Fall 2017 Class Schedule
Course | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
---|---|---|---|---|
ENG 202 | Introduction to Creative Reading & Writing | Curdy | MW 12:30-1:50 | |
ENG 202 Introduction to Creative Reading & WritingCourse Description: This course will introduce students to the major elements and tools of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction writing. Through exercises and projects, you’ll practice using these tools to produce original, exciting works of literary art. Along the way, you’ll sharpen your ability to track these elements both in published texts and in the work of your classmates, and further develop how you measure aesthetic value. You’ll be encouraged to see yourself as an active member of a community of artists, and to establish a regular discipline as a working writer. Writing and reading will be due in nearly every class, and peer workshop will play an important role in learning to see your work more objectively. Teaching Methods: Discussion. Evaluation Methods: Evaluation of a final portfolio. Texts include: A course reader. Note: This course is open to first-year students admitted in Fall 2017. | ||||
ENG 202 | Introduction to Creative Reading & Writing | Donohue | TTh 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 202 Introduction to Creative Reading & WritingCourse Description: This course will introduce students to the major elements and tools of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction writing. Through exercises and projects, you’ll practice using these tools to produce original, exciting works of literary art. Along the way, you’ll sharpen your ability to track these elements both in published texts and in the work of your classmates, and further develop how you measure aesthetic value. You’ll be encouraged to see yourself as an active member of a community of artists, and to establish a regular discipline as a working writer. Writing and reading will be due in nearly every class, and peer workshop will play an important role in learning to see your work more objectively. Teaching Methods: Discussion. Evaluation Methods: Evaluation of a final portfolio. Texts include: A course reader. Note: This course is open to first-year students admitted in Fall 2017. | ||||
ENG 206 | Reading & Writing Poetry | Mehigan | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 206 Reading & Writing Poetry[Prerequisite to English Major in Writing] Course Description: An introduction to the major forms of poetry in English from the dual perspective of the poet-critic. Creative work will be assigned in the form of poems and revisions; analytic writing will be assigned in the form of critiques of other class members’ poems. A scansion exercise will be given early on. All of these exercises, creative and expository, as well as the required readings from the anthology, are designed to help students increase their understanding of poetry rapidly and profoundly; the more wholehearted students’ participation, the more they will learn from the course. Prerequisites: No prerequisites. No P/N registration. Attendance of first class is mandatory. Freshmen are NOT permitted to enroll until winter quarter. Seniors require department permission. Prerequisite for the writing major and sequence-based minor. Literature Majors are also welcome. Teaching Method: Discussion; one-half to two-thirds of the classes will be devoted to discussion of readings and principles, the other classes to discussion of student poems. Evaluation Method: Evidence given in written work and class participation of students’ understanding of poetry; improvement will count for a great deal in estimating achievement. Texts include: An anthology, a critical guide, a 206 Reader prepared by the instructor, and the work of other students. Note: This course may also be counted toward the English Literature major. | ||||
ENG 206 | Reading & Writing Poetry | Mehigan | TTh 12:30-1:50 | |
ENG 206 Reading & Writing Poetry[Prerequisite to English Major in Writing] Course Description: An introduction to the major forms of poetry in English from the dual perspective of the poet-critic. Creative work will be assigned in the form of poems and revisions; analytic writing will be assigned in the form of critiques of other class members’ poems. A scansion exercise will be given early on. All of these exercises, creative and expository, as well as the required readings from the anthology, are designed to help students increase their understanding of poetry rapidly and profoundly; the more wholehearted students’ participation, the more they will learn from the course. Prerequisites: No prerequisites. No P/N registration. Attendance of first class is mandatory. Freshmen are NOT permitted to enroll until winter quarter. Seniors require department permission. Prerequisite for the writing major and sequence-based minor. Literature Majors are also welcome. Teaching Method: Discussion; one-half to two-thirds of the classes will be devoted to discussion of readings and principles, the other classes to discussion of student poems. Evaluation Method: Evidence given in written work and class participation of students’ understanding of poetry; improvement will count for a great deal in estimating achievement. Texts include: An anthology, a critical guide, a 206 Reader prepared by the instructor, and the work of other students. Note: This course may also be counted toward the English Literature major. | ||||
ENG 206 | Reading & Writing Poetry | Gibbons | TTh 11-12:20 | |
ENG 206 Reading & Writing Poetry[Prerequisite to English Major in Writing] Course Description: An introduction to the major forms of poetry in English from the dual perspective of the poet-critic. Creative work will be assigned in the form of poems and revisions; analytic writing will be assigned in the form of critiques of other class members’ poems. A scansion exercise will be given early on. All of these exercises, creative and expository, as well as the required readings from the anthology, are designed to help students increase their understanding of poetry rapidly and profoundly; the more wholehearted students’ participation, the more they will learn from the course. Prerequisites: No prerequisites. No P/N registration. Attendance of first class is mandatory. Freshmen are NOT permitted to enroll until winter quarter. Seniors require department permission. Prerequisite for the writing major and sequence-based minor. Literature Majors are also welcome. Teaching Method: Discussion; one-half to two-thirds of the classes will be devoted to discussion of readings and principles, the other classes to discussion of student poems. Evaluation Method: Evidence given in written work and class participation of students’ understanding of poetry; improvement will count for a great deal in estimating achievement. Texts include: An anthology, a critical guide, a 206 Reader prepared by the instructor, and the work of other students. Note: This course may also be counted toward the English Literature major. | ||||
ENG 206 | Reading & Writing Poetry | Mehigan | TTh 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 206 Reading & Writing Poetry[Prerequisite to English Major in Writing] Course Description: An introduction to the major forms of poetry in English from the dual perspective of the poet-critic. Creative work will be assigned in the form of poems and revisions; analytic writing will be assigned in the form of critiques of other class members’ poems. A scansion exercise will be given early on. All of these exercises, creative and expository, as well as the required readings from the anthology, are designed to help students increase their understanding of poetry rapidly and profoundly; the more wholehearted students’ participation, the more they will learn from the course. Prerequisites: No prerequisites. No P/N registration. Attendance of first class is mandatory. Freshmen are NOT permitted to enroll until winter quarter. Seniors require department permission. Prerequisite for the writing major and sequence-based minor. Literature Majors are also welcome. Teaching Method: Discussion; one-half to two-thirds of the classes will be devoted to discussion of readings and principles, the other classes to discussion of student poems. Evaluation Method: Evidence given in written work and class participation of students’ understanding of poetry; improvement will count for a great deal in estimating achievement. Texts include: An anthology, a critical guide, a 206 Reader prepared by the instructor, and the work of other students. Note: This course may also be counted toward the English Literature major. | ||||
ENG 207 | Reading & Writing Fiction | Bouldrey | MW 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 207 Reading & Writing Fiction[Prerequisite to English Major in Writing] Course Description: A reading and writing course in short fiction. Students will read widely in traditional as well as experimental short stories, seeing how writers of different culture and temperament use conventions such as plot, character, and techniques of voice and distance to shape their art. Students will also receive intensive practice in the craft of the short story, writing at least one story, along with revisions, short exercises, and a critical study of at least one work of fiction, concentrating on technique. Prerequisites: English 206. No P/N registration. Attendance of first class is mandatory. Course especially recommended for prospective Writing Majors. Literature Majors also welcome. Teaching Method: Discussion of readings and principles; workshop of student drafts. Evaluation Method: Evidence given in written work and class participation of students’ growing understanding of fiction; improvement will count for a great deal in estimating achievement. Texts include: Selected short stories, essays on craft, and the work of the other students. | ||||
ENG 210-1 | British Literary Traditions | Law | MW 1-1:50 | |
ENG 210-1 British Literary TraditionsCourse Description: This course offers an introduction to the early English literary canon, extending from the late medieval period through the eighteenth century. In addition to gaining a general familiarity with some of the most influential texts of English literature, we will be especially interested in discovering how literary texts construct, engage in, and transform political discourse. What kinds of political interventions are literary texts capable of making? What are the political implications of particular rhetorical strategies and generic choices? How do literary texts encode or allegorize particular political questions? How, at a particular historical moment, does it become possible to ignore or overlook the political projects embedded in these texts? In readings of Chaucer, More, Sidney, Shakespeare, Milton, Behn, and Swift, among others, we will consider how important it is to understand these texts from a political perspective, and wonder why this perspective is so often ignored in favor of psychologizing and subjectivizing readings. Teaching Method: Two lectures per week, plus a required discussion section. Evaluation Method: Regular reading quizzes (15%); class participation (25%); midterm exam (20%); final exam (20%); final paper (20%). Texts include: Beowulf; Mystery Plays; Chaucer, Canterbury Tales; More, Utopia; Sidney, Defense of Poesy; Shakespeare, Tempest and selected sonnets; Milton, Paradise Lost; Behn, Oroonoko; Swift, Gulliver’s Travels. Note: English 210-1 is an English Literature major and minor requirement; it is also designed for nonmajors and counts as an Area VI WCAS distribution requirement. | ||||
ENG 234 | Introduction to Shakespeare Pre-1830 | Phillips | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 234 Introduction to Shakespeare Pre-1830Course Description: This course will introduce students to a range of Shakespeare’s comedies, Teaching Methods: Lectures with Q&A; required weekly discussion section. Evaluation Methods: Attendance and section participation, two papers, midterm, final exam. Texts include: The Norton Shakespeare, ed. Stephen Greenblatt et al. Available at Beck’s Bookstore. | ||||
ENG 273 | Intro to 20th Century American Literature Post-1830 | Cutler | MW 11-12:20 | |
ENG 273 Intro to 20th Century American Literature Post-1830Course Description: When Henry Luce, the publisher of Time magazine, declared in 1941 that it was time to create “the first great American Century,” he meant to advocate for the spread of quintessential American values—freedom, democracy—throughout the globe. But the idea of the American Century has also been invoked to call attention to the United States’ perceived harmful influence in world affairs. This course surveys some of the most important works of modern American literature by examining the intense ambivalence of American writers—including Ernest Hemingway, Nella Larsen, Margaret Atwood, and Junot Díaz—about their place in the world. How have some writers sought to escape the perceived provincialism of their American identities? How have writers grappled with the legacy of American military interventions abroad? What are the United States’ ethical obligations to the world? Teaching Method: Two lectures per week and a discussion section. Evaluation Method: Quizzes, one short essay, one group project, and a final exam. Texts include:
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ENG 300 | Seminar in Reading & Interpretation: Reading and Interpreting Poe | Erkkilä | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 300 Seminar in Reading & Interpretation: Reading and Interpreting PoeCourse Description: Edgar Allan Poe invented the short story, the detective story, the science fiction story, and modern poetic theory. His stories and essays anticipate the Freudian unconscious and various forms of psychoanalytic, poststructuralist, and modern critical theory. Poe wrote a spooky novel called The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym and several volumes of poetry and short stories. As editor or contributor to many popular nineteenth-century American magazines, he wrote sketches, reviews, essays, angelic dialogues, polemics, and hoaxes. This course will focus on Poe’s writings as a means of learning how to read and analyze a variety of literary genres, including lyric and narrative poems, the novel, the short story, detective fiction, science fiction, the essay, the literary review, and critical theory. We will study poetic language, image, meter, and form as well as various storytelling techniques such as narrative point of view, plot, structure, language, character, repetition and recurrence, and implied audience. We will also study a variety of critical approaches to reading and interpreting Poe’s writings, including formalist, psychoanalytic, historicist, Marxist, feminist, queer, critical race, poststructuralist, and postcolonial theory and criticism. We will conclude by looking at the ways Poe’s works have been translated and adapted in a selection of contemporary films and other pop cultural forms. Teaching Method: Some lecture; mostly close-reading and discussion. Evaluation Method: 2 short essays (3-4 pages); and one longer essay (8-10 pages); in-class participation. Texts include: Edgar Allan Poe: Poetry, Tales, and Selected Essays (Library of America); M. H. Abrams and Geoffrey Galt Harpham: A Glossary of Literary Terms (Thomson, 8thEdition); Julie Rivkin and Michael Ryan, eds.: Literary Theory: An Anthology (Blackwell, rev. ed.). Notes: English 300 is an English Literature major and minor requirement. First class mandatory. No P/N registration. This course does NOT fulfill the WCAS Area VI distribution requirement. This course may not be repeated for major or minor credit. | ||||
ENG 300 | Seminar in Reading & Interpretation: Knotted, Not Plotted | Swanner | TTh 12:30-1:50 | |
ENG 300 Seminar in Reading & Interpretation: Knotted, Not PlottedCourse Description: …beginning with an introduction to today’s unconventional narratives in openworld videogames, hypertext internet novels, and even films like Inception, this course will trace the long history of structural weirdness in literature. While the colloquial understanding of a narrative is “a story with a beginning, middle, and an end,” there have always been narratives attempting to disrupt, upend, or discard that formula. By analyzing structurally unconventional texts by historical authors like Laurence Sterne, George Eliot, and Jorge Luis Borges, students will discover the radical political and cultural meanings behind forms that are flipped, chopped, spliced, or tangled. Additionally, by reading more recent pop-cultural texts alongside historical literary works, this course will perform its own kind of structural experimentation. Instead of studying narrative history in a linear way from its beginnings to an endpoint today, we will mix things up just like the texts we study. Like one story by John Barth, for instance, our classroom discussion may continually loop back to its... Teaching Method: Seminar discussion. Evaluation Methods: Two shorter papers and one longer one. Texts Include: John Barth’s Lost in the Funhouse (Anchor Literary Library, ISBN: 978-0385240871); Jorge Luis Borges’s The Aleph and Other Stories (Penguin Classics, ISBN: 978-0142437889); Mark Danielewski’s House of Leaves (Pantheon, ISBN: 978-0375703768); George Eliot’s The Lifted Veil and Brother Jacob (Oxford World’s Classics, ISBN: 978-0199555055); Laurence Stern’s The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy (Penguin, ISBN: 978-0141439778); Vladimir Nabokov’s Pale Fire (Vintage, ISBN: 978-0679723424). Texts will be available at: Norris Campus Bookstore. Notes: English 300 is an English Literature major and minor requirement. First class mandatory. No P/N registration. This course does NOT fulfill the WCAS Area VI distribution requirement. This course may not be repeated for major or minor credit. | ||||
ENG 300 | Seminar in Reading & Interpretation Our Monsters, Our Selves | Taylor | MW 12:30-1:50 | |
ENG 300 Seminar in Reading & Interpretation Our Monsters, Our SelvesCourse Description: Spell-casting witches, blood-sucking vampires, mindless zombies, evil robots, and invading aliens. What do our obsessions with specific supernatural, technological, or extraterrestrial threats to humanity tell us about cultural investments at a specific time and place? In this course, we will examine popular culture’s preoccupation with supernatural or extra-worldly “villains” in literature, nonfiction, films, and other media. This course will contextualize those trends in the historical, cultural, and political anxieties or interests of the time, including contemporaneous ideas of national identity, gender and sexuality, and developments in science and technology. For instance, the recent popularity of zombies has been linked to fears about increasing globalization, and alien invasion was a particularly popular theme in movies and literature at the intersection of the Cold War and humans’ exploration of space. Course material will also include satires of these crazes, which often expose the fears or desires underlying our fascination with particular literary figures or genres. We will investigate existing academic and nonfiction theses about why certain threats to humanity are popular in certain cultural moments; we will also develop our own hypotheses about why particular “monsters” or narratives captivate the popular imagination. Teaching Methods: Discussion. Evaluation Methods: Two papers, Canvas posts, participation; final group presentation. Texts include: Bram Stoker, Dracula; H.G. Wells, War of the Worlds; Orson Welles, War of the Worlds Radio Broadcast; Isaac Asimov, I, Robot; Max Brooks, World War Z and The Zombie Survival Guide; George Romero, Night of the Living Dead. Texts will be available at: Beck’s, Quartet Copies. Notes: English 300 is an English Literature major and minor requirement. First class mandatory. No P/N registration. This course does NOT fulfill the WCAS Area VI distribution requirement. This course may not be repeated for major or minor credit. Students completing this section of English 300 may not take the section of English 368 offered in the spring with the same topic. | ||||
ENG 308 | Advanced Creative Nonfiction Writing: The Radio Essay | Bresland | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 308 Advanced Creative Nonfiction Writing: The Radio EssayCourse Description: Writers today can write as they always have, but they needn’t stop there. They can also produce. They can make. In the past ten | ||||
ENG 311 | Studies in Poetry: Blake’s Afterlives: Poetics Beyond the Page -- Post-1830 | Wolff | TTh 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 311 Studies in Poetry: Blake’s Afterlives: Poetics Beyond the Page -- Post-1830Post-1830 Course Description: How did the Romantic poetry and visual art of William Blake come to inspire later artistic misfits and countercultures? How has his example pushed poetics beyond the page? This course explores the unique poetry of Blake alongside its experimental, politically committed, sometimes hallucinogenic afterlives. Obscure and barely read during his own life, the eccentric Blake might be seen as the prototype of the artistic genius ahead of his or her time, but today we can safely say that his star has risen many times over: in poetry, from the Victorian Pre-Raphaelites, to Walt Whitman, William Butler Yeats, and Allen Ginsburg; and across the arts, from Diane Arbus (in photography) to Jackson Pollack (in painting), Patti Smith (in music), and Kenzaburo Oe (in fiction), Blake’s afterlives have proliferated in the 20th century, spanning aesthetic ideologies from the Beat poets to surrealism, abstract expressionism, anti-war art, and punk. Emphasis will be placed on the poetic inventiveness of Blake’s mixed-media forms, and his attempts to reinvent the literary object, as we compare his own illuminated poetry and innovative printing techniques with successors, across artistic media. The course is run in parallel with the Block Museum of Art’s exhibit, “William Blake and the Age of Aquarius”; a number of our classes and assignments will focus on works displayed and events held in conjunction with this exhibit. Teaching Method: Brief lectures, seminar-style discussion, group exercises, field trips. Evaluation Method: Attendance and participation, weekly writing/creative assignments, short presentation, midterm paper, final project. Texts may include: William Blake, The Complete Illuminated Books (Thames & Hudson) (must be ordered online); OR William Blake, Songs of Innocence & Experience (Dover Fine Art) and The Marriageof Heaven and Hell (Dover Fine Art). Note: The above course is combined with COMP_LIT 312-0. | ||||
ENG 312 | Studies in Drama: Caryl Churchill: Techniques and Provocations -- Post-1830 | Davis, T. | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 312 Studies in Drama: Caryl Churchill: Techniques and Provocations -- Post-1830Post-1830 Course Description: The New Yorker proclaims that Caryl Churchill “is the greatest playwright alive and one of the most elusive.” Since she came to international prominence in 1979 each new work has rocked expectations: her subjects and theatrical treatments are unorthodox and ever-changing. Many of her scenarios teeter on the brink between farce and catastrophe, utilizing a mixture of realistic and starkly non-realist techniques to pose challenging questions about the timeliest questions of the day (gender identity, rapacious capitalism, environmental degradation, migrancy and refuge, and totalitarianism). This course will provide a systematic introduction to understanding a selection of Churchill’s full-length works and shorter plays in the light of her activism and experimentation, touching also on her major influences from the theatre and philosophy (Bertolt Brecht, Samuel Teaching Methods: Seminar discussion. Evaluation Methods: Critical writing, short essays, discussion. Texts may include: Mad Forest, Serious Money, Cloud Nine, A Number, Love and Information, Escaped Alone, Seven Jewish Children. Texts will be available at: Norris and Canvas. | ||||
ENG 313 | Studies in Fiction: Detective Stories -- Post-1830 | Eltahawy | MW 2-3:20 | |
ENG 313 Studies in Fiction: Detective Stories -- Post-1830Course Description: From London’s fastidious Sherlock Holmes to Los Angeles’s smooth-talking private eyes, detectives have developed into some of the most popular characters in British and American fiction alike. In this course, we will trace the origins and the evolution of detective stories in order to uncover the various roles that these popular figures have played in the representation of crime and its punishment. Turning our attention to a range of examples, including the traditional gentleman (Sherlock), the spunky teenager (Veronica Mars), and the real-life sleuth (the makers of Serial), we will interrogate the ways in which detectives have shaped our understanding of the law, the people who break it, and those who uphold it. What do we learn about society when we see it through detectives’ eyes? How do the stories that detectives tell—about themselves or about the suspects they investigate—impact the way that we view crime? And in what ways do detectives aid or challenge the legal systems in which they operate? Teaching Method: Discussion. Evaluation Methods: Participation; three essays. Texts include: Edgar Allan Poe, “Murders in the Rue Morgue”; Arthur Conan Doyle, selections from The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes; BBC’s Sherlock; Agatha Christie, selections from Poirot Investigates; John Huston, The Maltese Falcon; The CW’s Veronica Mars; Serial. Texts will be available at: course packet available at Quarter copies; films and episodes will be available for screening on Canvas site. | ||||
ENG 323-1 | Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales -- Pre-1830 | Phillips | TTh 2-3:20 | |
ENG 323-1 Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales -- Pre-1830Course Description: As we follow along the road to Canterbury, we not only hear a compendium of stories-both pious and irreverent-but we also meet a collection of characters whose diversity spans the spectrum of medieval society: a noble knight and a manly monk, a drunken miller and a virtuous priest, a dainty nun and a domineering wife, who compete with one other, trading insults as well as tales. Over the course of the quarter, we will explore the ways in which Chaucer experiments with late medieval literary genres, from chivalric romances to bawdy fabliaux, frustrating and playing upon the expectations of his audience. Against and alongside this literary context, we will consider the dramatic context of the pilgrimage itself, asking questions about how the character of an individual pilgrim, or the interaction between pilgrims, further shapes our perceptions and expectations of the tales: How is a romance different, for example, when it is told by a knight, by a social climber, or by a renegade wife? We will be reading Chaucer’s poem in the original Middle English. At the end of the quarter, we will give an in-class performance of one of the tales. Teaching Method: Discussion and some lectures. Evaluation Method: Class attendance and participation required; an oral presentation; several short papers; quizzes and a midterm exam. Texts will be available at: Beck’s Bookstore. The required textbook is The Canterbury Tales, ed. Jill Mann (Penguin Edition). | ||||
ENG 331 | Renaissance Poetry: Pre-1830 | Schwartz | MW 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 331 Renaissance Poetry: Pre-1830Pre-1830 Course Description: Some of the most compelling poets of early modern England were also religious thinkers. John Donne was an Anglican priest, who preached to thousands as the Dean of St Paul’s in London. George Herbert was a parish priest in a small village who wrote about the duties of his office. John Milton engaged in high-risk political efforts to transform England into the new Promised Land. This course will focus on the religious controversies that prevailed in early modern England and the ways these thinkers responded to them in their poetry. The controversies issued in new definitions of what the Good is, how power should be apportioned, and how signs have meaning. The specific arguments can seem odd in our more secular era: Why was so much blood shed over the meaning of the wafer and the wine in the Mass? Why did anyone care what the priest wore? Why were there fights over where the altar was placed in the church? But our goal will be to understand what was at stake in these and related questions as they are engaged in the very different styles of Donne, Milton and Herbert. Teaching Methods: Discussion. Evaluation Methods: You will be asked to offer a class presentation, write a short paper of 2-3 pages, and a longer one of 8-10 pages. Full class attendance and participation are required. Texts include: TBA. Note: This course is co-listed with English 388-0-20, which fulfills the Area V (Ethics and Values) and Area VI (Literature & Fine Arts) distribution requirements, and Religion 349-0-20. To fulfill both distribution requirements with this class, you must enroll in English 388 or Religion 349. | ||||
ENG 332 | Renaissance Drama: Racial Impersonation on the Renaissance Stage -- Pre-1830 | Costa | TTh 12:30-1:50 | |
ENG 332 Renaissance Drama: Racial Impersonation on the Renaissance Stage -- Pre-1830Course Description: How was racial difference constructed and performed in the early modern Teaching Method: Seminar discussions and occasional short lectures. Evaluation Method: Participation, oral presentation, occasional quizzes, and two essays. Texts Include: Ben Jonson, Masque of Blackness; William Shakespeare, Othello; Richard Brome, The Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore. | ||||
ENG 335 | Milton | Schwartz | MW 12:30-1:50 | |
ENG 335 MiltonPre-1830 Course Description: We will study John Milton’s poetry and prose in context, with sustained attention to the complexities of his art, the crisis of his times, the subtlety of his thought, and the extent of his influence. Milton’s defenses of political, personal, and religious liberty, his self-presentation, and his grappling with key ethical questions involving free will, gender definitions, crime, authority, rebellion and redemption will be among the many concerns that arise as we explore his work in the context of the raging political and theological controversies of his time. Teaching Method: Class discussion and lecture. Evaluation Method: Papers, class presentation, class participation. Texts Include: Paradise Lost by John Milton. | ||||
ENG 339 | Special Topics in Shakespeare: Adapt or Die, Perchance to Dream -- Pre-1830 | Swanner | TTh 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 339 Special Topics in Shakespeare: Adapt or Die, Perchance to Dream -- Pre-1830Shakespeare's works provide a rich source of material for modern adaptations like Akira Kurosawa's Ran, Disney's The Lion King, and even YouTube's Sassy Gay Friend. While some may dismiss such modern-day adaptations as cheap derivatives of Shakespeare's sacred originality, this course discovers that Shakespeare himself was a savvy purveyor of knockoffs. Very few of Shakespeare's works emerged originally from his lone creativity. Do you like Shakespeare's sonnets? Sir Philip Sidney beat him to it. Are you thrilled by the ghost of Hamlet's father? Thomas Kyd was writing vengeful ghosts before it was cool. Like modern adapters, Shakespeare was revising existing material both to innovate on past conventions and to address present cultural problems. In this class, we will follow the chain of adaptation that links Shakespeare's sources, Shakespeare himself, and his modern adapters. By tracing these strings of historical influence we will better understand the social imperatives that lead adapters to tweak, retain, or redact their source material. Teaching Method: Seminar discussion. Evaluation Methods: Two shorter papers and one longer paper; one student presentation. Texts Include: Jen Bervin's Nets (Ugly Duckling Presse, ISBN: 978-0972768436); Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy (Norton Critical Editions, ISBN: 978-0393934007); William Shakespeare's Hamlet (Arden Shakespeare, ISBN: 978-1472518385), King Lear (Norton Critical Editions, ISBN: 978- 0393926644); Macbeth (Norton Critical Editions, 2nd edition, ISBN: 978-0393923261); Sonnets (Yale University Press, 978-0300085068). Assorted films adaptations. Texts will be available at: Norris Campus Bookstore, films available for streaming through the course Canvas site. | ||||
ENG 359 | Studies in Victorian Literature: George Eliot's Middlemarch -- Post-1830 | Law | MW 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 359 Studies in Victorian Literature: George Eliot's Middlemarch -- Post-1830This course will be an intensive study of one of the most critically acclaimed novels ever written: George Eliot's Middlemarch. This is the classic and complex tale of a young woman of extraordinary talents thrust at the age of nineteen into a suffocating marriage. It is a brilliant portrait of the subtle, agonizing moral dilemmas at the heart of everyday life. In its rich social tapestry of scientific and political visionaries, of bankers and bohemians, farmers and lords, Eliot traces the complex tangle of ambition and frustration, of betrayal and compromise, and of spiritual awakening and deadening. We will read the novel slowly and carefully, probing the richness of its language, its philosophical meditations and its complex human psychology, and we will investigate its literary and historical context by reading scholarly essays on a host of fascinating background topics. Teaching Method: Seminar. Evaluation Method: 3 papers (3, 4, 6 pp.), contribution to seminar discussion. Texts include: George Eliot, Middlemarch (Broadview Press edition edited by Gregory Maertz -- this is essential! ISBN-13: 978-1551112336). Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore, though students are encouraged to acquire the book in advance, either at a local bookstore or online. | ||||
ENG 366 | Studies in African American Literature: The Metropolis and African American Culture -- Post-1830/ICSP | Wilson | TTh 11-12:20 | |
ENG 366 Studies in African American Literature: The Metropolis and African American Culture -- Post-1830/ICSPThroughout the twentieth century, the terms "urban" and "black America" became so intimately connected that they are often used as synonyms. By tracing different representations of urban life, this course examines the signification of the metropolis in African American cultural production. Although our focus will primarily center on cultural texts, we will address a number of the "push and pull" factors that prompted the Great Migration and the social forces that have subsequently kept many African Americans in the city. By focusing on a set of cultural texts, we will consider the ways in which African Americans have imagined both the allure and dangers of life in the city. Teaching Methods: TBA Evaluation Methods: TBA Texts may include: Work by Nella Larsen, Ralph Ellison, and LeRoi Jones; artists may include the 45 Return to Calendar photographers Wayne Miller and Camilo Jose Vergara as well as the painter Jacob Lawrence; film media may include Coolie High and Good Times; music may include hip hop artists from Public Enemy to Common. Critics may include W.E.B. DuBois, St. Clare Drake, Raymond Williams, Mike Davis, and Mary Pattillo. | ||||
ENG 368 | Studies in 20th-Century Literature: Resisting Interpretation -- Post-1830/TTC | Gottlieb | TTh 2-3:20 | |
ENG 368 Studies in 20th-Century Literature: Resisting Interpretation -- Post-1830/TTCCourse Description: Literature always resists -- even as it demands -- interpretation. In certain texts of modern literature, the resistance to interpretation issues into a particularly violent struggle in which points of defiance are difficult to distinguish from moments of defeat. This class will examine some of the literary texts of modernity and the tendency of these texts toward two interpretive gestures or situations: incomprehensible self-closure (and the attendant contraction of a space for self-legitimation) and an equally incomprehensible self-expansiveness (and the exhilarating, scary freedom it entails). We will begin the course with the enigmatic words of resistance repeated by Melville’s odd scrivener, Bartleby (“I prefer not to”), and end with the apocalyptic conclusion to Ellison’s Invisible Man (“Who knows but that, on the lower frequencies, I speak for you?”). | ||||
ENG 375 | Topics in Asian American Literature: Techno-Orientalism -- Post-1830/ICSP | Huang | MW 2-3:20 | |
ENG 375 Topics in Asian American Literature: Techno-Orientalism -- Post-1830/ICSPTechno-Orientalism names a variant of Orientalism that associates Asians with a technological future. This seminar will explore how Techno-Orientalist tropes are used by, played with, and rewritten by Asian American authors. We will study how twentieth-century and contemporary issues of technology, globalization, and financial speculation collide with a history of yellow peril and Asian Invasion discourse, as well as how these tensions manifest in figures and tropes such as robots, aliens, and cybernetics. Texts are drawn from drama, poetry, novels, short stories, comics, and film. Teaching Methods: Seminar. Evaluation Methods: TBA. Texts include: Cathy J. Schlund-Vials, Linda Trinh Vo, K. Scott Wong, Keywords for Asian American Studies (ISBN 978-1479803286); Cory Doctorow and Jen Wang, In Real Life (ISBN 978-1596436589); Larissa Lai, Automaton Biographies (ISBN 978-1551522920); Ruth Ozeki, My Year of Meats (ISBN 978- 0140280463); Gene Luen Yang, Level Up (ISBN 978-1250108111); Chang-rae Lee, On Such a Full Sea 52 Return to Calendar (ISBN 978-1594632891); Cathy Park Hong, Dance Dance Revolution (ISBN 978-0393333114). Note: This course is combined with Asian American Studies 376-0. | ||||
ENG 378 | Studies in American Literature: Art of Revolution -- Pre-1830 | Erkkilä | MW 11-12:20 | |
ENG 378 Studies in American Literature: Art of Revolution -- Pre-1830This course will focus on the art of politics and the politics of the literary imagination in Revolutionary America as a means of rethinking traditional accounts of both the literature and politics of the American Revolution. Radically utopian in its desire and vision, the American Revolution was also driven by feelings of loss, betrayal, anger, and fear, and haunted by the specter of ghosts, insurrection, and apocalypse. We will explore the affective, sensational, and specifically literary shaping of various founding documents as a means of illuminating some of the more visionary, terroristic, and contradictory aspects of the American Revolution; and we will consider the ways the imaginative writings of the time -- poems, letters, autobiographies, novels of seduction, the gothic, and the terrors of Islam -- reveal aspects of the "real" American Revolution that were repressed, silenced, or written out of the more official writings of the Revolution. Teaching Methods: Lecture and discussion. Evaluation Methods: Essay (3 pages); essay (5-6 pages); participation; final examination. Texts include: Thomas Paine, Common Sense; Thomas Jefferson, Declaration of Independence and selections from Notes on the State of Virginia; Letters of Abigail and John Adams; Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography; Phillis Wheatley, Poems; Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, Letters from an American Farmer; Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay, The Federalist Papers; Hannah Foster, The Coquette; or, the History of Eliza Wharton; Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Huntly; or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker; Royal Tyler, The Algerine Captive. | ||||
ENG 385 | Topics in Combined Studies: Medical Humanities: Reproduction, Gender, and Medicine -- Post-1830 | Roth | MW 11-12:20 | |
ENG 385 Topics in Combined Studies: Medical Humanities: Reproduction, Gender, and Medicine -- Post-1830Debates surrounding reproductive justice endlessly parse the meanings and consequences of abortion. Much less attention has been paid to the rhetoric, politics, and ideologies surrounding the other choice in the pro-choice dyad: participation in acts of reproduction, particularly pregnancy and childbirth. Students will be challenged to consider the gendered rhetoric surrounding ideas such as the biological clock, the pregnancy glow, and drug-free natural childbirth. We will investigate the way reproducing bodies are represented culturally, using media coverage of issues like Serena Williams' 2017 Australian Open win and Beyonce's baby bump "reveals," as well as the homebirth movement, transgender pregnancies, "breast-feeding Nazis," parental leave policies, and the CDC's 2016 recommendation that women of reproductive age refrain from drinking alcohol unless they are using contraception. Such case studies will help us ask how these discourses affect not only feminist ideas and activism, but also medical care and the medical system. Students will be encouraged to apply critical thinking to some of the most fundamental and long-standing assumptions of our public culture. Two central questions will guide the course: What assumptions are made about reproductive bodies? What are the social consequences of these assumptions? Teaching Method: Seminar-style discussion. Evaluation Method: Class participation, weekly short responses with one brief class presentation, three analytical and/or research papers of 4-5 pages each. Texts include: Maggie Nelson, The Argonauts; Adrienne Rich, Of Woman Born. Weekly readings include essays, stories, poems, and excerpts from longer works by Julia Kristeva, Hera Cook, bell hooks, Audre Lorde, Gayle Rubin, and many others and will be posted on Canvas. Texts will be available at: Norris and Amazon; Canvas course site. Note: This course is combined with Gender Studies 332-0-23. | ||||
ENG 385 | Topics in Combined Studies: Oceanic Studies: Literature, Environment, History -- Post-1830/TTC | Feinsod | MW 11-12:20 | |
ENG 385 Topics in Combined Studies: Oceanic Studies: Literature, Environment, History -- Post-1830/TTCThis course offers an overview of the interdisciplinary field of "oceanic studies," focusing on the great literary, scientific, and cinematic documents of modern seafaring. Writers may include Columbus, Cook, Darwin, Coleridge, Dana, Melville, Conrad, Woolf, O'Neill, Joji, Traven, Mutis, and/or Goldman. How have seas, sailors, ships and their cargoes helped to shape our imagination and understanding of major events and processes of modernity, such as the discovery of the New World, slavery, industrial capitalism, marine science, the birth of environmental consciousness, and contemporary globalization? What part did seafaring play in the formation of international legal systems, or in epochal events such as the American and Russian Revolutions? How does the rise in contemporary piracy compare to its "golden age" forerunners? How can we discern the history of the "trackless" oceans, and how do we imagine their future now that "90% of everything" crosses an ocean, and the seas are variously described as rising or dying? Our focus in the course will be on writers listed above, but our approach will be radically interdisciplinary, so we will also watch a few films (by Jacques Cousteau, Gillo Pontecorvo and Allen Sekula), and we will read short excerpts from the disciplines of "critical theory" (Heller-Roazen, Foucault, Deleuze, Corbin), labor and economic history (Rediker, Fink, Levinson), and environmental thought (Carson, Alaimo). Teaching Method: Discussion. Evaluation Method: Short writing exercises and midterm essays; experimental in-class presentations; final projects developed in consultation with instructor. Texts include: See above. Contact instructor nearer to enrollment for final list. Note: The above course is combined with COMP LIT 390-0. | ||||
ENG 386 | Studies in Film and Literature: Cowboys & Samurai -- Post-1830/TTC | Leong | TTh 11-12:20 | |
ENG 386 Studies in Film and Literature: Cowboys & Samurai -- Post-1830/TTCThe American cowboy and the Japanese samurai are often held up as mythic embodiments of the frontier or warrior spirits that define their respective nations. Yet despite their status as icons of national exceptionalism, the cowboy and samurai are surprisingly interchangeable. In the world of film, the Seven Samurai soon become The Magnificent Seven. This course explores two complementary genres: Westerns and jidaigeki (period drama). In addition to probing the concept of "genre" itself, we will also examine problems of translation and adaptation. How are elements present in one national, cinematic, or literary context transposed or re-coded to fit within another? What can the various cross-adaptations of samurai and cowboy films tell us about the shifting relations between Japan and the United States? How can generic conventions be bent or "queered" through practices of allusion, adaptation, and re-interpretation? Teaching Methods: Discussion. Evaluation Method: Participation, Canvas Posts, and Ungraded Writing Assignments (50%), Midterm Writing Portfolio (~6-7 pages) (20%), Final Writing Portfolio (~12-15 pages, including revisions of midterm writing) (30%). Texts include: Humanity and Paper Balloons (1937, dir. Sadao Yamanaka, 86min); Stagecoach (1939, dir. John Ford, 96 min); Vendetta of a Samurai (1952, dir. Kazuo Hori, 80min); High Noon (1952, dir. Fred Zinnemann, 85min); Rashomon (1950, dir. Akira Kurosawa, 88min); The Outrage (1964, dir. Martin Ritt, 97min); Yojimbo (1961, dir. Akira Kurosawa, 110min); A Fistful of Dollars (1964, dir. Sergio Leone, 99min); Duel in the Sun (1946, dir. King Vidor, 145min) ; Lady Snowblood (1973, dir. Toshiya Fujita, 97min); Red River (1948, dir. Hanks, 133 min); The Tale of Zatoichi (1962, dir. Kenji Misumi, 95 min); Taboo (Gohatto) (1999, dir. Nagisa Oshima, 100min); Brokeback Mountain (2005, dir. Ang Lee, 134min); The Twilight Samurai (2002, dir. Yoji Yamada, 129min); The Last Samurai (2003, dir. Edward Zwick, 131min); Sukiyaki Western Django (2007, dir. Takashi Miike, 121min). Texts will be available at: An extensive course reader available at Quartet Digital Printing. Note: The above course is combined with Asian Languages and Cultures 390. | ||||
ENG 387 | Studies in Literature and Commerce: Mad Men: The Rhetoric and Literature of Advertising -- Post-1830 | Taylor | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 387 Studies in Literature and Commerce: Mad Men: The Rhetoric and Literature of Advertising -- Post-1830In this course, we will investigate literature about and the rhetorical conventions of branding, advertising, and commercialism. Our exploration will include examining the history of marketing literary texts, such as advertisements for Charles Dickens' serialized novels, as well as narratives concerning advertising or consumerism. Moreover, students will learn to analyze marketing campaigns, advertisements, and television commercials. What cultural assumptions -- e.g., about gender, class, or race -- can we discover by analyzing the rhetoric and imagery of specific advertisements or branding strategies? An overarching question in the course will be the relationship between high and low culture: when might advertising count as art, and does the popularity of a literary text detract from its aesthetic or literary value? How does the pervasiveness of advertising influence what a society desires or values? We will read broadly, from stories that are set in or satirize the world of advertising or explore themes of consumerism and marketing, to nonfiction texts that discuss or deconstruct advertising and consumer culture. Teaching Methods: Discussion. Evaluation Methods: Participation, two papers, Canvas posts, final group presentation. Texts include: Walker Percy, The Moviegoer; Dorothy Sayers, Death and Advertising; Jerry Della Femina, From Those Wonderful Folks Who Gave You Pearl Harbor; short stories by Fritz Leiber, Emile Zola, Flannery O'Connor, and Virginia Woolf; and selections from Mark Twain, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court; David Ogilvy, Confessions of an Advertising Man; and Roland Barthes, Mythologies. From film and television, we will watch episodes of Mad Men; The Thrill of It All; and Killing Us Softly: Advertising's Image of Women. Texts will be available at: Books at Beck's; Course Reader at Quartet Copies. | ||||
ENG 388 | Studies in Literature and Religion: Renaissance Party -- Pre-1830 | Schwartz | MW 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 388 Studies in Literature and Religion: Renaissance Party -- Pre-1830Some of the most compelling poets of early modern England were also religious thinkers. John Donne was an Anglican priest, who preached to thousands as the Dean of St Paul's in London. George Herbert was a parish priest in a small village who wrote about the duties of his office. John Milton engaged in high-risk political efforts to transform England into the new Promised Land. This course will focus on the religious controversies that prevailed in early modern England and the ways these thinkers responded to them in their poetry. The controversies issued in new definitions of what the Good is, how power should be apportioned, and how signs have meaning. The specific arguments can seem odd in our more secular era: Why was so much blood shed over the meaning of the wafer and the wine in the Mass? Why did anyone care what the priest wore? Why were there fights over where the altar was placed in the church? But our goal will be to understand what was at stake in these and related questions as they are engaged in the very different styles of Donne, Milton and Herbert. Teaching Methods: Discussion. Evaluation Methods: You will be asked to offer a class presentation, write a short paper of 2-3 pages, and a longer one of 8-10 pages. Full class attendance and participation are required. Texts include: TBA. Notes: This course fulfills the Area V (Ethics and Values) and Area VI (Literature & Fine Arts) distribution requirements. This course is co-listed with English 331-0-20, but in order to receive credit toward the Area V distribution requirement, you must enroll in English 388. | ||||
ENG 308 | The Situation of Writing | Webster | TTh 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 308 The Situation of WritingThe present situation of writing requires that we create literature, as well as the contexts in which literature is shared, appreciated and understood. We are the inheritors, perpetuators and innovators of literary culture, and in this class we will position our inquiries on the present and future, even as we acknowledge the enduring humanistic values of writing. We will begin with a discussion of ideas gleaned from readings by Virginia Woolf, Martha Nussbaum, Lewis Hyde, Adrienne Rich, Ta Nehisi Coates and others. Then we will build on these ideas practically with an interview with another writer; a service learning assignment; and a creative work that reaches a new public, coordinates new media or engenders community. Many of our Thursdays will be enhanced by the "Return Engagements" series, featuring visits and readings from alumni of Northwestern's Writing Program who have gone on to forge careers in the literary arts. We will read their writing and open time for you to talk with them about continued education, publishing, agenting and editing. This course is designed especially for students who hope to forge careers as writers, and it will challenge all participants to think creatively about the space of literature in our changing society. Note: ENGLISH 392 is a requirement for all senior creative writing majors. Other students may enroll with department consent. | ||||
ENG 393 | Theory & Practice of Poetry | Kinzie | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 393 Theory & Practice of PoetryThis selective-enrollment, yearlong "Sequence" is designed to make students 64 Return to Calendar increasingly informed readers and self-sustaining apprentices of poetry. The Fall portion of the course begins with summer reading and intensive study in which poets learn to identify operative modes in poetry -- including description, rhetoric, story and song -- and begin connecting contemporary participants with root systems in the tradition. We support our studies with reading exercises and "imitation" assignments, in which students convert close reading into fodder for original writing. Students will write at least four papers and will write, workshop and revise four poems during the Fall term. They also will lead presentations on one chosen poet and one classmate during workshop. In the Winter term, students will continue to read and complete close reading assignments and will stretch their skills as they complete a week of "Daily Poems," thereby drawing on original energy and stamina to bring their work to the next level of accomplishment. Finally, in the Spring term, students will focus entirely on their own work, drafting, revising, workshopping and completing one long poem of at least 120 lines that combines autobiographical material with writing from research. Throughout the year, our close reading assignments hone skills in sensitive and critical thinking; our imitation poems challenge existing habits as they introduce new strategies; our Daily Poems exercise agility and confidence; and our workshops cultivate the openness and humility necessary to serious writing and lifelong learning. Through this intensive and nurturing Sequence, students become careful readers of each others -- work and complete a polished portfolio of original writing. Note: No P/N registration. Attendance at first class mandatory. Admission by application only. | ||||
ENG 394 | Theory & Practice of Fiction | Martinez | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 394 Theory & Practice of FictionThis course will allow you to explore how fiction works. We’ll be looking at, discussing, writing about, commenting on, and researching the elements of fiction, but mostly what we’ll be doing is writing buckets (you will be turning in a completed piece every other week during the Fall quarter), so we’ll be reading mostly to steal: we’ll figure out what works and we’ll use it for our own material. We’ll be engaged in the reading of a concise, funny book on the craft of fiction, and we’ll also be reading a wide and varied array of short stories. Again, though, this work is geared to do one simple thing: to find out what means and modes of expression you best respond to, and to figure out ways to approach this question: Given all the other potentially more awesome forms of entertainment out there, what is the role of sitting around scribbling things and reading other people’s scribblings? Why do it? Just so you know, what we’re doing in class closely replicates what all successful fiction writers do on a daily basis: reading the work of their peers and those of established and emerging authors with care, attention, and greed, and writing copious amounts to see what sticks. The more you do both of these activities, the better and more confident you’ll get. Teaching Method: Lectures, discussion, small- and large-peer workshops. Evaluation Method: This is a portfolio- and participation-based course. Grade based on timely delivery of all assigned work, with equal weight placed on your own stories and revisions and on your peer feedback. Texts Include: TBA Note: No P/N registration. Attendance at first class mandatory. Admission by application only | ||||
ENG 395 | Theory & Practice of Creative NonFiction | Stielstra | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
ENG 395 Theory & Practice of Creative NonFictionAn advanced year-long course in reading for writers, critical analysis of techniques of creative nonfiction, and intensive creative writing. Reading of primary works will concentrate on longer creative nonfiction works, and the creative project for the latter part of the sequence is a work of creative nonfiction of approximately 15,000 words. A guest non-fiction writer will visit in May as writer-in-residence. Teaching Method: Discussion. Evaluation Method: Based on creative and critical work; class presentations and participation. Texts Include: Varies each quarter. Texts will be available at Norris Center Bookstore and Quartet Copies. Note: No P/N registration. Attendance at first class mandatory. Admission by application only. | ||||
ENG 397 | Research Seminar: Cultures of Play -- Post-1830 | Soni | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
ENG 397 Research Seminar: Cultures of Play -- Post-1830From video games and board games to game shows and sports, games saturate our culture and shape who we are. Some scholars have even argued that games are replacing novels and film as the dominant form of cultural expression. Others view games as a frivolous and unproductive activity, not worthy of serious study. In this seminar, we will explore some of the fundamental questions about the relationship between games and human culture. Why do people play games? What kinds of meanings, cultural values and political agendas do games encode? Do games function differently than other cultural objects, such as films, novels or works of art? What might it mean to think of all culture and works of art as arising from a "play impulse"? And if this is the case, why do we trivialize game-playing? Is the ubiquity of games in our lives a specifically modern phenomenon? Is the advent of the digital age producing a gamification of everyday life? To investigate these questions, we will read a wide range of critical writing about the importance of play and games in human culture, by philosophers, novelists, literary critics, social scientists, historians and game designers. The class will give you an opportunity to develop a 12-15 page research paper that studies one particular game or aspect of game culture in-depth. In the process, you will learn how to frame a significant research question; articulate a research proposal; navigate scholarly databases and archives; evaluate sources; and, produce an annotated bibliography. Teaching Methods: The class will be run as a seminar. In addition to discussing the critical readings on play and texts about research methods, we will workshop student proposals and drafts, and talk about each student's research project in detail. Evaluation Methods: Attendance; preparation for seminar; discussion; Canvas posts; peer review; research proposal; annotated bibliography; drafts; final research paper (12-15pp.). Texts include: Craft of Research; Kant, Critique of Judgment; Schiller, Letters on Aesthetic Education; Morris, News from Nowhere; Huizinga, Homo Ludens; Caillois, Man, Play and Games; Turner, From Ritual to Theater: The Human Seriousness of Play; Bellah, Religion in Human Evolution; Sicart, Play Matters; Galloway, Gaming. Prerequisites: Open to juniors and seniors only. Students must successfully complete 4-6 300-level English courses before taking English 397. | ||||
ENG 398-1,-2 | Honors Seminar | Feinsod | W 3-5:50 | |
ENG 398-1,-2 Honors SeminarA two-quarter sequence for seniors pursuing honors in the English Literature major, consisting of a seminar in the fall quarter and an independent study with an honors adviser in the winter quarter. Prerequisites: Seniors only. Permission of department required. Attendance at first class mandatory. No P/N registration. | ||||
ENG 410 | Introduction to Graduate Study | Edwards | W 2:00-5:00 | |
ENG 410 Introduction to Graduate Study | ||||
Eng 441 | Studies in 18th-Century Literature: Experiences of Meaning and the Meaning of Experience in the Eighteenth-Century Novel | Soni | T 2:00-5:00 | |
Eng 441 Studies in 18th-Century Literature: Experiences of Meaning and the Meaning of Experience in the Eighteenth-Century NovelThis course will explore how the concept of experience changes under the conditions of modernity, and particularly the ways in which the uniquely modern form of the novel either radicalizes or resists those changes. The classical concept of experience -- best exemplified by Aristotle's dictum that good judgment requires experience -- construed experience as a form of wisdom, acquired through habituation and narrative embedding. By contrast, empiricism (particularly in Locke) reconfigures experience so that it refers to disaggregated and punctually encountered sense data, shorn of the narrative and fictional structures in which those data acquire meaning. How does the novel respond to these changes? The narration of individual subjective experience has long been understood to be one of the signal contributions of the modern novel. But experience in what sense? Some novels deepen the sense of shock, disorientation and estrangement that comes with the modern conception of experience, while others attempt to reconstitute the sense of meaning and narrative coherence that characterized an older concept of experience. In this class, we will examine the history of the concept of experience and study philosophical accounts of experience, alongside readings of a range of eighteenth century novels, in order to better understand how the novel might come to serve as a privileged vehicle for mediating experience. How does experience become meaningful or purposive for an individual, rather than being encountered as mere data? In what ways are fictional structures, such as narrative and metaphor, essential to constituting that meaningfulness? How are judgments, founded on those fictional structures, integral to the constitution of meaning, rather than merely secondary and dispensable op erations performed on already given data? In addition to examining novels in relation to philosophical accounts of experience, we will also read a broad selection of recent criticism that examines the relation between empiricism and the eighteenth-century novel. Possible texts include: Novels and other literature: Defoe, Robinson Crusoe; Swift, Gulliver's Travels; Richardson, Pamela; Smollett, Roderick Random; Sterne, Tristram Shandy; Rousseau, Emile; Austen, Pride and Prejudice; Blake, Songs of Innocence and Experience; Wordsworth, Prelude Philosophical accounts of experience: Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics (Bk.6) Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding and Thoughts Concerning Education; Vico, New Science; Dilthey, Poetry and Experience; Husserl, Experience and Judgment; Heidegger, Being and Time; Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception; Gadamer, Truth and Method; Polanyi, Personal Knowledge; MacIntyre, After Virtue; Pfau, Minding the Modern ("After Sentimentalism"); Susan Wolf, Meaning in Life and Why it Matters Eighteenth-Century Criticism: Watt, Rise of the Novel; Kramnick, Actions and Objects (chapter on Locke); Thompson, Fictional Matter; Yahav, Feeling Time; Bender, Ends of Enlightenment; Soni, Mourning Happiness (on the trial narrative and experience). | ||||
ENG 461 | Studies in Contemporary Literature: The Queer and the Oriental | Leong | Th 2:00-5:00 | |
ENG 461 Studies in Contemporary Literature: The Queer and the OrientalThe queer and the oriental are two figures on the wrong sides of Western philosophies of world history. Imagined as perverted deviations from, or inverted reflections of, a progress from despotic ancestral pasts to free reproductive futures, the queer and oriental are two species of wrong which resist being "raised up" or "sublated" into higher generalities of rightness and whiteness. Too wrong for history, these two wrongs also cannot be rectified or reduced into each other -- but not for lack of trying. Over the course of the long twentieth century, a seemingly endless pile-up of cultural productions has positioned Orientals as queers or featured queers Orientalizing themselves and others. The mind-gagging accumulation of such productions illustrates how thoroughly such maneuvers never really work; or rather, how they work, like desires often do, by never being fulfilled. The seminar opens with the ongoing tension between two different departures from Hegel's philosophy of world history -- economic materialist approaches exemplified by Marx and genealogical approaches exemplified by Nietzsche. We will explore how constitutive tensions between these approaches -- variously described as "materialist vs. idealist," "total vs. fragmentary," and "restricted vs. general" -- have been a recurrent feature of work in queer theory, postcolonial theory, and critical race studies. In a twist on Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's statement that "any understanding of virtually aspect of modern Western culture must be, not merely incomplete, but damaged in its central substance to the degree that it does not incorporate an analysis of modern homo/heterosexual definition," the aim of this seminar is to pursue the irresolvable corollaries to the axiomaticity of "modern Western culture." Our mantra will be: any understanding of virtually any aspect of homo/ heterosexual definition must be, not merely incomplete, but damaged in its central substance to the degree that it does not incorporate an analysis of non/modern non/ Western division. We will combine our theoretical explorations with the pragmatic task of "coverage." Accordingly, we will read texts defined as "canonical" by virtue of having been placed on departmental qualifying exam lists, a series of placements that happily accords with the texts having been touchstones for critics over the last four decades. Such texts include works by Christina Rosetti, Herman Melville, Oscar Wilde, Rudyard Kipling, Ezra Pound, Jean Toomer, and Maxine Hong Kingston. We will also read works by Malinda Lo and Yone Noguchi. As this is a fall quarter seminar, I will not require the production of a full-length end-of-term research paper; the default final assignment will be a conference paper with annotated bibliography. (The option to write a full-length paper will remain open to those who wish to pursue it). In addition, the seminar will place more emphasis on foundational skills of graduate-level knowledge production: close reading and reading for argumentative structure; construction and analysis of fi eld bibliographies or "lists"; and oral presentation, prepared and extemporaneous. | ||||
ENG 471 | Studies in American Literature: Border Literature | Cutler | M 2:00-5:00 | |
ENG 471 Studies in American Literature: Border LiteratureThe US-Mexico border has been the site of intense cultural conflict since the mid-nineteenth century. It marks both the connection and the division between two nations, and many of our most fraught conversations concern whether the border should be a bridge or a wall. As an entry point into these conversations, this course will survey literature and film centering on the US-Mexico border. Students will become familiar with the history of the border, beginning with the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo in 1848 and extending through NAFTA and up to the current political climate. Together we will consider how the border has become such a potent site for contemporary mythmaking, a flashpoint for anxieties about race, labor, gender, and sexuality. Texts will include: Gloria Anzaldua's Borderlands / La Frontera (1987); Sandra Cisneros's Woman Hollering Creek (1991); Cormac McCarthy's The Crossing (1994); Carlos Fuentes's La frontera de cristal (1995); Juan Felipe Herrera's 187 Reasons Mexicans Can't Cross the Border: Undocuments (1995); Carmen Boullosa's Tejas (2014). (Texts originally written in Spanish will be taught in English translation.) | ||||
THEATRE 503 | Interdisciplinary Studies in Theatre & Performance: Re-performing the Avante Garde | Manning | T 2:00-5:00 | |
THEATRE 503 Interdisciplinary Studies in Theatre & Performance: Re-performing the Avante Garde |