QUILL

ENGL 4468: Modern Poetry (Spring 2020)

This course will begin with some central figures behind and within English language 20th-century poetry and then split up into interest groups according to the students’ own enthusiasms and desires to explore. The central figures will include Whitman, Dickinson, Pater, Hopkins, Yeats, Frost, William Carlos Williams, H. D., Wallace Stevens,...

AFRICAN TREE

ENGL 4098: Special Topics in the Novel, Post-1900 - Afro-diasporic Novels (Spring 2020)

This course considers how the legacy of slavery, including the Middle Passage, is rewritten in 20 th and 21 st century novels in English. We will consider not only how that history is remembered, but how its legacy lives on. We’ll begin with slave narratives to consider the narrative form...

TYPEWRITER

ENGL 3088: Major Authors of Post-1900 Literature in English - T.S. Eliot and Company (Spring 2020)

T.S. Eliot wrote several of the most important poems of the twentieth century. He was also a major critic, a playwright, and a publisher. His work remains a troubling mix of brilliantly subversive “raids on the unconscious” and deeply conservative reactions against modernity. To read Eliot is to encounter other...

PEOPLE ON PHONE AND LAPTOP

ENGL 2058: Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Literature (Spring 2020)

A hybrid form, graphic narrative combines the innovative visual/verbal framework of the cartoon and the longer storytelling form of fiction and nonfiction. A term first coined in the US in 1978, graphic narratives have become a mainstay popular genre. This course will examine its popular appeal and also how this...

TEEPEE

ENGL 4717: Native American and Indigenous Studies Capstone Seminar (Spring 2020)

This seminar provides a selective overview of historic and contemporary trends in Native American and Indigenous Studies academic scholarship as well as contemporary Indigenous methodologies and theory. The readings cover a range of Eurowestern disciplines and Indigenous epistemic practices, allowing the course to be accessible to students from a range...

Middle East

ENGL 4697: Special Topics in Multicultural and Ethnic American Literature - Postcolonial Studies and the Middle East (Spring 2020)

This course explores European and American discourses, ideologies, and representations of the Middle East from the 19th century to the present. How, we ask, was a region as ethnically, religiously, culturally, and linguistically diverse as it is vast rendered amenable to the European imperial enterprise and its more recent, American...

woman writing

ENGL 3267: Women Writers - Romantic-Era Women Writers (Spring 2020)

In this course we will read a variety of women writers from the 18th and 19th centuries. Romanticism (1750-1832) is often called the Age of Revolution because it overturned all kinds of traditional, conformist thinking as well as sparking revolutions in America and France. During this dynamic era, writers challenged...

mine

ENGL 4026: Special Topics in Genre, Media, and Advanced Writing - Millennial Ecofictions (Spring 2020)

This course considers a selection of recent American ecofictions in the context of posthuman and postnatural theory. These ecofictions rework the category of “nature” outside of a realist narrative framework but still take their bearings from notions of environmental degradation and sustainability. In the wake of the new geological epoch...

IRON MAN COMIC BOOK

ENGL 3856-002: Topics in Genre Studies - Comic Books (Spring 2020)

Our world is undergoing exponential change. No one knows what is coming ahead, but we all know it is coming fast. We live in what Yuval Noah Harari calls “an age of bewilderment.” Art is one way of understanding our situation. Overwhelmingly, the art of the moment is comics. Comics...

Ginger Rogers

ENGL 3246: Topics in Popular Culture - American Film Comedy (Spring 2020)

This class will engage in close readings of thirteen or fourteen American feature films and a number of shorts that best typify distinctly American genres like screwball comedy, or American treatments of standard genres like slapstick comedy, farce, satire, and black comedy. We will trace several motifs - the romantic...

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