Undergraduate Academics
Literature
The literature discipline introduces students to the history of written culture from antiquity to the present day, as well as to methods of research and textual analysis. Course offerings cover major works in English and other languages in addition to literary criticism and theory. Some courses focus on individual authors (Virgil, Shakespeare, Woolf, Murakami); others, on literary genres (comedy, epic), periods (medieval, postmodern), and regional traditions (African American, Iberian). Students are encouraged to employ interdisciplinary approaches in their research and to divide their time between past and present, as well as among poetry, prose, drama, and theoretical texts.
Literature 2025-2026 Courses
-
First-Year Studies—Year | 10 credits
LITR 1100
Where and how did democratic ideals emerge? Throughout the history of the world, hierarchies of power and privilege have predominated. Democracy is not the norm. Democracy is the bizarre exception. But 3,000 years ago, ancient Greek epic poetry began to undermine the moral validity of political hierarchies and tyrannical abuses of power. From the eighth through the fifth centuries BCE, ancient Greek literature cultivated ideals of humanity, equality, and justice vital to sustaining humane, egalitarian values, norms, and institutions. Over centuries, ancient Greeks came to understand—as by now we must—that not only individuals but also groups, both large and small, can wield power tyrannically by using violence and intimidation to subjugate others and silence dissenting opinions. Reading selected works of Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Herodotus, Euripides, Plato, and others, we will investigate how and why the Greeks developed democratic ideals, why they themselves failed to attain them, and how we might do better. This course is reading- and writing-intensive. We will also encounter ideas that are uncomfortable and troubling in various predictable and unpredictable ways. The course is designed for anyone who welcomes open-minded critical inquiry and is eager to read and calmly discuss texts that are challenging, both intellectually and emotionally. In fall, students will meet weekly with the instructor for individual conferences; in spring, individual conferences will be biweekly.
Faculty
-
First-Year Studies—Year | 10 credits
LITR 1012
Note: No prior knowledge of Japanese is required.
The American conception of Japan is largely based on the pop culture that it exports. This is not a politically neutral process. Many of the things that we think of when we hear “Japan”—like anime and manga, ramen and sushi, Pokémon and Zelda, mecha suits and Godzilla, and kawaii (cute) culture—are products consciously pushed abroad by the Japanese government since the 1980s as part of the “Cool Japan” initiative. Many of these modern-day markers of “Japanese-ness” were also shaped by the US occupation of Japan after World War II and other transnational encounters within the Japanese Empire and its aftermath. In this course—through close examination of a range of Japanese media objects, including but not limited to anime and manga, the modern serial novel, cinema, architecture, food, fashion, and video games—we will consider how pop culture forms and circulates around the globe. In the process, we will think through issues of genre and form in transnational media reception: Why are the samurai film and the Hollywood western the same, actually? What can J-Horror tell us about the concerns of postwar Japanese society? Why are cyberpunk stories always set in Japan, and what is the state of “techno-orientalism” today? Biweekly in fall, students will alternate between individual conferences with the instructor and small-group activities that will include transition to college, research sessions, literary and media analysis strategies, and academic writing/editing workshops. Biweekly in spring, students will meet with the instructor for individual conferences.
Faculty
-
First-Year Studies—Year | 10 credits
LITR 1029
This course will explore the powerful hold that Paris has exerted on literature since the early 19th century, when the city established itself as a world capital of artistic, intellectual, and political life. Our guiding focus will be on how writers use the geography of Paris—streets, monuments, markets, and slums—to depict the complexities of modern life, posing the urban landscape as a place of revolution and banality, alienation and community, seduction and monstrosity. We will pay particular attention to the ways in which the representation of the city allowed writers to question the form and function of literature itself. We will begin with the 19th-century French novelists and poets who made Paris the site of epic literary struggles, including Honoré de Balzac, Charles Baudelaire, Victor Hugo, Guy de Maupassant, and Émile Zola. We will see how the city provided fertile ground for the aesthetic experimentations of 20th-century literature in works by Guillaume Apollinaire, André Breton, Colette, and Georges Perec. Our study will explore writers who have recorded the often violent and traumatic history of modern Paris, such as Marguerite Duras, Leïla Sebbar, and Patrick Modiano. Finally, we will analyze how Paris is experienced as a cosmopolitan space in works about expatriates, immigrants, exiles, and travelers from authors as varied as Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, James Baldwin, Alain Mabanckou, Faïza Guène, and Enrique Vila-Matas. Beyond our focus on close readings of literary texts, students will have the opportunity to read some historical and theoretical considerations of Paris and also watch several films where Paris features prominently. Class will entail close readings and discussions of primary texts in English translation and focus on how to offer critical analyses of works in seminar discussions and class essays. Biweekly in fall and spring, students will alternate between individual conferences with the instructor and small-group activities that will include writing workshops, screenings, and field trips.
Faculty
-
First-Year Studies—Year | 10 credits
LITR 1079
“For women, then, poetry is not a luxury,” Audre Lorde writes. “It is a vital necessity of our existence.” Poetry, Lorde continues, helps to bring about an understanding of what is, as well as to imagine what might be. This understanding of literature as shedding new light on existence and as sketching new possibilities held a profound political importance for the tradition of Black women’s writing. This seminar seeks to study that tradition in the 20th century, from writing on the difficulties of Jim Crow, through mid-century responses to the Cold War and the heyday of Black Feminism, to the responses to neoliberal multiculturalism at the century’s close. We will consider Black women’s prose, poetry, drama, and more by authors such as Pauline Hopkins, Zora Neale Hurston, Ann Petry, Gwendolyn Brooks, Toni Cade Bambara, Toni Morrison, and more. Course work will include short analytic essays and a longer research-based conference project. In fall, students will meet weekly with the instructor for individual conferences; in spring, individual conferences will be biweekly.
Faculty
-
First-Year Studies—Year | 10 credits
LITR 1053
Comedy is a startlingly various form that operates with a variety of logics. Comedy can be politically conservative or starkly radical, savage or gentle, optimistic or despairing. In this course, we will explore some comic modes—from philosophical comedy to modern film—and examine a few theories of comedy. A tentative reading list for fall will include a Platonic dialogue (the Protagoras), Aristophanes, Plautus, Juvenal, Lucian, Shakespeare, Molière, some Restoration comedy, and Fielding. In spring, students may read Jane Austen, Stendhal, Dickens, Mark Twain, Oscar Wilde, Kingsley Amis, Philip Roth, and Tom Stoppard. We will also look at film and cartoons. Both semester reading lists are subject to revision. In fall, students will meet weekly with the instructor for individual conferences; in spring, individual conferences will be biweekly.
Faculty
-
Open, Small Lecture—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 2008
This lecture will focus on the interpretation and appreciation of the most influential lyric poetry written in English in the tumultuous decades between the French Revolution and the Reform Act of 1832. Over the course of two generations, Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats invented a new kind of autobiographical poem that largely internalized the myths they had inherited from literary and religious traditions. The poet’s inward, subjective experience became the inescapable subject of the poem—a legacy that continues to this day. We will explore ways in which the English Romantic poets responded to the political impasse of their historical moment and created poems out of their arguments with themselves, as well as their arguments with one another. The preeminent goal will be to understand each poet’s unique contributions to the language.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 3621
This course will read Romanticism as a precursor to our own era of postmodernism. The starting point will be the French Deconstructionist reading of Friedrich Schlegel and his short-lived journal, Athenaeum (1798-1800). As Maurice Blanchot argues, among the many contradictions “out of which romanticism unfolds—contradictions that contribute to making literature no longer a response but a question,” perhaps most significant is that “romantic art, which concentrates creative truth in the freedom of the subject, also formulates the ambition of a total book, a sort of perpetually growing Bible that will not represent but, rather, replace the real.” We will take Blanchot’s insight as our guide in reading an otherwise disparate collection of texts ranging across Romantic time and space. From Germany, besides Schlegel’s aphorisms, we will read Hoffmann’s The Sandman (1816) and The Golden Pot (1814); from Great Britain, Scott’s The Heart of Midlothian (1818), Byron’s Don Juan (1819), and Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818); from Poland, Potocki’s The Manuscript Found in Saragossa (1814); from Russia, Pushkin’s The Captain’s Daughter (1836) and Eugene Onegin (1833), Lermontov’s A Hero of Our Time (1841), and Gogol’s Dead Souls (1842); and from the United States, Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter (1850) and Melville’s Moby Dick (1851). Along the way, we will periodically depart from the 19th century to emphasize the ways that Romanticism underpins what we take to be our own postmodernist thought. As a response to Don Juan, we will read Tom Stoppard’s 1993 play, Arcadia. Together with Frankenstein, we will read Jeanette Winterson’s 2019 novel, Frankissstein: A Love Story; and will end on a ship-faring note, as we juxtapose Moby Dick with Maggie Nelson’s gender- and genre-bending The Argonauts (2015).
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 3069
At the start of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Hester Prynne is punished by the Puritans of Boston for having a child out of wedlock. She is forced to stand in the town square wearing a dress with a scarlet A on it. As she endures the stares of the crowd around her, Hester thinks back to her past life in England. It will be seven years before she comes to terms with this moment and still longer before she gains full perspective on her life. In her struggle, Hester is like a series of figures in the classic coming-of-age novel, who go from a period in their lives when their perspectives are limited to a time when their experiences lead them to a much deeper self-awareness of who they are in relation to the world at large. In varying degrees, this struggle is one we all go through. This course will trace the history of coming-of-age literature in 19th-century America, generation by generation, from the pre-Civil War years, through the Civil War, to the prosperous 1880s and 1890s and the turn of the 20th century. The kind of personal education that lies at the heart of these books is captured by the narrator of Moby Dick, when he observes, “A whale ship was my Yale College and my Harvard.” In addition to Hawthorne, the authors we will study include Frederick Douglass, Herman Melville, Mark Twain, Henry James, and Edith Wharton. In a country that divided over slavery and had to overcome its Puritan origins, the novels we study reflect the conflicts of American society whether rooted in race, class, or the role of women. What unites these books is that, in the end, the self-awareness of their central figures takes on a life of its own. By the time we last see them, they know who they are.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 3175
Julian of Norwich is the earliest known woman to author a text in English. In 1373, at the age of “thirty and a half,” Julian fell severely ill. On the brink of death, she experienced a series of visions, which she recorded as her “short text” or Shewings. Sometime after her recovery, she chose a life of solitude as an anchorite; and for the next 40 years, Julian contemplated and elaborated on her visionary experiences. The result is her “long text,” A Revelation of Divine Love, which has been called “the most important work of Christian reflection in the English language.’ The journey of this course will begin with Julian’s Shewings and end with her Revelation—her writings serving as a lens to various traditions of medieval mysticism. Along the way, we will encounter the “intellectual” and “erotic” threads of mysticism woven throughout Jewish, Christian, and Islamic spirituality—from the philosophy of Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Solomon ibn Gabirol (Avicebron), and Augustine of Hippo to the poetry of Ibn Arabi, Dante, and Jewish mystics. Next, we will examine how monks and mendicants such as Richard of St. Victor, William of St. Thierry, and Bonaventure understood the intersection of human and divine love, how the knowledge of self leads to the knowledge of God. We will then pause at the fraught waystation of mysticism and heresy to examine how Meister Eckhart’s and Marguerite Porete’s teachings of the soul’s total union with God were met with institutional hostility and violence. Finally, we will land once again in medieval England. After surveying Julian’s English contemporaries, we will embark on a sustained close reading of her Revelation of Divine Love—now with preparation to see how she understood the purpose of her visionary experiences: “Who showed it thee? Love. What showed he thee? Love. Wherfore showed he it thee? For love.”
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 3219
When we consider some of the “great” works of early modern English poetry—Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene, William Shakespeare’s Sonnets, and John Milton’s Paradise Lost, for example—we are often tempted to treat them as the product of unique inspiration and individual craft when they are, in fact, heavily invested in creating and sustaining collaborative relationships. The Faerie Queene and Paradise Lost were published with dedicatory poems by Sir Walter Ralegh and Andrew Marvell, respectively, that stand as some of the best interpretive readings of each work to date; Shakespeare’s Sonnets reflect the intimacies of patron-client relationships, which forcefully shaped the early modern literary marketplace. Indeed, framing poetic authorship in the early modern period as the work of aloof geniuses can obscure the poetic forms that honored creative communities: verse letters, epitaphs, country house poems, song settings, and unfinished works “completed” after a poet’s death, to name a few. In this course, we will explore collaborative authorship in early modern English poetry. Besides reading selections from The Faerie Queene, Shakespeare’s Sonnets, and Paradise Lost, we will survey poetry that illuminates the community ethics of these major texts: Spenser’s friendly verse epistles to his friends and desperate dedications to his patrons; works circulated through the poetic circles fostered by Queen Elizabeth I and Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke; and the poems written by royalists and revolutionaries to promote new kinds of community during the English Civil War. Along the way, we will also encounter poems that show the unique characteristics of early modern English literary collaboration: Ben Jonson’s verses for his adopted poetic “sons,” Mary Sidney’s heartbreaking completion of her late brother’s psalm translations, and George Herbert’s partnership with the experimental bookbinders Anna and Mary Collett. Course work will include a collaborative “journal” project that will help us explore what it means to read and write in relationship with one another.
Faculty
-
Open, Lecture—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 2057
Masques are the “forgotten genre” of English Renaissance drama, rarely appearing on syllabi or studied with the same frequency as works for the popular stage. Yet, during the first half of the 17th century, they exerted a political and artistic influence that arguably exceeds that of the plays that Shakespeare and company were staging at the Globe Theatre. Masques were bombastic entertainments performed for and by the Stuart court. They were studies in excess, with lavish sums spent upon well-documented costumes and scenery. They were commentaries on the state of things in England, where playwrights like Ben Jonson could speak directly (and critically) to the royalty themselves. They were avant-garde experiments, where creatives like the architect Inigo Jones could reinvent the visual style of theatre for centuries to come and where women—at least aristocratic women—could break ground by performing in dramatic roles at a time when male actors alone occupied the popular stage. In this course, we will dive into the hidden world of the early modern English masque. We will read and discuss Ben Jonson’s pioneering works that established many masque conventions, including The Masque of Blackness, The Masque of Queens, and Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue. We will discuss how masques offered a vehicle for dramatists to comment on current political affairs, colonial projects, and even salacious “true crimes” while reading George Chapman’s The Memorable Masque and John Milton’s innovative masque about chastity and liberation, Comus. Finally, we will encounter texts that reveal just how far these entertainments influenced literary culture more broadly. This will include Shakespeare’s The Tempest, which shows him trying to “keep up” with masque innovations, as well as Margaret Cavendish’s “The Contract,” a romance that details the complex traditions of attending masques—and the thrilling possibility that audience members might become spectacles themselves.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 3133
The alternate history, which imagines a different present or future originating in a point of divergence from our actual history—a branching point in the past—is both an increasingly popular form of genre fiction and a decreasingly disreputable form of analysis in history and the social sciences. While fictions of alternate history were, until very recently, only a subgenre of science fiction, celebrated American literary novelists Philip Roth and Michael Chabon published well-regarded novels of alternate history—The Plot Against America and The Yiddish Policeman’s Union, respectively—earlier in this century. Similarly, while counterfactual historical speculation is at least as old as Livy, academic historians have, until recently, scorned the practice as a vulgar parlor game; but this is beginning to change. In the early 1990s, Cambridge University Press and Princeton University Press both published intellectually rigorous books on alternate history and counterfactual analysis in the social sciences; Cambridge more recently published a volume analyzing alternate histories of World War II; and in 2006, the University of Michigan Press published an interesting collection of counterfactual analyses, Unmaking the West. This course will examine a number of fictions of alternate history, some reputable and some less reputable, and also look at some of the academic work noted above. We shall attempt to understand what it might mean to think seriously about counterfactuals and about why fictions of, and academic works on, alternate history have become significantly more widespread. The course will also grapple with what makes an alternate history aesthetically satisfying and intellectually suggestive rather than ham-fisted, flat, and profoundly unpersuasive.
Faculty
-
Sophomore and Above, Seminar—Fall | 5 credits
LITR 3355
This course will examine representations of pregnancies—both planned and unplanned—in the history of the anglophone novel. From the origins of the English novel in the 18th century through to today, pregnancies signify inheritance, adherence or deviance from gender norms, and metaphorical links between childbirth and birthing a novel. Over the course of the semester, we will consider why this is so. What can fictional pregnancies reveal about the novel as a literary form and about our changing cultural and medical understanding of sex and reproduction? This course will approach the topic of the pregnancy plot from three different perspectives: narratological, historical, and political. In terms of narrative, we will ask how the pregnancy plot emerged as a defining feature of the English novel and how representations of pregnancy have changed over time with changing ideas of gender and sexuality and new reproductive technologies. How does a pregnancy, especially an unwanted pregnancy, drive forward the plot and illuminate character, especially as it relates to gender? What role does the pregnancy plot play in relation to the more widely discussed marriage plot, and how does one narrative strand influence the other? Novels we will consider include works by Thomas Hardy, William Faulkner, Octavia Butler, Margaret Atwood, and Maggie Nelson. Focusing on works from the 19th through 21st centuries, we will look at historical changes in how people understood and experienced conception, gestation, termination, and labor and delivery. From a political perspective, we will examine contemporary theories of reproductive justice to consider the past from the vantage of our present moment.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Year | 10 credits
LITR 3713
In 1904, poet W. B. Yeats and playwright and translator Lady Gregory launched what would become the first state-subsidized anglophone national theatre, which they called the Abbey Theatre. They did so, in their words, to prove to the world that “Ireland is not the home of buffoonery and of easy sentiment…but the home of an ancient idealism.” Aiming to correct centuries of misrepresentation, the Abbey Theatre set out to show the world that Ireland could be a cultural center despite the fact that it was considered, at the time, culturally backwards, a thorn in the side of the British Empire, and a victim of unrelenting years of famine and economic impoverishment. More than a century later, the Irish arts scene now produces acclaimed novelists, poets, playwrights, filmmakers, and actors—from Sally Rooney to Martin McDonagh to Saoirse Ronan. In fall, we will track this development: beginning in the 19th century, with the rise of the Anglo-Irish novel written by a settler class of Protestant writers; through the Irish Literary Revival, which championed the Irish language, myths, and arts; and then through revolution, partition, and civil war leading to the founding of the Irish Free State. In spring, we will follow the new independent Ireland through years of repressive Catholic control and censorship of the arts and through the late 20th century and early 21st, which saw an economic boom and bust known as the “Celtic Tiger”—the Good Friday Agreement establishing peace in Northern Ireland, as well as a series of public referendums legalizing divorce, gay marriage, and, eventually, abortion. In Ireland, literature and politics are tightly intertwined, with writers fighting as revolutionaries and works of art directly fueling public events such as the Easter 1916 Rising. The course will include readings of playwrights such as J. M. Synge, Samuel Beckett, Brian Friel, and Marina Carr; novelists such as Oscar Wilde, James Joyce, and Edna O’Brien; and poets such as Yeats, Eavan Boland, and Seamus Heaney. We will also explore notable films by Irish filmmakers. Some of the themes that will be discussed throughout the year include the relationship between tradition and modernity; competing ways of knowing through folklore, religion, and science; imperialism and anti-imperialism; sectarianism and partition; and changing ideas of gender and sexuality.
Faculty
-
Open, Lecture—Year | 10 credits
LITR 2033
The performance of a play is a complex cultural event that involves far more than the literary text upon which it is grounded. First, there is the theatre itself—a building of a certain shape and utility within a certain neighborhood of a certain city. On stage, we have actors and their training, gesture, staging, music, dance, and costumes alongside scenery and lighting. Offstage, we have the audience, its makeup, and its reactions; the people who run the theatre and the reasons why they do it; and finally the social milieu in which the theatre exists. In this course, we will study these elements as a system of signs that convey meaning (semiotics)—a world of meaning whose lifespan is a few hours but whose significances are ageless. The plays of Shakespeare will be our texts. Reconstructing the performances of those plays in the England of Elizabeth I and James I will be our starting place. Seeing how those plays have been approached and re-envisioned over the centuries will be our journey. Tracing their elusive meanings, from within Shakespeare’s Wooden O to their adaptation in contemporary film, will be our work.
Faculty
-
Open, Lecture—Year | 10 credits
LITR 2213
What if the roots of English literature were not wholly English? How were the origins of Italian literature pollinated with Arabic philosophy? This course will explore these questions and more through two foundational texts—Dante’s Divine Comedy and Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Often read in isolation, we will instead study these works together—in historical, intellectual, and comparative context—charting how the high tide of Italian literary culture reached the shores of medieval England, how Dante’s vernacular epic of the afterlife helped shape Chaucer’s vernacular epic of earthly life. In fall, we will focus on Dante, treating his formation as a poet and thinker as a window into the formation of Italian literature itself. We will explore his engagement with the Occitan, Sicilian, and Tuscan lyric traditions; his reading of Aristotle through Arabic and Latin commentators; and his response to the burgeoning—and fraught—political and intellectual climate of medieval Florence. Having immersed ourselves in the life, times, and mind of Dante, we will then turn to the Comedy itself, reading all three canticles—the Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso—with special attention to Dante’s evolving understanding of love and desire. In spring, we will turn to Chaucer and his role in inaugurating vernacular English literature through a rich, self-conscious dialogue with Dante and the other “corone,” or crowns, of Italian literature—Boccaccio and Petrarch. Chaucer’s travels to Genoa and Florence in 1373 and Milan in 1378 were formative for him as a person and poet. At a time when hardly anyone in England had heard of Dante, Boccaccio, or Petrarch, Chaucer read them in the original and responded to them by creating new literary forms. In doing so, Chaucer fashioned a future English literary audience; in a real sense, he wrote for us. We will read Chaucer’s House of Fame (a direct response to the Comedy) and Canterbury Tales, pairing each tale with its Italian analogues and influences. Throughout the year, we will practice comparative reading and source study, mapping how ideas and literary forms travel across, cultures, languages, and borders. In the process, we will encounter the profoundly interconnected intellectual world of Dante’s and Chaucer’s Middle Ages.
Faculty
-
Sophomore and Above, Seminar—Year | 10 credits
LITR 3750
Contemporary poems have many unique virtues; in them, we recognize our moment in time refracted in its own cultural and linguistic idiom. Contemporary poems exist at the near edge of literary tradition, where the past ends, and our poetic inheritance becomes a source of invention, a live wire. For a working poet, contemporary poetry offers the most readily available bridge to the resources of the art. All great works of poetry have, of course, the capacity to inspire fresh imaginings. But the shock of the new is often obscured or dulled by canonization—as if poems, too, could be cordoned off in a museum or placed behind glass by their official greatness. But the reputation of the contemporary is always up for grabs. Contemporary poems await our judgment and interpretation. They also pose a significant challenge to our critical faculties. We are, almost by definition, less equipped to evaluate the new, which seeks to establish the standard by which it will be judged. In this seminar, we will read a sequence of the instructor’s “elective affinities” from contemporary poets Elizabeth Bishop, May Swenson, Amy Clampitt, James Merrill, A. R. Ammons, John Ashbery, Geoffrey Hill, Mark Strand, Jay Wright, Seamus Heaney, Louise Glück, and Anne Carson. In conference, students will be encouraged to focus on, or discover, their own elective affinities among contemporary poets and select favorite poems to contribute to our final set of readings for class discussion.
Faculty
-
Sophomore and Above, Seminar—Year | 10 credits
LITR 3197
It is often in the realm of fantasy, speculative fiction, experimental writing, or the humble notebook that writers chart a path of escape out of foreclosed futures. These are stories that directly address the limits of our ability to know, observe, or believe the many claims of so-called reality. When statements of fact become obstacles to social change, or when political exigencies occlude alternative possibilities for the future, or when mere accuracies drain us of our living vitality, there are certain kinds of stories that can take us on a detour into a more vivid sense of truth. The time-knot responds to the dead-end by diagramming new ways of envisioning space, movement, causality, interdependence, mutation, and evolution. Discussions of literature will be supplemented by a selection of theoretical texts that offer useful terms for conceptualizing how literary form might escape closure; for example, the time-knot, mimetic faculty, fugitive pose, indigenous storytelling, undercommons, pedagogies of crossing, nomadic subjectivity, virtual, and finitude. Authors will include Walter Benjamin, Gayatri Spivak, Dipesh Chakrabarty, Gerald Vizenor, Shigehisa Kuriyama, Francois Jullien, Naoki Sakai, Patricia Clough, M. Jacqui Alexander, Fred Moten, Eve Tuck, and Alexis Pauline Gumbs. Discussions of literature will be accompanied by a series of weekly, short-form writing experiments that will invite students to work practically and creatively with the concepts and literary tropes of the course. Primary literature will include: Italo Calvino’s If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler, Michael Ende’s The Neverending Story, Orson Scott Card’s Speaker for the Dead, Octavia Butler’s Dawn, Samuel R. Delany’s Dhalgren, Colson Whitehead’s The Intuitionist, Louise Erdrich’s The Painted Drum, Darcie Little Badger’s Elatsoe, Tommy Orange’s There There, Marlen Haushofer’s The Wall, Sinan Antoon’s The Corpse Washer, W.G. Sebald’s Vertigo, Yōko Ogawa’s The Memory Police, Can Xue’s Frontier, Samantha Harvey’s Orbital, Ted Chiang’s Exhalation, Karen An-hwei Lee’s The Maze of Transparencies, Ruth Ozeki’s A Tale for the Time Being, David Hinton’s Existence: A Story, Han Kang’s The White Book, Roland Barthes’ Mourning Diary, Joan Didion’s Notes to John, and Annie Ernaux’s The Years.
Faculty
-
Sophomore and Above, Seminar—Year | 10 credits
LITR 3526
“Reader, I married him. A quiet wedding we had,” Charlotte Brontë’s title character exclaims in the concluding chapter of Jane Eyre. Jane’s wedding may be quiet, but the steps leading up to her marriage with a man who once employed her as a governess are dramatic; and so are the steps leading to marriage in the other classic marriage-plot novels with which this course begins. From Jane Austen’s Emma, to Henry James’ The Portrait of a Lady, the novels we will read in fall reflect the thinking of the heroine of George Eliot’s Middlemarch, who observes, “Marriage is so unlike everything else. There is something even awful in the nearness it brings.” Nothing, in short, is “conventional” about the 19th century English and American classics of Austen, Brontë, Dickens, Eliot, and James that we will study. They lead directly to Edith Wharton’s turn-of-the-century novel, The House of Mirth, and the modern fiction we take on in spring, which ranges from Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby to Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar and Sally Rooney’s Normal People. Love and romance are at the heart of the books that will dominate our reading, but so are the laughs and heartaches that are part of any serious relationship.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3084
What kind of work is care work? Is it a form of labor? Love? Is caretaking a social or individual responsibility? And who pays for it? This course will question the role of caretaking in modern societies through a range of literary and sociological texts. We will begin with the premise that caretaking is both fundamental to a functioning society and also grossly devalued. This devaluation is marked by the poor pay associated with caretaking professions, as well as the gendering and racializing of caretaking responsibilities. This course will draw on recent writing in disability studies, gender studies, political theory, and ethnic studies—as well as literary works including novels, poems, comics, and memoirs—to consider the experience of the men and women performing care work and those who require their care. We will discuss terms, such as “self-care,” which have become commonplace but that we often encounter as marketing concepts that have been stripped of their origins. This course will aim to situate the concept of caring into historical, political, and aesthetic contexts. Readings and assignments will encourage students to imagine the future of care work in a changing society. This course will involve community engagement with the Wartburg Adult Care Community in Mount Vernon, New York.
Faculty
-
Open, Large seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3434
The surrealist movement emerged in France in the early 1920s, when a group of writers questioned the narrative of reason, progress, and tradition that had long defined European culture. In exploring the potential of the unconscious, the surrealists endeavored to create an avant-garde artistic and political revolution motivated by desire, madness, and dreams. The concepts and techniques developed by the French surrealists would go on to have an enormous influence on writers, artists, and filmmakers across the globe. This course will explore some of the key ideas, practices, and figures in the history of surrealism. The first portion of the semester will focus on the group’s origin in France. We will read several of the movement’s foundational texts and study many of the strategies that the surrealists invented for artistic creation. From there, we will examine the legacy of surrealism in a variety of locations—from Latin America and the Caribbean to Egypt, Japan, and the United States—in order to see how the movement’s message of revolution and nonconformity has been adopted and adapted by writers and artists up through the present day. Topics addressed will include automatic writing, dream work, mad love, the marvelous, games and chance, urban flânerie, gender and surrealism, anticapitalist and anticolonial surrealism, and reality itself. Although our first focus will be on the literature of surrealism, this will be a very interdisciplinary course; students will see how surrealists made use of many types of media and expression, including drawing, painting, collage, photography, and film. For conference, students will follow the collective model of the movement and pursue small-group projects that will carry on the creative and critical legacy of surrealism.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3145
While Dostoevsky is often praised for the universality of his themes, in his own day he was a working journalist deeply engaged with the issues facing his own contemporary Russia. This course will seek to contextualize a few of Dostoevsky’s major works by reading them as they were originally written: as part of an ongoing and often heated debate with his contemporaries. We will begin with the distinction between the 1840s and the 1860s that Dostoevsky made famous first in Notes from Underground (1864), then moving on to read Crime and Punishment (1866) and Demons (1872) in the context of the intense debates that drove the latter decade. Our particular focus will be Russian nihilism, above all as it was defined by Turgenev and Chernyshevsky, and also the “woman question,” especially as developed in the works of two women writers, Nadezhda Khvoshchinskaya and Sofiia Kovalevskaya. We will finish with Nabokov’s extravagant send-up of Chernyshevsky and Russian nihilism in The Gift (1938).
Faculty
-
Open, Lecture—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 2037
This course will explore the literary culture of the British Isles during the lifetime of the great Anglo-Irish satirist Jonathan Swift. In his use of humor, shock, whimsy, and quicksilver irony to convey moral outrage and personal pique, Swift has influenced every major satirist who came after him—from Mark Twain to John Oliver. Swift also lived through remarkable times. Between his birth in 1667 and his death in 1745, Britain grew from a war-torn cultural backwater to a military and colonial powerhouse with a stable, if corrupt, political system, several of the world’s great cities, and a sense of national identity that has remained largely consistent to this day. At the same time, the marketplace of literature and ideas in Britain grew increasingly diverse and fractious, as popular fiction appealed to newly literate readers and as authors from the social and colonial margins—including Ireland, a colony within the British Isles—began to make itself heard in print. Swift exemplified many of these developments in his life and work, at once mocking and immortalizing the crime-ridden squalor of London; attacking the English exploitation of Ireland, even as he formed part of the Anglican establishment in Dublin; and honing a form of ironic invective that enlightened, amused, and offended readers of all backgrounds and orientations. This course will cover each of Swift’s major works, from Gulliver’s Travels—both a classic of science fiction and a devastatingly effective satire—to his outrageous scatological poetry and his scathing writings on Ireland, including the notorious Modest Proposal, as well as introducing students to a host of other distinctive voices from this raucous period in English letters. We will, for example, become acquainted with the undisputed master of the heroic couplet, Swift’s friend Alexander Pope, who made satirical poetry of undying power and beauty out of the most unlikely of subjects—such as landscape design and a purloined lock of hair. Other writers under consideration will include England’s first professional female author, Aphra Behn; the second Earl of Rochester, a wildly transgressive poet of sexual libertinism; satirical playwrights such as William Wycherley; the founders of lifestyle journalism, Joseph Addison and Richard Steele; John Gay, author of The Beggar’s Opera, a musical comedy with a cast of thieves and sex workers; and the visual satirist William Hogarth. We may also consider a few modern landmarks of literary and cinematic satire with an 18th-century heritage by writers and directors such as Kurt Vonnegut, Joan Didion, Stanley Kubrick, and Boots Riley.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3140
Before the 18th century was dubbed the Enlightenment, it was widely known as the Age of Criticism—a term that captures the growing cultural influence, not least in the English-speaking world, of largely secular commentary on society, politics, morality, and the arts. Suddenly, everyone was a critic, eager to express their opinions in one of the many sites for conversation and debate that were blossoming across Britain and its colonies. Those sites included institutions with brick-and-mortar locations—coffeehouses, taverns, and private clubs—but also the virtual forums made possible by the increasingly inescapable medium of print; parallels to our own social media-dazed era are easy to draw. With the Age of Criticism came a new kind of celebrity: the public intellectual. No man of letters was more renowned for his powers of criticism, conversation, and what he called “clubbability” than Samuel Johnson (1709-84), the gravitational center of our course. In addition to compiling the first English dictionary of note, Johnson was a gifted and hugely influential literary theorist, poet, political commentator, biographer, and satirist, as well as a legendarily pithy maker of small talk and a master of the English sentence. His overbearing but strangely lovable personality was preserved for posterity by his friend and disciple, James Boswell, who in 1791 published The Life of Johnson, the greatest and most entertaining of all literary biographies, which records, among much else, Johnson’s near-blindness, probable Tourette’s Syndrome, and selfless love of cats. Now, after the tercentenary of his birth, this seminar will reappraise Johnson’s legacy within a broad cultural survey of the British Enlightenment. Along with Johnson, Boswell, and other titans of 18th-century prose, such as Edward Gibbon, David Hume, and Adam Smith, we will consider international writing on race and slavery (Olaudah Equiano, Ottobah Cugoano, and the abolitionist poets), the French and American revolutions (Edmund Burke), and women’s rights (the Bluestocking Circle and Mary Wollstonecraft). We will also sample the period’s fiction (Horace Walpole’s lurid Gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto, and Frances Burney’s coming-of-age saga, Evelina), comic drama (Oliver Goldsmith’s uproarious She Stoops to Conquer), and personal writing (Burney’s diary, Boswell’s shockingly candid London Journal), as well as Celtic literature (James Macpherson), visual art (Joshua Reynolds), and the poetic innovations that laid the groundwork for Romanticism (Thomas Gray). We may also glance at Johnson’s reception and influence over the centuries—for instance, in the work of Virginia Woolf.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3321
What is in a feeling, and what does it do? This course will explore how medieval writers understood the emotions—what they called the passions—as forces that move the soul, affect the mind, transform the body, and raise pressing questions about free will and moral responsibility. Because the passions operate at the threshold of the soul and body, virtually every domain of medieval thought had something to say about them—from poetry and medicine to philosophy and contemplative devotion. For instance, physicians like Peter of Spain diagnosed lovesickness and melancholia as genuine medical conditions. Philosophers like Aquinas compiled catalogues of the passions—from joy and sorrow to fear and courage to despair and hope—and offered phenomenological descriptions of how the passions arise through both embodied sensation and ensouled experience. Occitan troubadours like Arnaut Daniel and Italian lyric poets like Cavalcanti and Dante could write of love as the bondage of mind and will or the source of ethical nobility and spiritual freedom. (Dante did both.) Mystics like Walter Hilton and Julian of Norwich explored how emotional awareness could be refined into subtler modes of spiritual attention and how, at the same time, the inmost experience of divine love could be expressed as ecstatic, passionate feeling. In addition to the themes and writers above, this course will examine how the passions open onto questions of habitus and disposition—how repeated action shapes how we feel and how the way we repeatedly feel shapes our action. We will also consider how emotion is at the center of vice and virtue—how the quality of our feeling determines the quality of our inner life and our life with others. With the help of contemporary scholarship, we will approach the medieval passions with historical and phenomenological methods of analysis. Through these lenses, we will see how the passions in the Middle Ages serve as a unique site for comparative intellectual history, spanning disciplines and bridging ancient, medieval, and modern traditions. At the same time, studying the medieval passions offers something more personal: the chance to recover forms of feeling and attention from the past that might expand the borders of our own in the present.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3195
When the iconoclastic poet John Milton published his masterpiece, Paradise Lost (1667), he had already lost the fight he had spent most of his adult life waging: A king had returned to the throne of England, and the radical energy of the English Civil War seemed to have consumed itself. Why write Paradise Lost—an epic poem about the biblical Creation, the Fall of Man, and the dignity of human freedom—at all? Among other things, Milton’s epic is an act of faith: faith in religious and political imagination; faith in the revolutionary potential of love; and, ultimately, faith in poetry as a means to express his passionate “great argument.” In this course, we will take our time reading all of Paradise Lost, considering its revisionary relationship with the Bible, its complex gender politics, its experimental poetic form, and its bold engagement with scientific advances and philosophical problems. Along the way, we will consider a range of theoretical approaches that literary scholars have taken to comprehend a text that one early reader described as a book that “contains all things.” Finally, we will explore the influence of Paradise Lost on later works, such as William Blake’s mystic poetry, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, and Toni Morrison’s Paradise.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3080
Whose voices matter in Shakespeare’s plays? In this class, we will draw upon diverse perspectives in the fields of voice and sound studies to explore questions of identity and agency, performance and play, in the works of Shakespeare. We will read and watch stagings of Hamlet, Henry VIII, The Tempest, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Twelfth Night, and Macbeth—texts that insist upon understanding voices as powerful, though unpredictable, modes of expression. As we do so, we will learn about the history of early modern dramatic performance. What did voices sound like in the acoustic spaces of 16th/17th-century London’s indoor and outdoor theatres, and how are modern writers and artists responding to the “voice” of Shakespeare today? How did psychology, religion, and stories about witches combine to shape Shakespeare’s theatre music? How might familiar characters and plots become unfamiliar when we approach them through the context of children’s performance? We will also consider the ways that Shakespearean voices challenge our expectations about the performance of gender, race, class, and neurotypicality. “Mad” songs, hyper-drag theatrics, curses, jokes, and choked-up confessions: the variety of speech acts in Shakespeare’s works underscores the wide scope of perspectives that his plays offer. Readings from modern voice theorists like Nina Sun Eidsheim, Amanda Weidman, and Patricia Akhimie will help guide our discussion of the resonant social problems and possibilities that Shakespeare’s voices continue to speak, sing, and shout about.
Faculty
-
Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3061
One group of 19th-century realist novels, also some later novels with apparently comparable ambitions, are sometimes imagined to have been, in part, responses to things that seemed unprecedented; for example, an acceleration of historical velocity, the diffusion of new forms of economic life, the rise of new classes and pressures on older elites, increasing urbanization, and the apparently sudden and disorienting arrival of something denoted by a word that dated from the beginning of the 19th century: modernity. The ambitions of these novels included description and assessment, in the title of one of them, of “the way we live now.” In roughly the same period, a new social science—sociology—appeared, comparably ambitious and also attempting the description and analysis of new forms of social order and social change. Since some of the novelists and sociologists appear to have been engaged in a comparable project, it may be rewarding to read them together—which is what we will accomplish in this course. Our syllabus may include Balzac’s Père Goriot, Stendhal’s The Red and the Black, Dickens’ Bleak House, Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, Ellison’s Invisible Man, Marx and Engels’ The Communist Manifesto, and Du Bois’ The Souls of Black Folk. Whether it proves particularly profitable to read these writers in the same course is to be determined. Nevertheless, we will certainly read some good books.
Faculty
-
Sophomore and Above, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits
LITR 3246
Whitman famously embraced the internal contradictions in his poetry, asserting, “I contain multitudes.” His statement was also prophetic—and not only with regard to his large and diverse progeny among poets writing in English. Whitman’s impact on Hispanic and Portuguese literary culture began with José Martí’s 1887 essay, “El poeta Walt Whitman,” written by the exiled Cuban poet after hearing Whitman give a public reading. Published in Argentina’s La Nación, Martí’s appreciation incepted a cult of Whitman that spread throughout Latin America, Spain, and Portugal. Whitman became the formative influence on Chilean poet Pablo Neruda (who said of Whitman, “He taught us everything.”), Mexican poet-critic Octavio Paz and Peruvian poet César Vallejo. The Spanish poet Federico García Lorca included an “Ode to Walt Whitman” in his sequence, “Poet in New York”; and multiple strains in Whitman’s poetry can be found under the various “heteronyms” created by Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa, who not only “contained multitudes” but also provided each of his multiple selves with a name, a biography, and a unique body of literary work. In this seminar, we will begin with Whitman’s major works before turning to the poetry of Pessoa, Lorca, and Neruda, among others. While observing Whitman’s influence on his Luso-Hispanic heirs, we will also strive to appreciate them on their own terms for the imaginative power and originality of their contributions to modern poetry—which have made them national and international figures in their own right. Poems written in Spanish will be read in opposing-page translations, allowing those familiar with the language to make reference to the original.
Faculty