|
|
List of Classes
ENGL G5001x. Masters Seminar. 3 pts. Prerequisites: permission of the department.
Section 1: Approaches to Literary Theory and Practice (Maura
Spiegel) We will read a range of foundational and influential
current works of literary and social theory, with emphasis on theories of
affect and emotion. In works by Bakhtin, Barthes, Butler, Cavarero, Freud,
Girard, Goffman, Huizinga, Ngai, Ricoeur, Sedgwick, Tomkins, White,
Winnicott, Wittgenstein, as well as selected works of fiction and film, we
will examine theories of shame (stigma) disgust, envy, paranoia, grief,
complacency, compassion, excitement, etc., as they operate on the individual
and national stage. Ideas about authenticity, memory, subjecthood and
relationality, will also come under scrutiny, as they pertain to narrative
representation and literary practice.
Section 2: Introduction to Literary Scholarship (Ezra
Tawil) A deliberately broad approach to the field of literary
studies, introducing works of literary scholarship across periods, genres,
and theoretical approaches. Along the way, we'll read some classics of
criticism from the past fifty years or so, some important recent critical
works, and a few theoretical works that have proven especially fruitful to
literary scholars.
Section 3: Evolution of the Literary Field (Gauri
Viswanathan) This course offers an introduction to ways of thinking
about the discipline of English in particular and disciplinary formations
more broadly. We will focus on both the historical developments in the field,
including the role of colonialism in the rise of English studies, and
theoretical issues of canon formation, representations of gender, class, and
race, religion and secularism, popular literature and heterodoxy, literary
subjectivity, the problem of humanism, to name a few. This course does not
aim to be comprehensive but rather seeks to introduce you to key arguments in
the field, represented by several exemplary critical texts as well as
selected articles.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G5001
|
|
ENGL
5001
|
42147
001
|
W 6:10p - 8:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
M. Spiegel
|
13
|
|
|
ENGL
5001
|
85845
002
|
W 2:10p - 4:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
E. Tawil
|
12
|
|
|
ENGL
5001
|
13279
003
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
G. Viswanathan
|
11
|
|
ENGL G5005x and y. M.A. Thesis Tutorial. 3 pts.
(Tutorial)
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G5005
|
|
ENGL
5005
|
11646
001
|
Th 1:00p - 2:00p
303 Hamilton Hall
|
N. Horejsi
|
29
|
|
Medieval Literature
CLEN W4015y. Textual Analysis: Vernacular Paleography. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor
(Lecture). This course will survey the history of the manuscript book from
the Carolingians to the early years of printing (9th -15th century). Students
will study the questions that have driven the field of paleography since its
inception, and the canonical history of the main scripts used in Western Europe
during the later Middle Ages. We will consider the manuscript book as a
physical artifact, in a codicological approach; and we will look at the
production of books in their social and political settings. Students will
develop practical skills in reading and transcription, and will begin to
recognize the features that allow localization and dating of manuscripts. We
will use original materials from the Rare Book and Manuscript Library whenever
possible. Students will be expected to have a basic knowledge of Latin.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN W4015
|
|
CLEN
4015
|
78248
001
|
MW 9:10a - 10:50a
TBA
|
C. Baswell
|
7
|
|
ENGL W4091x. Introduction to Old English Language and Literature. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Lecture). An introduction to the language and literature of England from the
8th to the 11th centuries. This class provides a general historical and
literary introduction to the period as you learn the language of Anglo-Saxon
England. Because this is predominantly a language class, we will spend much
of our class time studying grammar as we learn to translate literary and
non-literary texts. While this course provides a general historical framework
for the period as it introduces you to the culture of Anglo-Saxon England, it
will also take a close look at Anglo-Saxon folk psychologies of mind and
embodiment as they are revealed in the language. We will look at how each
work contextualizes (or recontextualizes) relationships between the body and
soul, the soul and the mind, and the individual and society. Students will be
expected to do assignments for each meeting. Requirements: The course will
involve periodic quizzes, a mid-term paper, a final exam, and an oral
presentation (to be turned in).
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL W4091
|
|
ENGL
4091
|
59780
001
|
MW 6:10p - 7:25p
303 Hamilton Hall
M 7:10p - 10:00p
303 Hamilton Hall
|
M. Matto
|
19
|
|
ENGL G4092y. Beowulf. 3 pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Lecture). Prerequisite: One semester of Old English required, as this course
demands a solid knowledge of Old English; also, computer skills required as
assignments will be required on class Wiki site. This course will involve
close reading in the original language of this very well known Anglo-Saxon
epic. Each student will work through his or her own individual translations
from Old English to Modern English over the course of the semester and will
post them collectively on a site we will use for our collective revisions,
comments, and questions. Preference given to those who already have a working
knowledge of the language. Our primary text is Klaeber's edition of
Beowulf. We will also compare various translations (Liuzza, Heany,
Donaldson) with our own. Secondary materials will include The Postmodern
Beowulf as well as other materials to familiarize us with historical
context, contemporary scholarship, and literary sources. Requirements involve
a steady dose of translation each week, two presentations, as well as a final
paper.
Application instructions: E-mail Professor Dailey ( pd2132@columbia.edu ) by Friday, November
13,with the subject heading "Beowulf." In your message, include basic
information: your name, school, major, year of study, and relevant courses
taken, along with a brief statement about why you are interested in taking
the course. Note that a prior language course in Old English is a
prerequisite for this class; please indicate such coursework in your
application.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G4092
|
|
ENGL
4092
|
63376
001
|
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
|
P. Dailey
|
7
|
|
ENGL G6002x. Middle English Texts: England's Antiquities. 3
pts.
(Seminar). This course will explore medieval English versions of the antique
past, as well as their broader setting in ancient and continental medieval
stories of disaster and refoundation. While the bulk of texts we read will
be in Middle English, at each stage students can explore instead (or in
addition) relevant works in the other languages of medieval Britain: Latin,
French, or the Celtic tongues.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G6002
|
|
ENGL
6002
|
43046
001
|
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
652 Schermerhorn Hall
|
C. Baswell
|
10
|
|
CLEN G6028y. Topics in medieval literature: Medieval Animals. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor
(Seminar). This course organizes some points of contact between literary and
theoretical readings on animals. Medieval literary texts may include beast
fables, bestiaries, lives of St. Cuthbert and St. Francis, and romances of
the Knight of the Lion and Knight of the Swan. Theoretical
readings may include works of Augustine, Aquinas, Foucault, Levinas, Deleuze
and Guattari, Derrida, Haraway, Singer, and Eco.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN G6028
|
|
CLEN
6028
|
61530
001
|
Th 11:00a - 12:50p
401 Hamilton Hall
|
S. Crane
|
0
|
|
CLEN G6537y. Embodiment: Ancient, Medieval, Postmodern. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar). This course explores how the body, the senses, interiority, and
materiality are constructed in ancient and medieval literary, philosophical,
and religious texts and how they are connected with hermeneutic and cognitive
practices. Texts from antiquity include Aristotle, Paul, Origen, Augustine,
Gregory the Great, and Theodore of Mopsuestia; texts from the Middle Ages
include the Old English Body and Soul and The Ruin, Old
English riddles, William of St. Thierry, Rudolf von Biberach, Guigo II,
Marguerite d'Oingt, Hadewijch, Ida of Louvain, Bernard of Clairvaux, Hugh of
St. Victor, Richard of St. Victor, and Bonaventure. The course will also look
at how medieval readings of embodiment dialogue with, are commesurate to, or
differ from readings of materiality and embodiment in Hegel, Marx,
Merleau-Ponty, Lévinas Derrida, Nancy, Lyotard, Negri, Agamben, and
Butler. What kind of "radical" materialities do we find in the post-Marxist
thinkers like Negri, or of Agamben? Given the tendency in the wave of
phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty) to think of embodiment as a kind of radical
interpentetration of world and body, what differences do we find in the
revision to phenomenology evidenced by thinkers such as Lyotard, Derrida, and
Nancy? How do the "materialities" in medieval mystical texts and their
theological counterparts compare?
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN G6537
|
|
CLEN
6537
|
62097
001
|
M 4:10p - 6:00p
201D Philosophy Hall
|
P. Dailey
|
0
|
|
American Literature to 1900
ENGL W4612x. Jazz and American Culture: Gender, Race and Jazz. 3
pts.
(Lecture). An introduction to theories of gender and race (in conjunction
with other social categories such as class, nation, and sexuality) as lenses
for studying how people have used jazz to struggle over ideas that mattered
to them.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL W4612
|
|
ENGL
4612
|
93546
001
|
TuTh 10:35a - 11:50a
413 Kent Hall
Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
403 International Affairs Bldg
|
R. O'Meally
|
69 / 120
|
|
Twentieth-Century Literature
CLEN W4200x. Caribbean Diaspora Literature. 3 pts.
(Lecture). Texts by writers from Cuba, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic,
Haiti, Trinidad, Dominica, and Jamaica. The impact of migration and
transculturation on the texts, the articulation of new cultural subjects, the
fostering of dialogue largely suppressed in the writers' home countries.
Possible authors: Derek Walcott, Michelle Cliff, Paule Marshall, V.S.
Naipaul, Julia Alvarez, Junot Diaz, Edward Rivera, Edwidge Danticat, Oscar
Hijuelos.
Although a geographically small area, the Caribbean has produced major social
and revolutionary movements, and two globally influential revolutions: the
Haitian Revolution (1791) and the Cuban Revolution (1959). It has also
produced literature and poetic discourse that has sought to revolutionize
through analysis and language. In this course, we will examine texts that
reflect on revolution and/or attempt to revolutionize by writers and
musicians such as Aimé Césaire, CLR James, Alejo Carpentier,
Frantz Fanon, Michelle Cliff, V.S. Naipaul, Bob Marley, Carlos Varela, and
Calle 13, among others. Syllabus.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLEN W4200
|
|
CLEN
4200
|
27246
001
|
TuTh 10:35a - 11:50a
503 Hamilton Hall
Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
503 Hamilton Hall
|
F. Negron-Muntaner
|
64
|
|
ENGL W4502x. British Literature 1950 to the present. 3 pts.
(Lecture). This course will trace English fiction (and a few films) from the
post-WWII era, with emphasis on close reading, exploring formal innovation as
ethical strategy, the status of liberal humanism, epistemology and historical
representation, the evolution of the Upstairs/Downstairs story, UK-US
relations, and generational takes on bad boys and prigs. Writers will
include: Graham Greene, John Osborne, Martin Amis, John Banville, Pat
Barker, Kazuo Ishiguro, Ian McEwan, V.S. Naipaul, W.G. Sebald, and films by
Carol Reed, Michael Apted, Joseph Losey, Tony Richardson, Mike Leigh, Stanley
Kubrick, Stephen Frears, and Powell and Pressburger. ENGL W4502_001_2009_3">Syllabus.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL W4502
|
|
ENGL
4502
|
40799
001
|
TuTh 4:10p - 5:25p
603 Hamilton Hall
|
M. Spiegel
|
43
|
|
ENTA W4724y. Modern Drama: Theatricality on the God-forsaken Stage. 3
pts.
(Lecture). This course explores melodrama, metadrama, epic, and lyric drama
as theatrical forms designed to fill the void of meaning created by a
suddenly godless universe in the nineteenth century. Readings embrace a wide
variety of theatrical styles, predominantly from the twentieth century, and
include works from diverse playwrights such as Oscar Wilde, Shaw, Pirandello,
Susan Glaspell, Sam Shepard, Brecht, Genet, Mamet, Beckett, Maria Irene
Fornes, Suzan-Lori Parks, Tony Kushner, and Caryl Churchill. Assignments
include two short papers (5-7 pages), question sets on individual plays,
regular attendance and classroom participation, and a comprehensive final
exam.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENTA W4724
|
|
ENTA
4724
|
76285
001
|
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
TBA
|
Z. Brietzke
|
37
|
|
ENGL G6506y. Modernism and Imperial Imagination. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar). What was the relationship between British modernist literature and
the British Empire? Modernism has been construed in nearly oppositional
terms-as deeply collusive with imperial thinking, or, alternatively, as
viscerally hostile to empire. In this course, we will attempt to theorize
this relationship in our own terms, reading a variety of writers and texts
from the first half of the twentieth century. The bulk of our readings will
be English, but we will also read material from Ireland, India and Africa.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G6506
|
|
ENGL
6506
|
88529
001
|
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
S. Cole
|
0
|
|
CLEN G6531x. Issues in Contemporary Criticism: Intellectuals. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar). The category of "the intellectual," traditionally dated back to
Emile Zola's "J'accuse!" in the midst of the Dreyfus Affair, has inspired
some of the past century's most innovative forms of writing, action, and
writing that makes a stronger than usual claim to be action. This
course will examine theorists of the intellectual- Benda, Mannheim, Gramsci,
Foucault, Bourdieu- as well as notable intellectuals, the social landscapes
against which they emerged, and the shaping of their careers. Writers to be
discussed will include Orwell, Sartre, Sontag, Chomsky, and Naomi Klein,
among others. Recommended introductory reading: Stefan Collini, Absent
Minds and/or Marcie Frank, How To Be an Intellectual in the Age of
Television. Requirements: short (1 to 2 page) weekly journal entries,
oral presentations, and one medium-sized (12-15 page) final paper. CLEN G6531_001_2009_3">Syllabus.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLEN G6531
|
|
CLEN
6531
|
73596
001
|
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
B. Robbins
|
16
|
|
ENGL G6613y. American Studies: American Intellectuals. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar). This course will explore a range of influential
thinkers--Emerson to Sontag by way of Margaret Fuller, William James, Du Bois,
Randolph Bourne, Hannah Arendt, Robert Oppenheimer--all of whom address and
enact the political responsibility of the intellectual--particularly what does
it mean to think and judge,especially in times of crisis.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G6613
|
|
ENGL
6613
|
61030
001
|
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
201D Philosophy Hall
|
R. Posnock
|
0
|
|
ENGL G6622x. Contemporary American Fiction. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar). Beyond historical coincidence, is there a set of broad thematic or
formal concerns shared by contemporary fiction? How are we to think and
write about body of literature that belongs to an as-yet undefined cultural
moment? This course will consider the problems and potential of studying
�the contemporary,� as well as
covering a diverse range of prose fiction by North American authors from the
early 1990s to the present. For our purposes, the contemporary period
extends from the end of the Cold War through the first decade of the
twenty-first century. Some authors, such as Philip Roth, Charles Johnson,
and Toni Morrison are already subjects of extensive critical debate; others,
such as Allison Bechdel, Junot Diaz, and Colson Whitehead have not yet
received much scholarly attention. In addition to discussing the work of
some of these authors, we will ask about the consequences of such critical
excess or oversight on the experience of reading and interpretation. Weekly
reading assignments will pair a work of fiction with one or more articles
intended to locate each work in the context of critical debates.
Application instructions: E-mail Prof. Rachel Adams
(rea15@columbia.edu) by Wednesday, April 15th with the subject CONTEMPORAY
AMERICAN FICTION. In the message, include basic information: name, school,
major, year of study, relevant courses taken, along with a brief statement
about why you are interested in taking the course.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G6622
|
|
ENGL
6622
|
72446
001
|
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
R. Adams
|
14
|
|
ENGL G6632y. American Film Theory. 3 pts.
(Seminar).
ENGL G6740y. Early 20th Century British Drama. 3 pts.
(Seminar). Modern British drama was the focus of every contentious literary
and cultural question in the early twentieth century: coterie audience versus
mass audience, visionary versus realist theory and practice, cultural and
linguistic versus political and economic nationalism, eternal archetypal
sexual roles versus evolving constructed gender identity, cyclical versus
linear ideas of history and time, epic theater versus dramatic theater, among
many other issues. Because the dramatists all knew and responded to each
other, the issues and arguments tend to be more starkly and clearly defined
than in other periods. This seminar will pursue these questions through plays
by Wilde, Yeats, O'Casey, Shaw, Granville-Barker, Woolf, Eliot, Auden,
Priestley, Beckett, Wesker.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G6740
|
|
ENGL
6740
|
82030
001
|
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
201D Philosophy Hall
|
E. Mendelson
|
0
|
|
ENGL G6851y. Modernism and the Imperial Imagination. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar) What was the relationship between British modernist literature and
the British Empire? Modernism has been construed in nearly oppositional
terms-as deeply collusive with imperial thinking, or, alternatively, as
hostile to empire. In this course, we will attempt to theorize this
relationship in our own terms, reading a variety of writers and texts from
the first half of the twentieth century. The bulk of our readings will be
English, but we will also read material from Ireland, India and Africa.
CLEN G6920y. Perspectives on the Modern: Modernity, Terminable and
Interminable. 3 pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the
instructor
(Seminar).
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN G6920
|
|
CLEN
6920
|
62896
001
|
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
707 Hamilton Hall
|
S. Gourgouris
|
0
|
|
Theory
CLEN G6566y. Theory, Religion and Culture. 3 pts.
(Seminar). This course will explore various theoretical approaches to
religion in modernity and include readings on topics such as: religious
subjectivity and the politics of belief; the place of imagination in the
evolution of religions; theories of secularism; religion, postcolonialism,
and postmodernism; world religions, heterodoxy, and alternative spiritual
movements.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN G6566
|
|
CLEN
6566
|
27497
001
|
TBA
|
G. Viswanathan
|
0
|
|
Special Topics
ENGL W4810x. Aspects of the Novel: On Style. 3 pts.
(Lecture) Our topic for the semester will be the inner workings of
sentences and paragraphs as they function in the novel. We will probably read
only four novels in their entirety (most likely Austen's Emma, Flaubert's
Madame Bovary, Henry James' The Golden Bowl and Alan Hollinghurst's The Line
of Beauty); we will also read a handful of essays and short stories, but the
rest of the texts we'll work with will for the most part be brief extracts
that we read closely together in class as we pursue a series of questions
about voice, person, etc. with the help of theorists including Georges Perec,
Roland Barthes, Wayne Koestenbaum and D. A. Miller. Short assignments will
include creative as well as critical options.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL W4810
|
|
ENGL
4810
|
47604
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
517 Hamilton Hall
W 1:10p - 4:00p
517 Hamilton Hall
|
J. Davidson
|
59
|
|
ENGL W4901x. History of the English Language. 3 pts.
(Lecture). Lecture, but with lots of class discussion. This course applies
knowledge of the English language and its history to issues of both law and
literature. There are two required books, both paperbacks: (1) Language
Myths, edited by Laurie Bauer and Peter Trudgill (Penguin), and (2)
The Language Instinct, by Steven Pinker (Harper). There will be about
half a dozen short written assignments: hands-on research efforts.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL W4901
|
|
ENGL
4901
|
98246
001
|
TuTh 6:10p - 7:25p
304 Hamilton Hall
Tu 7:10p - 10:00p
304 Hamilton Hall
|
D. Yerkes
|
11
|
|
CLEN G4995x. Special Topics in Modern Literature: Reading Lacan. 4
pts.
(Seminar). Reading selections from Lacan's Seminar X: Anxiety; Seminar IX:
Identification; Seminar XVII: The Other Side of Psychoanalysis, & Seminar
XX: Encore: On Feminine Sexuality together with selected novels and short
stories. Emphasis on Lacan's elaboration of the four discourses, jouissance,
the formulas of sexuation, and the ethics of the real. Consideration of the
relevance of his thought to literature and culture, to capitalism, politics,
neuroscience, and the idea of humanity. Undergraduates are welcome to enroll
in the course. Application instructions: E-mail Professor M.
Jaanus(mj35@columbia.edu) with the
subject heading "Reading Lacan." In your message, include basic
information: your name, school, major, year of study, and relevant courses
taken, along with a brief statement about why you are interested in taking
the course.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLEN G4995
|
|
CLEN
4995
|
02073
001
|
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
207 Milbank Hall
|
M. Jaanus
|
16
|
|
ENGL G6499x. Poetics. 3 pts.
(Seminar). This course will examine both contemporary theories of poetic form
(primarily scansion) and the history of poetic theory, concentrating on
classical (Aristotle, Horace, Longinus), Renaissance (Sidney, Boileau), and
Romantic (Wordsworth, Shelley, Mill) treatises. It is intended both for
those who seek an introduction to the theory and practice of poetic analysis
and for those with a more specialized interest.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G6499
|
|
ENGL
6499
|
57449
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
716 Philosophy Hall
|
E. Gray
|
12
|
|
CLEN G6550y. Trauma, Terror, and Performance. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructors.
(Seminar). This course explores the interconnections between trauma, terror,
memory, and performance through three major 20th and 21st c. events - the
Holocaust, Argentina's 'Dirty War,' and the United States's post 9/11 "war on
terror " - and the theoretical questions they raise. Do they each have their
own unique structure and idiom, or can we think about individual and
collective trauma through a trans-local, cosmopolitan lens? Topics include:
the performance of state power and state sponsored terror; the individual and
collective nature of trauma; the effects of gender, race and power on trauma
and memory; embodied practices such as testimony and witnessing, their use in
literature, museums, pedagogy, and performance, and their archivization; the
relation of torture and truth; the social role of sites of memory and
memorialization (Auschwitz, Club Atlético, Ground Zero, Guantanamo,
etc.); theaters of justice such as trials, tribunals and truth commissions;
performances of protest and resistance.
This course draws from classic and recent readings at the juncture of
trauma, memory, and performance studies. To build on the paradigms suggested by
the Holocaust, Argentina's 'Dirty War,' and the U.S. after 9/11, students will
be encouraged to extend the topics explored in class to other sites.
Please note that this is a consortium course which will alternate meetings
at Columbia and NYU. Students need to figure travel time into their plans.
We plan to meet on Wednesdays from 4 -6:30. During the semester, several
evening talks and seminars will be organized in conjunction with the course,
both at Columbia and NYU.
Application instructions: E-mail Professor M. Hirsch
(mh2349@columbia.edu) by May 2009,
with the subject heading "Trauma, Terror, Performance." In your message,
include basic information: your name, school, major, year of study, and
relevant courses taken, along with a brief statement about why you are
interested in taking the course.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN G6550
|
|
CLEN
6550
|
10796
001
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
201D Philosophy Hall
|
M. Hirsch
|
0
|
|
ENGL G6631y. American Higher Education: History and
Prospects. Prerequisites: permission of the instructors.
(Colloquium). This is a course in American intellectual and cultural history
focused on issues in higher education. The aim of the course is to deepen
historical understanding of theinstitutions to which today's graduate
students plan to devote their professional lives as faculty members and
academic citizens. Topics include the origins of the American college and
university in the colonial period, the rise of the research university in the
19th century, the invention and evolution of the "Humanities," the principles
and practice of admissions and financial aid since World War II, the risks
and opportunities of today's "on-line" entrepreneurial university, the
"pre-history" of the so-called culture wars, and the effects of the current
financial crisis on higher education. From time to time, visiting speakers
will join us for discussion of these and other issues. Interested students
should email Professor Delbanco at ad19@columbia.edu for more information.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G6631
|
|
ENGL
6631
|
88201
001
|
M 6:10p - 8:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
A. Delbanco
|
0
|
|
CLEN G6706y. Media Studies. 3 pts.
(Seminar). Can theater be described as a medium? What is the relationship
between theater and mechanically reproducible media? What is, or should be,
the role of theater in an age of mass culture? European and American plays
and films from the twentieth century, including works by Antonin Artaud,
Samuel Beckett, Bertolt Brecht, Caryl Churchill, Susan Glaspell, Jerzy
Grotowski, D.W. Griffith, Clifford Odets, and The Wooster Group. Theoretical
readings by Walter Benjamin, Peter Brooks, Jürgen Habermas,
Siefried Kracauer, Richard Sennett, and Samuel Weber. Article-length seminar
paper and presentation required. Students will also be required to submit
drafts of their final papers to workshop with the group during the final
weeks of class.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN G6706
|
|
CLEN
6706
|
60942
001
|
W 2:10p - 4:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
K. Biers
|
0
|
|
ENTA G6725y. Performance Theory. 3 pts.
(Seminar). "Performance" is a term widely--and surprisingly--invoked in the
humanities today, especially considering how recently "performance" was
derogated as a kind of unconstrained, wild semiology in many traditional
humanities fields. In many ways, of course, conventional approaches to
dramatic literature and theatre history have long considered performance--the
dialectical relationship between dramatic texts and stage production, the
history of theatre institutions and performance practices, theoretical
accounts of the form and purpose of drama as a genre of writing. Yet such
approaches to performance were circumscribed by their view of the priority of
literary meanings, the sense that the authority of performance is
fundamentally citational, sustained by its evocation of "the text."
Performance theory since the 1950s has attempted to resituate the cultural
work of performance, away from a sense that performance replays a script to a
sense of performance--nontheatrical as well as theatrical performance--as a
distinct, constitutive form of cultural production. This course will survey a
range of approaches to the problematic of performance, as they are practiced
now in the overlapping disciplines of theatre, literary, and performance
studies. The course will both introduce major theoretical
models--performative discourse, restored behavior, liminoid genres,
surrogation, textuality--of performance, and provide the opportunity to
engage with the analysis of performances. It will also pay some attention to
the development of disciplinary critique in the period, and its consequences
for the contemporary mapping of "the field(s)." Requirements: Each student
will write one article-length paper, and lead one discussion of a written
theoretical text or of a performance piece.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENTA G6725
|
|
ENTA
6725
|
03872
001
|
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
W. Worthen
|
0
|
|
ENGL G8490x. Advanced Research Seminar: Publishing a Scholarly
Article. 3 pts.
(Seminar). What is the most important thing a graduate student can do to
prepare for the job market in the years before applying for jobs? Publish an
article. Other things matter, of course, such as writing an excellent
dissertation and producing great job materials, but we already have many ways
to help you do that. This seminar will be in workshop format and will guide
you through the process of article-writing. We will discuss how to turn a
seminar paper (or idea) into an article, how to determine where to send the
article, and demystify the process of submitting work and responding to
editorial comments. Participants commit to submitting an article to a
scholarly journal by the end of the semester. The seminar is open to all
graduate students in the English Ph.D. program, but priority will be given to
students who have passed their qualifying exams and turned in a dissertation
prospectus.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G8490
|
|
ENGL
8490
|
78296
001
|
Th 6:10p - 8:00p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
S. Marcus
|
6
|
|
ENGL G8491y. Advanced Research seminar. 3 pts.
(Seminar).
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G8491
|
|
ENGL
8491
|
73146
001
|
Th 6:10p - 8:00p
401 Hamilton Hall
|
S. Marcus
|
0
|
|
18th- and 19th-Century Literature
ENGL G4307x. Richardson's Clarissa. 4 pts.
(Seminar). Almost a million words long, Samuel Richardson's Clarissa took
eighteenth-century readers by storm, and has a strong claim to be considered
the single most important novel of the century. We'll begin with some brief
excerpts from Richardson's first novel Pamela and a few of the more virulent
contemporary attacks on this new mode of popular fiction, then proceed
through Clarissa in regular chunks, interspersed with bits and pieces of
other relevant epistolary fictions, critical discussions and historical
accounts. This seminar has no prerequisites other than your own eagerness to
embark on a demented and potentially transformative program of extreme
reading;topics for discussion will include the novel in letters, the
first-person voice, the psychology of families and the sociology of
inheritance in eighteenth-century England, the languages of sexuality,
eighteenth-century burial customs, madness in literature, providential
narratives and life after death, suffering, rewritings of Job, the rise of
the novel, etc. etc. Note: This seminar is a joint undergraduate-graduate
class. This spring, I will admit 8 undergraduates and a waiting list of 4
(if needed), reserving 6-8 spots for graduate students who may be interested;
we will work out the final details of enrollment at the first seminar meeting
in the fall semester. Application instructions: Email
Professor Jenny Davidson (jmd204@columbia.edu) by noon on Wednesday,
April 15, with the subject heading "Clarissa." In your message. include
basic information: your name, school, major, year of study, and relevant
courses taken, along with a brief statement about why you are interested in
taking this course.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G4307
|
|
ENGL
4307
|
26897
001
|
M 6:10p - 8:00p
402 Hamilton Hall
|
J. Davidson
|
20
|
|
ENGL W4402x. Romantic Poetry. 3 pts.
(Lecture). An introduction to the works of the great poets of the Romantic
period (1789-1824), especially William Blake, William Wordsworth, Samuel
Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, and John Keats. In addition to
closely considering their poems, we will also read prose works that
complement and illuminate the poetry, including essays by Wordsworth,
Shelley, and William Hazlitt, and letters by Keats. Syllabus.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL W4402
|
|
ENGL
4402
|
76247
001
|
TuTh 4:10p - 5:25p
312 Mathematics Building
|
E. Gray
|
87
|
|
ENGL W4404y. Victorian Poetry. 3 pts.
(Lecture). This course examines the works of the major English poets of the
period 1830-1900. We will pay special attention to Alfred Tennyson and Robert
Browning, and their great poetic innovation, the dramatic monologue. We will
also be concentrating on poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Gerard Manley
Hopkins, Christina Rossetti, Matthew Arnold, A. E. Housman, and Thomas Hardy.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL W4404
|
|
ENGL
4404
|
88097
001
|
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
TBA
|
E. Gray
|
33
|
|
ENGL W4405y. The Fin de Siècle: Sensation and Degeneration,
1880-1900. 3 pts.
(Lecture). This course will survey the tumultuous scene of England - chiefly
London -- in the 1890s, focusing on the most significant cultural, political,
and social debates of the period. We will be concerned in particular with
the fin-de-siècle rhetorics of degeneration and the concomitant
fascination with sensation and sensory experience. Topics to include:
sexology and the criminalization of sex; monstrosity, racial science, and
physiogamy; feminism and the New Woman; urban poverty, crime, and policing;
spiritualism and psychic research; new technologies of visuality and
communication; and the new imperialism. We will also study the significant
aesthetic movements of the period, including Decadence, Aestheticism, and
Pre-Raphaelitism. Writers will include: Grant Allen, Sarah Grand, Thomas
Hardy, Max Nordau, Walter Pater, Robert Louis Stevenson, Bram Stoker, Oscar
Wilde, and W.B. Yeats.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL W4405
|
|
ENGL
4405
|
83048
001
|
TuTh 2:40p - 3:55p
TBA
|
V. Rosner
|
11
|
|
ENGL W4632y. Introduction to Asian American Literature and Culture. 3
pts.
(Lecture). This course surveys important prose narratives, poetry, and plays
written by Asians in America, with a focus on works produced since 1970, in
light of the history of U.S. racial formation, transpacific migration, and
U.S.-Asian relations since the mid-nineteenth century.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL W4632
|
|
ENGL
4632
|
92747
001
|
MW 6:10p - 7:25p
TBA
|
W. Jin
|
22
|
|
ENTA W4723x. Ibsen, Chekhov, Strindberg. 3 pts.
(Lecture). Intensive reading of major works from the early masters of
modern drama. Course will focus on stylistic innovations, thematic concerns,
and theatricality of the three playwrights. Particular emphasis will be given
to the place of each on the contemporary stage, visual presentations of
production histories, and relevance to the 21st-century theatrical repertory.
Evaluation consists of question sets for each play, two short (5-7 page)
papers, and a comprehensive final examination.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENTA W4723
|
|
ENTA
4723
|
56148
001
|
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
517 Hamilton Hall
|
Z. Brietzke
|
48
|
|
ENGL W4801x. History of the English Novel I. 3 pts.
(Lecture). At the end of the eighteenth century, Clara Reeve argued, in her
literary-critical dialogue, The Progress of Romance(1785), that the
"English" novel had a diverse and polyglot history, one that extended,
geographically, as far as the East, and, temporally, to the ancient
Heliodoran romance. Inspired by Reeve, as well as more recent scholars of
the form, this course will explore the relationship between gender and genre
by considering one major strand of the novel's complex lineage, the
"romance," a "feminine" genre much-maligned by eighteenth-century critics who
were eager to legitimate their own authorship, and anxious to shape the
cultural discourse surrounding literary production. As we explore the
novel's debt to romance, including the immense popularity of the Gothic
leading into the nineteenth century, we will consider contemporary criticism
(Samuel Johnson, Henry Fielding, Reeve), modern theories of the novel (Ian
Watt, Michael McKeon, Nancy Armstrong, Margaret Doody). Readings
may include Haywood's Love in Excess, Richardson's Pamela,
Fielding's Joseph Andrews, and Matthew Lewis' The Monk.
Undergraduates: There will be a take-home midterm, in-class final exam, and
two papers (1 three-page assignment explicating a specific passage and a
longer 6- to 7-page final paper) as well as sporadic quizzes.SYLLABUS.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL W4801
|
|
ENGL
4801
|
78548
001
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
603 Hamilton Hall
|
N. Horejsi
|
29
|
|
CLEN W4822y. The 19th-Century Novel In Europe: Country and City in
the Nineteenth-Century European Novel. 3 pts.
(Lecture). A survey of touchstone nineteenth-century European novels, this
class will explore the relationship of the realist novel to urban experience
and rural identity. If most novels are, in Raymond Williams's phrase
"knowable communities," how do fictions of the city and fictions of the
country represent youth and experience, time and space, work and leisure, men
and women, landscape and portraiture, privacy and public life, national
culture and cosmopolitanism? Readings include Balzac's Père
Goriot, Hugo's Notre Dame de Paris, Flaubert's Madame
Bovary, Austen's Persuasion, Dickens' Oliver Twist,
Eliot's Middlemarch, Tolstoy's Anna Karenina.
Requirements: two writing assignments and two-in-class written exams;
thorough and attentive reading and participation are also mandatory.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLEN W4822
|
|
CLEN
4822
|
94699
001
|
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
TBA
|
M. Cohen
|
38 / 95
|
|
ENGL G6402y. Eliot and Trollope. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar). Two major practitioners of the novel in the mid-to-late nineteenth
century, presented with an eye to undoing, or rethinking, their presumed
differences. The great novelist of the moral imagination versus the novelist
of moral compromise and accommodation; the cosmopolitan novelist of ideas
versus the nativist, even xenophobic English gentleman; the all-knowing,
all-forgiving Mother versus the distant, genial Father; profundity versus
prolixity: by thinking these myths relationally, even dialectically, we might
achieve a better understanding of the horizon of the Novel in its most
culturally dominant period in Britain. We will attend most strenuously to
challenges of form faced by both writers, such as: beginnings and endings (or
origins and purposes), sequentiality (and thus causality and consequence),
scales of space and time, the balancing of dialogue and description, the
evocation of consciousness in narrative, and generating ethical lessons out
of contingent events. Selected major novels of both, read in alternation,
along with important non-fiction (Trollope's Autobiography, numerous
essays of Eliot's), pivotal critical pieces of recent years, and samples of
Victorian and modern moral philosophy from J. S. Mill to Bernard Williams.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G6402
|
|
ENGL
6402
|
27279
001
|
Th 11:00a - 12:50p
402 Hamilton Hall
|
N. Dames
|
0
|
|
ENGL G6835x. The Industrial Novel. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: the instructor's permission.
(Seminar). This course offers intensive study of "the industrial novel," a
body of mid-Victorian fiction responding to the economic volatility and class
conflict that accompanied the rise of industrial production. In little more
than a decade, treatments of this broad concern by a number of major
novelists converged in a set of distinctive formal strategies, yet the
relatively brief prominence of the form underscores an unusually direct
connection with contemporary political anxieties. As the industrial novel
presses against the increasingly domestic preoccupations of mid-Victorian
fiction, it throws those preoccupations into sharp relief, and more broadly
illuminates the construction of Victorian domesticity itself. We'll be
especially interested in the intersections of gender and class, the interplay
of socio-economic history and narrative form, and the political dimensions of
the mid-Victorian novel. Finally, the topic poses large questions about
genre and literary history: does "the industrial novel" denote a genre, and
why apply that tag to works that rarely depict industrial labor? Why not
the "social problem" novel, the "domestic novel in Northern dress," or even
"the novel of insurrection"? Major authors include Disraeli, Gaskell,
Charlotte Bronte, Kingsley, Dickens, and George Eliot; we'll also gather in
some of the political economy of John Stuart Mill and Marx, we well as the
social reporting of Engels and others.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G6835
|
|
ENGL
6835
|
64033
001
|
M 11:00a - 12:50p
302 Fayerweather
|
J. Adams
|
14
|
|
ENGL G8401x. Doctoral Seminar In 19th-Century Literature. 3
pts.
Renaissance Literature
ENGL W4101y. English Literature of the 1590s. 3 pts.
(Lecture). This course examines the literature of the turbulent final years
of the sixteenth century in England from the defeat of the Spanish Armada
in 1588 to the death of Elizabeth I in 1603. The course draws on drama,
verse and prose, often in the context of other historical documents.
Topics will include debates about the succession; the perceived threats
from Spain and Catholicism; economic hardships of the 1590s; England and
immigration; the challenge posed by the earl of Essex; and concerns about
Ireland and the Irish. Texts include plays by William Shakespeare,
Christopher Marlowe, and Thomas Dekker; pamphlet literature by Thomas Nashe
and Robert Greene; and poetry and prose by Edmund Spenser.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL W4101
|
|
ENGL
4101
|
82247
001
|
MW 4:10p - 5:25p
TBA
|
A. Stewart
|
25
|
|
CLEN G4121x. The Renaissance in Europe: Sonnet Sequences. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Undergraduates should obtain the
instructor's permission to register for this lecture.
(Lecture). An exploration of religious and erotic lyric sequences in England.
After a look at their precedents in Ovid's Amores, Petrarch,
Renaissance readings of the psalms, and samples (in English) of such French
poets as DuBellay, Ronsard, and Labé, and the Italian Stampa, we will
focus on the Sidneys (Philip, Mary, and Robert), Daniel, Drayton, Spenser,
Lodge, and Shakespeare with a glance at Anne Lok and a quick move forward to
Mary Wroth. Matters to be considered include gender and the Petrarchan
tradition, number symbolism, the translation of empire, imitatio,
the relation of Eros to politics and subjectivity, crossovers between
religious and amatory discourse, and the very concept of poetic sequence.
CLEN G4121_001_2009_3">Tentative syllabus.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLEN G4121
|
|
CLEN
4121
|
04320
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
201A Philosophy Hall
W 1:10p - 4:00p
201A Philosophy Hall
|
A. Prescott
|
14
|
|
ENGL G6128y. Textual Scholarship for Early Modern Literary Studies. 3
pts.
(Seminar). This course is designed to introduce students to the important
current critical debates involved in studying the early modern period
through the history of the book, manuscript studies, textual bibliography,
paleography, and textual editing. Students will be expected to undertake
a good amount of reading in the theoretical literature on these subjects.
Seminars will combine discussion of this critical literature with hands-on
engagement with a series of case studies in early modern text studies,
featuring both printed book and manuscript sources.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G6128
|
|
ENGL
6128
|
83032
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
TBA
|
A. Stewart
|
0
|
|
ENGL G6135x. Renaissance Drama: The Making of Early Modern Tragedy. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
(Seminar). This seminar will consider what the early modern stage understood
tragedy to be and the various "inventions" that fueled its power and
popularity as a theatrical genre. We will examine plays ranging from Norton
and Sackville's Gorboduc to John Ford's 'Tis Pity She's a
Whore, including several by Shakespeare.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: ENGL G6135
|
|
ENGL
6135
|
26146
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
612 Philosophy Hall
|
J. Howard
|
12
|
|
ENGL G6200y. Shakespeare in 1606. 3 pts.
(Seminar). This course situates the plays Shakespeare wrote in 1606 within
their immediate Jacobean cultural contexts, including ongoing outbreaks of
plague and the aftermath of the failed Gunpowder Plot. Readings include
plays by Shakespeare, Jonson, Middleton, Beaumont, Fletcher, Day, Wilkins,
Armin, and Dekker, and well as contemporary social and political history.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: ENGL G6200
|
|
ENGL
6200
|
23317
001
|
Tu 9:00a - 10:50a
401 Hamilton Hall
|
J. Shapiro
|
0
|
|
ENGL G8202y. Doctoral Seminar: Renaissance. 3 pts.
There are currently no cross-listed courses for your department.
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