comic conventions and the psychology of dramatic character. In addition
we'll read one or two comedies by Shakespeare's contemporary, BenJonson
(Volpone, The Alchemist) to see how Jonson treats comedy
in an altogether different manner. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or
sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Gender and Genre in Shakespeare's Plays
Full course for
one semester. In this semester-long survey of Shakespeare's plays, we
will focus upon the intersection of gender and genre, both on the
Renaissance stage and in more recent adaptations and productions. How
does the genre of a given play (tragedy, comedy, romance) affect the
audience's expectations of gender roles? Does genre constrain the
dramatic representations of femininity, of masculinity, of breaking or
bending traditional gender boundaries? Conversely, we will also think
about the ways in which Shakespeare potentially uses gender to
challenge the audience's notions of what comedies and tragedies can do,
and how gender and genre can collide to resist received notions
concerning class, authority, identity, familial relations, and ethnic
and racial difference. Plays under consideration may include The Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer Night's Dream, As You Like It,Twelfth Night, The Merchant of Venice, Antony and Cleopatra, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear, A Winter's Tale, and The Tempest. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
British and Irish Drama from 1956 to the Present
Full
course for one semester. From the early days of London's Royal Court
Theatre, a theatre recently described as "the most important theatre in
Europe," to the work of playwrights from Ireland and England's
industrial heartland, companies trained in European physical theatre,
and black British and British Asian writers, the past 50 years have
been an especially rich period of experimentation and innovation in
British and Irish drama. We will read a number of plays from the last
five decades and consider their innovations with respect to performance
as well as their relationship to social, cultural, and historical
phenomena. Though our class discussions will touch upon many issues,
the reading list has been designed to highlight five interrelated
topics: gender, race, the British Empire, devised and process-based
theatre, and affect on the stage. Likely dramatic texts include those
of John Osborne, Ann Jellicoe, Samuel Beckett, Edward Bond, Caryl
Churchill, Marina Carr, Forced Entertainment, Complicite , Sarah Kane,
Debbie Tucker Green, and Roy Williams. We will also read relevant
critical and theoretical texts. Prerequisite: Humanities 110 or
sophomore standing. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Shakespeare: The Love Plays
Full
course for one semester. This course will focus on a range of Shakespeare's
plays, in which the representation of love is a central theme. We will study
such topics as the nature and language of romance and sexuality, the
construction of gender roles and their deployment in games of love and power,
the function and ideology of cross-dressing and its significance for the status
of women, conflicts of love and war (or love as war), the relation of age to love, the origins and
consequences of jealousy in love, and the way attitudes towards love are shaped
and represented by genre (tragedy and comedy). Plays may include A Midsummer
Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, As You Like It, Twelfth Night, Measure
for Measure, Othello, and Antony and Cleopatra.
Prerequisite: sophomore standing. Conference.
English 301 - Junior Seminar in English Literary History
America after the Fall
Full course for one semester. This
course, a study of the methods and a sample of the materials of
American literary history, will focus on epic and lyric poetry. Texts
will include Milton's Paradise Lost and the poetry of Anne
Bradstreet, Edward Taylor, Phillis Wheatley, Emily Dickinson, and Walt
Whitman. In addition, there will be substantial reading in literary
theory and an extensive critical bibliography project. We will consider
questions about genre, literary authority, tradition and innovation,
canon formation, and intertextuality. Primarily for English majors, for
whom the junior seminar is usually required no later than the end of
the junior year. Prerequisites: junior standing and two English courses
at the 200 level or above. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Irony,
Allegory, Epic
Full course for one semester. A study of the
methods and a sample of the materials of English literary history using the
narrative tradition extending from Chaucer to Fielding. Texts include Chaucer’s “The Knight’s
Tale” and “The Wife of Bath’s Tale,” Spenser’s Faerie Queene, Lanyer’s Salve
Deus Rex Judaeorum, Milton’s Paradise Lost, and Fielding’s Tom Jones. There will be substantial reading in
literary theory. We will consider
questions about representation, figures and tropes, genre, influence,
intertextuality, authority, tradition and innovation, and canon formation. Primarily for English majors, for whom
the junior seminar is required no later than the end of the junior year. Prerequisites: junior standing, two English courses at
the 200 level, or consent of instructor. Conference.
Lyric, Epic, Künstlerroman
Full course for one
semester. A study of the methods and a sample of the materials of
English literary history. After some definitional questions, the course
will begin with an examination of change and continuity in the English
sonnet. We will then focus especially upon Wordsworth’s Prelude,
considered both as a transformation of the epic tradition and as the
main poetic exemplar of what would become the novel of artistic
self-discovery and development. Texts to be read include: Spenser, The Fairie Queene (Book I); Milton, Paradise Lost; Thomson, The Seasons; Wordsworth,The Prelude; Joyce, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man; Woolf, To the Lighthouse.
Throughout the semester, we will address problems of canon
construction, literary intertextuality, generic transformation, and
critical history. Students will develop their own critical history of
approaches to a work by a major author. This course is primarily for
English majors, for whom the junior seminar is usually required no
later than the end of the junior year. Prerequisites: junior standing,
two English courses at the 200 level or above, or consent of the
instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man
This course will
engage in an in-depth study of Ellison's 1952 novel by reading not only
the text, but also Ellison's essays and interviews and a substantial
amount of the critical history. Additionally, we will read texts
alluded to in the novel by Emerson, Twain, Douglass, Washington, Du
Bois, Whitman, Garvey, and T.S. Eliot. Students must assemble an
annotated bibliography of 25 major essays on and a critical history of
one major text covered by the parameters of the course. This course is
primarily for English majors, for whom the junior seminar is usually
required no later than the end of the junior year.Prerequisites: junior
standing and two English courses at the 200 level or above. Conference.
English 302 - Junior Seminar in English Literary History: Epic and Novel
The Composition of a Novel
Full course for one semester.
This course will explore the critical methods and a sampling of texts
in English literary history by analyzing the composition of Charlotte
Brontë's Shirley (1849) in a variety of ways. These will
include: close readings of the dialogue between this still noncanonical
novel with its canonical precursors in drama and epic (e.g.,
Shakespeare's Coriolanus and Milton's Paradise Lost);
questions about the role of Brontë's biography, the influence of her
contemporary reviewers, and her recourse to newspaper accounts of the
Luddite rebellions and the Napoleonic Wars; and Brontë's relations to
the intellectual history of her day, especially on matters of national
identity, labor economy, and sexual equality (Wollstonecraft, Marx,
Engels). We will consider questions of genre, tradition and innovation,
canon formation, critical history and gender. This course is primarily
for English majors, for whom the junior seminar is usually required no
later than the end of the junior year. Prerequisites: junior standing
and two English courses at the 200 level or above. Conference.
Epic and Novel
Full course for one semester. This course offers a study of the
methods and a sample of the materials of English literary history
focusing on epic and novel, with texts that may include Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Chaucer’s “Wife of Bath’s Tale,” Milton’s Paradise Lost, Sterne’s Tristram Shandy,
and a novel by Toni Morrison. In addition, there will be substantial
reading in literary theory. We will consider questions about genre,
literary authority, tradition and innovation, canon formation,
intertextuality, and the role of gender in epic and novel. This course
is primarily for English majors, for whom the junior seminar is usually
required no later than the end of the junior year. Prerequisites:
junior standing and two English courses at the 200 level or above.
Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Studies in Nonfiction Prose
English 303 - American Studies Seminar: The Death of Satan
Full
course for one semester. Early Americans viewed their history as an
epic struggle against Satan; yet today, Americans’ sense of evil is
weaker and more uncertain. How and why did Americans lose their sense
of evil? This course offers an introduction to the methods of American
studies: we will look at literature in the context of American history
and material culture. We will cover major American authors from the
colonial period through postmodernism, including works by Rowlandson,
Mather, Brockden Brown, Hawthorne, Melville, Douglass, Wharton, James,
Lowell, and Morrison. Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200
level or above, at least one course in either American history or
American religion, or consent of instructor. Conference. Not offered
2009-10.
English 311 - Studies in Nonfiction Prose
Autobiography Full
course for one semester. This course will introduce problems of narrative
through the study of autobiography and memoir. We will examine various
strategies writers employ to describe the self, whether in isolation or in
relationship to family and the surrounding culture. We will focus on the
language of self-representation; the function and expression of memory; problems
of truth, fiction, and lying in autobiography; the nature of the
confessional act; parental secrecy and the older child’s revelation as avenues
to self-discovery; the relation of performativity to identity; the ways
autobiographers give symbolic meaning and form to their experience; and the
relation of gender to self-representation. We’ll look at ways writers
experiment with diverse forms, challenging conventional or traditional modes of
life-writing, such as graphic autobiographies. And we will discuss whether this
kind of writing serves anything like a therapeutic purpose. There will also be
readings in autobiographical theory. Some possible texts include Nabokov’s Speak,
Memory; De Quincey’s Confessions
of an English Opium-Eater, Gertrude
Stein’s The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Maxine Hong Kingston’s WomanWarrior, GeorgesPerec's W, Michel Leiris’ Manhood, KathrynHarrison’s The Kiss, Mary Gordon’s The Shadow Man, Wilkomirski’s Fragments, and Art Spiegelman’s Maus. Prerequisite: two English or literature courses.
Conference.
The English Enlightenment and the Modern Intellectual
Full
course for one semester. In this course we will read a variety of major
18th-century authors whose work opens the modern debate on what it
means to be a literary intellectual. Major authors will include Joseph
Addison, David Hume, Adam Smith, Samuel Johnson, Edmund Burke, and Mary
Wollstonecraft, with some contemporary contributions from writers
including Susan Sontag. We will also read critical work attempting to
define what enlightenment means, from Immanuel Kant, Horkheimer and
Adorno, Michel Foucault and Jürgen Habermas. Prerequisite: two English
courses at the 200 level or above, or consent of the instructor.
Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
English 329 - Film and Fiction
Full course for one
semester. This course looks at ways film directors have adapted significant
novels for the screen. We will focus on narrative in fiction as it has been
transformed into narrative for films; the different techniques for storytelling
each medium employs; and various criteria for assessing the success or failure
of such adaptations, along the way examining the notion of “fidelity” as a
valid criterion for assessing film adaptations. We will also regard how point
of view is established in each genre. Some attention will be given to cinematic
codes and to ways of discussing how literary language is rendered in visual
terms. Novels and the films adopted from them will include such classics as
Nabokov’s Lolita, Mann’s Death in
Venice, Graham Greene’s The
Third Man, Conrad’s Heart of
Darkness (Apocalypse Now), John Fowles’ The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Henry James’ Washington Square (The Heiress), and Julio Cortazar’s Blowup. Prerequisite: two English or literature courses. Conference.
Studies in British Culture
English 337 - Studies in British Culture
British Literature, Colonialism, and Slavery, 1680–1830
Full
course for one semester. In this class we will read a series of texts
that focus on the nature of national and imperial identity in an age of
exploration, conquest, and colonization. Most of the works are British,
along with some French, American, and Caribbean texts, and range from
canonical texts by writers such as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, and
Jane Austen to journals, letters, autobiographies, and poetry by less
well-known authors from the social periphery or margins of empire.
Through these readings we will explore two kinds of questions: First,
in close readings of the varied forms of these texts (satire, fiction,
the memoir and journal, and poetry) we will trace the impact of various
literary genres on political arguments and vice versa. Second, we will
investigate what national identity is, what it means to be an imperial
power, and what the nature of the non-European "other" is in a literary
culture fascinated by the possibilities of colonial domination and
confronted with the fact of slavery. Associated topics such as the
development of a culture of ethnographic and cultural tourism in this
period will also be examined. There will also be substantial secondary
reading in recent criticism and theory on the questions raised by the
readings. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above,
or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Bloomsbury Group
This course examines the works and
cultural impact of the Bloomsbury set, one of the most important of all
English cultural movements and one that had an enormous impact on
British cultural and social thought in the first half of the 20th
century. The course will stress the group's debt to the philosophies of
G.E. Moore that emphasized the pleasures of human friendship and
aesthetic appreciation, as well as its rejection of the restrictions of
Victorian society. Primary attention will be given to the writings of
Virginia Woolf, the preeminent figure of the group, but we will also
look at the fiction of E.M. Forster and Leonard Woolf; the criticism of
Clive Bell and John Maynard Keynes; the art of Roger Fry, Vanessa Bell,
and Duncan Grant; and the biographical writings of Lytton Strachey.
Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above, or consent
of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Studies in Fiction
English 333 - Studies in Fiction
Postmodern Culture
Full
course for one semester. This course will introduce the field of
postmodern studies—in connection with cultural studies and
poststructuralism—and a number of issues associated with postmodernity
and postmodernism in their cultural, aesthetic, and political
dimensions. While the focus is on fiction and theory, we will also
examine films and television programs. Prominent among the topics this
course covers are globalization, mass culture, terrorism, virtual
reality, hypertext, conspiracy, hybridity, pastiche, “the death of the
author/subject,” intertextuality, and nostalgia. We will read fiction
by authors such as Thomas Pynchon, Don DeLillo, Jean Rhys, William
Gibson, Kathy Acker, and J.G. Ballard along with selected theoretical
writings of Jean Baudrillard, Jacques Derrida, Judith Butler, Homi
Bhabha, Fredric Jameson, Donna Haraway, Michel Foucault, Jean-François
Lyotard, and Slavoj Zizek. We will also screen several films, including
films directed by Alfred Hitchcock, David Lynch, and Ridley Scott.
Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above, or consent
of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Description and Narration
Full course for one semester.
This course will focus on the relations between description and
narration in examples drawn from American, French, and English fiction.
In what ways does description serve various narrative drives? In what
ways does description assert its separate purposes and what might those
be? Primary texts include Callistratus’s Descriptions, Chrétien de Troyes’s, Melville’s Typee, Flaubert’s A Sentimental Education, Hardy’s Tess of the D’Ubervilles, Zola’s The Ladies’ Paradise, Woolf’s The Waves, Stein’s Three Lives, and Joyce’s Dubliners.
Theoretical readings will be drawn from the work of M.M. Bakhtin,
Michel Riffaterre, Roland Barthes, Elaine Scarry, W.T.J. Mitchell, and
Paul Ricoeur. Weekly writing assignments and active participation are
required. Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200 level or above.
Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Romance Full course for one semester. In this course
we will interrogate the problematic status of the fictional narratives
generally classified as romances. Is the romance a historically
specific genre, the medieval precursor to the modern novel? Or is it,
as Northrop Frye maintains, "the structural core of all fiction"? In
thinking through such questions, we will also consider the relationship
of the romance to the categories/genres of epic, novel, and history in
light of critical discussions by Jameson, Auerbach, Parker, and others.
As we move from the Greek romance through the "classic" romances of the
Middle Ages and finally on to modern continuations of the form, we will
specifically address issues of narrative structure, chivalric vs.
heroic identities, and the historical representations of class, gender,
and the nation. Texts studied may include Daphnis and Chloe, the romances of Chrétien de Troyes, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Malory's D'Arthur, Spenser's The Faerie Queene, Sidney's The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia, Behn's Oroonoko, Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, and Morris's The Wood Beyond the World. Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200 level or above. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Raj and After: Fictions of English India
Full course
for one semester. For almost a hundred years, nearly the entirety of
the Indian subcontinent was under the direct political control of the
British Empire; through one of the most astonishing imperialist
exercises in world history, hundreds of millions of people were thus
ruled by a comparative handful of foreign administrators. This course
seeks to examine this period through the rich and varied fictional
responses to it by British and Indian writers alike both during and
after the Raj. We will consider such topics as the mutual assimilations
of both the ruling and the ruled cultures; the gathering strength of
the independence movement; the gradual decline of imperialist vigor;
the problems of linguistic impasse; and the intersections of gender,
sexuality, and race within discourses concerning foreign rule and
Indian nationalism. Novelists to be studied will include Rudyard
Kipling, Rabindranath Tagore, E.M. Forster, Raja Rao, Paul Scott, and
Salman Rushdie. We will also read shorter critical texts by Martha
Nussbaum, Benedict Anderson, Edward Said, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak,
Sunil Khilnani, and Homi Bhabha. Prerequisite: two English courses at
the 200 level or above, or consent of the instructor. Not offered
2009-10.
Encyclopedic Fictions: Tristram Shandy, Moby-Dick, Ulysses
Full
course for one semester. Edward Mendelson has identified the
encyclopedic narrative as a genre crucial to the formation of national
cultures by rendering the full range of a nation’s knowledge and
beliefs visible by means of the organizing skeleton of epic form. This
course will engage with three seminal encyclopedic fictions of the
Anglo-American novelistic tradition in the 18th, 19th, and 20th
centuries: Laurence Sterne’s The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman; Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick or, The Whale; and James Joyce’s Ulysses.
Because encyclopedic fiction makes full use of the resources of
literary forms while simultaneously rendering them obsolete, we will
use these three challenging novels as test cases against which we will
read a variety of critical texts concerning narrative theory and the
archive, including works by Jorge Luis Borges, Gyorg Lukács, M.M.
Bakhtin, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida. In addition, we will
read something about the historical national backgrounds against which
these three novels are set. Prerequisite: two English courses at the
200 level or above. Not offered 2009-10.
Black and Asian British Literature
Full course for one
semester. Over the past several decades, the work of Britain’s
immigrant and native-born ethnic writers has had a truly global impact.
This course will offer an in-depth, interdisciplinary examination of
black and Asian British literature. First, we will study the origins of
Britain’s black and Asian population, particularly in the postwar
period. Dominated first by immigrants from the Caribbean and then by
immigrants from South Asia, the postwar mass migration of the formerly
colonized forever changed the complexion and culture of Britain. Then
we will examine the rise of “black British” identity as a response to
racism, particularly during the 1970s and 1980s, when it was claimed by
individuals of African, Caribbean, and Asian descent. Finally, we will
consider the last two decades, when, after the so-called “Rushdie
Affair” (the controversy over The Satanic Verses), the notion
of Afro-Asian unity began to fall apart. Our readings will be drawn
from novelists, poets, and filmmakers such as Sam Selvon, Buchi
Emecheta, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Isaac Julien, Black Audio Film
Collective, Salman Rushdie, Hanif Kureishi, Jackie Kay, Monica Ali, and
Gautam Malkani. We will also read critical works by Homi Bhabha, Hazel
Carby, Paul Gilroy, Stuart Hall, C.L. Innes, Kobena Mercer, and others.
Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above, or consent
of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Literature of Venice
Full course for one semester.
What happens when the symbolic use of space, in fiction, is grafted
onto a specific place and the living history of a city? We will explore
this question through a body of literature set in the city of Venice.
From William Shakespeare to Ann Radcliffe to Thomas Mann, writers have
often used Venice to figure a particularly complex relationship to
history and modernity, and/or to secrecy, sexuality, and knowledge. We
will examine why this city of masks and public spectacles has proved so
compelling a setting for Gothic novels, detective fictions, and
historical romances. In addition to criticism and theory, our readings
will include novels and short stories by (among others) James Fenimore
Cooper, Wilkie Collins, and Henry James. Although our focus will be on
prose fiction, we will also consider how the literature on Venice has
been shaped and illuminated by Venetian histories and travelers’
accounts. Selected film adaptations of the course texts will supplement
our analysis. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or
above, or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Social World of the
Victorian Novel
Full course for one semester. The Industrial Revolution,
the entrenchment of the bourgeoisie, and the two Reform Bills made possible
tremendous transformations in the social worlds of Victorian Great Britain.
This course will examine how these changes were both documented and re-imagined
in the works of five seminal novelists of the period: William Makepeace
Thackeray, Elizabeth Gaskell, George Eliot, Anthony Trollope, and Charles
Dickens. We will pay particular attention to the ways in which these novelists
figure communities as constituted around such institutions as the workplace,
the home, the beau monde, the
church, the legal system, and the government. There will be substantial
historical, critical, and theoretical readings in addition to the novels.
Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200 level. Conference.
Fielding, Sterne, Austen: Narrative Theory and the Novel 1749-1815
Full course for one semester. This course will
focus on readings of three masterly experiments with novel form published
between 1749 and 1815: Fielding’s Tom Jones, Sterne’s Tristram Shandy, and
Austen’s Emma, along with fairly extensive readings on narrative theory. We will read historical texts to contextualize
these readings, some shorter fictional works from the period covered, and,
especially, critical works exploring modes of narration and focalization,
character, temporality in the novel, and the nature of literary style. Critics
will include classic commentators on the novel genre such as Viktor Shklovsky,
Mikhail Bakhtin, Wayne Booth, and Gerard Genette, as well as recent work by
scholars of Fielding, Sterne, and Austen. Prerequisite: two English courses at
the 200 level or above, or consent of the instructor. Conference.
Transnational Literature
Full course for one semester.
This course will examine an
important phenomenon in contemporary literature: the rise of fiction
that can
legitimately claim to be transnational. We will read several
transnational
novels by ethnic American and postcolonial writers such as Monique
Truong, Ruth
Ozeki, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Jessica Hagedorn, Caryl Phillips, Amitav
Ghosh,
Indra Sinha, and Michael Ondaatje. In addition, we will read
influential works
in transnational theory and the critical perspectives out of which it
emerged
and with which it continues to intersect, including those of
postcolonial,
diaspora, and ethnic studies. Our key theory text will
be Lisa Lowe’s influential essay, “The Intimacies of Four Continents,”
which
will provoke a look forward and backward to the work of thinkers such
as Homi
Bhaba, Dipesh Chakrabarty, Pheng Cheah, David Eng, Bishnupriya
Ghosh, Fredric Jameson, Walter Mignolo, Edward Said, and Gayatri
Spivak. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above, or
consent of the instructor. Conference.
Studies in American Literature
English 341 - Studies in American Literature
The Borderlands as Imaginary Narrative Space
Full
course for one semester. This course will introduce the discourse of
“the border” through a range of literary, historical, and cinematic
texts situated on or near the U.S./Mexico border. Our goal is to
understand not only the vibrant, violent history of the region—and how
that history is rendered aesthetically—but to understand how the border
is “felt” as a political truth, a geographical fiction, and a psychic
tension. This class is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from
literary studies, cultural studies, film studies, and Chicano/Latino
studies for its operating rubrics. Texts will include Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian, Richard Rodriguez’s Hunger of Memory, and Gloria Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera, in addition to works by Ana Castillo, Tomás Rivera, and Sandra Cisneros. Films may include LoneStar, No Country for Old Men, The Searchers,
and documentaries by Lourdes Portillo and Bill Brown. Prerequisites:
two 200-level English courses. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Jewish American Literature
Full course for one semester.
What is "Jewish" and what is "American" about Jewish American
literature? This course will introduce students primarily to Jewish
American fiction, with some attention to drama, autobiography, and
poetry from the 19th to the 21st century. We will discuss themes such
as identity (cultural, ethnic, and religious), exile, gender, history
and the Shoah (Holocaust), and issues such as humor, choice of
language, and the relationship of Jewish American literature to other
minority discourses and to other Jewish literatures. Texts may include
work by Anzia Yezierska, Abraham Cahan, Jo Sinclair, Philip Roth,
Joanne Greenberg, Chaim Potok, Cynthia Ozick, Isaac Bashevis Singer,
Rebecca Goldstein, Melvin Bukiet, Allegra Goodman; David Mamet; Emma
Lazarus, Alicia Ostriker, and Robert Pinsky; we will also view and
discuss one or more films. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200
level or above. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Film Noir
Full course for one semester. As the U.S. moved
in the 1940s from a wartime experience to a new, postwar context, works
of popular culture expressed both the hopes and fears that came with
that transition. For example, a series of postwar films such as the
well-known It's a Wonderful Life used magic figures who
descended to earth to help lost and bedraggled protagonists find their
way again in the confusions of the moment. But the way in which George
Bailey's American dream so quickly can become a nightmare suggests an
underside to 1940s optimism. In this respect, film noir, a trend of
films that started during the war but really exploded in the postwar
moment, expresses a bleaker, more bitter and downbeat vision of the
historical moment. Here, heroes turn into confused loners caught in the
labyrinths and dead ends of the city. Noir expresses tensions around
urban life, around sexual roles and identity, around work and success,
and so on. This course will examine noir both thematically and
stylistically to pinpoint its expressive commentary on social trends
and tensions. The course will also attend to the ongoing fascination
with—and frequent revival of—noir style and subject matter to study how
the social concerns of film noir continue to express complications in
the success story of America as a nation. The course will include both
films and novels adapted to film or with a distinctly noir aesthetic,
including Therese Raquin, The Postman Always Rings Twice, The Blank Wall, The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep.
Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200 level or above. Previous
coursework in film studies recommended. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Albee and Kennedy
Full course for one semester. This
course will be an in-depth study of the works of two major avant-garde
American playwrights who first gained recognition in the 1960s, Edward
Albee and Adrienne Kennedy. Albee's works include The Zoo Story,The American Dream, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, A Delicate Balance, Tiny Alice, and Three Tall Women. Kennedy's work includes Funnyhouse of a Negro, The Owl Answers, A Rat's Mass, and A Movie Star Has to Star in Black and White. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
English 356 - Studies in African American Literature
The Black Radical Tradition
Full
course for one semester. Throughout the history of Black people as a
colonized people in the West, there has been an ongoing debate about
the proper relationship or stance the colonized should have toward the
colonizer. In the 19th century, Martin Delany's radicalism was opposed
by Frederick Douglass's more accommodationist stance. Later, the
conflict was manifested by the contrast between W.E.B. Du Bois and
Booker T. Washington, and then between Marcus Garvey and Du Bois. Later
still, there were Malcolm X and Dr. King, and then Amiri Baraka and
Ralph Ellison. With the possible exception of the DuBois-Washington
conflict, the less radical position is the one that has received the
most attention, both public and scholarly. This course will examine the
work of three representative figures of the Black radical tradition in
the 20th century: W.E.B. Du Bois (U.S.A), C.L.R. James (Trinidad), and
Richard Wright (U.S.A.). In particular, we will examine their
relationship to Marxism as a means to the solution of the problem of
the colonized. This course will be both interdisciplinary—we will read
works of literature, history, and sociocultural criticism—and
cross-cultural. Texts will include Black Reconstruction, The Souls of Black Folk (DuBois), The Black Jacobins, Beyond a Boundary (James), Native Son, and 12 Million Black Voices (Wright). Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level, or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Black Radical Tradition II
Full course for one
semester. This course continues an examination of the radical solution
to the problem of the colonized. This semester we will concentrate on
the decades of the 1950s and 1960s. We will do an in-depth study of
three writers rather than a more broad-based survey. The three writers
are Frantz Fanon, Malcolm X, and LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka, although for
the latter we will study him in the larger context of the Black Arts
Movement. This will necessitate some attention to other writers such as
Larry Neal, Sonia Sanchez, and Harold Cruse. Prerequisite: two English
courses or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
The Art of the African American Short Story Full course
for one semester. This course will
survey African American short fiction from the late 19th century into
the 20th
century. We will look at the work in its historical and political
context. We
will begin in the 1890s with the work of Charles Chesnutt that
interrogates the
time immediately after slavery and signals the beginning of African
American
modernism. We will also cover the periods of the Harlem Renaissance,
African
American Naturalism, The Civil Rights Movement, The Black Arts
Movement, and
beyond. In addition to Chesnutt, authors will include Langston Hughes,
Zora
Neale Hurston, Jean Toomer, Richard Wright, James Baldwin, Ralph
Ellison, Paule
Marshall, Ernest J. Gains, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, Gayl Jones,
Jamaica
Kincaid, Amiri Baraka, Toni Cade Bambara, and Edward P. Jones.
Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200 level or above, or
consent of
the instructor. Conference.
Studies in Medieval Literature
English 352 - Studies in Medieval Literature
Love, Lyric, and Loss
Full course for
one semester. Focusing on Chaucer's brilliant narrative poem "'Troilus and
Criseyde," in this course we will explore the invention and long cultural
afterlife of medieval constructions of love and loss. In the first part of the
course, we will become familiar with Middle English and the continental lyric
and narrative traditions Chaucer knew and drew upon in writing his lesser-known
masterpiece, "Troilus and Criseyde." We will read some of Chaucer's lyrics and
early dream visions ("The Parlement of Foules," "The Book of the Duchess").
Other readings will be drawn from medieval and contemporary texts that
represent and theorize love and loss (e.g., Boethius, troubadour poetry, Marie
de France, Kristeva). Middle English texts will be read in the original, other
medieval texts in translation. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above, or consent
of the instructor. Conference.
Chaucer
Full course for one semester. The
late-14th-century poet Geoffrey Chaucer is surely one of the greatest
masters of irony in English literature. In this course we will study a
generous selection of his masterpiece, The Canterbury Tales.
The first section of the course will focus on developing students'
facility with Chaucer's language and with medieval culture through a
study of The General Prologue. As we proceed through the tales,
we will pay careful attention to Chaucer's representation of gender and
class through his use of irony and satire, his manipulation of genre,
his relationship to his source materials and to medieval Christian
authorities, and his subtle exploration of a poetics of instability.
Throughout the course we will also consider and reconsider the
implications of Chaucer's ambiguous social status within the Ricardian
court, as well the validity of thinking of the poet as a "skeptical
fideist." Students will learn to read Middle English fluently by the
end of the semester, though no previous experience with early forms of
English is required. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level
or above, or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Studies in Shakespeare
English 363 - Studies in Shakespeare
Shakespearean Skepticism
Full
course for one semester. A study of the way in which Shakespearean
theatre engages what Stanley Cavell calls the “catastrophe of the
modern advent of skepticism.” Among the questions to be addressed are
epistemological problems as they relate to tragedy, crises of belief
and authority, and the gendering of skepticism. Plays to be read
include King Lear, Othello, Hamlet, Much Ado about Nothing, All’s Well that Ends Well, and The Winter’s Tale. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level, or consent of the instructor. Conference.
Shakespeare and the Disciplines of Culture
Full course for
one semester. In early modern England a vigorous debate occurred about
the effects of theatre on character, a debate that finds its echo in
modern discussions of the political and ethical effects of Shakespeare
and his place in the canon. This course will examine several of
Shakespeare’s plays with particular attention to the way in which they
implicitly shape a political subject and a moral self. Among the plays
addressed will be Richard II, Henry V, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and The Tempest. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above, or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Studies in Poetry
English 366 - Studies in Poetry
The Lyric, 1789 to the Present
Full
course for one semester. A study in the theory, practice, and history
of the lyric from Romanticism to the present time. The lyric, as one
of, if not the most characteristic poetic form, has
historically been a fertile ground for both poets and critics to define
and contest the constitutive elements of poetry. We will examine one of
the most crucial periods in the construction of lyric, romanticism, and
the critical and poetic legacy of romanticism for modernism and
postmodernism through a reading of major lyric poets from all three
periods. Readings and discussion will include a wide range of critical
approaches to lyric, focusing on such questions as the constitution of
the speaker; the relationship between the speaker and the fictional or
real world he inhabits; organic form; the figure of “voice”; the role
of intertextuality; the understanding of symbol and allegory within the
lyric; the attack on lyric by aesthetic-ideology critics; and aesthetic
form as experiment. Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200 level
or above, preferably including English 211, or consent of the
instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Image, Body, Text
Full course for one semester. This
course examines poetry, painting, and criticism from the Victorian and
Modern periods, investigating how the notion of the image was
conceptualized and, in particular, how it is connected to the
representation of the body. We will investigate such issues as the
relationship between vision and textuality, the nature of spectatorship
and beholding, the politics of the aestheticized image, and the image
as the locus for the performance of gender and sexuality. Readings may
include works of Tennyson, the Brownings, D.G. Rossetti, Christina
Rossetti, Pater, Ruskin, Pound, H.D., Mina Loy, Djuna Barnes, Frank
O'Hara, and Mark Doty as well as theory and criticism drawn from
literature and art history. Prerequisites: two English courses at the
200 level or above, or consent of the instructor. Not offered 2009-10.
The Poetics of
Translation
Full course for
one semester. This course will explore the theory and practice of
literary translation, with particular attention to how texts cross
cultural borders. In the process, we will also consider the role of translation
in twentieth-century poetic innovation, with attention to
major theorist-innovators such as Ezra Pound, Jorge Luis Borges, and
Haroldo de Campos. We will read selectively in translation theory, and
relate this theory to our own translation practice. Students will
complete a portfolio of translated poems, short stories, or short dramatic
works suitable for submission to a literary journal. Prerequisites:
two literature courses at the 200 level or above, preferably
including English 211, or consent of the instructor. Students should
have a competency in a foreign language equivalent to at least one year of
study at Reed, or be concurrently enrolled in the second year of a Reed
language course. Conference.
English 378 - Free Verse
Full
course for one semester. This course will consider the history,
practice, and theory of free verse in America from Whitman to the
present. We will examine the debates about what constitutes free verse,
the role it plays in defining avant-garde movements and forms, its
relation to metrical poetry, and some of the most fruitful critical
approaches for understanding it, including the poets’ own writings on
the poetics of verse form. Among the poets we may read are Whitman,
Pound, Eliot, H.D., Williams, Winters, Olson, Creeley, Duncan,
Levertov, Ginsberg, Zukovsky, Bishop, Rich, and Lee, as well as
selections from neoformalist and language poets. Prerequisite: two
English courses at the 200 level or above, preferably including English
211, or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
English 384 - Poetry and History
Contemporary American Poetry
Full
course for one semester. This course is devoted to the works of
American poets writing after 1945, beginning with poets ranging from
Richard Wilbur to Charles Olson and ending with those writing now.
While the class will focus on specific texts, we will also consider
questions about the relationships between poetry, poetics, and American
culture, trying to map the broad features of various poetic traditions
and practices in the United States in the last half of the 20th
century, with an emphasis on the heterogeneous nature of poetic
practices. Prerequisite: English 211 or consent of the instructor.
Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
American Modernism
Full course for one semester. Virginia
Woolf wrote that on “or about December, 1910, human character changed,”
voicing a widely shared excitement over an anticipated revolution in
the arts. The American poets who stayed in the U.S. shared this
excitement, but also faced unique cultural circumstances. We will do
close readings of poetry by Williams, Moore, and Stevens; look at how
they were responding to and helping shape American attitudes about the
arts; and evaluate the poets’ ideas about poetry’s place and function.
Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level, or English 211 and
an American history course, or consent of the instructor. Conference.
Not offered 2009-10.
Politics and
the Self in English Romanticism
Full course for
semester. A course on the
relationship between the arguments and discourse arising from the American and
French Revolutions (in what is called the revolution controversy) and the
project and style of lyric poetry, especially in England. We will
explore late 18th- and early 19th-century claims about poetic and
political revolution, along with shifting ideas of personal identity. Writers may
include the Wordsworths (William and Dorothy), the Shelleys (Mary and Percy
Bysshe), Burke, Thomas Paine, William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary
Robinson, Mary Hays, Helen Maria Williams, and Anna Barbauld. Prerequisites: English 211 or a history course in the
period. Conference.
Literary Theory
English 393 - Literary Theory
Theory and the Ethics of Reading
Full
course for one semester. Since Aristotle, literary criticism has always
had an ethical dimension, even if not always foregrounded. This course
will examine several approaches to understanding the relationship
between literature and ethical analysis. Among the theorists to be
considered will be Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Schiller, Paul
de Man, and Jacques Derrida. We will test theory against some works of
literature, among them Shakespeare's Coriolanus, Austen's Pride and Prejudice, and Conrad's Heart of Darkness. Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level, or consent of the instructor. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
Problems in
Contemporary Narrative Theory
Full course for one semester. This course
introduces students to problems and debates in narrative theory. We will focus on three current areas of
research: theories of character,
the analysis of narration (e.g. represented thought), and the contextualist
dimensions of literary style. Each
week will pair one or more classic paper in narrative theory (e.g. Propp on the
folk-tale, Genette on focalization, Bakhtin on heteroglossia) with a more
recent approach to the problem it confronts. Readings may include Marxist, feminist, and post-colonial
approaches to narrative; we will also consider what interdisciplinary studies,
such as those drawing on cognitive science and the sociology of literature,
offer for theories of the novel.
To test these theories, we will employ a common set of novels, drawn
from various periods and national traditions, which we will read concurrently
throughout the semester: Lewis's The
Monk, Austen's Pride
and Prejudice, Machado de
Assis' The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cuba/s, and selected chapters from Ulysses.
Prerequisite: two English
courses at the 200 level, or consent of the instructor. Conference.
A History of
Rhetoric and Literary Theory
Full course for
one semester. This course consists
of an examination of
classical rhetoric ("the art of persuasion") and the ways in which
rhetorical systems promulgated theories about the functions of
memory, imagination, and language in relation to the composition and
reception of literary texts of all genres. Part of the goal is to
arrive at sophisticated and historically informed definitions of
concepts such as mimesis, copia, and
the sublime. Attention will also be paid to the theories and functions
of literary tropes, particularly metaphor, metonymy, irony, and allegory. Theoretical texts will be
read in conjunction with literary texts, enabling the student to use them and
critique various theories in
his/her own strategies for close reading.
The theoretical texts are taken
from Aristotle, Cicero, Quintilian, Longinus, Erasmus, Thomas Wilson,
St. Ignatius Loyola, Burke, Kant, Freud, and Lacan. The literary
texts include Sophocles' "Oedipus Rex," Shakespeare's sonnets, and
James Joyce's Dubliners. Prerequisite: two 200-level English courses
or consent of the instructor. This course satisfies the pre-17th C requirement.
Conference.
English 400 - Introduction to Literary Theory
See Literature 400 for description.
Other Classes
English 328 - Film Theory
Full
course for one semester. This course develops an advanced understanding
of film as a complex cultural medium through a survey of the principal
theories of cinema from the silent era to the present. Some of the key
theoretical approaches this course introduces include realist theory,
genre criticism, auteur theory, structuralism, psychoanalytic film
theory, feminist theory, and postcolonial film theory. Prerequisites:
junior standing and English courses at the 200 level or above,
including an introductory film course. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
English 330 - Exploration and Travel Narratives, Self and Other
A
study of voyaging, exile, and homecoming in a range of narratives, from
epic, drama, fiction, and travel writing. These are "liminal" texts,
with figures who cross borders, and who may transgress against the
familiar and fantasize a freedom otherwise denied to them. There are
twin interests here: on the new land to be explored and its people, and
on the consciousness of the explorer. We will engage such questions as:
why does the protagonist voyage? Why does he or she write or tell
stories? What shape or plot does the narrator give to the journey? What
is the nature of "the exotic" and what ethnocentric assumptions and
valorizations are implicit in designating an "other" defined against
the normalized "self?" do such texts emphasize universalism or
relativism? What is the relation of the new place to "home"? The texts
may include Homer's Odyssey, Shakespeare's The Tempest, Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, Swift's Gulliver's Travels, Flaubert's Letters from Egypt, Lawrence's Sea and Sardinia, Greene's Journey without Maps, Canetti's Voices of Marrakech, Eco's Travels in Hyperreality, and Barthes' Empire of Signs. Prerequisites: two English courses at the 200 level or above. Conference. Not offered 2009-10.
English 386 - Literature and the Sister Arts: Theory and Practice
Full
course for one semester. This course will examine the relationship
between poetry and the sister arts, especially painting and music, from
the later 18th through the 20th centuries. While we examine particular
paintings, poems, and music, our emphasis will be on the literary
understanding of these other arts. The approach to this problem will be
both historical and critical, including contemporary theory on
representation, gender, and ekphrasis. Topics include the
expanding reading, viewing, and listening audiences in the late 18th
century; the development of literary and art criticism as genres; the
ideas of the sublime, the beautiful, and the picturesque; and the
nature of the image. Some of the figures we may read are Lessing,
Burke, Wordsworth, Blake, Tennyson, Ruskin, Pater, Rossetti, Williams,
H.D., Loy, Pound, O’Hara, and Doty. Prerequisite: two English classes
at the 200 level or above, or consent of the instructor. Conference.
Not offered 2009-10.
English 470 - Thesis
One-half or full course for one year.
English 481 - Independent Reading
One-half or full course for one semester. Prerequisite: approval of the instructor and the division.