DEPARTMENTOF ENGLISH ENGLISHDEPARTMENTCOURSEDESCRIPTIONS SPRING2012 English270‐286designedfornon‐majors ENGL270‐001 WORLDLITERATURE MWF11:15‐12:05 ZHU (Cross‐listedwithCPLT270) Selectedmasterpiecesofworldliteraturefromantiquitytopresent.Formoreinformation,please contacttheinstructor. ENGL270‐501 WORLDLITERATURETTH11:00‐12:15 GUO (Cross‐listedwithCPLT270) (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) SameasENGL270‐001 ENGL282‐001 FICTION MWF8:00‐8:50 STAFF Fictionfromseveralcountriesandhistoricalperiods,illustratingthenatureofthegenre.Formore information,pleasecontacttheinstructor.Prerequisites:ENGL101and102orequivalent FICTION MWF9:05‐9:55 STAFF ENGL282‐002 SameasENGL282‐001 ENGL282‐003 FICTION MWF12:20‐1:10 STAFF SameasENGL282‐001 ENGLE282‐092 FICTION S9:00‐2:00 WRIGHTJT SameasENGL282‐001 ENGLE282‐801 FICTION TTH5:30‐8:15 STAFF SameasENGL282‐001 ENGLE282‐851 FICTION TTH5:30‐8:45 ELLIOTT SameasENGL282‐001 ENGL283‐001THEMESBRITISHWRITING MW11:15‐12:05,Th9:30 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) FallinginLoveAgain?FromMuchAdotoHighFidelity Astudyofclassictextscentrallyconcernedwithrelationsbetweenthesexes.Literaryworkswill beexaminedwithregardtosuchissuesasmarriageanddivorce,boredomandimagination,self‐ absorptionandfeltconnectionwithothers.Themesofthissortwillcomeintoplayalongwith questionsofgenreandsocialcontext.WritersstudiedmayincludeWilliamShakespeare,Jane Austen,GustaveFlaubert,HenryJames,HenrikIbsen,KateChopin,GeorgeBernardShaw,Walker Percy,andNickHornby.Pertinentfilmsmaybeincludedinclassdiscussionsandassignments. ENGL283‐002THEMESBRITISHWRITING MW11:15‐12:05,Th11:00 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐003THEMESBRITISHWRITINGMW11:15‐12:05,Th12:30 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐004THEMESBRITISHWRITINGMW11:15‐12:05,Th2:00 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐005THEMESBRITISHWRITINGMW11:15‐12:05,Th3:30 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) 1 SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐006THEMESBRITISHWRITINGMW11:15‐12:05,F9:05 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐007THEMESBRITISHWRITINGMW11:15‐12:05,F12:20 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐008THEMESBRITISHWRITINGMW11:15‐12:05,F1:25 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐009THEMESBRITISHWRITING MW11:15‐12:05,F10:10 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐010THEMESBRITISHWRITING MW11:15‐12:05,F3:35 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐011THEMESBRITISHWRITING MW11:15‐12:05,Th9:30 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐012THEMESBRITISHWRITING MW11:15‐12:05,F9:05 RHU (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐013THEMESBRITISHWRITING TTH3:30‐4:45 STAFF (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐019THEMESBRITISHWRITINGMWF9:05‐9:55 STAFF (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐020THEMESBRITISHWRITINGTTH2:00‐3:15 STAFF (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL283‐001 ENGL283‐501THEMESBRITISHWRITING MW8:40‐9:55 RHU (RestrictedtoSouthCarolinaHonorsCollegeStudentsOnly) FallinginLoveAgain?FromMuchAdotoHighFidelity Astudyofclassictextscentrallyconcernedwithrelationsbetweenthesexes.Literaryworkswill beexaminedwithregardtosuchissuesasmarriageanddivorce,boredomandimagination,self‐ absorptionandfeltconnectionwithothers.Themesofthissortwillcomeintoplayalongwith questionsofgenreandsocialcontext.WritersstudiedmayincludeWilliamShakespeare,Jane Austen,GustaveFlaubert,HenryJames,HenrikIbsen,KateChopin,GeorgeBernardShaw,Walker Percy,andNickHornby.Pertinentfilmsmaybeincludedinclassdiscussionsandassignments. ENGL284‐001 DRAMA MW2:30‐3:45 MCALLISTER Thisgeneraleducationcourseintroducesstudentstothemajorandminordramaticgenres (tragedy,comedy,moderndrama,melodrama,etc.)andtheatricalstyles(naturalism,epictheater, absurdism.etc.)inwesterntheater.Ourguidingquestionswillbe:Whydrama?Whydowe transform“socialdramas”intoaestheticdramas?Whatpurposesdotheseculturalperformances serveatspecifichistoricalmomentsandindifferentrepresentationalmodes?Thecourseisdivided intofiveunits.UnitoneintroducesstudentstoVictorTurner’stheoryof“socialdrama”(breach, crisis,redressivemachinery,reconciliation),asitappliestoimportant,oftenlife‐changingeventsin ourlives.Inunittwo,wedefinethe(5)basicstructuralelementsofaestheticdrama(plot, character,idea,language,givencircumstances),andexploretheemergenceoftragedyandcomedy intheclassicalandearlymodernperiods.Forunitthree,wefocusonstructuralandcultural analysesofmoderndramas,whileunitfourturnstostructuralandculturalinvestigationsof postmoderndrama.Unitfiveclosesthecoursewithabrieflookatdramaticdevelopmentinfilm, television,andnewmedia,especiallymulti‐platformstorytelling.Classassignmentswillinclude 2 threeshortcriticalresponsepapers,unitexams,ateamfinalproject,activeparticipationinclass discussions,andanoralpresentationconsistingofa“socialdrama”narrative,ashortplaywright presentation,amonologueperformance,ORa“transmedia”presentation. ENGL285‐001THEMESAMERICANWRITINGMW10:10‐11:00,Th9:30VANDERBORG (Designedfornon‐majors) "AmericanCyborgs" Ifyoulovesciencefiction,considerthiscourse.Wewillstudythefigureofthe"cyborg"‐‐ahuman beingaugmentedbytechnology‐‐inrecentAmericanshortstories,novels,andfilms.Arebody‐ changingtechnologiesperceivedasbeneficialormalevolentinthesetexts,asliberatingorlimiting? Someofthecyborgsandcyber‐creatureswe'llstudy:humanswithmechanicalimplantsand surgicalalterations,humanssurroundedbymachines,humansincyberspace,"recordings"ofa humanmind,humanswithtechnologicallyalteredmemories,andhuman‐likelifeformsthatseem partlyorganic,partlymechanical.We'llreadtextsbyIsaacAsimov,PhilipK.Dick,AnneMcCaffrey, OrsonScottCard,M.T.Anderson(Feed),andScottWesterfeld(Uglies);we'llwatchBladeRunner andAliens.Courserequirementsincludeapaper,amidterm,afinalexam,acollageassignment,and unannouncedquizzes. ENGL285‐002THEMESAMERICANWRITINGMW10:10‐11:00,Th11:00VANDERBORG (Designedfornon‐majors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐003THEMESAMERICANWRITINGMW10:10‐11:00,Th8:00VANDERBORG (Designedfornon‐majors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐004THEMESAMERICANWRITINGMW10:10‐11:00,Th2:00VANDERBORG (Designedfornon‐majors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐005THEMESAMERICANWRITINGMW10:10‐11:00,Th3:30VANDERBORG (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐006THEMESAMERICANWRITING MW10:10‐11:00,F9:05VANDERBORG (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐007THEMESAMERICANWRITING MW10:10‐11:00,F10:10VANDERBORG (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐008THEMESAMERICANWRITING MW10:10‐11:00,F11:15VANDERBORG (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐009THEMESAMERICANWRITING MW10:10‐11:00,F12:20VANDERBORG (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐010THEMESAMERICANWRITING MW10:10‐11:00,F1:25VANDERBORG (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐001 ENGL285‐011THEMESAMERICANWRITINGMWF11:15‐12:05 STAFF (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) ReadingavarietyofAmericantextsthatexemplifypersistentthemesofAmericanculture.Formore information,pleasecontacttheinstructor. ENGL285‐012THEMESAMERICANWRITINGTTH8:00‐9:15 STAFF (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐011 ENGL285‐013THEMESAMERICANWRITINGTTH11:00‐12:15 STAFF (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐011 3 ENGL285‐014THEMESAMERICANWRITINGTTH12:30‐1:45 STAFF (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐011 ENGL285‐501THEMESAMERICANWRITING MW2:30‐3:45 VANDERBORG (RestrictedToSCHonorsCollegeStudentsOnly) "AmericanCyborgs" Ifyoulovesciencefiction,considerthiscourse.Wewillstudythefigureofthe"cyborg"‐‐ahuman beingaugmentedbytechnology‐‐inrecentAmericanshortstories,novels,andfilms.Arebody‐ changingtechnologiesperceivedasbeneficialormalevolentinthesetexts,asliberatingorlimiting? Someofthecyborgsandcyber‐creatureswe'llstudy:humanswithmechanicalimplantsand surgicalalterations,humanssurroundedbymachines,humansincyberspace,"recordings"ofa humanmind,humanswithtechnologicallyalteredmemories,andhuman‐likelifeformsthatseem partlyorganic,partlymechanical.We'llreadtextsbyIsaacAsimov,PhilipK.Dick,AnneMcCaffrey, OrsonScottCard,M.T.Anderson(Feed),andScottWesterfeld(Uglies);we'llwatchBladeRunner andAliens.Courserequirementsincludeapaper,amidterm,afinalexam,acollageassignment,and unannouncedquizzes. ENGLE285‐300THEMESAMERICANWRITING W5:30‐8:15 JONES (DesignedforNon‐EnglishMajors) SameasENGL285‐011 ENGLE285‐851THEMESAMERICANWRITING MW5:30‐8:30 STAFF (Acceleratedsessionstarts03/12‐04‐23) (FinalexamsfollowtheColumbiacampusfinalexamschedule) SameasENGL285‐011 ENGL286‐001 POETRY MWF9:05‐9:55 STAFF Poetryfromseveralcountriesandhistoricalperiods,illustratingthenatureofthegenre.Formore information,pleasecontacttheinstructor.Prerequisites:ENGL101and102orequivalent ENGL287‐001AMERICANLITERATUREMWF9:05‐9:55 STAFF (DesignedforEnglishmajors) AnintroductiontoAmericanliteraryhistory,emphasizingtheanalysisofliterarytexts,the developmentofliterarytraditionsovertime,theemergenceofnewgenresandforms,andthe writingofsuccessfulessaysaboutliterature. ENGL287‐002AMERICANLITERATUREMWF10:10‐11:00 STAFF (DesignedforEnglishMajors) SameasENGL287‐001 ENGL287‐003AMERICANLITERATURETTH9:30‐10:45 STAFF (DesignedforEnglishMajors) SameasENGL287‐001 STAFF ENGL288‐001 ENGLISHLITERATUREI MWF11:15‐12:05 (DesignedforEnglishMajors) AnintroductiontoEnglishliteraryhistory,emphasizingtheanalysisofliterarytexts,the developmentofliterarytraditionsovertime,theemergenceofnewgenresandforms,andthe writingofsuccessfulessaysaboutliterature.Prerequisites:ENGL101and102orequivalent. ENGL288‐002 ENGLISHLITERATUREI MWF2:30‐3:20 STAFF (DesignedforEnglishMajors) SameasENGL288‐001 ENGL288‐003 ENGLISHLITERATUREI TTH11:00‐12:15 STAFF (DesignedforEnglishMajors) SameasENGL288‐001 ENGL288‐004 ENGLISHLITERATUREI TTH2:00‐3:15 STAFF (DesignedforEnglishMajors) SameasENGL288‐001 4 ENGL288‐501 ENGLISHLITERATUREITTH12:30‐1:45 (DesignedforEnglishMajors) (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsOnly) RICHEYE In this version of English 288, we will cover the spectrum of British literature in two formats. In the first half, we will assess the vulnerability of the hero and the transformation of epic form beginning with the Anglo-Saxon poem, Beowulf (in translation), continuing with Milton’s Renaissance epic, Paradise Lost and Mary Shelley’s gothic novel, Frankenstein, and culminating with Philip Pullman’s contemporary reassessment of this tradition in The Golden Compass. In the second half, we will explore the interconnections between love and property—first in Shakespeare’s comedy, As You Like It, second in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and finally in E.M. Forster’s modern British novel, Room with a View. Course Requirements: Daily analytical quizzes on the assigned reading, one Oxford English Dictionary Assignment, one two-page paper on Paradise Lost, two five page papers, a midterm, and a final exam. Course Outcomes: We will be able to articulate the differences between genres (whether epic poem, comedy, or novel) and situate each literary form within its larger historical context. We will gain an awareness of the way words change across time and be able to assess these transformations. We will become skilful in analytical argument as we practice this verbally in class discussion and increasingly more accomplished in our analytical writing. Finally, we will be able to assess with critical awareness and elegance the transformations that occur in the hero across time as well as in the property of love. All English courses 300 and above require ENGL 101, 102, and one course between ENGL 270‐ 292 SCHC158‐501 RHETORIC MW4:00‐5:15 ERCOLINI (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) SCHC158‐502 RHETORIC TTH11:00‐12:15 SMITH (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) SCHC322H‐501 PROSEM:BLACKSCWRITERS TTH12:30‐1:45 ALAO (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) ThiscourseexaminesliteraturebyandaboutAfricanAmericansinSouthCarolina.Wewillstudy howwritersimaginethestateanditsdistinctivehistoryandcultureaswellastheinfluenceofthe regionontheirwritingmoregenerally.Readingswillbedrawnfromavarietyofhistorical momentsandgenres,includingautobiography,novels,poetry,andchildren’sliterature.Wewill alsoexplorelargerquestionsofsouthernidentityandplaceinrelationtotheUpstate,Midlands, andLow‐countryareasofthestate. SCHC322I‐501 PROSEM:FREEDOMTRAINS TTH11:00‐12:15 TRAFTON (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) FreedomTrains Anexplorationofthethemes,motifs,andliteraryexpressionsoftheideaoffreedominAfrican Americanliterature.TextswillincludeDavidWalker,AppealtotheColoredCitizensoftheWorld, FrederickDouglass,NarrativeoftheLifeofFrederickDouglass,HarrietJacobs,IncidentsintheLife ofaSlaveGirl,andBarackObama,DreamsfrommyFather. SCHC350K‐501THEAVANT‐GARDE:FROMFUTURISMTOFLARFTTH9:30‐10:45GLAVEY (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) PROSEM:HOLOCAUSTINAMERICA MW2:30‐3:45CLEMENTI SCHC350T‐501 (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) "Remembering,ImaginingandTeachingtheHolocaustinAmerica” Thiscoursefocusesonthewayinwhichwriters,filmmakers,artistsandculturalinstitutions (museums,schools,etc.)havecontributedtotheconstructionofanindelible“Holocaustmemory” inAmericasincetheendofWWII.WewillstudytherepresentationsoftheHolocaustthrougha varietyofmediaandgenres:documentaries,featurefilms,museumexhibits,oralhistoriesand someoftheclassicsofHolocaustliterature(memoirs,fiction,andcomics).Themainconcernofour explorationisnot“how”(or“why”)thisatrociousgenocidehappened,butinwhatwaysuch untellableexperiencescanbetoldthroughthearts.Andiftheycanbetold.Aselectionofsecondary sourceswillillustratethehistoricalcontextoftheHolocaustandenrichourdiscussionswith interestinganddiscomfortingquestionsfromtheperspectiveofliterarytheory,genderstudies, philosophy,andmore. 5 SCHC352O‐501PROSEM:JOHNDRYDEN&HISCONTEMPORARIESTTH3:30‐4:45SHIFFLETT (RestrictedtoSCHonorsCollegeStudentsonly) "JohnDrydenandHisContemporaries."StudyofthegreatestEnglishpoetandliterarycriticofthe seventeenthcentury,incompanywiththeleadingmoral,political,andscientificthinkersofhisage. Writerstobeconsidered‐‐inadditiontoDryden‐‐includeThomasHobbes,JohnLocke,JohnMilton, RobertBoyle,andGeorgeSavile,FirstMarquisofHalifax.Coursetobeconductedinthemannerofa seminar,withsomemeetingsheldintheDepartmentofRareBooks&SpecialCollections,Thomas CooperLibrary,andatermpaperinvolvingoriginalarchivalresearch. ENGL309‐001 TCHWRITINGONE‐TO‐ONEMWF10:10‐11:00STOWE The study of theories and pedagogy of individualized writing instruction with intensive writing practiceincludinghands‐onone‐on‐onesessions.Recommendedforprospectivewritingteachers. ENGL360‐001 CREATIVEWRITING MWF9:05‐9:55 STAFF Workshopcourseonwritingoriginalfiction,poetry,drama,andcreativenonfiction.Formore information,pleasecontactinstructor. ENGL360‐002 CREATIVEWRITING MWF11:15‐12:05 STAFF SameasENGL360‐001 ENGL360‐003 CREATIVEWRITING TTH11:00‐12:15 STAFF SameasENGL360‐001 ENGLE360‐300 CREATIVEWRITING MW5:30‐6:45 BARILLA SameasENGL360‐001 ENGL380‐001 EPICTOROMANCE TTH2:00‐3:15 GWARA (Cross‐listedw/CPLT380) Comprehensiveexplorationofmedievalandotherpre‐Renaissanceliteratureusingtexts representativeoftheevolutionofdominantliteraryforms. TTH12:30‐1:45 SHIFFLETT ENGL381‐001 THERENAISSANCE (Cross‐listedw/CPLT381) AsurveyofEuropeanliteratureatthethresholdofthemodernworld,1300‐1700,with considerationgiventoancientauthorswhoservedtoinspiretheRenaissancemovement.Ancient authorstobestudiedarelikelytoincludeCicero,Horace,Virgil,Ovid,Seneca,andLucan.Modern authorstobestudiedarelikelytoincludePetrarch,Valla,Pico,Vives,Erasmus,More,Machiavelli, Ariosto,Castiglione,Rabelais,Spenser,Montaigne,Sidney,Shakespeare,Cervantes,Jonson, Corneille,Milton,andDryden.Requirementsarelikelytoincludetwoexamsandoneresearch paper. ENGL383‐001ROMANTICISM TTH11:00‐12:15 FELDMAN Inparttobetterunderstandourworldandourvaluesandinparttoenjoysomedynamitepoetryand prose,wewillexploreworksbywritersoftheRomanticerainBritain.Wewillreadselectionsfrom writerssuchasJaneAusten,WilliamWordsworth,MaryRobinson,SamuelTaylorColeridge,Charlotte Smith, William Blake, Jane Taylor, Walter Scott, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, JohnKeats,MaryTighe,LordByron,andFeliciaHemans.Wewillexaminethewaysinwhichliterature respondedtovariousforces,includingpoliticalevents(suchastheAmericanandFrenchrevolutions), aesthetictheory,theabolitionistmovement,thefeministmovement,socialclassissues,innovationsin the book trade, and an increasingly literate public. Classes are taught by the lecture/discussion method.Therewillbetwoshortessays,amidtermandafinalexam. ENGL385‐001 MODERNISM TTH11:00‐12:15 GLAVEY ThiscoursewillserveasanintroductiontotheliteratureofAnglo‐American‐‐and,toamuchlesser extent,European‐‐modernism.Ourfirstgoalwillbetounderstandthespecificfeaturesofparticular early‐twentieth‐centurytexts:howtheyareputtogetherasworksofart,whattheyattemptto achieve,howtheymayormaynotchallengecontemporaryreaders.Fromtherewewillconsider howtheyrespondto,reflect,andresisttheprocessesofmodernization.Oneofourprimary questionswillbe:Whatdoesitfeelliketobemodern?Inthinkingthroughwhatliteraturetellsus aboutthisquestion,wewillconsidertheepistemological,psychological,andsociologicalfacetsof modernityasreflectedandrewrittenbytheparticularformalandthematicchoicesofourauthors. AuthorscoveredwillincludeDjunaBarnes,AndreBreton,T.S.Eliot,ErnestHemingway,Langston Hughes,ZoraNealeHurston,JamesJoyce,MinaLoy,RichardBruceNugent,EzraPound,Marcel Proust,GertrudeStein,WallaceStevens,WilliamCarlosWilliams,andVirginiaWoolf.Requirements forthecourseincludeanessay,acreativeproject,andafinalexam. 6 ENGL387‐001INTROTORHETORICMW2:30‐3:45 ERCOLINI (cross‐listedwithSPCH387) Thetermrhetoric,particularlyincontemporarypoliticaldiscourse,isoftenusedtomeanempty speech(opposedtoaction)designedtodressthingsuptolookbetterthantheyare(deception aboutactualconditionsorissues).Rhetoric,however,hasarich,complex,andimportanthistory thatdistinguishesresponsiblediscoursefromthatwhichisdeceptive,shallow,andunethical. Rhetoriccanfurthermorebecharacterizedasanorientation,awayofseeing,awayofknowing. Thiscourseexaminesthisrobustfieldofrhetoricinthreedimensions:thehistoryofrhetoric (particularlyancientGreekandRoman)asasetofpractices,pedagogies,andwaysofencountering theworld;rhetoricasacriticalpracticeofreading,interpretation,andintervention;andfinallyas thesiteofvariouscontemporarytheoriesanddebatesontherelationbetweenpersuasionand knowledge,thenatureoflanguageanditsinfluence,andhoweverydaycultureandexperience performimportantpoliticalandsocialfunctions. ENGL388‐001HISTLITCRITICISM/THEORYTTH2:00‐3:15 STEELEM RepresentativetheoriesofliteraturefromPlatothroughthe20thcentury. ENGL389‐001 THEENGLISHLANGUAGE MWF10:10‐11:00 KELLER (Cross‐listedwithLING301) IntroductiontothefieldoflinguisticswithanemphasisonEnglish.CoverstheEnglishsound system,wordstructure,andgrammar.ExploreshistoryofEnglish,Americandialects,social registers,andstyle. STAFF ENGLE389‐300 THEENGLISHLANGUAGE MW5:30‐6:45 (Cross‐listedwithLINGE301.300) SameasENGL389‐001 ENGL391‐001 GREATBOOKSWESTWORLDII TTH12:30‐1:45 BRODER (Cross‐listedwithCPLT302.001) EuropeanmasterpiecesfromtheRenaissancetothepresent. ENGL404.001 ENGLISHDRAMATO1660 TTH12:30‐1:45 GIESKES TheDramaofShakespeare’sContemporaries Thisclasswillprovideanintroductiontotherichfieldofnon‐Shakespearean earlymoderndrama.Shakespearewasfarfromtheonlyplaywrightworking intheperiodandwewillreadaselectionofplaysthatheldthestagealongside andincompetitionwithhisworks.WewilllikelyreadplaysbyKyd,Marlowe, Dekker,Marston,Middleton,Jonson,WebsterandFord—writerswhosecareers coincidewithorcomeafterShakespeare’s.Someeffortwillbemadetosituate theseplaysintheliterary,social,andtheatricalcontextsinwhichtheyappeared. Threepapers,anEarlyEnglishBooksexercise,andafinalexam. ENGL405‐001 SHAKESPEARE’STRAGEDIESTTH9:30‐10:45 RICHEY Intimacy in Shakespeare’s Tragedy In this course we will explore how intimacy in Shakespeare’s tragedies unfolds at the intersection of theology, property, and poetry. Because religion, law, and art drew on characteristic “properties” to define the terms of their discourse, “property” operated on multiple levels and involved identity, behavior, and the more material ground we now associate with it. Initially, aristocratic marriages were designed to make a match that would unite wealthy families and preserve property through lines and legacies, not for romantic purposes. But during Shakespeare’s time (and, we could argue, by way of Shakespeare himself), intimacy was beginning to change. We will accordingly think about how Shakespeare’s work renegotiates theological, legal, and poetic ground, quite literally, to open up new forms of intimacy. Learning Outcomes: From the first class we will employ critic Harry Berger Jr.’s “Making Interpretation Manageable” to strengthen our understanding of speech/writing as both self-representation and a representation of the other. We will watch cinematic clips in class (and out) to observe what aspects of intimacy are being developed and what are being withheld, since performance can open up interpretation as well as delimit it in a specific direction. We will think about what we gain and what we lose in moving from text to production. We will also look into how the properties of performance are altered by different quartos and printings. Finally, we will wonder what specific “properties” intimacy has and why it traverses the ground between the transcendent on the one hand, the earthy and material on the other. We will first read Shakespeare’s Roman tragedies, Titus Andronicus, Romeo and Juliet, and Julius Caesar, and then we will turn to his great, late tragedies, Hamlet, Othello, Lear, and Macbeth. Last of all, we will consider A 7 Winter’s Tale, a tragic-comedy, which provides a final twist on tragedy and another glimpse of intimacy in the final phase of Shakespeare’s career. Requirements, Word of the Day, Action News, one critical abstract, daily quizzes, Two 5-7 Papers (one critical, one open). ENGL406‐001 SHAKESPEARE’SCOM/HIST MW8:40‐9:55 MILLER In this class we will read six or seven of Shakespeare’s comedies, probably The Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Much Ado About Nothing, As You Like It, and Twelfth Night. Class will follow a discussion format with participation emphasized. Assignments for the course will include two critical essays (6-8 pages), a class presentation, and a class project in addition to the midterm and final. Class projects will be either individual or team assignments; a number of options will be offered, including that of staging a scene from one of the plays, or producing/adapting a scene as a video. Students who successfully complete this course will improve their ability understand Shakespeare’s language and the design of his plays. They will also improve their critical reading and writing skills. The most important objective for the class is to enhance your ability to take pleasure in the plays, whether reading them or watching a performance. ENGLE406‐300 SHAKESPEARE’SCOM&HISTMW5:30‐6:45 LEVINE ThiscourseexaminesShakespeare’scomediesandhistoriesinrelationtohistimeandtoourown. Lookingcloselyatsevenplays(AMidsummerNight’sDream,TheMerchantofVenice,RichardII,1 HenryIV,HenryV,TwelfthNightandMeasureforMeasure),we’llexaminetheinterplaybetween thesepopularplaysandtheElizabethan‐Jacobeancultureinwhichtheywereproduced,takingup suchissuesaspolitics,socialorder,gender,andfamilyrelations.Ourapproachshouldraise provocativeandimportantquestions,whichwe’llthenusetostructureclassdiscussionandwriting assignments.Twopapers,quizzes,mid‐term,andfinalexam. ENGL423‐001 MODERNAMERICANLITERATURE MW8:40‐9:55 COWART We'll sample significant American writing from roughly 1900 to the middle of the twentieth century, including work by figures such as Pound, Frost, Eliot, Stevens, Ginsberg, Stein, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Hurston, Wright, Porter, Faulkner, Cather, Nabokov, O'Connor, Salinger, Pynchon, and DeLillo.. (The following may be included if it is called for: PAPERS: Two, five pages each QUIZZES: Simple reading quiz on every assignment EXAMS: Two hour exams and a final GRADE: Daily Quizzes=10%, exams=15% each, final=20%, papers=20% each) ENGL428B‐001 AFRI‐AMERLITII:1903‐PRESTTH2:00‐3:15 ALAO (Meetsw/AFRO398B) BlackLiterature:1903tothePresent: ThisintroductorycoursesurveysAfricanAmericanliteraturefromtheearlytwentiethcenturyto thepresent.Thecourseisorganizedchronologicallyandexaminesformalandthematicconcernsof twentiethcenturyAfricanAmericanwriters.Whilewewillexaminemajorthemesandconcernsof writersduringdifferenthistoricalperiods,wewillpayparticularattentiontothethemeof migration.Usingmigrationasalens,studentswillcontemplatetherelationshipsbetweencultural productionandhistoricalphenomenasuchastheGreatMigrationandtheGreatReturnMigration. Theywillalsoexaminehowwritersinterrogaterace,gender,andclassthroughtheirexplorationof multiplelandscapesanduseofvariousgenres. ENGLJ429B‐001TOPIC/STUDIESAMERLIT:F.SCOTTFITZGERALD BUCKER (WEBCourse:SeeDistanceEd.) Prereq:Studentsmustcompleteonesophomoreliteraturecourse(282‐289)beforetakingany upperlevelcourse).Asurveyoftheauthor’sworksandcareerthrough26recordedlecturesby preeminentFitzgeraldscholarandbiographer,MatthewJ.Bruccoli. ENGL429C‐001“ComicsandtheU.S.South”TTH9:30‐10:45 WHITTED (Meetsw/AFAM398EandSOST405U) ThiscourseisascholarlystudyofthewaycomicsrepresenttheU.S.Southandexploresouthern histories,places,andidentities.Drawinguponcomicstrips,comicbooks,andgraphicnovelsfrom the1930stothepresent,ourinvestigationwillexploretherelationshipbetweenregionandnation, therepresentationofrace,class,andgenderinsoutherncomics,andthewayshistoryandmemory areprocessedthroughpersonalandcollectivetrauma.TextswillincludePogo,CaptainAmerica, SwampThing,NatTurner,Hellboy:TheCrookedMan,StuckRubberBaby,AD:NewOrleansAfterthe 8 Deluge,andtheessaycollection,ComicsandtheU.S.South.Gradeswillbebasedontwoanalytical essaysandaresearchpaper,acreativeproject,andweeklywriting/drawingassignments. ENGL429F‐001TOPICS:AMERICANBESTSELLERSTTH9:30‐10:45DAVIS AmericanBestsellers,PastandPresent WhenaworkoffictionappealstomillionsofAmericanreaders,itprobablymeetsoftenunspoken needsanddesiresgeneratedwithinagivenculturalmoment.Bestsellershaveinfluencedthetastes andpurchasinghabitsofreadersintheUnitesStatesforover150years,andtheycanteachus muchaboutwhatmatteredtoreadersatdifferentpointsinournation’shistory.Rarely uncontroversial,bestsellersacrossavarietyofgenresgainedenormouspopularityandassuch, oftenguaranteedtheirexclusionfromtheU.S.literarycanonandclassroom.Inthiscourse,wewill rectifythattrendandseekhistoricalaswellasaestheticexplanationsforthevastandoftenlasting appealofavarietyofnineteenth,twentieth,andtwenty‐firstcenturybestsellers.Readingswill rangefromnineteenth‐centurysentimentalfictiontotwentieth‐centuryPulitzerPrizewinners, fromearlydimenovelsandwesternstocontemporaryyoungadultnovelsincludingHarryPotter, Twilight,andTheHungerGames.Assignmentswillincludepresentationsandpapersonbestsellers notcoveredinthecourseaswellasbothamidtermandafinal. TTH2:00‐3:15 POWELL ENGL429S‐001 SOUTHERNWRITERSTODAY (Cross‐listedwithSOST405L) ThiscoursedrawsonrecentimaginativewritinginspiredbytheU.S.Southtoexplorewaystoday’s southernwritersrespondtoandcontinuetoshapearangeofideologiesaboutregionalexperience. This section in particular focuses on literary representations of historical moments shaping contemporary understandings of varieties of southern identity and will include guest lectures by several of the local authors studied. In addition to completing course readings in contemporary fiction and poetry, students will attend two local literary events of their choice outside of class, writetwoshortessays,participateinclassdiscussionsandothergroupactivities,anddemonstrate masteryofcoursematerialsandskillsonquizzes,amidterm,andacumulativefinalexam.Possible course texts include Lan Cao, Monkey Bridge; Casey Clabough, Confederato; Elizabeth Cox, Slow Moon;KwameDawes,Wisteria;GailGodwin,UnfinishedDesires;MichaelGriffith,Trophy;Minrose Gwin, The Queen of Palmyra; Silas House, A Parchment of Leaves; Ravi Howard, Like Trees, Walking; and Ray McManus, Red Dirt Jesus. Note: English majors and Southern Studies minors maychoosetoenrollforcreditundereitherheadingdependingontheavailabilityofseats,butthe courseisnotrestrictedtomajorsorminorsandhasnoprerequisitesotherthanEnglish101. ENGL430‐001TOPIC:FREEDOMTRAINSTTH2:00‐3:15 TRAFTON FreedomTrains:Anexplorationofthethemes,motifs,andliteraryexpressionsoftheideaof freedominAfricanAmericanliterature.TextswillincludeDavidWalker,AppealtotheColored CitizensoftheWorld,FrederickDouglass,NarrativeoftheLifeofFrederickDouglass,Harriet Jacobs,IncidentsintheLifeofaSlaveGirl,andBarackObama,DreamsfrommyFather. ENGL431‐001 CHILDREN’SLITERATURE TTH11:00‐12:15 JOHNSON ThiscourseisabroadintroductiontotheworldofcontemporaryAmericanchildren’sliterature. (Itcouldbesubtitled“TheculturalpoliticsoftheAmericanChildren’sBookWorld.”)Studentswill examinetexts,bothpicturebooksandchapterbooksthatareinsomewayrelatedtocentralideas ofandaboutAmericaandAmericansofvariousbackgrounds,experiences,andorientationstothe world.Discussiontopicswillincludethemeaningofliteraryexcellenceinchildren’sbookwriting andillustration,thepoliticsofthechildren’sbookpublishingindustry,andcurrentissuesand controversiesinthefield.Thoughtheprofessorismindfulthatmanystudentsinthiscourse areEducationstudents,studentsshouldbearinmindthatthisisanEnglishcourse. ENGL432‐001 ADOLESCENTLITERATURE MW4:00‐5:15 Readingandevaluatingrepresentativeworksappropriatefortheadolescentreader.Pleasecontact instructorformoreinformation. ENGL434‐001 ENVIRONMENTALLITERATURE TTH3:30‐4:45 BARILLA “Nature”hasinspiredapowerfulbodyofAmericanliterature,yetwhatdowereallymeanbythe term?Arehumans“natural?”Whatarethedistinctionsbetweennatureandculture?Wherearewe headed–towardecologicalapocalypse,orutopia?Thiscoursewillexplorethemoral,aesthetic,and metaphysicaldimensionsof“Nature”asanexpressionofAmericanconsciousnessandnarrative. Wewillencounterthehowlingwilderness,thetranscendent,sublimewilderness,andthe threatenedwilderness.Wewilllookatalternativelandscapesandliteraryinspirations,suchasthe pastoral,agrarianlandscapeextolledbyThomasJeffersonasthefoundationofourdemocracy. We’llconsiderNaturenotjustasaplace,butalsoasarepresentationoftheanimalsthatinhabitit. Ourapproachwillincludereadingcontemporarynovelsandfoundationalnature‐writingessays, participatinginthekindofoutdoorexplorationthatinspiredsomeofthereadings,andattempting 9 somenaturewritingofourown,allwiththegoalofunderstanding“Nature”asadynamicinterplay offorces. ENGLE437‐300WOMENWRITERS MW5:30‐6:45 CLEMENTI (Cross‐listedwithWGSTE437) Thiscourseexploresrepresentativeworksofliteratureandotherartgenresbywomen‐‐froma specifichistorical,geographicalandculturalperspective. ENGL439A‐001 TOPICS:FAST&SLOWFOODSMW2:30‐3:45 KEYSER FastandSlowFoodsinModernU.S.Literature. ThetwentiethcenturysawthetransformationofAmericanfoodtechnologies,habits,andcultures, andU.S.literaturefromthisperiodreflectsthesechanges,sometimeswithexcitement,sometimes withdisgust.Beginningwiththeturn‐of‐the‐centurymeatindustryexposé,UptonSinclair'sThe Jungle,thiscoursewillconsiderhowAmericanliteraturedepictsthenewtastesofthemodernage. Someofthetextsthatweencounterwillbewarningsabouttheeffectsofindustrialfoodonour healthandsociety,someutopicspeculationsabouthowfooddistributioncouldbemorejust,some humorouspiecesaboutthepreparationoffood,othersnostalgicforolderwaysofbeingandeating. Overthecourseofthesemester,wewillconsiderhowtheoldtruism"youarewhatyoueat"shapes themodernAmericanliteraryimagination.Assignmentsmayincluderesponsepapers,nonfiction personalfoodwritings,acomparativeclosereadingessay,andaresearchpaper. ENGL439E‐001 TOPICS/EASTRNRELG&POETRY TTH12:30‐1:45 DINGS (Cross‐listedw/RELG491P) Globalcitizenshiprequiresthatweunderstandourselvesinrelationtoourglobalneighbors.Aswe seedailyinthenews,failuretodevelopthismutualunderstandingisdisastrous.Thefactisthat mostpeoplearoundtheworldthinkandactinsomerelationshiptocorebeliefsthattheyhold;itis alsotruethatformanysocietiesaroundtheworldthesebeliefsarereligiousorgrowoutof religioustraditions.Knowledgeofthesetraditionscanleadtogreaterunderstandinganddiscovery ofsharedvalues.ThiscoursewillexploreHinduism,Taoism,Confucianism,andBuddhismandtheir relationshiptooneanother.Aplannedsequeltobeofferedinthespring2013semesterwillexplore Judaism,Christianity,andIslam.Studentsmaytakeeithercourseorboth.Studentswillreadabout eachreligionaswellasreadcanonicalandcontemporarypoetrythatlooksatlifethroughthe particularworldviewinfocus.Gradingwillbedeterminedbyfourtests,homeworkassignments, qualityandregularityofclassperformance,andonefinal12‐15pagepaper. ENGLE450‐300 ENGLISHGRAMMARTTH5:30‐6:45 DILLARDA (Cross‐listedwithLING421) MajorstructuresofEnglishmorphologyandsyntax;roleoflanguagehistoryandsocialandregional variationinunderstandingcontemporaryEnglish. ENGL455‐001 LANGUAGEINSOCIETY TTH3:30‐4:45 CHUN (Cross‐listedw/LING440) Studyoflanguagepatternswithinandacrosssocialgroupsandcontexts,focusingonhowlanguage reflectsandcreatesspeakers'memberships,relationships,andidentities.Specialattentionwillbe giventodialectsandstylesinU.S.settings. ENGL457‐001 AFRICAN‐AMERICANENGLISH TTH11:00‐12:15 WELDON (Cross‐listedwithLING442,AFAM442,andANTH442) Thiscourseisdesignedtointroducestudentstothestructure,history,anduseofthedistinctive varietiesofEnglishusedbyandamongmanyAfricanAmericansintheu.s.Inthiscourse,wewill examinesomeofthelinguisticfeaturesthatdistinguishAfrican‐AmericanEnglish(AAE)fromother varietiesofAmericanEnglish.Wewillconsidertheoriesregardingthehistoryandemergenceof AAE.WewilllookattherepresentationofAAEinliterature.Wewillexaminethestructureand functionofvariousexpressivespeecheventsintheAfrican‐Americanspeechcommunity.Andwe willconsiderattitudinalissuesregardingtheuseofAAE,especiallyastheyrelatetoeducationand theacquisitionofStandardEnglish. ENGL460‐001ADVANCEDWRITING MWF11:15‐12:05 STAFF Extensivepracticeindifferenttypesofnonfictionwriting.Formoreinformation,pleasecontactthe instructor. ENGL460‐002 ADVANCEDWRITING TTH12:30‐1:45 GREER Inthisclass,wewillwritethreemajoressays.Iwillalsoassignin‐classwritingtohelpprepare studentstocomposetheirmajorwork.Thoughthesetopicsmayvary,thethreeessayswill probablyconsistofthefollowing:acomparisonandcontrastpaper,adefinitionpaper,anda persuasiveessay.Studentswillbeexpectedtomeetwithmethroughoutthesemesterforone‐on‐ 10 oneeditingsessions.Grammarisparamount.Iassumethatstudentswillhavemasteredbasic writingandsowillbereadytotacklethedeeperaspectsofprose,i.e.,thecommunicationofideas whichareprofound,unique,andengaging. ENGL460‐003 ADVANCEDWRITING TTH2:00‐3:15 SMITH Theoverarchingaimofthiscourseistohelpstudentsdeveloptheirabilitiesaswriters.Toward thatend,thecoursewillinvolvereadingabout,discussing,analyzing,andextensivelypracticing variousformsofnon‐fictionwriting. ENGL460‐004 ADVANCEDWRITING TTH3:30‐4:45 STAFF SameasENGL460‐001 ENGL461‐001 THETEACHINGOFWRITIN TTH3:30‐4:45 STAFF Theoryandmethodsofteachingcompositionandextensivepracticeinvariouskindsofwriting. Recommendedforprospectivewritingteachers.Formoreinformation,pleasecontactthe instructor. ENGL462‐001 TECHNICALWRITING MWF12:20‐1:10 STAFF Preparationforandpracticeintypesofwritingimportanttoscientists,engineers,andcomputer scientists,frombrieftechnicalletterstoformalarticlesandreports.Formoreinformation,please contacttheinstructor. ENGL463‐001 BUSINESSWRITING MWF9:05‐9:55 STAFF Extensivepracticeindifferenttypesofbusinesswriting,frombriefletterstoformalarticlesand reports.Formoreinformation,pleasecontacttheinstructor. BUSINESSWRITING MWF10:10‐11:00 STAFF ENGL463‐002 SameasENGL463‐001 ENGL463‐003 BUSINESSWRITING MWF11:15‐12:05 STAFF SameasENGL463‐001 ENGL463‐004 BUSINESSWRITING TTH8:00‐9:15 STAFF SameasENGL463‐001 ENGL463‐005 BUSINESSWRITING TTH3:30‐4:45 STAFF SameasENGL463‐001 ENGLE463‐092 BUSINESSWRITING S9:00‐2:00 PARROTT SameasENGL463‐001 PARROTT ENGLE463‐093 BUSINESSWRITING S9:00‐2:00 SameasENGL463.001 ENGLE463‐300 BUSINESSWRITING M5:30‐8:15 STAFF SameasENGL463‐001 ENGLE463‐301 BUSINESSWRITING T5:30‐8:15 STAFF SameasENGL463‐001 ENGL464‐001 POETRYWORKSHOP TTH9:30‐10:45 DINGS (PREREQ:ENGL360) Someexperienceinwritingpoetryatthe360levelishighlyrecommended.Studentswillfocuson themostimportanttechniquesinvolvedinthewritingofpoetrybycloselyreadingavarietyof professionalpoemsandbywritingpoemswhichusethosetechniques.Theaimhereistocreate art,notjustfulfillassignments.Tothatpurposestudentsareencouragedtofindanddeveloptheir owncontentaswellasindividuatetheiruseoftechniquesinagrowthtowardtheirownunique styleandvoice.Poemswillbereadanddiscussedinclassbythestudents’peers.Gradingisdone byportfolio;significantrevisionoforiginaldraftsisexpected. ENGL465‐001 FICTIONWORKSHOP TTH2:00‐3:15 STAFF (Pre‐requisiteEnglish360) WorkshopinwritingfictionforstudentswhohavesuccessfullycompletedENGL360. 11 ENGL470‐001 RHETORICOFSCIENCE&TECHNOLOGY MW4:00‐5:15GEHRKE (Cross‐listedwithSPCH470) RhetoricofScienceandTechnology Whichformsofcommunicationframeourunderstandingsofscienceandnewtechnologies?Why dodifferingkindsofdiscoursesandmodesofengagementaffectsciencepolicyandpublic perceptionwhileothersdonot?Howislanguage,bothspokenandwritten,usedwithinscientific communitiestomakeandjustifyclaims?Whatusesoflanguageenablesomescientificclaimsto gainprominencewhereothersfail?Thiscoursewillgrapplewiththesequestionsbyintroducing studentstothestudyoftherhetoricofscienceandtechnology.Wewillbeginwithanintroduction torhetoric,followedbyastudyofhowcommunicationandrhetoricbuildknowledge.Wewillthen examinepreviouscasestudiesinsciencecommunicationandrhetoric.Finally,eachstudentwill takeupaspecificprobleminrhetoricofscienceandtechnologyandpursueitsrelationshiptoa currentpubliccontroversy.Insodoing,studentswillproduceoriginalresearchbaseduponstudy andobservationofcontemporaryevents. ENGL473‐001 FILM&MEDIATHEOR&CRITCSM TTH9:30‐10:45 COOLEYH (PreReq:FILM240orConsentofInstructorCross‐listedw/FILM473) Theoryandcriticismoffilmandmediafromthe1910stothepresent.Considersarangeofcritical approachestoanalyzingwhatdifferentformsofaudio‐visualmediadotoandfortheaudiences theyaddressandtheworldstheydepict. ENGL492‐001FICTIONWORKSHOP TTH12:30‐1:45 BARILLAJ (PREREQ:ENGL360and465) Opentostudentswithextensiveexperienceincreativewriting,thisworkshopwillpursuetheart andcraftofwritingliteraryfictionatanadvancedlevelthroughclosereadingsandthecomposition oforiginalshortstories.Producingoriginalfiction,andrespondinginwritingtoothers'stories,will bethefocusofthecourse,althoughwewillalsospendtimeonexercisesandtheconsiderationof publishedfiction. ENGLE550‐300 ADVANCEENGLISHGRAMMAR TTH5:30‐6:45 DISTERHEFT (PREREQ:LING421/ENGL450orLING600/ENGL680) (Cross‐listedwithLINGE521‐300) AdvancedEnglishGrammarisacoursedesignedtoenhancestudents’abilitiesinanalyzingthe structureofspokenandwrittenEnglish.Emphasisisplacedonrestrictionsonwordformationand sentencestructure,andtherelationsbetweensentencestructureandmeaning.BothStandard AmericanEnglishanditsregionalandsocialvarietieswillbeusedintheexaminationofhow intendedmeaningisconveyedthroughsentencestructure.AdvancedEnglishGrammarisgeared towardstheneedsofpresentandfutureteachersofEnglish.Itwillprovidestudentswithboththe skillsnecessarytoexplainwhyEnglishworksthewayitworks,andopportunitiestoapplythose skillsintothepracticalanalysisoftheEnglishlanguage. ENGL566S‐001“SplitScreens:Hollywoodinthe‘50s&‘60s”TTH12:30‐1:45COURTNEY (Cross‐listedw/FILM566S) Thiscourseexaminestwosignificantdecadesofruptureandchange,atthemoviesandinAmerican cultureatlarge.WhilepopularU.S.mythologiesliketoimaginethe1950ssimplyastheyearsof “FatherKnowsBest”andwhitesuburbansplendor,evenpopularHollywoodtextsrevealamore unstableandcontestedculturallandscape—especiallywithregardstomattersofrace,gender,and sexuality.The1960s,too,weremoreofamixedculturalbagthanpopularmemoryoftenwould haveit.ProvocativecombinationsofchangeandconventionareparticularlyevidentinHollywood cinemainthesedecades,registeredbytheeruptionofcontemporaryconflictsinplotsand characters,butalsobysubtleanddramatictransformationsof“classicalHollywood”style itself.Thiscourseconsidersrupturesofbothkinds,socialandaesthetic,andparticularlyhowthey interactinthisperiodofAmericancinema.What,forexample,doesthedisruptionofconventional Hollywoodcodesallowtobesaid,andnotsaid,aboutshiftingconceptionsofgenderand sexuality?WhatcanwelearnabouttheongoingsignificanceoftheCivilRightsEra,its“successes” andits“failures,”byinterrogatingpopularculture’sownattemptstoimagineracialprogress?And howmighttheanalysisofpopularfantasiesofmid‐20thcenturylifeandchangehelpusunderstand ourown21stcenturyinvestmentsinselectivelyrememberingandforgettingthepast?Questions likethesewillguideourreadings,screenings,anddiscussions. 12
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