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ENGL 226 American Literature 2
Ms. Kaitlyn Pinder
Summer Term 2013 (May)
Time:听Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 9:35 am 鈥 11:55 am
Full course description
顿别蝉肠谤颈辫迟颈辞苍:听This course studies American Literature between and beyond Walt Whitman鈥檚 鈥渂arbaric yawp鈥 and the 鈥渉owl鈥 of Allen Ginsberg鈥檚 generation. It serves as an introduction to American Literature from 1865-1970, a period of remarkable economic, cultural, and imperial transformations that established the United States as a superpower of the twentieth century. Rapid transcontinental settlement, urbanization, industrialization, world war, and a shift from colonial to world power form the cultural and historical backdrop to this period of abundant and diverse literary production. In our study of the major works of this period, we will track the on-going life of foundational ideas in American literature and culture, and the way they are challenged, transformed, and adapted by writers who 鈥 because of their race, gender, and sexuality 鈥 did not always have a voice in 鈥淎merica.鈥 These foundational ideas include: individualism, freedom, democracy, revolution, and rebellion. As we proceed chronologically through the works in the course, we will also note how changes in aesthetic form and genre affect and challenge previous ideas of 鈥淎merica,鈥 and tune our discussions to racial, gender, and class politics implicit in the texts.听
Evaluation:听In-class participation: 15%, Reading Quizzes (5 x 2%): 10%, Response Paragraphs (3 x 5%): 15%, Final Exam: 30%, Final Essay (1800-2000 words): 30%
罢别虫迟蝉:听听
- Norton Anthology of American Literature 8th Edition Volumes C, D, and E
- Mark Twain, Pudd鈥檔head Wilson (also available on Project Gutenberg)
- Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49
- Recommended readings and listenings will be made available on MyCourses.
Format:听Lectures and discussion
ENGL 314 20th Century Drama
Nations and Naturalism
Ms Amanda Clarke
Summer Term 2013 (June)
Time:听Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 9:35 am - 11:55 am
Full course description
顿别蝉肠谤颈辫迟颈辞苍:听This course examines nine key 20th century plays with attention to formal, thematic, and historical concerns. In particular, we will consider the rise of naturalism as a dominant mode of writing and stagecraft in the period, and its relationship to the development of national theatres throughout Europe and North America. We take as our departure point Benedict Anderson鈥檚 assertion that nations are 鈥渋magined communities.鈥 Anderson argues that the success of invented national communities depends on a body politic鈥檚 ability to recognize, identify with, and assert belonging to a nation. This is achieved through the creation of 鈥渋mage[s] of communion鈥 (6). In this class, we will investigate how theatre creates, traffics, and contests these images of national communion.听
Evaluation:听Participation 15%, In-class Short Essay (June 13th) 20%, Final Paper (6 pages, due July 4th) 35%, Final Exam 30%
罢别虫迟蝉:听听
- Eight Modern Plays (Norton Critical Edition edited by Anthony Caputi)
- J. M. Synge, Playboy of the Western World
- Michel Tremblay, Les Belles-Soeurs
- Lorraine Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun
- Brian Friel, Translations
- Marie Jones, Stones in his Pockets
Format:听Lecture, discussion, occasional in-class screenings
Average enrollment: 50 students