Spring 2020 Class Schedule
Course | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
---|---|---|---|---|
English 206 | Reading and Writing Poetry | Mehigan | MW 11-12:20 | |
English 206 Reading and 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. | ||||
English 206 | Reading and Writing Poetry | Schlesinger | TTh 5:30-6:50 | |
English 206 Reading and 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. | ||||
English 206 | Reading and Writing Poetry | Boyd | WF 12:30-1:50 | |
English 206 Reading and 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. | ||||
English 207 | Reading and Writing Fiction | Bouldrey | MW 12:30-1:50 | |
English 207 Reading and 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. | ||||
English 207 | Reading and Writing Fiction | Seliy | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
English 207 Reading and 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. | ||||
English 208 | Reading and Writing Creative Nonfiction | Barker | WF 9:30-10:50 | |
English 208 Reading and Writing Creative Nonfiction[Prerequisite to English Major in Writing] Course Description: An introduction to some of the many possible voices, styles, and structures of the creative essay. Students will read from the full aesthetic breadth of the essay, including memoir, meditation, lyric essay, and literary journalism. Discussions will address how the essay creates an artistic space distinct from the worlds of poetry and fiction, and how truth and fact function within creative nonfiction. Students will be asked to analyze the readings closely, and to write six short essays based on imitations of the style, structure, syntax, and narrative devices found in the readings. Students can also expect to do some brief writing exercises and at least one revision. 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; one-half to two-thirds of the classes will be devoted to discussion of readings and principles, the other classes to discussion of student work. | ||||
English 210-2 | English Literary Traditions, Part 2 | Lane | MW 11-11:50 plus discussion section | |
English 210-2 English Literary Traditions, Part 2Course Description: This course surveys exemplary and outstanding British literature by major authors from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries, putting literary texts in conversation with such historical developments as the French revolution, the industrial revolution, the rise of nationalism and imperialism, new print and transportation technologies, rapidly increasing literacy rates, and a wealth of related cultural arguments. Teaching Methods: Lectures paired with seminar-style discussions, all focusing intensively on passages and background arguments, including with clips and slides. Evaluation Methods: 1 short analysis, final paper, periodic quizzes, and participation. Texts include: The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Major Authors (8th ed., Vol. B: ISBN 0393928314); Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility (Penguin; ISBN 0141439661); George Eliot, The Lifted Veil (Oxford; ISBN 0199555052); Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway (HBJ; ISBN 0156628708). Please follow the editions assigned; comparable pagination will greatly advance our discussions. Note: English 210-2 is an English Literature major and minor requirement; it is also designed for nonmajors and counts as an Area VI WCAS distribution requirement. | ||||
English 234 | Introduction to Shakespeare | Masten | MW 12:30-1:50 plus discussion section | |
English 234 Introduction to ShakespeareCourse Description: We'll read a range of Shakespeare's plays: comedies, histories, tragedies, and tragicomedies, from early in his career to his final works. The course will introduce the plays by introducing them back into the context of the theatre, literary world, and culture in which Shakespeare originally wrote them. We will think about Shakespeare's contexts and how they matter: a theatre on the outskirts of ever-expanding Renaissance London; a financially successful acting company in which he played the simultaneous and often overlapping roles of writer, actor, and co-owner; a world of reading and writing in which words, plots, and texts were constantly being re-circulated into new plays; the rich possibilities of the English language around 1600. We will centrally consider the ways in which these theatrical, literary, and cultural questions register within the plays themselves. What do words, plays, stories do—how do they work—in Shakespeare's plays? Who or what is an audience or an actor in these plays? How do Shakespeare's plays stage issues such as gender, race, religion, sexuality, social class, entertainment and the media -- and how does his approach to these issues continue to speak to our own era? Teaching Method: Lectures with discussion; required weekly discussion section. Texts include: Folger Library paperback editions of the following plays (these editions only): A Midsummer Night's Dream (978-1-5011-4621-3); The Merchant of Venice (978-1-4391-9116-3); Henry V (978-0-7434-8487-9); As You Like It (978-0-7434-8486-2); Hamlet, Updated edition (978-1-4516-6941-1); The Tempest, Updated edition (978-1-5011-3001-4); The Two Noble Kinsmen (978-0-671-72296-8); additional critical readings on Canvas. Texts will be available at: Beck's Books Evanston. | ||||
English 275 | Introduction to Asian American Literature | San Diego | TTh 9:30-10:50 plus discussion section | |
English 275 Introduction to Asian American LiteratureCourse Description: Asian American, Asian-American, Asian/American: from Chinese Americans to Hmong Americans to mixed race Asian Americans, from fourth-generation Californians to cosmopolitan college students, from desert internment camps to New York City office buildings, what do the many subjects and locations of Asian American literature tell us about the capaciousness of the category itself? This class has two goals—first, providing an overview of literature written by Asian Americans in the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries and placing these texts in conversation with key concepts from Asian American culture and history. Second, interrogating the constructed, pan-ethnic nature of Asian American identity, a category that came into use only in the 1960s as a coalitional entity defined by shared histories of labor, discrimination, and national and cultural unbelonging. This class does not presume prior knowledge of Asian American literature. Key terms and concepts we will cover include: representation, identity, authenticity, aesthetics, labor, globalization, assimilation, and canonicity. In the process, we will familiarize ourselves with the richness and diversity of Asian American literature by considering a variety of genres, including short stories, documentaries, novels, speculative fictions, and memoirs. Teaching Method(s): Lecture, Discussion. Evaluation Method(s): Regular reading responses; two short essays; one long essay; active class participation. Texts (subject to change; please confirm final text list on Canvas before purchasing):
Texts will be available at: Primary texts will be available at the Norris Bookstore and on reserve in the library. Other texts will be available in a required course packet available at Quartet Copies. | ||||
English 300 | Seminar in Reading and Interpretation: Taking Comedy Seriously | West | MW 9:30-10:50 | |
English 300 Seminar in Reading and Interpretation: Taking Comedy SeriouslyCourse Description: What is comedy? Ever since Aristotle’s promised account of comedy, written to follow his famous discussion of tragedy in Poetics, accidentally got lost, comedy has suffered from genre confusion in the shadow of its allegedly more serious double, tragedy. On the one hand, the source of comedy’s appeal seems to go without saying. On the other, maybe for that very reason, comedy has rarely gotten the same kind of serious attention as other forms of writing and performance, and some of its sharpest theorists are also its greatest creators. Is it the same as what is funny? Is it just a happy ending? What is happiness, anyway? Who knows? This two-thousand-year indecision makes comedy an ideal topic for a course to explore tactics of reading and interpretation. We will read comedies from Aristophanes to modern sit comes, and weigh against them some of comedy’s theories, including formal, historical, social, anthropological, and psychological approaches. Teaching Method(s): Mostly discussion-based. Evaluation Method(s): Several short writing assignments; final project Texts include: Aristophanes, Birds; Terence, Eunuchus; Shakespeare, As You Like It; Behn, The Rover; Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest; Gleason, The Honeymooners; Stoppard, Arcadia; Vogel, How I Learned to Drive Texts will be available at: Beck’s. | ||||
English 300 | Seminar in Reading and Interpretation: Bad Books | Boemler | MW 12:30-1:50 | |
English 300 Seminar in Reading and Interpretation: Bad BooksCourse Description: What makes a book bad? Having a harmful moral lesson? Being poorly written? Once we decide a book is bad, what should we do with it? Is official censorship the answer? Should publishers be boycotted? How should we decide what is acceptable to teach in a classroom setting—and to what extent should this depend on the age of the students? These questions have been argued over since Plato declared that the poets should be excluded from his utopian city. They are no less pressing in our own day, when commitments to free speech run up against anger at harmful racial and other stereotypes in literature. In this course, you will have to opportunity to examine arguments about what constitutes “bad” literature from a range of historical and cultural contexts. Even as you read and analyze arguments about the literary and moral value of particular books, you will have to the opportunity to construct your own arguments in response and grapple with the real difficulties that books can present—especially when they clash with values that we ourselves hold dear. Teaching Method(s): Lecture and discussion. Evaluation Method(s): Active participation in discussion, Canvas posts, one short paper, one longer paper, collaborative project. Texts include: Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451, George Orwell, 1984, Salman Rushdie, Satanic Verses, Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness, and essays including Chinua Achebe, “Racism in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness,” John Milton, “Areopagitica,” and selections from Plato’s Republic. Texts will be available at: Norris and Canvas | ||||
English 300 | Seminar in Reading and Interpretation: James Joyce's Works and Worlds | Froula | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
English 300 Seminar in Reading and Interpretation: James Joyce's Works and WorldsEvaluation Method: Faithful attendance; informed, engaged participation; exercises; formal analysis of a speech, exchange, or scene (2-3 pp.); critical essay using two different approaches (5-6 pp.); class presentation; final project (8-10 pp.); self-evaluation. Texts include: TBA. Additional required and recommended readings via NUCat, Canvas, and Library Reserve. Textbooks will be available at: Norris | ||||
English 306 | Advanced Poetry Writing: Theory and Practice of Poetry in Translation | Gibbons | TTh 11-12:20 | |
English 306 Advanced Poetry Writing: Theory and Practice of Poetry in TranslationCourse Description: A combination of seminar and workshop. Together we will translate several short poems and study theoretical approaches to literary translation and practical accounts by literary translators. We will approach language, poems, poetics, culture and theoretical issues and problems in relation to each other. Your written work will be due in different forms during the course. In your final portfolio, you will present revised versions of your translations and a research paper on translation. Prerequisite: A reading knowledge of a second language and experience reading literature in that language. If you are uncertain about your qualifications, please e-mail the instructor at rgibbons@northwestern.edu to describe them. Experience writing creatively is welcome, especially in poetry writing courses in the English Department. Teaching Method: Discussion; group critique of draft translations; oral presentations by students. Evaluation Method: Written work ("Canvas" responses to reading, draft translations, revised translations, and final papers) as well as class participation should demonstrate students’ growing understanding of translation as a practice and as a way of reading poetry and engaging with larger theoretical ideas about literature. Texts include: Essays on translation by a number of critics, scholars and translators, in two published volumes and on the Course Management web site ("Canvas”). Note: This course is combined with COMP_LIT 311-0 and COMP_LIT 414-0. | ||||
English 309 | Advanced Creative Cross-Genre Writing: The Art of Obsession | Mun | MW 2-3:20 | |
English 309 Advanced Creative Cross-Genre Writing: The Art of ObsessionStudents will have the option to write a creative non-fiction essay or a short story. This class is for serious writers who are unafraid of taking real risks, unafraid of true rewrites/revisions, unafraid of working hard toward turning a good story or an essay into a great one. Teaching Method: Workshop. Evaluation Method: Creative writing assignments, peer-reviews, and reading responses, workshop participation. Text Include: Coursepack and books. Coursepack will be available at: Quartet Copies Instructor Bio: Nami Mun was raised in Seoul, South Korea and Bronx, New York. She is the author of the novel Miles from Nowhere, which received a Whiting Award, a Pushcart Prize, the Chicago Public Library’s 21st Century Award, a Hopwood Award, and was shortlisted for the Orange Prize for New Writers and the Asian American Literary Award. Some of Nami’s honors include fellowships from University of Michigan, Northwestern University, The MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, Bread Loaf and Tin House. Miles from Nowhere went on to become a national bestseller. Nami’s work can be found in Granta, Tin House, The New York Times Sunday Book Review, The Iowa Review, the Pushcart Prize Anthology, and Tales of Two Americas: Stories of Inequality in a Divided Nation, among others. Previously, she has worked as an Avon Lady, a street vendor, a photojournalist, a waitress, an activities coordinator for a nursing home, and a criminal defense investigator. | ||||
English 313 | Studies in Fiction: Science Fiction (Post 1830/TTC) | Andrews | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
English 313 Studies in Fiction: Science Fiction (Post 1830/TTC)Course Description: This course provides a literary introduction to science fiction. Beginning with its 19th century origins in gothic fiction and adventure narratives, we will trace the development of science fiction through its early 20th century boom as a pulp form, its mid-century emergence as a recognizable literary genre, and its late 20th century adoption as a venue for exploring identity politics. How have longstanding genre themes like technological innovation and futuristic social progress endured or changed over time? How have explorations of race, gender, and sexuality been important to the genre’s development? How has sci-fi shaped the wider social world in realms like scientific research, political rhetoric, fan cultures, and popular media? We will consider these questions as we survey a selection of novels and short stories by major science fiction authors. Teaching Methods: short lectures, discussion, collaborative group work Evaluation Methods: participation, two analytical papers (6-7 pages each), final essay (7-9 pages) Texts Include: Frankenstein by Mary Shelley; Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick; The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin; Binti by Nedi Okorafor. Short fiction selections will include work by H.G. Wells, Harlan Ellison, Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, James Tiptree Jr., and Octavia Butler. Texts Will Be Available At: All novels will be available at the Northwestern University Bookstore. All short fiction will be posted on the course Canvas site. Instructor Bio: Erin Andrews’ research and teaching interests include speculative fiction and sci-fi, American literature, gender and sexuality studies, and popular culture studies. At Northwestern, she has taught in both the English and Gender & Sexuality Studies Departments on topics including 20th and 21st century literature, feminist and queer theories, and film. Her courses center interdisciplinary teaching methods, with a focus on creating opportunities for students to make connections between assigned literary and theoretical texts and their larger historical, political, and cultural contexts. Her current book project focuses on post-World War II American science fiction, and it explores the relationships between the sci-fi genre and U.S. military power. | ||||
English 324 | Studies in Medieval Literature: The Middle Ages Go to the Movies (Pre 1830/TTC) | Breen | TTh 9:30-10:50 | |
English 324 Studies in Medieval Literature: The Middle Ages Go to the Movies (Pre 1830/TTC)Course texts include: The Death of King Arthur, trans. James Cable, ISBN 9780140442557; Early Christian Lives, ed. Carolinne White, ISBN 9780140435269 | ||||
English 332 | Renaissance Drama: Power and Commerce in Early Modern Drama (Pre 1830) | Caldwell | TTh 12:30-1:50 | |
English 332 Renaissance Drama: Power and Commerce in Early Modern Drama (Pre 1830)Course Description: "Greed is good”: Shakespeare and his contemporaries delighted in writing plays that explored this worldview. Early modern playwrights were especially fascinated by the power that people could accrue through the world of business and commerce. In this course, we will consider key works by Shakespeare that explore the possibilities offered by the market, alongside plays by his contemporaries that celebrate and satirize the pursuit of profit. We will read specific plays for how much fun, and potentially dangerous, they consider the hunt for wealth and power to be, including: Shakespeare’s exploration of political power, justice, and debt in The Merchant of Venice; Ben Jonson’s satire of the alchemical desire to turn lead to gold in The Alchemist; and Thomas Middleton’s Ocean’s 11-style con-game in Michaelmas Term. By analysing major works of early modern drama, written just as the West was witnessing the emergence of capitalism and the modern economy, we will gain a deeper understanding of how writers were representing and questioning the basic assumptions of their culture about the role that commerce could or should have in their lives. Teaching Method(s): Seminar Discussion. Brief Lectures. Evaluation Method(s): One short paper, one medium-length paper, one long paper, individual oral presentations. Texts include: Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Measure for Measure, Timon of Athens; Ben Jonson, The Alchemist; Thomas Middleton, Michaelmas Term; William Haughton, Englishmen for My Money Films (made available on Canvas): Shakespeare’s Globe Theater’s The Merchant of Venice; Cheek by Jowl/Pushkin Theater’s Measure for Measure. Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore. Instructor Bio: Dr. William Casey Caldwell is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the English Department at Northwestern University. His research focuses on early modern literature, monetary history, market culture, and history of sexuality. Caldwell is co-editor of The Hare: An Online Journal of Untimely Reviews in Early Modern Theater, and has published on audience laughter and dramaturgy in reconstructed early modern playhouses. A former Franke Graduate Fellow in residence at Northwestern’s Kaplan Institute for the Humanities, he has worked as Senior Research Assistant at Shakespeare’s Globe Theater, and recently co-taught Shakespeare at Stateville maximum security prison. Caldwell also gives preamble talks at Chicago Shakespeare Theater and volunteers with Northwestern’s Prison Education Program. He holds an MFA in Shakespeare and Performance from Mary Baldwin College in Partnership with the American Shakespeare Center; an MA in Philosophy from the University of Auckland; and a BA in Philosophy from the University of Texas at Austin. | ||||
English 335 | Milton (Pre 1830) | Schwartz | MW 9:30-10:50 | |
English 335 Milton (Pre 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. | ||||
English 338 | Studies in Renaissance Literature: Reading Between the Lines (Pre 1830/TTC) | Boemler | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
English 338 Studies in Renaissance Literature: Reading Between the Lines (Pre 1830/TTC)Teaching Method: Lecture and discussion. Evaluation Method(s): Active participation in discussion, Canvas posts, one short paper, one longer paper, creative new media project. Texts include: Selections from John Donne, The Complete English Poems; George Herbert, The Complete Poetry; Aemilia Lanyer, The Poems of Aemilia Lanyer; William Shakespeare, King Lear; Philip Sidney, The Major Works; and Leah Knight and Wendy Wall, gen. eds., The Pulter Project: Poet in the Making. Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore (some materials available online). | ||||
English 363-1 | 20th Century Fiction: Modern British Fiction and The First World War (Post 1830) | Lane | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
English 363-1 20th Century Fiction: Modern British Fiction and The First World War (Post 1830)Course Description: This course explores recurring motifs in Edwardian (1901-10) fiction and beyond, providing a clear introduction to British modernism and to the “setting” of the First World War (1914-18). We’ll study the cultural and literary shift from naturalism to post-impressionism, as well as other formal changes in British fiction that writers tied to the immediate aftermath of the war and its catastrophic effects. We’ll also trace comparable arguments and shifts in painting and aesthetics, and examine related social and cultural preoccupations, among them: changing conceptions of privacy, psychology, and gender; and widespread concerns about rural change, urban decay, national cohesion, military conflict, and the ends of imperialism. Teaching Methods: Seminar-style discussion, focusing intensively on passages and background arguments, including with clips and slides. Evaluation Methods: Weekly canvas posts, one short analytical paper, final essay, and in-class participation. Texts include (available at Norris Center Bookstore and in order of use): Joseph Conrad, The Secret Agent (ISBN 0141441585); E. M. Forster, Howards End (ISBN 0486424545); James Joyce, Dubliners (ISBN 978-0143107453); Katherine Mansfield, Selected Stories (ISBN 0393925331); D. H. Lawrence, Women in Love (ISBN 0486424588); Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway (ISBN 0156628708); and selected poetry in George Walter (ed.), The Penguin Book of First World War Poetry (ISBN 9780141181905). Please follow the editions assigned; comparable pagination will greatly advance our discussions. | ||||
English 365 | Studies in Postcolonial Literature: Indian Ocean Cultures (Post 1830/TTC) | Mwangi | TTh 11-12:20 | |
English 365 Studies in Postcolonial Literature: Indian Ocean Cultures (Post 1830/TTC)Teaching Method: Interactive lectures, debates, role-play, one-on-one meetings, and small group discussions. Evaluation Method: Two 6-page papers, weekly Canvas postings, regular self-evaluation, peer critiques, class participation, take-home exam, pop quizzes (ungraded), and 1-minute papers (ungraded). Objectives
Primary reading list (may change):
Note: This course is combined with Comp Lit 301-0-20. | ||||
English 366 | Studies in African American Literature: Black Insecurity (Post 1830/ICSP) | Mann | MW 11-12:20 | |
English 366 Studies in African American Literature: Black Insecurity (Post 1830/ICSP)Course Description: What does it mean to read major works of post-soul black literature from the standpoint of insecurity? How is black insecurity distinct from insecurity broadly conceived? What unique qualities does literature have that help critics understand black insecurity in ways other forms can’t? This class will examine essays, poetry, and fiction written in the post-soul era—that is written between the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act—to examine the ongoing struggle for black freedom and the conditions of insecurity that underwrite it. We will specifically examine the relationship between insecurity as an affect, and the periodization of post-soul writing, asking specific questions about the unfulfilled promises of Civil Rights era agitation and the ongoing insecurities that suffuse discourses of black activism, especially those related to police and vigilante violence of the last decade. We relate these forms of antiblack violence to the ongoing War on Terror to assess their interdependence. We will also interrogate how progressive calls for various kinds of security from food security to climate security reinforce the discourse of security. Teaching Method(s): Seminar-style Discussion. Evaluation Method(s): 3 Analysis papers; 1 Oral Presentation. Texts include: Audre Lorde, The Cancer Journals; Toni Morrison, The Bluest Eye; Claudia Rankine Citizen; Colson Whitehead, Underground Railroad. Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore Note: This course is combined with AFAM 3XX. More details will be available at a later date. | ||||
English 366 | Studies in African American Literature: 19th-C Black New World Literature | Spigner | MW 2-3:20 | |
English 366 Studies in African American Literature: 19th-C Black New World LiteratureThe course is reading and writing intensive, and every class will require preparation of a primary text and supplementary reading through which we will explore central issues in the assigned reading, including issues of class and citizenship, identity formation, and gender. Texts will include works by Florence Hall, Harriet E. Wilson, Mary Prince, Charles Chesnutt, Alice Dunbar-Nelson, and others, in addition to companion critical and theoretical articles. Evaluation Method(s): Assignments will include regular online discussions, leading an in-class discussion, and mid-term and final papers. Students will be evaluated on their performance in these assignments as well as class attendance and participation. This class depends on discussion and participation of every member of the class. Come to class prepared to enthusiastically tackle, through discussion and our own literary criticism, issues of gender, class, sexuality, and race as they figure in our readings and other materials. Required texts: Our Nig, Harriet E. Wilson
Imperium In Imperio, Sutton E. Griggs
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English 368 | Studies in 20th Century Literature: Woolf and Bloomsbury (Post 1830) | Froula | TTh 2-3:20 | |
English 368 Studies in 20th Century Literature: Woolf and Bloomsbury (Post 1830) | ||||
English 378 | Studies in American Literature: Visionary Women Writers (Pre 1830) | High | MW 12:30-1:50 | |
English 378 Studies in American Literature: Visionary Women Writers (Pre 1830)Course Description: This course explores major touchstones of women’s lives and writing in the seventeenth and eighteenth century, paying particular attention to women’s disobedience and radical expression. How, why, and with what success did visionary women challenge the structures of power in the early Americas? To answer these questions, we will consider poems, novels, journals, and other manuscript writings, tracing women’s mark on religion, literature, and revolutionary politics in the American colonies. There will be a significant archival component in this course and students will have the opportunity to pursue original research in small writing groups. Texts include: Anne Bradstreet, The Tenth Muse, Lately Sprung Up in America; Coosaponakeesa’s march on Savannah; Mary Dyer, “Petition to the Massachusetts General Court”; Anne Hutchinson’s court records; Toni Morrison, A Mercy; Judith Sargent Murray, “On the Equality of the Sexes”; Lucy Terry Prince, “Bars Fight”; Mercy Otis Warren, “Observations on the New Constitution”; and Phyllis Wheatley, Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral. Teaching Method(s): Discussion, collaborative group work. Evaluation Method(s): Participation and preparation; one exploratory essay (3-5 pages); short weekly writing; and a final collaborative archival project with in-class presentation. Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore. | ||||
English 378 | Studies in American Literature: The Chicago Way: Urban Spaces and American Literature (Post 1830/ICSP) | Savage | TTh 3:30-4:50 | |
English 378 Studies in American Literature: The Chicago Way: Urban Spaces and American Literature (Post 1830/ICSP)Teaching Method: Discussion, brief lectures, guest speakers, and an optional urban tour. Evaluation Method: Class participation; brief written responses to each text; several options for papers of various lengths. Texts Include: Nelson Algren's Chicago: City on the Make and The Neon Wilderness; Richard Wright's Native Son; Stuart Dybek's The Coast of Chicago; journalism by Ben Hecht, Mike Royko and others; short fiction by Sandra Cisneros, James T. Farrell and others; poetry by Carl Sandburg, Gwendolyn Brooks, Tony Fitzpatrick and others; the films The Untouchables, The Blues Brothers, Call Northside 777, and Barbershop; the graphic novel 100 Bullets: First Shot, Last Call. Note: Texts will be available at Comix Revolution, 606 Davis Street. | ||||
English 383 | Studies in Theory and Criticism: Black Vernacular as Theory (Post 1830/ICSP) | Bey | TTh 2-3:20 | |
English 383 Studies in Theory and Criticism: Black Vernacular as Theory (Post 1830/ICSP)Course Description: This course will take as fundamental that black vernacular—the dialects and slang and folk language found in black communities—is a form of theory and theorizing. This theory, though different from the capital-T Theory of notable philosophers, will be shown to also possess intellectual sophistication, simply in, as Barbara Christian has said, “the form of the hieroglyph.” If we assume, rightly, that black people have always theorized, only in different and alternative ways, how might we examine the nuances of that theory? What does it look like? Where, and it what forms, can it be found? “Black Vernacular as Theory” will traverse myriad discursive genres—from novels to poems to music to social media to personal lives. It will put, say, the conversations between black women in the kitchen on par with the intellectual status of literary theorists, dismantling implicit hierarchies between “high” and “low” theory. Students will read the work of Barbara Christian, Geneva Smirtherman, Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, and others; listen to the corpus of Kendrick Lamar and Big L; and reflect on community conversations from family reunions and barbershops. Ultimately, we will begin to rethink what “counts” as theory, and how we might come to understand various marginalized communities within black cultural production as doing substantive work in terms of knowledge production. Teaching Method(s): Primarily discussion. Evaluation Method(s): Mandatory attendance and participation. Brief weekly responses and one longer final paper. Texts include: Readings will include Barbara Christian's “A Race For Theory,” the fiction of Toni Morrison and Zora Neale Hurston, the critical work of Geneva Smitherman on black English, hip-hop, and other work. Texts will be available at: Norris. Note: This course is combined with AFAM 3XX. Details will be available at a later date. | ||||
English 385 | Topics in Combined Studies: Information Overload! Text Technologies from the Printing Press to the Smartphone | Ladd | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
English 385 Topics in Combined Studies: Information Overload! Text Technologies from the Printing Press to the SmartphoneCourse Description: This course explores the anxiety, exhaustion, and unease brought on by information technologies. We will trace emotional responses to technological change, from the shock of the printing press to the malaise of the present "information economy." How did new text technologies reshape language and society? Who is permitted access to certain kinds of information and why? We will take a hands-on approach to these questions by pairing literature that addresses the anxieties of technology, like the scifi linguistics of Arrival and the postapocalyptic Shakespeare of Station Eleven, with book history and digital humanities techniques designed to manage information. Students will learn how books are made, how search algorithms work, and how to analyze text with code. Teaching Method: Discussion. Evaluation Method: Class participation, presentations, 1 midterm paper, several short responses, final project. Texts may include: Ted Chiang Stories of Your Life (ISBN 1101972122); Ben Jonson The Staple of News (PDF provided); Emily Dickinson poetry (excerpts provided); Safiya Noble Algorithms of Oppression (ISBN 1479837245); Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Americanah (excerpts provided); Emily St. John Mandel Station Eleven (ISBN 0804172447). Note: This course is combined with Humanities 325-6-20. | ||||
English 386 | Studies in Literature and Film: Celebrity Culture (Post 1830) | Nordgren | MW 2-3:20 | |
English 386 Studies in Literature and Film: Celebrity Culture (Post 1830)Course Description: In 2007 Stephen King opined “I think there ought to be some serious discussion by smart people, really smart people, about whether or not proliferation of things like The Smoking Gun and TMZ and YouTube and the whole celebrity culture is healthy…I mean, I know people who can tell you who won the last four seasons on American Idol and they don't know who their f------ Congressmen are.” This course will ask students to take up King’s call, discussing seriously the origins of celebrity culture in America and its proliferation in the 20th and 21st centuries. To this end, we will read literature and watch films that address Hollywood filmmaking, connections between “the American Dream” and celebrity status, the relationship between stars and their fans, the consequences of intense media scrutiny, and the racial and gendered structures that shape fame. Recognizing that the divisions between celebrity culture, politics, and other media forms have long been blurred, this course will also prompt students to delve into the dark sides of American culture, asking questions about our obsessions with crime, corruption, and Hollywood glamour. Teaching Method: Seminar discussion. Evaluation Method: participation, short writing assignments, weekly reality TV journal, presentation and final paper. Texts include: James Baldwin, The Devil Finds Work and F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Last Tycoon. We will watch and analyze a range of films on celebrity culture, including three versions of A Star is Born; Sunset Boulevard, dir. Billy Wilder; All About Eve, dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz; Misery, dir. Rob Reiner; and The Bling Ring, dir. Sofia Coppola; as well as music and music videos by Lady Gaga and Beyoncé. Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore and through Canvas. Instructor Bio: Todd Nordgren specializes in British and American modernist literature and culture, queer and feminist theories, life writing, and genre studies. At Northwestern, he has designed and taught courses on poetry and poetics, modernist fiction, and life writing in minority communities. His recent work includes a forthcoming chapter in the Routledge Companion to Queer Theory and Modernism on the intersections of autobiography and celebrity culture in the early 20th century. His current book project, “Taking Form: Writing Queer Lives in the Early Twentieth Century,” examines how modernist literature inaugurated a new optimism about expectations of what a queer life could entail. “Taking Form" explores the period between Oscar Wilde’s trials for “gross indecency” in 1895 and the formation of large-scale gay and lesbian movements after World War II, highlighting how authors challenged, eluded, and exceeded the sexual constraints and codes of the school story, the marriage plot, the imperial romance, and autobiography to make writing about queer life possible in an era of increasing medical and legal categorization. | ||||
English 387 | Studies in Literature and Commerce: Love and Money from Shakespeare to Crazy Rich Asians (Post 1830) | Caldwell | TTh 3:30-4:50 | |
English 387 Studies in Literature and Commerce: Love and Money from Shakespeare to Crazy Rich Asians (Post 1830)Course Description: “Love is like money…hard to find and easy to lose.” Writers through the ages have long mined uncanny similarities between the pursuit of love and money, though not always in such a melancholy note, for their plots and poetic language. In this course, we will ponder the entertainment value of certain potent combinations of romance and riches, as these are presented through the lives of literature’s best known and most complex characters. Characters such as Shakespeare’s Shylock, Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, and Kevin Kwan’s extravagant Singaporeans, confront us with fascinating questions about erotic desire and wealth that play upon our hopes and fears: how do we know if we love someone for themselves or for their money? What is the difference between a romantic and financial bond? What does it mean to experience passion through the filter of financial language and metaphors? Can we really have it all??? As we consider the relationship in these texts between romance and riches, jealousy and insolvency, we will challenge our basic assumptions about what it means to be in love, in debt, flush with money, and trapped in poverty. Teaching Method: Seminar Discussion. Evaluation Method: Two short papers, one medium-length research paper, one long paper, one discussion-leading assignment. Texts include: Guy de Maupassant, “The Necklace”; Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice; Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary; Gabriel García Márquez, Memories of My Melancholy Whores; Jonathan Dee, The Privileges; Kevin Kwan, Crazy Rich Asians. Movies (made available on Canvas): Indecent Proposal (1993), Crazy Rich Asians (2018). Texts will be available at: Norris Bookstore. Instructor Bio: Dr. William Casey Caldwell is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the English Department at Northwestern University. His research focuses on early modern literature, monetary history, market culture, and history of sexuality. Caldwell is co-editor of The Hare: An Online Journal of Untimely Reviews in Early Modern Theater, and has published on audience laughter and dramaturgy in reconstructed early modern playhouses. A former Franke Graduate Fellow in residence at Northwestern’s Kaplan Institute for the Humanities, he has worked as Senior Research Assistant at Shakespeare’s Globe Theater, and recently co-taught Shakespeare at Stateville maximum security prison. Caldwell also gives preamble talks at Chicago Shakespeare Theater and volunteers with Northwestern’s Prison Education Program. He holds an MFA in Shakespeare and Performance from Mary Baldwin College in Partnership with the American Shakespeare Center; an MA in Philosophy from the University of Auckland; and a BA in Philosophy from the University of Texas at Austin. | ||||
English 388 | Studies in Literature and Religion: Saints and Rebels (Post 1830/ICSP) | Boemler | MW 9:30-10:50 | |
English 388 Studies in Literature and Religion: Saints and Rebels (Post 1830/ICSP)Teaching Method: Lecture and discussion. Evaluation Method: Active participation in discussion, Canvas posts, one short paper, one longer paper, class presentation. Texts include: Coursepack including selected poetry from poets including: the Psalms, Job, Hildegard von Bingen, Rumi, Yehuda Halevi, George Herbert, John Donne, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Emily Dickenson, Yehuda Amichai, Kendrick Lamar, and Mona Haydar. Texts will be available at: Quartet Copies and Canvas. | ||||
English 393-3 | Theory and Practice of Poetry | Mehigan | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
English 393-3 Theory and Practice of PoetryCourse Description: This 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. | ||||
English 394-3 | Theory and Practice of Fiction | Abani | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
English 394-3 Theory and Practice of FictionTeaching 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. | ||||
English 395-3 | Theory and Practice of Creative Nonfiction | Bouldrey | MW 3:30-4:50 | |
English 395-3 Theory and Practice of Creative NonfictionTeaching 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. | ||||
English 397 | Research Seminar: The Uses and Abuses of the Middle Ages | Breen | TTh 11-12:20 | |
English 397 Research Seminar: The Uses and Abuses of the Middle AgesCourse texts: Wayne C. Booth, et al., The Craft of Research, 4th ed., ISBN 9780226239736. Prerequisites: Open to juniors and seniors only. Students must successfully complete 5 300-level English courses before taking English 397. | ||||
English 403 | Writers' Studies in Literature | Miles | W 6p-9p | |
English 403 Writers' Studies in Literature | ||||
English 435 | Studies in 17th-Century Literature: The Renaissances We Earn | West | M 2-4:50 | |
English 435 Studies in 17th-Century Literature: The Renaissances We Earn | ||||
English 451 | Studies in Romantic Literature: Lyric Environments | Wolff | W 2-4:50 | |
English 451 Studies in Romantic Literature: Lyric Environments | ||||
English 465 | Studies in Colonial & Postcolonial Literature: Forms and Ecology | Mwangi | Tu 2-4:50 | |
English 465 Studies in Colonial & Postcolonial Literature: Forms and Ecology | ||||
English 471 | Studies in American Literature: The Poetics of Dissolution | Wilson | Th 2-4:50 | |
English 471 Studies in American Literature: The Poetics of Dissolution | ||||
English 496 | MFA Poetry Workshop | Abani | T 6p-8:50p | |
English 496 MFA Poetry WorkshopStudents will select a photographer or other visual artist whose work they think shares the same core aesthetic as theirs (and no it cannot be another writer), pick a series from that artists work (no more than 5 (five) paintings, photographs or any other “forms”) and write a short one page explanation speaking to why this artist, this work and this sequence. Then students MUST submit a sequence of 15 pages of poetry assembled as an arc (the typical chapbook is 25-30 pages of poetry, so this is less than that). The poems will be placed in a manuscript style format with a title page etc. The two items (artist selection and poems) will be submitted on the first day of class so that we can begin work almost immediately. We will offer each other constructive critiques, a catalog of the work submitted spanning a set of 19 points that will be laid out in the syllabus (like Themes, Style, Syllabic Structure, Form vs Content etc.), creating a critical and creative catalog of the work. The outcome is a thorough workshop of a sequence of our poems advancing us towards the skills needed for a full-length thesis and later, a full-length book for publication.
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English 498 | MFA Creative Nonfiction Workshop | Biss | M 6p-8:50p | |
English 498 MFA Creative Nonfiction Workshop | ||||
English 571 | Teaching Creative Writing | Seliy | M 10a-12:50p | |
English 571 Teaching Creative WritingIn the second half of the course we will move into the practical work of designing creative writing courses that have a beginning, middle, and end, and also a clear set of achievable learning objectives. You will do the practical work of drafting syllabi, generating exercises, and selecting reading material for introductory courses in poetry, fiction, and creative non-fiction. |