The material on this page is from the 2002-03 catalog and may be out of date. Please check the current year's catalog for current information.
English
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Professors Deiman (on leave, 2002-2003), Turlish, Thompson (on leave, winter semester and Short Term), Taylor, and Dillon, Chair; Associate Professors Freedman (on leave, 2002-2003), Malcolmson, and Nayder; Assistant Professors Shankar and Ruffin; Visiting Assistant Professors Hazard and Hecker; Mr. Farnsworth Through a wide range of course offerings the Department of English seeks to develop each student's capacity for readingthe intense, concerned involvement with textual expression. All courses are intended to foster critical reading, writing, and thinking, in which "criticism" is at once passionate appreciation, historical understanding, and the perpetual re-thinking of values. More specifically, the English major prepares students for careers such as teaching, publishing, and writing, for graduate study in literature, and for graduate programs leading to the study or practice of medicine or law. Though the department embodies a variety of teaching styles and interests, the faculty all believe in the art of patient, engaged reading as both knowledge and pleasure. Departmental offerings are intended to be taken in sequence. Courses at the 100 level are open to all students. Courses at the 200 level are open to students who have completed one 100-level course and are more difficult in terms of both the amount of material covered and the level of inquiry; they also address questions of theory and methodology in more self-conscious ways. Seminars at the 300 level are generally for juniors and seniors who have completed several English courses (the latter requirement may be waived at the discretion of the instructor for certain interdisciplinary majors). Cross-listed Courses. Note that unless otherwise specified, when a department/program references a course or unit in the department/program, it includes courses and units cross-listed with the department/program. Major Requirements. Majors must complete eleven courses of which a minimum of seven must be taken from the Bates faculty. Students may receive no more than two credits for junior semester abroad courses, and, normally, no more than two credits for junior year abroad courses. Under special circumstances, and upon written petition to the English department, junior year abroad students may receive credit for three courses. In a CBB off-campus study program focused on the English major, students may receive credit for three courses without petitioning. Unless specifically designated as a seminar by the Bates English department, none of the CBB courses can be used to fulfill seminar credit. One course credit is granted for Advanced Placement scores of four or five, but these credits count only toward overall graduation requirements, not toward the eleven-course major requirement. The eleven courses required for the major must include one or two courses at the 100 level and nine or ten courses at the 200 level or above. Upper-level courses must include: a) three courses on literature before 1800; b) one course emphasizing critical thinking; c) two junior-senior seminars; and d) a senior thesis (English 457), which may be undertaken independently or as part of a junior-senior seminar (457A with a thesis written through 395A, for example). Although writing a thesis through a seminar may fulfill both a seminar requirement and the thesis requirement, it counts as a single course credit. Students may count one course in a foreign literature (with primary focus on literature rather than on language instruction) and/or one course in creative writing toward the major. English majors may elect a program in creative writing. This program is intended to complement and enhance the English major and to add structure and a sense of purpose to those students already committed to creative writing. Students who wish to write a creative thesis must undertake this program. Requirements for the focus on creative writing include: 1) Two introductory courses in the writing of prose (291), poetry (292), or drama (Theater 240). 2) One advanced course in the writing of prose or poetry (391 or 392). 3) Three related courses in the English department or in the literature of a foreign language. 4) A one- or two-semester thesis (nonhonors) in which the student writes and revises a portfolio of creative work. Students who elect the creative writing concentration must fulfill all English major requirements but may count toward them one creative writing course as well as the related literature courses and thesis. With departmental approval, students may write a two-semester honors thesis in the senior year. Majors who wish to present themselves as potential honors candidates are encouraged to register for at least one junior-senior seminar in their junior year. Majors who elect to participate in a junior year abroad program and who also want to present themselves as honors candidates must submit evidence of broadly comparable course work or independent study pursued elsewhere; such persons are encouraged to consult with the department before their departure or early in their year abroad. At the end of their junior year, prospective honors candidates must submit a two-page proposal and a one-page bibliography; those wishing to write a two-semester creative thesis must submit a one-page description of a project and a substantial writing sample. Both are due at the department chair's office on the first Friday after Short Term begins. Students planning to do graduate work should seek out advice early on concerning their undergraduate program, the range of graduate school experience, and vocational options. Graduate programs frequently require reading proficiency in up to three foreign languages, so it is strongly recommended that prospective graduate students achieve at least a two-year proficiency in a classical (Latin, Greek) or modern language. Pass/Fail Grading Option. Pass/fail grading may not be elected for courses counting toward the major. General Education. No English Short Term unit may serve as an option for the fifth humanities course. Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, or A-Level credit awarded by the department may not be used towards fulfillment of any general education requirements. CoursesENG 121. Colloquia in Literature. Colloquia introduce students to the study of literature from a variety of perspectives, with a focus on such objects as author, genre, and literary period. These courses not only delve into their particular subject matter, they also allow a preliminary discussion of critical vocabulary and methods that will carry over into more advanced courses. Discussion and frequent writing assignments characterize each section. Prospective majors are urged to take at least one colloquium. Enrollment limited to 25 per section.
ENG 141. American Writers to 1900. A study of ten to twelve American texts selected from the works of such writers as Bradford, Mather, Bradstreet, Edwards, Franklin, Cooper, Hawthorne, Fuller, Emerson, Thoreau, Jacobs, Melville, Douglas, Stowe, Wilson, Whitman, and Poe. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. Normally offered every year. L. Turlish, C. Taylor. CM/EN 145. Epic, Saga, Romance. In this course students read a variety of works from the most popular narrative forms in the Middle Ages. The course may include Beowulf, the Icelandic sagas, the Maginogion, Orfeo, Middle English alliterative poetry, Arthurian literature, as well as post-medieval interpreters of medieval narrative such as Tolkien and Evangeline Walton. Enrollment limited to 25. M. Hazard. New course beginning Fall 2003. ENG 152. American Writers since 1900. A study of ten to twelve American texts selected from the works of such writers as Dickinson, Twain, Gilman, Chesnutt, James, Adams, Dreiser, Hughes, Frost, Stein, Hemingway, Larsen, Fitzgerald, Faulkner, Pound, Eliot, Crane, Cullen, Wright, Stevens, Williams, Baldwin, Plath, Albee, Brooks, Walker, Ellison, Pynchon, and Morrison. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. Normally offered every year. C. Taylor, L. Turlish. ENG 171. European Literature: European Tradition from Homer to Cervantes. A study of major texts of European literature, read in English, with attention to their importance as both works of art and documents of cultural history. Texts include works by Homer, the Greek tragedians, Plato, Sappho, Vergil, Dante, Rabelais, Montaigne, Cervantes, and others. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. Normally offered every year. S. Dillon, M. Hazard. ENG 206. Chaucer. Reading and interpretation of the greatest work of the fourteenth-century Middle-English poet, the Canterbury Tales. All works are read in Middle English. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. (Pre-1800.) Normally offered every year. A. Thompson, M. Hazard. ENG 209. Introduction to Medieval and Renaissance Culture. Why study pre-1800 literature? This course seeks to engage students in reading a culture very different from, and yet significantly linked to, our own. The course is a study of intersections and development in late medieval and early Renaissance literature from the origins of romance and Christian chivalry to the emergence of secular politics, the Elizabethan theater, and the colonization of the Americas. Writers include Marie de France, Christine de Pizan, Chaucer, Petrarch, Machiavelli, Anne Askew, and Shakespeare. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. (Pre-1800.) Normally offered every year. M. Hazard. ENG 211. English Literary Renaissance (1509-1603). A study of the Elizabethan Age through developments in literature, particularly the sonnet (William Shakespeare, Louise Labé, Philip Sidney, Mary Wroth) and the romance epic, Spenser's Faerie Queene, studied in relation to medieval romances by Chrétien de Troyes and Marie de France. Attention is given to developments in religion, politics, and society. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. (Pre-1800.) Offered with varying frequency. C. Malcolmson. AA/EN 212. Black Lesbian and Gay Literatures. This course examines black lesbian and gay literatures in English from Africa, the Caribbean, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada. Students are introduced to critical and historical approaches for analyzing literature about black queer sensibilities. Open to first-year students. Normally offered every year. C. Nero. ENG 213-214. Shakespeare. A study of the major plays, with some emphasis on the biography of Shakespeare and the Elizabethan milieu. Students planning to take both English 213 and 214 are advised to take 213 first. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. (Pre-1800.) Normally offered every year. C. Malcolmson, S. Freedman, P. Hecker. ENG 216. The Waste Land and After. This course examines the backgrounds, themes, and techniques of T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land in terms of its influence upon subsequent American poetry and prose fiction. Primary readings include texts by Hart Crane, William Faulkner, John Berryman, and Bernard Malamud. Secondary readings and student presentations focus on background texts by such writers as Sir James Frazer, Jessie Weston, and Hermann Hesse. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 30. Offered with varying frequency. L. Turlish. ENG 220. Dickens Revised. Focusing on four works that span Dickens's career—Oliver Twist, A Christmas Carol, Great Expectations, and The Mystery of Edwin Drood—students place Dickens in his Victorian context and consider how and why his fiction has been adapted and reworked in the twentieth century. Students discuss film and musical adaptations as well as fictional reworkings, and examine changes in Dickens's reputation and the evolving cultural meaning of his stories. Novels, films, and musicals include Oliver!, Jack Maggs, The D. Case, and The Mystery of Edwin Drood: The Solve-It-Yourself Broadway Musical. Enrollment limited to 25. L. Nayder. New course beginning Fall 2003. ENG 221. Dickens and Victorian Culture. Reading Dickens's work as a novelist and journalist in the context of Victorian politics and culture, students consider his reputation as a social reformer and a disciplinarian as well as a literary genius, and focus on his varying representations of class conflict, criminality, and gender relations. Works include Sketches by Boz, Oliver Twist, Bleak House, Great Expectations, and Our Mutual Friend, in addition to critical and biographical studies. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 40. Offered with varying frequency. L. Nayder. ENG 222. Seventeenth-Century Literature. A study of significant writers of the seventeenth century. Writers may include William Shakespeare, John Donne, George Herbert, Aemilia Lanyer, John Milton, and Aphra Behn. Attention is given to the intellectual, political, and scientific revolutions of the age. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. (Pre-1800.) Offered with varying frequency. C. Malcolmson. ENG 226. Milton's Paradise Lost. Milton's Christian epic, Paradise Lost (1668), which retells the story of man's fall from Paradise, is one of the most influential and interesting works in English literature. Students read this poem twice: once before midterm, with attention to internal form and structure, and then again afterwards, focusing on significant problems from the history of Milton criticism, and on the remarkable influence of Milton's poem in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Enrollment limited to 25. (Pre-1800.) Offered with varying frequency. S. Dillon. ENG 238. Jane Austen: Then and Now. Students read Austen's six major works, investigate their relation to nineteenth-century history and culture, and consider the current Austen revival in film adaptations and fictional continuations of her novels. The course highlights the various and conflicting ways in which critics represent Austen, and the cultural needs her stories now seem to fulfill. Readings include Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. L. Nayder. ENG 241. American Fiction. Critical readings of representative works by American writers such as Hawthorne, Twain, Howells, James, Crane, Norris, Chopin, Hurston, Dreiser, Dos Passos, Le Sueur, Fitzgerald, Stein, Faulkner, Cather, Steinbeck, Wright, Warren, Baldwin, and Welty. Discussions of individual novels examine their form within the context of the major directions of American fiction. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. Offered with varying frequency. Staff. ENG 243. Romantic Literature (1790-1840). The theoretical foundations of English and European Romanticism, including its philosophical, critical, and social backgrounds. The course concentrates on Rousseau, Blake, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats. Attention is also given to Lamb, Hazlitt, De Quincey, Swedenborg, and other prose figures and critics of the period. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. Offered with varying frequency. R. Farnsworth, S. Dillon. ENG 245. Studies in Victorian Literature (1830-1900). Selected topics in the period, organized by author, genre, and historical connections. Special attention is given to philosophical backgrounds and the critical language of the day. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. Offered with varying frequency. S. Dillon. ENG 250. The African American Novel. An examination of the African American novel from its beginnings in the mid-1800s to the present. Issues addressed include a consideration of folk influences on the genre, its roots in the slave narrative tradition, its relation to Euro-American texts and culture, and the "difference" that gender as well as race makes in determining narrative form. Readings include narratives selected from among the works of such writers as Douglass, Jacobs, Wilson, Delany, Hopkins, Harper, Chesnutt, Johnson, Toomer, Larsen, Hurston, Wright, Petry, Ellison, Baldwin, Walker, Morrison, Marshall, Reed, and others. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. K. Ruffin. ENG 254. Modern British Literature since 1900. An introduction to the birth of modern British literature and its roots, with attention to its social and cultural history, its philosophical and cultural foundations, and some emphasis on its relationship to the previous century. Texts are selected from the works of writers such as Forster, Lawrence, Joyce, Woolf, Mansfield, Eliot, Yeats, Orwell, Rushdie, and Lessing. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. L. Shankar. ENG 260. Literature of South Asia. This course introduces fiction, poetry, and films by writers who are of South Asian descent, or who have considered the Indian Subcontinent their home. Topics include British influence on South Asia, the partition of India, national identity formation, women's social roles, the impact of Western education and the English language, and the emergence of a new generation of postcolonial literary artists. Writers are selected from among Salman Rushdie, Arundhati Roy, Anita Desai, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Satyajit Ray, Rabindranath Tagore, Sarojini Naidu, Jhumpa Lahiri, Mahasweta Debi, U. R. Anantha Murthy, Amitav Ghosh, Ved Mehta, and Ismat Chugtai. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. L. Shankar. ENG 264. Modern Irish Poetry. A study of the development and transformation of Anglo-Irish poetry in the twentieth century, especially as it responds to the political, social, and gender forces at work in Ireland's recent history. Beginning with brief but concentrated study of poems by W. B. Yeats and Patrick Kavanagh, the course then examines the work of inheritors of these major figures' legacies, including Seamus Heaney, Derek Mahon, Thomas Kinsella, Eavan Boland, Eamon Grennan, Paul Muldoon, and Medbh McGuckian. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. R. Farnsworth. ENG 275. English Novel. A study of the English novel from its origins to the early nineteenth century. Readings include selections from Homer's Iliad, and novels by Defoe, Richardson, Fielding, Radcliffe, Austen, and Scott. Among the issues addressed by this course are the relation of the novel to the epic, and the social and political orientation of this new genre. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. (Pre-1800.) Offered with varying frequency. L. Nayder. ENG 291. Prose Writing. A course for students who wish practice and guidance in the writing of prose. The course may alternate between fiction and nonfiction. Admission by writing sample. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 15. Written permission of the instructor is required. Normally offered every year. C. Taylor. ENG 292. Poetry Writing. A course for students who wish practice and guidance in the writing of poetry. Admission by writing sample. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 15. Written permission of the instructor is required. Normally offered every year. S. Dillon. ENG 294. Storytelling. This course introduces cross-cultural forms, contexts, and strategies of storytelling in the process of analyzing the role of stories in everyday life. Primary readings include a range of stories characteristic of diverse traditions. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Recommended background: introductory courses in literature, anthropology, or the sociology of knowledge. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 25 per section. Offered with varying frequency. C. Taylor. ENG 295. Critical Theory. Major literary critics are read, and major literary works are studied in the light of these critics. Critical approaches discussed may include neoclassical, Romantic, psychoanalytical, formalist, generic, archetypal, structuralist, and deconstructionist. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. (Critical thinking.) Normally offered every year. S. Freedman. EN/WS 297. Feminisms. The course develops the ability of students to analyze gender in relation to other issues, including race, class, and sexuality. Topics include the multiple theories of how these issues intersect in literature, including black feminism, socialist feminism, queer theory, deconstruction, and psychoanalytic theory. Some attention will be paid to media feminism: both the brand of feminism popular in current movies and TV shows, and media reactions to feminism. Not open to students who have received credit for EN/WS 395L. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Enrollment limited to 25. (Critical Thinking.) C. Malcolmson. New course beginning Fall 2003. ENG 360. Independent Study. Students, in consultation with a faculty advisor, individually design and plan a course of study or research not offered in the curriculum. Course work includes a reflective component, evaluation, and completion of an agreed-upon product. Sponsorship by a faculty member in the program/department, a course prospectus, and permission of the chair are required. Students may register for no more than one independent study per semester. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Normally offered every semester. Staff. ENG 365. Special Topics. Offered occasionally by a faculty member in subjects of special interest. Prerequisite(s): one 100-level English course. Staff. ENG 391. Advanced Prose Writing. Prerequisite(s): English 291. Enrollment limited to 12. Written permission of the instructor is required. Normally offered every year. R. Farnsworth. ENG 392. Advanced Poetry Writing. Prerequisite(s): English 292. Enrollment limited to 12. Written permission of the instructor is required. Normally offered every year. R. Farnsworth. ENG 395. Junior-Senior Seminars. Seminars provide an opportunity for concentrated work in a restricted subject area. Two such seminars are required for the English major. Students are encouraged to see the seminar as preparation for independent work on a senior thesis. They may also choose to use the seminar itself as a means of fulfilling the senior thesis requirement. Sections are limited to 15. Written permission of the instructor is required.
ENG 457, 458. Senior Thesis. Students register for English 457 in the fall semester and for English 458 in the winter semester. Majors writing an honors thesis register for both English 457 and 458. Normally offered every year. Staff. Short Term UnitsAR/EN s10. A Cultural and Literary Walk into China. This unit has two goals: 1) to offer an introduction to Chinese aesthetics through architecture, the fine arts, the performing arts, and literature; 2) to study how Buddhist aesthetic ideas expressed in rock-cut temples, monasteries, and garden design, often reappear in altered ways in poems, plays, and epics. Students travel to seven historically important cities in China: Beijing, Datong, Luoyang, Xian, Shanghai, Hangzhou, and Suzhou. Recommended background: Art/Asian Studies 243, any course in Chinese language and literature, Asian Studies/Religion 208 and 309. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 20. Not open to students who have received credit for Art s10 or English s10. Offered with varying frequency. T. Nguyen, S. Freedman. ENG s13. The Fin de Siècle in American Literature. Henry Adams echoed Matthew Arnold's poem when he described America in the 1890s as "caught between two worlds, one dead, the other powerless to be born." This unit considers the American 1890s, especially in the light of our own recent fin de siècle. Themes include cultural exhaustion, apocalypticism, "decadence," and aestheticism. Authors include Henry Adams, Kate Chopin, and Stephen Crane. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 15. Offered with varying frequency. L. Turlish. CM/EN s16. Monastic Mysteries. In this unit, students read a selection of modern mystery novels set in the Middle Ages, primarily by Ellis Peters about the fictional Benedictine monk Cadfael. Students discuss the difficulties and choices faced by the modern writer of fiction presenting the social realities of the medieval world. Students also read primary historical sources describing that world, in particular the Chronicle of Jocelin of Brakelond. Enrollment limited to 25. Not open to students who have received credit for English s16 or Classical and Medieval Studies s16. Offered with varying frequency. M. Hazard. ENG s17. Telling Stories about the Saints. The saints of the Christian church were not only central to the belief system of the European Middle Ages, they also provided an opportunity for rich and varied narrative and cultural constructions. The saints' legends found in the thirteenth-century Middle English collection that is the focus of the unit sometimes reveal more about the hopes and fears of the people by and for whom they were composed than about the saints themselves, but they are no less interesting for that reason. Literal translation of a chosen text, historical investigation, and creative rewriting all play a part in the process of acquainting students with the nature of narrative and the continuing hold upon our imagination of the saints and the stories that have been told about them. Recommended background: a willingness to work closely with the language of a rather difficult thirteenth-century text is highly desirable. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 12. Offered with varying frequency. A. Thompson. ENG s19. Introduction to Film Analysis: Formalism and Beyond. The unit breaks into three: 1) an introduction to languages of cinematic description through the viewing and discussion of clips and films complemented by theoretical essays in, for instance, formalism, narratology, deconstruction, and feminism; 2) an intensive reading of a single film, first in terms of its own structure and elements, then in light of various methodological contexts; 3) a substantial critical writing project. Directors studied may include Scorsese, Renoir, Hitchcock, Wells, and Stone. Enrollment limited to 15. Offered with varying frequency. S. Freedman. ENG s20. NewsWatch. What criteria determine that some aspects of experience are regarded as newsworthy and others not? What conventions determine how to represent this news? What are the boundaries between journalism and other nonfictional narratives (history, essay, documentary, biography, for example)? What tensions exist between "all the news that's fit to print" and commercial, consumer-based media? This unit considers how diverse media collect, represent, and comment on the "news," drawing on media and cultural studies, discourse analysis, and narrative theory to critically explore both dominant media representations in the United States and alternatives to it, especially in foreign presses and/or alternatively supported media. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. C. Malcolmson, C. Taylor. ENG s23. Beatniks and Mandarins: A Literary and Cultural History of the American Fifties. An examination of established and adversarial culture in the American 1950s. Readings are in the literature and social commentary of such representative figures as Lionel Trilling, Norman Mailer, and Jack Kerouac. Some attention is given to film noir as the definitive Fifties cinematic style and to the phenomenon that wed the recitation of poetry to American jazz. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. L. Turlish. ENG s25. Sociocultural Approaches to Children's Literature. This unit studies some of the "classics" in British and American literature written to educate and entertain children, including works by Hans Christian Andersen, Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, J. M. Barrie, Louisa May Alcott, R. L. Stevenson, A. A. Milne, E. B. White, Mildred Taylor, Robert McCloskey, Dr. Seuss, and Jean Fritz. By employing the tools of sociocultural and psychological analysis, students examine the formation of gendered, racial, cultural, and social class identities through childhood literary experiences. Some attention is given to film versions of children's stories. This course has a required service-learning component of work with elementary school children and teachers. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 15. Offered with varying frequency. L. Shankar. EN/WS s26. Felicia Skene. This unit examines the life and writings of the largely forgotten Victorian novelist and social reformer, Felicia Skene (1821-1899). Students investigate Skene's life story and read a number of her works, including The Inheritance of Evil, Or, the Consequence of Marrying a Deceased Wife's Sister (1849) and "Penitentiaries and Reformatories" (1865). Focusing on the novel Hidden Depths (1866), students research the subject of Victorian prostitution, its primary theme, and engage in the research necessary to produce a new edition of that work. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 15. Not open to students who have received credit for English s26 or Women and Gender Studies s26. Offered with varying frequency. L. Nayder. ENG s28. Robert Creeley and Company. Robert Creeley (b.1926) is one of the most important and interesting poets of the twentieth century. This unit explores a range of Creeley's poetry and prose from his earliest works associated with the Black Mountain school to recent books, such as Life and Death (1998). Creeley's writing situates itself in a network of relationships, and students therefore also read poetry and correspondence by Charles Olson, Robert Duncan, and Denise Levertov. Creeley's later collaborations with artists are also discussed. Recommended background: English 121E. Enrollment limited to 25. Offered with varying frequency. S. Dillon. EN/RH s29. Place, Word, Sound: New Orleans. This unit offers an interdisciplinary and experiential approach to the study of New Orleans, the most African city in continental North America. The goal of the unit is to understand the impact of place on culture and aesthetic practices, learn how institutions represent New World and creole transformations of Africanity, and introduce students to historical and contemporary debates about African influences in the United States. Students examine cultural memory, questions of power, and definitions of cultural terrain as expressed in literature, art, music, and architecture. In addition to attending the seven-day Jazz and Heritage Festival, students visit various sites of literary, cultural, and historical significance to New Orleans. Recommended background: a course in African American Studies offered in English, Music, Rhetoric, or African American Studies. Enrollment is limited to 16. Written permission of the instructor is required. C. Nero, K. Ruffin. New unit beginning Short Term 2003. ENG s31. "Letters from Tasmania": Writing an Epistolary Novella. Students read an epistolary novel, and collectively write a novella of their own. They are presented with a specific historical context for their novellathe colonization of Tasmania by the British. They study historical source materials, and each assumes a different fictional "persona"; the cast includes both Tasmanian and British correspondents. Each student is required to contribute at least ten letters to the novella, with a minimum of twenty-five pages. This unit enables students to put into practice concepts they have studied in literature courses, and encourages them to make connections among politics, history, and literature. Recommended background: at least one course in the study of fiction, British or American. Enrollment limited to 15. Written permission of the instructor is required. Offered with varying frequency. L. Nayder. ENG s35. Constructing Catherine Dickens. Combining literary and biographical study with archival research, this unit focuses on the neglected figure of Catherine Dickens, wife of the novelist, who was forced from her home in 1858 after twenty years of marriage and ten children. Reading conflicting accounts of Mrs. Dickens as well as her own unpublished letters and book (a cookbook), students examine her family life in the context of Victorian gender norms and marriage law, consider how and why she has been represented by critics and biographers, and construct their own portraits of her. Prerequisite(s): one English course. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 15. Offered with varying frequency. L. Nayder. ENG s37. Representing Labor in Fiction and Film. This unit explores how workers in the twentieth-century United States have represented their own lives and struggles, and how writers and directors have transformed personal narratives into fiction and film of often epic sweep. Diverse storytellers contribute to what is remembered and forgotten as the story of labor becomes public history, from the slave system to the factories of the North, from the Dust Bowl's westward migration to migrant laborers moving across borders and sometimes back again. Works include Solomon Northrup's slave narrative and Gordon Parks Sr.'s Half Slave, Half Free: Solomon Northrup's Legacy; Upton Sinclair's The Jungle and William Duke's The Killing Floor; John Steinbeck's and John Ford's Grapes of Wrath; Tomás Rivera's and Severo Pérez's ...And the Earth Did Not Devour Him; Gregory Nava's El Norte; and Harriet Arnow's and Daniel Petrie's The Dollmaker. Prerequisite(s): one English course. Enrollment limited to 15. Offered with varying frequency. C. Taylor. ENG s43. Shakespeare in the Theater. A study of Shakespeare's plays in performance, intended to acquaint the student with problems in the interpretation of the plays that are created by actual stage production. Students see Shakespearean productions in various locations, including London and Stratford-on-Avon, England. Prerequisite(s): English 213 and 214. Enrollment limited to 15. Written permission of the instructor is required. Offered with varying frequency. Staff. ENG s50. Independent Study. Students, in consultation with a faculty advisor, individually design and plan a course of study or research not offered in the curriculum. Course work includes a reflective component, evaluation, and completion of an agreed-upon product. Sponsorship by a faculty member in the program/department, a course prospectus, and permission of the chair are required. Students may register for no more than one independent study during a Short Term. Normally offered every year. Staff. |
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