Spring 2016 Courses - Idaho State University
Transcription
Spring 2016 Courses - Idaho State University
1 English Courses: Lower Division (1000-2000) 3-5 Upper Division (3000-4000) 6-8 Graduate Level (5000-7000) 7-9 Philosophy Courses 10-11 *Courses in purple satisfy general education requirements 2 English 1110-02 (Objective 4A) Introduction to Literature: American Horror Stories TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Amanda Zink In this course we will read and view a sampling of texts and film/ TV from the genres of horror and the Gothic. We will explore the fears that Americans seem to have shared since the 17th century and will postulate explanations for the return in popularity of horror stories in 21st-century pop culture. The readings for this course will include poetry, drama, short stories, the novel, and film/TV. English 1101 English Composition Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb class schedule. In this course students will read, analyze, and write expository essays for a variety of purposes consistent with expectations for college-level writing in standard edited English. English 1101P Variation of ENGL 1101 Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb class schedule. Students not placing into ENGL 1101 will receive intensive supplemental instruction in reading, analyzing, and writing expository essays. English 1110-03 (Objective 4A) Introduction to Literature: Madness in Literature MWF 9-9:50 Instructor: Tera Cole This course will cover a range of literary genres including novellas, novels, short stories, poetry, and drama. The focus of the course is the representation of madness in literature. The texts will cover a wide range of authors, historical time periods and encompass different cultural contexts. An emphasis will be placed on critical reading and analysis of these texts. Students will learn appropriate terminology and respond to the texts in class discussion, group discussion, and through written analysis. English 1102 (Objective 1) Critical Reading & Writing Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb class schedule. Writing essays based on readings. Students will focus on critical reading, research methods, gathering ideas and evidence, and documentation. English 1107 (Objective 7) Nature of Language TR 1-2:15 Instructor: Chris Loether This course offers a general survey of structure and use of language. Topics include language origins, descriptive and historical linguistics, language and culture, and history of the English language. English 1110-04 (Objective 4A) Introduction to Literature TR 1-2:15 Instructor: David Lawrimore Introduction to the critical reading of various literary genres, with attention to the interpretation and evaluation of representative texts. English 1110-01 (Objective 4A) Introduction to Literature MW 9:30-10:45 Instructor: Jenn Fuller—IDAHO FALLS CAMPUS Don't allow a textbook company to define the great works of literature for you. In this introductory course you'll read a variety of poems, plays, short stories, and essays in order to develop your own criteria for defining literature. English 1110-05 (Objective 4A) Introduction to Literature MWF 11-11:50 Instructor Michael Stubbs Introduction to the critical reading of various literary genres, with attention to the interpretation and evaluation of representative texts. 3 English 2210-01 (Objective 9) American Cultural Studies TR 1-2:15 Instructor: Brian Attebery This course focuses on three story patterns that have been used to define the American experience and identity: the captivity narrative (including captives turned into slaves), the self-made man, or American success story, and the hard-boiled detective story, which is about corruption and violence and the restoration of justice by a cynical loner. We will look at the ways these patterns are embodied in fiction, film, and other media, and how they are used to promote or to question economic systems and political ideas. English 1122 Academic Writing for Non-Native Speakers of English Part I Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb course schedule. This courses focuses on basic writing tasks. These include summary and response as well as vocabulary and grammar development. Explores culture-based academic expectations and conventions in communication. English 1123 Academic Writing for Non-Native Speakers of English Part II Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb course schedule. This course is a continuation of the goals of ENGL 1122 and preparation for the demands of ENGL 1101. Introduction to the writing process (prewriting, drafting, revising, editing) and concepts such as audience, purpose, and thesis. Continued emphasis on development of grammar and vocabulary. English 1126-01 (Objective 4A) Art of Film I TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Roger Schmidt English 1126-02 MW 11-12:15 Instructor: Brandon Hall Course examines the creative process, aesthetic principles and historical background of cinematic arts. Screening of representative films and examination of critical works and theories are included. English 2210-02 (Objective 9) American Cultural Studies MWF 10-10:50 Instructor: Will Donovan Examine U.S. culture through the multidisciplinary study of ghostly folklore, Spring calendar customs such as St. Patrick’s Day/Valentine’s Day, and more! English 2211-01 Introduction to Literary Analysis MWF 11-11:50 Instructor: Matt VanWinkle Writing-intensive course. Teaches students how to perform close readings of poetry and prose. Introduces major theoretical approaches to literature. Includes orientation to finding and evaluating secondary criticism. English 2212-01 (Objective 9) Introduction to Folklore and Oral Tradition MWF 10-10:50 Instructor: Amy Howard English 2212-02 (Objective 9) Online Instructor: Amy Howard We will discuss, collect, and analyze folklore such as legend, myth, folk tale, customs, foodways, material culture, superstition and beliefs about the supernatural found in domestic, international, and digital folk groups. 4 English 2258-01 (Objective 4A) World Literature II: The Problem of Modernity TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Curt Whitaker You may be surprised to learn that many historians now refer to life four hundred years ago as “early modern.” In this course we will puzzle over what it means to be modern, looking at literary works from a variety of cultural traditions. We will begin with the Spanish poets Góngora and Quevedo (see his modern look in the portrait), followed by Boswell’s Life of Johnson, Schopenhauer’s Appendices and Omissions, and Chopin’s The Awakening. The second half of the course will focus on the fiction of Garcia Márquez and Rushdie, who created in magical realism one of the definitive approaches to modernity. English 2278-01 Survey of American Literature II TR 1-2:15 Instructor: Hal Hellwig We'll be reading some of the most astonishing works of literature from any country in the world, and all of those works are American! (My profuse apologies in advance to other countries.) You'll analyze and evaluate cultural materials in American society as it evolved from roughly 1865 to 1990. You'll read fiction, poetry, and drama, from a number of regional and national movements. You'll see why American literature is so good at figuring out why American history, culture, and values are so important in understanding life in general. While including mainstream figures, such as Crane, Faulkner, and Frost, the readings will also include writers who represent movements or periods, such as 19th and 20th Century women, Realism, Naturalism, the Harlem Renaissance, Beatniks, Native American, Cold War, political, and so-called Postmodern writers. We might have time to look at the influence of American literature on the development of other cultural events/ artifacts/artwork (film noir, television comedies, paintings), at least those that have direct links to the anthology readings in the course. English 2258-02 (Objective 4A) Survey of World Literature II TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Jenn Fuller—IDAHO FALLS CAMPUS Tired of only reading literature from America and Britain? Take World Literature and read a selection of texts that explore the cultures and stories of a wider world. English 2280-01 Grammar and Usage TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Brent Wolter Introduction to the grammar of standard written English. The course is designed to give students an improved knowledge of grammar in order to improve usage and writing skills at both the sentence and paragraph level. English 2268-01 Survey of British Literature II TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Matt Levay This course introduces students to the variety and depth of British literature, from the late eighteenth century to the present. Focusing on formal developments as well as the historical contexts in which they arose, we will ask how authors responded to the changing social, political, and cultural circumstances of their historical moments (e.g., scientific progress, imperialism and the decline of the British Empire, the nature of labor, transforming systems of political and religious belief, and the treatment of women, to name just a few) and how they used literature as a method of exploring the world they inhabited. English 2281-01-04 Introduction to Language Studies MWF 11-11:50 Instructor: Brent Wolter This is a distance learning course with sections in Pocatello (01), Idaho Falls (02), Meridian (03), and Twin Falls (04) This is an introductory survey course in linguistics, which is the scientific study of language. A variety of topics will be covered, including morphology, syntax, semantics, phonetics, phonology, language acquisition, sociolinguistics, and language change. The course is recommended for anyone who intends to go into teaching or anyone who is interested in how language works. 5 English 3306-01 Intermediate Creative Writing Workshop MWF 11-11:50 Instructor: Susan Goslee Intermediate training in one or more of the forms of creative writing. English 3311-02 Writing and Research about Literature MWF 12-12:50 Instructor: Alan Johnson The aim of this class is to read literary works in different genres and write essays about these texts by drawing on various critical approaches. Besides discussing the artistry of the texts, we will look at how cultural, historical, biographical and other contexts shape their production and reception. Examples of the questions we might ask include: Why was Olaudah Equiano’s 1789 autobiography about his enslavement so important for both literary and political reasons? Why did women writers, such as the Brontë sisters, initially write under male names? What is significant about Jean Rhys’s 1960s novel that gives us a different window onto Charlotte Brontë’s classic, Jane Eyre, and where do we situate Rhys herself on the literary map? English 3307 Professional and Technical Writing Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb class schedule. An intensive course covering skills and conventions pertinent to writing in the professions, including technical writing. Applications in disciplines or subjects of interest to the individual student. Especially appropriate for science, engineering, and pre-professional majors. English 3327-01 Children’s and Young Adult Literature TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Brian Attebery Many children’s books cross over to become favorites among adult readers because of their narrative pleasures and unique insights. Perhaps more importantly, the books we read as kids stay with us and shape our sense of self and the world. In this course we will read a variety of powerful, funny, and subversive books published for children and young adults by writers like Mark Twain, Louise Fitzhugh, and Sherman Alexie along with historical studies and theoretical approaches. English 3308 Business Communications Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb class schedule. An advanced course in conventions of business communications, emphasizing purpose and audience. Focus on style, semantics, research skills, format, persuasion, and critical analysis and synthesis of data. English 3311-01 Writing and Research about Literature TR 9:30-10:45 Instructor: Amanda Zink In this writing-intensive course you will continue honing your close-reading skills. We will build on these skills by introducing ourselves to the major critical and theoretical patterns of thought in literary scholarship, reading both critical essays on each trend and literary works that can bear such theoretical scrutiny. You will learn about ten such trends: New Criticism, Structuralism, Deconstruction, Psychoanalysis, Feminism, Queer Studies, Marxism, Historicism and Cultural Studies, Postcolonial and Race Studies, and Reader-Response Criticism. English 3328-01 Gender in Literature TR 1-2:15 Instructor: Amanda Zink Departing from the notion that studying gender in literature is synonymous with studying women in literature, this course will look at the ways female and male genders are constructed and queered in American literature. In this context, “queer” is a verb: to queer gender is to look at the foundations of gendered roles and identities and question them. In this course we will read texts such as Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, Chuck Palahniuk’s Fight Club, and Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues to explore and to reconsider the limits, biases, and boundaries of gendered identities. 6 English 4401/5501 Writing for Engineers, Scientists, and Humanists M 4-6:30 Instructor: Lydia Wilkes An advanced course in which students develop an independent style in writing such types of essays as the personal, biographical, argumentative, and critical. May contain prose analysis. English 4464/5564 Renaissance Visual Culture and the Advent of Printing M 7-9:30 Instructor: Curt Whitaker In this course we will read Renaissance classics such as Hamlet and Don Quixote, attending to how they were first printed and how they were read by seventeenth-century audiences. Studying the different forms Shakespeare’s plays appeared in—the many quartos as well as the First Folio of 1623—helps us understand what it was like to be part of a new middle-class public that for the first time read imaginative literature for pleasure. In the case of Don Quixote, we can put ourselves in the place of the first readers of fiction, considering along with them why a person might read a novel, or romance, as such works were known in Cervantes’s day. Part of the course will also include a hands-on workshop at the Pinyon Jay Press on campus, where students will have the opportunity to see how a real printing press operates and to print an actual document of their own. A related focus of the course will be on seventeenth-century visual culture and aesthetic theory as we consider how the great artists of the time such as Rembrandt and Velázquez contributed to a sophisticated new world of circulating images. English 4409/5509 Literary Magazine Production: Black Rock & Sage T 4-6:30 Instructor: Susan Goslee From the call for American independence in the pamphlet “Common Sense” to the first state-side publication of “The Waste Land” in the Dial, small magazines and presses have fomented political and literary change in our country. Students will gain exciting hands-on experience in the production of Black Rock & Sage, ISU’s literary journal. Students will first develop strategies for soliciting literary, art, music, and schematic submissions. Then in exciting and lively debates, they will select the stories, poems, and essays that are to be published. Students will also organize and produce different events on campus to promote the magazine and support ISU’s art culture. To inform our production of Black Rock & Sage, we will survey a variety of well-established student-run journals, read interviews with significant journal editors, study the history of the “little” magazine, and consider briefly the relationship among the arts, democracy, and culture. In this class, students will help shape the ways in which Idaho State contributes to the nation’s literary dialogue. English 4466/5566 Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature MWF 2-2:50 Instructor: Matt VanWinkle Early nineteenth-century British writers felt themselves to be involved in an age of extremes. The possibility of rapid, thorough, long-desired change seemed nearly within reach. The means to achieve it, however, seemed daunting, even horrific. In a similar vein, writers of the era investigated a newly troubled relationship with the past. How much of your former self do you have to leave behind to pursue the future you imagine? This course will explore how the poetry and prose of this period articulated these entwined interests in revolution and remembrance. English 4455 Fantasy and Magical Realism TR 11-11:15 Instructor: Sharon Sieber Studies in important literatures and cultures not otherwise covered in the curriculum. Equivalent to CMLT 4415 7 English 4472/5572 Proseminar in a Major Literary Figure: Jane Austen W 4-6:30 Instructor: Roger Schmidt This course offers an immersive introduction to the work of Jane Austen. English 4484/4454 Phonetics TR 11-12:15 Instructor: Chris Loether Introduction to descriptive linguistics focusing on the phonetics and phonetic phenomena of English and the other languages of the world. Extensive practice in perception and production of such phenomena. English 4486/5586 Old English TR 1-2:15 Instructor: Tom Klein Old English is the name given to the earliest stage of the English language. Its records date from between 700 and 1100; it is the language of Beowulf, The Wanderer, and the jewel-like Riddles, and was one of J.R.R Tolkien’s central interests. This course offers an introduction to the language: pronouncing it, reading it, and adjusting our minds to live in it a little. Our chief goal is to learn enough of its structure to read short passages with ease. In doing so, we will inevitably be learning about our own language. We will also be learning about the Anglo-Saxon people who spoke the language, and the medieval contexts in which it was shaped and recorded. English 4490/5590 Topics in Folklore: Legend and Belief Online Instructor: Jennifer Attebery You are welcome in this course even if you have not previously taken a folklore course. We will hone in two major genres of folklore-- legend and belief. Legends are informal narratives told as true. Folk belief is any informally-held belief about the world. These range from beliefs regulating the planting of crops, to beliefs about spirits and ghosts, to beliefs about the healing properties of plants, objects, and chemicals. A deeper understanding of legends as a narrative form is important in literary studies, as legends and the beliefs they examine inform many writers. Anthropologists also benefit from understanding the genres of legend and belief as parts of cultural wholes. In the course we will look at numerous examples of legends from a variety of sources and culture, analyzing them in light of recent theoretical approaches developed by the legend scholars Gillian Bennett, Bill Ellis, and others. 8 English 4491 ST: The House in Literature MWF 11-11:50 Instructor: Alan Johnson As a capstone course, this class helps you refine the reading, research and writing skills you have cultivated over the past three years. The broad topic of the “house in literature” will allow each of you to develop a substantial research project, present parts of your research findings to the class, and engage with a variety of literary works and critical methods in relation to the theme. The house, as both setting and motif, has been an important touchstone in literary history, dramatizing such topics as domesticity, the changing roles of women, the meaning of home, colonial plantation culture, modern individualism, and class. English 4493 Senior Seminar in Professional Writing MWF 11-11:50 Instructor: Rob Watkins Capstone course for professional writing students. Each student will design and complete a substantial professional writing project. Projects will require a project proposal or outline, reading list, final document, and oral presentation. English 4494 Senior Seminar in Creative Writing MWF 12-12:50 Instructor: Susan Goslee Capstone course suitable for students working in any creative writing genre. Each student will compile in advance a reading list and project outline in consultation with instructor. During the course, the student will complete a substantial creative writing project and give a presentation. Instructor will also assign class-wide readings, some from each student's list. Workshop-based. English 4499 Realizing Beckett TR 1-2:15 Instructor: Josh Leukhardt This course will explore the dramatic works of Samuel Beckett including full-length stage plays, short and one act plays, radio plays and teleplays. Its primary aim is to explore the concepts of Beckett’s abstract theater, how it is conceived, edited, practically approached, and realized on the stage. This course will be augmented by experiencing the live ISU production of Waiting for Godot In April. English 6621 African American Slave Narratives T 7-9:30 Instructor: David Lawrimore Between 1740 and 1920, more than 100 expatriated African slaves and their African-American descendants responded to slavery and white supremacy in the form of autobiographical narratives. This seminar will explore the developments in the African American slave narrative, from its inception in the fragmented narratives of Britton Hammon and Venture Smith to the genre’s historic prominence in the narratives of Fredrick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs to its rebirth in the postmodern fiction of Toni Morrison and Octavia Butler. Structured chronologically, this class will consider how the genre begins, coalesces, and eventually solidifies as well as how these developments influence and are influenced by historical phenomena related to slavery in the United States. Secondary readings will introduce students to the history of US slavery, the central scholarship of slave narratives, and to broader theories of genre, race, and the intersections of aesthetics and politics. English 6681 Theory of Second Language Acquisition R 4-6:30 Instructor: Brent Wolter This course is designed to introduce current and future teachers to fundamental ideas and perspectives in second language grammar and vocabulary acquisition. Particular attention will be paid to critically assessing and evaluating the different theoretical approaches, with an eye firmly fixed on linking theory with practice. English 6635 Teaching Shakespeare in Performance R 7-9:30 Instructor: Jessica Winston This seminar introduces students to the field of teaching Shakespeare with performance. The course will survey foundational and newer criticism and orient students to a range of performance-related pedagogical practices. In addition, the class will reinforce one particular approach, one that the course professor uses in her own “Shakespeare in Performance” class. This involves using performance history to open up interpretative questions about the plays and to provide a framework for interpreting current performances, whether filmed or staged. While the course will focus on undergraduate teaching, the readings and discussion will be relevant to current and future high school teachers too. No prior experience with Shakespeare or theatre is necessary. This course counts for the doctoral pedagogical seminar requirement, but it does not fulfill the pre-1800 literature seminar requirement. English 7731 Practicum in Teaching Composition W 7-9:30 Instructor: Lydia Wilkes 9 Philosophy 2230-01-04 Medical Ethics MW 2:30-3:45 Instructor: Ralph Baergen This is a distance learning course with sections in Pocatello (01), Idaho Falls (02), Meridian (03), and Twin Falls (04) An examination of ethical issues that arise in medical practice. Philosophy 1103 (Objective 4A) Topics may include informed consent, withdrawing life-sustaining Introduction to Ethics treatment, abortion, assisted suicide, and the Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb class schedule. An introduction to philosophy through an analytical and historical allocation of scarce resources. study of major ethical theories. The course will focus on the basis Philosophy 2230-05 of judgments and reasoning concerning questions of good and Medical Ethics bad, right and wrong. Online Instructor: Ralph Baergen Philosophy 2201-01 (Objective 7) An examination of ethical issues that arise in medical practice. Introduction to Logic Topics may include informed consent, withdrawing life-sustaining MWF 10-10:50 treatment, abortion, assisted suicide, and the allocation of scarce Instructor: Russell Wahl resources. This course is a mix of traditional logic and modern symbolic logic. The section on traditional logic includes basic argument Philosophy 2230-06 analysis and categorical syllogisms and the section on symbolic Medical Ethics logic includes a study of truth tables and formal proofs. The Online focus throughout will be on what constitutes a good argument. Instructor: Nobel Ang Students will learn techniques of analysis which will improve An examination of ethical issues that arise in medical practice. their ability to discern what is and is not entailed from given Topics may include informed consent, withdrawing life-sustaining claims. There will be regular homework assignments, several treatment, abortion, assisted suicide, and the allocation of scarce quizzes, two midterm examinations, and a final. resources. Philosophy 2201-02 (Objective 7) Philosophy 3353 Introduction to Logic Philosophy of Law MWF 11-11:50 MW 1-2:15 Instructor: William McCurdy Instructor: Jim Skidmore An introduction to the concepts and methods of deductive and An investigation of historical and contemporary theoretical inductive logic, with special emphasis on the use of logical approaches to law and a variety of philosophical problems that methods to identify, analyze, construct, and evaluate everyday arise with respect to the law. Topics include natural law theory, arguments. legal positivism, legal realism, Constitutional interpretation, theory of punishment, and civil liberties. Philosophy 2210 Introduction to Asian Philosophies MWF 12-12:50 Instructor: William McCurdy A study of Hindu, Buddhist, and other Far Eastern approaches to topics such as immortality, time, reality, mystical experience, the divinity of the soul, the question of duty. Emphasis varies. Philosophy 1101 (Objective 4A) Introduction to Philosophy Multiple sections offered. See BengalWeb class schedule. An introduction to the major thinkers and major problems in Western philosophical and scientific traditions. Sections may emphasize either an historical or problems approach. 10 Philosophy 4400/5500 Philosophy of Art TR 1-2:15 Instructor: Jacob Berger This upper-level course is an introduction to the philosophy of art. Students will acquire philosophical tools to study the nature, evaluation, interpretation, and impact of works of art. Topics include various theories of art and the value of art, the questions of creativity and meaning, the nature of aesthetic experience, pictorial representation, and the relationship (if any) of art to morality. We will read not only traditional and contemporary works of philosophy and art criticism, but also examine many works of art in a philosophical context. 11 Philosophy 4425/5525 Existentialism W 4-6:30 Instructor: Carl Levenson A survey of the major works of Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Sartre, and Camus. Topics may include the origins of values, the death of God, the varieties of despair, the inevitability of love's failure and the absurdity of life. Philosophy 4460/5560 Theory of Knowledge MW 2:30-3:45 Instructor: Russell Wahl This course is a survey of topics in epistemology such as the nature of knowledge, the problem of skepticism, and the nature of justification. Various claims about the sources of knowledge, and accounts of a priori knowledge and truth will also be considered. Readings will be from classical and contemporary sources. There will be two take-home examinations, a paper and a presentation as well as a final examination.