Course Offerings English Department Spring 2008 Hartwick College
Transcription
Course Offerings English Department Spring 2008 Hartwick College
Course Offerings English Department Brochure produced by Rachel Prouty ‘10 & Professor Cody Spring 2008 Hartwick College 12. Woodcut border from Book of Hours. Paris: Vostre, 1502. 13. Border from Book of Hours. 14. Woodcut Illustration from Raphael Holinshed‟s The Historie of Scotlande. London: Henry Denham, 1857. 15. Illustration from The Historie of Scotlande. 16. Woodcut illustration by Virgil Solis for Æsopi Fabvlæ. Frankfurt, 1566. 17. Woodcut illustration from Ioannis de Sacro Bosco‟s Sphæra. Cologne: Cholinum, 1581 18. Black-letter text from The Romaunt of the Rose, in The Woorkes of Geffrey Chaucer, newly printed with diuers addicions which were neuer in printe before . . . . London: John Kyngston, 1561. 19. Woodcut illustration by Hans Springinklee for the Book of Daniel, Biblia Latina. Lyon: Sacon for Anton Koberger, 1522. 20. Woodcut illustration for the Book of Hosea, Biblia Latina. 21. Title page from Elbert Hubbard‟s Little Journeys to the Homes of English Authors. New Series, Volume VI. East Aurora, NY: The Roycrofters, 1900. 22. Title page from John Ruskin‟s The King of the Golden River. East Aurora, NY: The Roycrofters, 1900. Headpiece from Andromache. Six images from The Wonder Clock or four and twenty Marvellous Tales, being one for each hour of the day; written & illustrated by Howard Pyle. Embellished with Verses by Katharine Pyle. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1888. Illustration Credits 1. Woodcut printer‟s ornament from title page of Andromache. A Tragedy. As it is Acted at the Duke’s Theatre. London: T. Ratcliffe, 1675. 2. Woodcut initial letter from the “Epistle to the Reader” in Andromache. 3. Initial letter from Act I, Andromache. 4. Printer‟s ornament accompanying “The Names of the Persons,” Andromache. 5. Initial letter from the “Epistle Dedicatory” in Thomas Shadwell‟s The Libertine: A Tragedy. Acted by His Royal Highness’s Servants. London: Henry Herringman, 1676. 6. “Finis,” from the final page of The Libertine. 7. Printer‟s Ornament from Sir William Lower‟s Horatius: A Roman Tragedie. London: G. Bedell and T. Collins, 1656. 8. “Tragedie,” from the title page of Horatius. 9. Printer‟s ornament from the conclusion of Thomas Becon‟s “The Polecy of Warre,” in Becon‟s Works. London: John Day, 1563. 10. Dedication from Becon‟s “Preface” to “The Polecy of Warre.” 11. Initial letter from “The Polecy of Warre.” 1502. January Term 2008 Introduction to Creative Writing (ENGL. 213-03) Prof. C. Frost MTWTHF 3:00-5:30, CLA 248 Little by little, in workshop, discussion, small groups, readings by visiting writers, and conferences with the instructor/writer, we can move from what we like and what we don‟t like to the individual voice, one‟s own truest noise. We will begin with fiction and move toward poetry. On workshop days we will read student work with care. The spirit of a good workshop is serious, intimate, supportive, and often humorous. Our purpose will not be to „fix‟ a poem or story but to comment on its energy and its design. Discussion will concern the myriad possibilities of art and beauty— experiment and form. And there'll be lots of reading—the Beats, the moderns, minimalists, magical realists—to see what's possible in poetry and fiction. Art of the Cinema (THEA. 260-78) (W) Prof. K. Golden M 4:00-4:55 CLA 342, W 2:55-4:55 AND 149 Twelve fascinating films shown on a big screen in Anderson Theatre in a fourteen week term; what could be better than that? Discussion topics include story and screenwriting, cinematography, editing, art direction, movie music and scoring, special effects and more. THEA 260 includes a “W” option for students who need to achieve Level 4. CIS: Unruly Women (INTR. 310-Cd) Prof. S. Navarette TTH 10:10AM 12:10, CLA 346 This course will examine the outrageous acts and everyday rebellions (to recruit Gloria Steinam‟s phrase) of women who have interrogated and resisted the gender constructions and ideologies that, although roughly in place in early modern European culture, were formalized by the mid-eighteenth century with the establishment of a powerful middle class, the monied members of which were eager to include among their holdings women who, in their roles as wife, daughter, and mother, could be showcased as household tutelaries. Josephine Baker‟s notorious “banana dance”; Martha Stewart‟s attempt to corporatize domestic practice; Hillary Clinton‟s refusal to be “K-O‟d” within the political arena; the photographs of performance artist Cindy Sherman: outrageous acts such as these will be examined in the context of precursor acts of rebellion staged by women unable to contain themselves within their designated spheres within the larger context of their eighteenth-, nineteenth-, and twentieth-century Western cultures and societies. This course will place special emphasis upon novelistic representations of rebellious women, focusing on the ways in which feminine “waywardness” manifested itself within narrative constructs shaped by various overlapping contexts—political, social, cultural, economic. Discussions of these primary texts will be shaped by a consideration of a range of materials (music, films, the visual arts, scientific manuals) and theoretical models and methodologies. Cross disciplinary in orientation, this CIS will benefit from perspectives imported by students from other disciplines. Literary texts will include Lewis Carroll‟s Alice in Wonderland (1865), Angela Carter‟s The Passion of New Eve (1977), and Toni Morrison‟s Beloved (1987). Films will include Billy Wilder‟s Sunset Boulevard (1950), Jonathan Demme‟s Silence of the Lambs (1991), and Neil Jordan‟s The Crying Game (1992). Fury of the Northmen (ENGL. 235-02) Prof. L. Darien MTTHF 12:00-2:30, CLA 251 It is often said that in the 9th century, an Irish monk wrote a prayer in the margin of a manuscript: “From the fury of the Norsemen, O Lord, protect us!” Whether or not such a manuscript actually exists, the sentiment was by no means uncommon; from Ireland to Italy, from France to far-away Byzantium (modernday Istanbul), the barbarian pagan invaders from the Scandinavian peninsula (also known as the Vikings) astonished and terrified the Christian societies of Western Europe in the 8th and 9th centuries. They raided monasteries and towns, pillaging all they could find and killing anyone they pleased, from the lowliest peasant to the Archbishop of Canterbury (whom they murdered by pelting him with animal bones!). But the Vikings were not just evil barbarians that terrorized the so-called civilized world; they were also traders, explorers, settlers and poets. After their conversion to Christianity and thus the introduction of writing into a previous oral society, these Scandinavian peoples again astonished the civilized world by creating a body of vernacular literature that is virtually unparalleled in its imagination, breadth and beauty. This course examines a small piece of this rich heritage. We will read (in translation, of course) examples of the three major genres of Old Norse-Icelandic literature; the edda (mythological poems and prose), the saga (the best known genre, sometimes inaccurately hailed as the first novelistic writing), and the pattr (similar to short stories). Attention will also be paid to the historical backgrounds with readings from non-Norse historical sources such as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles. The breadth of the Viking experience will also be represented by sagas about the discovery of North America and about the Vikings in Byzantium. Recurrent themes and emphases will include the importance of revenge and blood feud, the law, the varying roles of women, and the evolving influence of Christian ideology. Texts will include the two Eddas (the Elder and the Younger), a number of sagas (including the Saga of King Harald and The Vinland Sagas), and a number of parttir, along with other short excerpts. Introduction to Screenwriting (ENGL.250-03) Prof. M. Burgio MTTHF 3:00-5:30, CLA 251 Students will learn: the basics of screenwriting, including story, character, plot, dialogue, scene, and dramatic tension; the structure of screenplay in three acts; and the screenplay format using Final Draft Version 7. Writing assignments include twopage papers on assigned films, several short papers on special topics provided by the instructor, a character biography, short treatment, and the first 30 pages (Act I) of a feature-length screenplay. Classes consist of lectures on the basics of screenplay craft, written assignments, screenings, discussions of films, and workshops of students‟ work. SIST: Bishop and Lowell (ENGL. 450-45) Prof. T. Travisano M 11:15-12:10, WF 11:15-12:35, CLA 329 Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979) and Robert Lowell (1917-1977) were two of the great American poets of the twentieth century. They met and became close friends in 1947 when Lowell was 30 and Bishop 36, and shortly after each had published a prize-winning first book. They remained close friends (Lowell called Bishop my favorite poet and favorite friend) for the rest of their lives and wrote many wonderful letters back and forth for the next three decades, until Lowell‟s death in 1977, two years before Bishops own. Your professor is currently completing an edition of the complete letters between Bishop and Lowell, scheduled to be published in 2005, and we will be working from those letters as well as with Bishop‟s and Lowell‟s poetry, exploring their interconnected lives and art and their intertwining poetic and personal development. Goals: As an English department seminar, this course serves as one of the capstone experiences of the English major. Along with reading some great poems and great letters, we will be developing direct, hands on experience with working with primary sources such as letters and other documents and we will also develop our skill is responding to secondary (critical) sources. Each student will develop verbal, research and analytical skills by giving a series of class presentations, sharing work with the class and getting useful responses. And each student will write two relatively long papers. To support you in doing this, well work on research and critical thinking skills, the use of source materials, and the art of developing a bibliography. Hawthorne & His World (ENGL. 380-Gh) Prof. D. Cody TTH 2:30-4:30, CLA 248 Nathaniel Hawthorne, one of the great explorers of the twilight realm of the imagination, is one of the few American authors who has consistently maintained his place in our literary canon. This course will attempt to enrich our understanding of the author‟s life and works by locating them in a variety of cultural contexts, including the psychological, the religious, and the historical. We will explore, for example, his ambiguous relationships with movements as diverse as Calvinism and Transcendentalism; his place in the “Young America” movement; his fascination with both magic and science; his ambivalent attitude toward the feminist movement of his day; the ways in which precursors such as Spenser, Milton, Shakespeare, Cotton Mather, Sir Thomas Browne, Robert Burton, Samuel Johnson, and Sir Walter Scott influenced his own stories, sketches, and romances; his relationships with contemporaries such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, Edgar Allan Poe, and Herman Melville; and his influence on such literary heirs and disciples as Emily Dickinson, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Franz Kafka, H. P. Lovecraft, William Faulkner, and Stephen King. There will be two papers, a midterm, and a final examination. All students will be expected to take an active part in class discussions. Four Modern American Poets (ENGL.384-01) Prof. T. Travisano MTWF 10:00-12:30, CLA 349 In this class we will be to read, experience and develop an understanding of four of the greatest and most original American poets of the twentieth century. Other goals will be to develop critical reading and writing skills and to develop an understanding of the art of poetry and how poets create a working style. The four poets to be explored this term include Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore and one mystery poet as yet to be determined. Modern British Literature (ENGL. 365-Ef ) (W) Prof. M. Schramm TTH 12:20-1:40, CLA 252 Spring Term 2008 “On or about December 1910 human character changed,” said Virginia Woolf in response to a London art exhibition titled “Manet and the Post-Impressionists,” which included paintings by VanGogh, Gauguin, Matisse, and Picasso. As Woolf observed, the exhibition revolutionized the way people looked at art and “human character.” Christine Walsh, an art critic for The Daily Herald, called these artists “Great Rebels of the World” and grouped them with Edwardian socialists and suffragettes. Texts by great literary rebels of the Edwardian Age will be our focus. We‟ll read Dubliners, a short story sequence by James Joyce, the Irish author whom T. S. Eliot called “the man who killed the nineteenth century.” Other scholars credit Virginia Woolf with ushering in the twentieth century with her experiments in fiction. Reading Woolf‟s novel To the Lighthouse will allow us to explore her revolutionary approaches to character and her use of stream-of-consciousness. In her essay “Modern Fiction,” Woolf explained that her aim in using this narrative mode was to capture the “flickerings of the innermost flame,” in other words, the internal worlds of human beings rather than their outward lives. “Flickerings of the innermost flame” also appear in writings of the modern poets included in the course (William Butler Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Philip Larkin, and Seamus Heaney); D.H. Lawrence‟s short stories; and E. M. Forster‟s novel Howards End. Grades will be based on two critical essays, a final exam, and class participation. “W” students will write two additional critical essays. Four Fantasists: Tolkien and His Precursors (ENGL. 350-78) Prof. D. Cody MW 2:55-4:15, CLA 346 This exploration of the literary fantasy—the realm, that is, of the imaginary, the fabulous, the unreal, and the uncanny—will center on the works of four of the central figures in the history of the genre. William Morris—poet, artist, political radical, a man who according to his own reckoning was “born out of his due time”— created the modern literary fantasy when he wrote The Wood Beyond the World in 1894. Shortly thereafter, H. G. Wells began to publish his “scientific romances”—works such as The Time Machine, The Invisible Man, and The War of the Worlds, “atrocious miracles,” as J. L. Borges has called them, that “will be incorporated into the general memory of the species and even transcend the fame of their creator or the extinction of the language in which they were written.” In 1926, E. R. Eddison produced The Worm Ouroboros, considered by many connoisseurs to be the finest example of the heroic fantasy. And beyond them all, of course, looms J. R. R. Tolkien‟s The Lord of the Rings, the most popular work of fantasy ever written and in many ways a compendium of much that came before it. As we read and discuss these and other works, we will examine the ways in which they concern themselves with the ways in which they express a utopian frustration with the waves of industrialism, imperialism, technology, warfare, pollution, alienation, and exploitation that have exerted such a powerful influence on modern life and culture. There will be two research papers, a midterm, and a final examination. The Anatomy of English (ENGL. 208-02) Prof. J. Suarez-Hayes MWF 9:05-10:00, CLA 252 "I really do not know that anything has ever been more exciting than diagramming sentences." Gertrude Stein What would possess Gertrude to say such a thing? Why bother to diagram a sentence? Have you pondered the Existential "there" lately or been accused of dangling a participle? We will probe these mysteries through a systematic, practical and analytical study of the structure and function of words, phrases, and clauses in the English language through an in-depth study of authentic materials by authors from diverse backgrounds, while emphasizing recognition of form and analysis of function. Required for those students planning to teach secondary English (must be completed before student teaching may begin). Recommended for English majors and minors, those planning to tutor at the Writing Center, and students serious about writing as a serious career. If you have ever wondered why English does what it does, this course is for you. Intro. to Creative Writing (ENGL. 213-Cd) Prof. A. Lichtenstein TTH 12:20-2:20, CLA 248 Learning to write creatively means learning to think creatively and to be aware. Through a series of writing experiments in both fiction and poetry, you will experience writing as a powerful means of exploring the world and In this course you will be introduced to various forms of fiction and poetry and to the tools of the craft that will help you to write in those forms. You will explore significant memories, images and events to mine for fictional and/or poetic gold. And you will learn that writing is a creative process in which you continually give yourself permission to say what you Shakespeare I (ENGL. 336-78) Prof. L. Darien MW 2:55-4:55,CLA 251 This course consists of advanced study of the first half of Shakespeare‟s dramatic career, a period in which Shakespeare wrote many of his great histories and comedies. Among the plays to be studied are Richard III, Taming of the Shrew, 1 Henry IV, 2 Henry IV, Henry V, Midsummer Night’s Dream, Much Ado about Nothing, As You Like It, and Merchant of Venice. Along with our in-depth consideration of the particular plays, their cultural context, and critical reception, we will also be attempting to answer two nearly unanswerable questions: how does historical drama change historical “reality”? and what makes comedy funny? Students may take Shakespeare I and Shakespeare II in any particular order they wish (and do not by any means have to take both), but please note that this is an upper-level English course. Middle English Literature (ENGL. 333-Gh) (A) Prof. L. Darien TTH 2:30-4:30, CLA 251 British Literature: Beginnings to 18th Century Variety is one of the hallmarks of Middle English literature, which is not surprising when one realizes that the time period is not only relatively long (c. 400 years), but also is one of enormous social, cultural, and linguistic change. Literature of the Middle English period is written in a large number of dialects and in many genres: romance, lyric, Breton lai, saint‟s life, epic, historical chronicle, drama, dream vision, and many more. This course can therefore only hope to introduce some of this rich complexity through the study of a number of the more important Middle English works, including those of the Pearl-poet and of Geoffrey Chaucer. Works will be read in the original Middle English except in the case of the Pearl -poet. This course is also satisfies the “Approaches” requirement for majors. Thus besides the Middle English works themselves, we will also be studying various types of literary criticism (including feminist theory, New Historicism, deconstruction, Marxist theory, and textual criticism and source studies) as well as applying these critical approaches to the literature being studied. (English. 230-04) Prof. L. Darien MWF 11:15-12:10, CLA 244 This course is a survey of the great works of English Literature from the beginnings through the 18th century. Not only does the course explore some of the best and the most beautiful works written in Old, Middle, and Modern English, but it also introduces the student to the methods of literary study, particularly the study of poetry. Among the works and authors read are Beowulf, Gawain, Chaucer, Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare, Donne, Marvell, Milton, Dryden, Swift, and Pope. (This course is required for all English majors.) Creative Writing: Fiction (ENGL. 311-Cd) Prof. B. DeLanoy TTH 10:10-12:10, CLA 329 Romanticism to Realism (ENGL. 231-04) (W) Prof. M. Schramm MWF 11:15-12:10, CLA 248 Have you ever wondered what was written in England in the centuries between Gulliver’s Travels (1726) and the Beatles‟ lyrics (1960s)? Have you ever drawn a blank when asked at family gathering, “So, as an English major, what do you make of Wordsworth or Joyce?” Answers to these questions and more can be discovered in Survey of English Lit. II, a course which includes Romantic, Victorian, and modern literature. We begin with William Blake‟s “Songs of Innocence” and “Songs of Experience,” deceptively simple lyrics that sound like Mother Goose rhymes but are actually biting satires of British society. The course ends with poems in which Seamus Heaney struggles with his vocation as a poet in troubled Ireland. Many of our readings will be poetry, but in the final month we‟ll discuss two modern novellas (James Joyce‟s The Dead and Joseph Conrad‟s Heart of Darkness) and selected short stories by James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, D. H. Lawrence, Katherine Mansfield, and Doris Lessing. There will be two paper assignments (four for “W” students), as well as a mid-term and final exam. This class is open to students that have all ready taken an introductory creative writing course. Otherwise, students will need to get permission to join the class. This class will assume at least a passing familiarity with the basic components of storytelling— character, conflict, detail, description—and focus instead on the craft of serious fiction. Students will read published work, essays on technique, and will write new work to be discussed in workshop. This class is for those with an abiding interest in fiction, in the how and why of prose. Creative Writing: Nonfiction (ENGL. 310-07) Prof. T. Travisano MWF 2:55-3:50, BRE 308 This is a course in non-fiction writing for those who already write well and want to get better. It‟s called creative writing: non-fiction because we‟ll be exploring how to use creative tools, narrative, humor, surprise, metaphor, appeals to strong emotion in writing based on fact or opinion. We‟ll be focusing in particular on feature writing and the essay, those areas of journalism and periodical writing that give the freest rein to the prose writers creative talents. Exploring examples of creative non-fiction from many leading sources, we will learn to read acquisitively: that is, we will to try to imitate, adapt, or otherwise acquire the most effective elements of the technique of these writers. Class sessions will normally follow a workshop approach, in which students will discuss, criticize and learn from writing samples. We will often meet in small group conferences to examine papers. On occasion, outside visitors may be invited to talk to the class about their craft. American Literature: Beginnings to the Civil War (ENGL. 240-03) Prof. T. Travisano MWF 10:10-11:05, CLA 329 In this course, well be reading a diverse array of writings which, taken together, begin to tell the story of the founding of the United States and the emergence of distinctly American ways of writing and understanding. Well hear from farmers and philosophers, from men and women, from people whose skin is white, black, or red, from poets, printers and politicians. In fact, several of our writers: Freneau, Franklin, Whittier, Douglass, and Whitman, to name a few were poets, printers and politicians all at once. Well study conceptions of freedom, individuality and equality, as these emerge from the crucibles of revolution, race, class, and gender. Well watch the emergence and transformation of such basic American concepts as the self-made manor woman. And well explore the struggle in American life between a devotion to traditions in politics, culture, arts and the transforming impact of a series of revolutions in politics and outlook. We‟ll also develop a critical vocabulary to talk and think about literature. We‟ll learn to read complex texts alertly and acquisitively and to write about and discuss them analytically. In the process, we will develop an understanding of American literature and culture to 1865 and its relation to the present. American Literature: Civil War to the Present (ENGL. 241-04) Prof. I. McManus/Dusenbery We will aim in this course to study leading authors of poems, stories, novels and plays enduring from 1865 to the present day. We will focus on classic works more or less in their entirety rather than engaging in a futile attempt to be encyclopedic. We will attempt to find patterns connecting these works to each other and articulate what may be specifically American about these texts. We will also focus on the individual voice, maverick or revolutionary as it may be. Thematically we will address issues of race, class, gender and the ways in which they have interrupted or deferred the American dream for the American family. These works are likely to include but not be limited to Walt Whitman‟s Song of Myself, Mark Twain‟s Huckleberry Finn, Kate Chopin‟s Desiree’s Baby, Charles Chesnutt‟s The Passing of Grandison, Stephen Crane‟s Maggie, A Girl of the Streets, Eugene O‟Neill‟s A Long Day’s Journey Into Night, Tennessee Williams‟ A Streetcar Named Desire, Alan Ginsberg‟s Howl and Raymond Carver‟s Cathedral. Other writers under consideration include Emily Dickinson, Edith Wharton, Langston Hughes, Ralph Ellison, Philip Roth, Jack Kerouac and Toni Morrison. We will relate works to their historical contexts and to cultural and literary movements such as Realism, Naturalism and Modernism as we look back at the breathtaking trip America has enjoyed since the end of the Civil War. Introduction to playwriting (ENGL. 250-78) Prof. M. Shaw MW 2:55-4:15, CLA 252 In order to explore the wonders of writing for the stage, we will read select contemporary works to explore dramatic structure, characterization, tone, and styles. The students will write monologues, scenes, and one-act plays, while also critiquing and workshopping the work of fellow students. The class will culminate in open readings of the students work.