Spring 2013 course descriptions

Professor David Farley
Creative Passports        

This intensive writing course will use the document of the passport as a means to explore the boundary between the public and private, a boundary that is both a particular place and an abstract idea. In particular, we will focus on how the passport organizes information about us into a neat little booklet and asks us to verify our identity in a certain way in order to pass. Through a series of papers that emerge from the different categories present in the passport – categories such as name, language, gender, nation, and the like – we will attempt to “reclaim” this document from the government bureaucracy of which it is a part and recast it in a form that can better represent who we are and how we engage the world, ultimately allowing us a greater freedom to travel where we will. In addition to this series of papers we will read authors such as Chekhov, Sebald, Tan, and others. Students will complete weekly writing assignments, both in class and out, as well as a final “Creative Passport,” where they will collect, reflect, and reclaim the writing they did over the course of the semester. 

 

Professor Ikuko Fujiwara

In this course you will think, read, discuss, and write with cultural contexts in mind. You will explore the impact of cultures on the way we see ourselves and others. You will also explore different approaches to writing about culture as you pursue writing as a means of analyzing and critiquing culture, and of engaging with cultural images, artifacts, spaces, texts, and discourse. Throughcritically examining, analyzing, articulating, synthesizing, documenting, sharing perspectives, experiences, and writings, my hope for you is to gain a better understanding of who you are and where you belong, and to discover new ways of viewing your own lives, and the lives of others.



Professor Stephanie Gray
Writing the Self Through the City and Place, Keepin’ It Real

We live in one of the most diverse and remarkable metropolises in the world – yet this large city is comprised of countless neighborhoods, places, and people – millions of people, including YOU, all with a story (and maybe a mystery or secret) behind each and every one. In this class you will navigate your own story and sense of self through reading and writing about our city (and other places) and the many stories behind them, in order to create your own. We will write several types of pieces where we explore notions of self through place, NYC, and our own relationships to our city or place. We will write our own narratives, portraits, and analysis of different places and works we will read – mostly nonfiction, but ending with a special series of fiction short stories based on the author’s real life.We will explore all of these different elements of place and the personal for inspiring the writing of our essays, journals, research piece, and reflection with our end of semester portfolio. With so many interesting aspects to our class theme, there WILL be something for everyone to pursue – something YOU are interested in and excited by. While we will be working with this theme and focused assignments, within them you will always be able to choose YOUR specific topic/subtopic, so make it fun for YOU!We will learn that writing is a continual learning process rather than just a finished product to be evaluated and graded, end of story. Think of the analogy of a writer’s practice to that of an athlete and musician – do they do a perfect long jump or symphony on the first try? It’s about practice, practice and not always what we think is perfection. Besides supporting your continuing development of written sophistication and innovative/real life research (not the typical research you might always think of) this class will introduce you to different and exciting writing strategies through essays and a creative research work, and will culminate with a portfolio, with a personal reflection. We’ll write journals in which you will express your personal take/interpretation on the reading as well as what you think the writer is trying to express. Writers we will read and become inspired by include nonfiction works of: Touré, Colum McCann, “The Long Winded Lady”/Maeve Brennan, E.B. White, Sandra Cisneros, Jane Jacobs, Edmund Berrigan, Sloane Crosley, Nora Ephron, and others, as well as to be announced, yet to be published readings we’ll find on blogs and news sites that fit in with the explorations in our class (a little surprise can’t hurt!) 

 

Professor Jeff T. Johnson
I’m New Here Where is the self?

We will use the Gil Scott-Heron album I’m New Here (2010) as a launch text for this First Year Writing course. In particular, the song “I’m New Here” (along with Smog’s original, from the 2005 album A River Ain’t Too Much to Love) will be a through-line and reference point for our discussions about reading and writing. The theme is starting anew, and negotiating new and old selves in terms of opportunity and loss, baggage and burden, alienation and community-building. The drama of being new here plays out with(in) the self and in a society (or societies) of displacement and inclusion. One is estranged from, rejected and embraced by the self and others. Place and self, self and other may be conflated, and differentiating these is an ongoing process of self-realization and being in the world. Writing is a negotiation between the self and the world, which affect one another. We learn the signs, codes and customs of a new place through our reading and writing practice, and in doing so we learn to communicate with the people and culture of that place. We change, and so does the place, and our changing sense of place is related to our changing sense of self. As we consider our shifting notions of place and self, we will explore, in writing and conversation, ideas of relocation, change, relationality/intersubjectivity, home, exile, redemption, discovery, and anything else that occurs to us in relation to readings and discussion. We will have the opportunity to explore various forms and strategies in our writing, including the epistle, obituary, meditation, song lyric, digression, classified ad, prose poem, erasure, discursive music review, journalistic account, and transcript. We will also develop our writing skills in relation to the traditional scholarly essay and hybrid essay forms. How does the use of multiple forms to express our thoughts and ideas relate to course themes of leaving, arrival and the relational self? Throughout the semester, we will reflect on this question. The goal is for us to become more agile writers, as we broaden our sense of what writing is, and what the writing self is. Meanwhile, we will explore the ways we engage each other, ourselves, and the world through letters. By the end of the course, we will be in another place, ready to be new (t)here again.  

 

Professor Angie A. Lalla
Humor             

The goal of this course will be to explore the purpose(s) and purpose-ful-ness of writing in, and through, a humorous lens. In order to for us to undertake such a theme-based approach to writing, we must first work towards the understanding that writing is not simply an arrangement of words that convey meaning; it is a medium - a tool that can be used for 1. representing and re-presenting society, 2. investigating meaningful experiences 3. claiming and arguing a perspective, and perhaps most significantly, 4. provoking action and instrumenting social change through a comic style. Throughout our time together, we will be examining various forms of writing such as humorous fictions and critical essays, and utilizing both traditional (short-stories, poetry, novel excerpts, etc.) and nontraditional (spoken word performances, stand-up comedy, memes, etc.) literary mediums as a means of developing our conceptions about self, society, language, and the writing process. We will also be coming to terms with this idea of writing as a process - which requires you to think, research, draft, revise, and above all, be committed and accountable writers. While our schematic focus will be to consider the ways in which humor is represented in texts - especially in relation to oppression, subversion, liberation, etc. - we will also be rethinking the notion of readable texts, and looking to digital forms of writing such as memes and image macros, to determine if and how society has reappropriated writing. This course also emphasizes your role as a writer, and will be actively engaging your positionality (in terms of race, class, gender, etc.) through our readings and your writings. I also promise that by the end of the semester, you'll be leaving our class with more than a few laughs!  

 

Professor M. Amanda Moulder

Personal Stories/Public Engagement In 1990, activist and New York City Teacher of the Year Award recipient John Taylor Gatto stated that: “The truth is that schools don’t really teach anything except how to obey orders. This is a great mystery to me because thousands of humane, caring people work in schools as teachers and aides and administrators, but the abstract logic of the institution overwhelms their individual contributions.” His statement upset people and has been rejected by many, yet it hits on a central tension in contemporary society: What do we need educational institutions for?  For that matter, how do institutions of all types tend to “overwhelm” our individual contributions and why?  During this semester, you will begin to answer these questions and will focus on the purpose and value of a college education in your life.  Next, you will explore your personal encounters with identity, education, and institutional injustice.  Finally, you will analyze your own stories to locate the topics that inspire you to take part in larger public conversations.  During this final unit, you will insert yourself into a signification public discussion, conduct primary and secondary research, and search for common ground with people who care about the same issues as you. The entire semester will be guided by the idea that when we investigate and write about what we already love to think about, we are better writers and sharper critical thinkers.This section of English 1000c will share many ideas and assignments with Professor Sophie Bell’s section of ENG 1000C. 

 

Professor Jon L. Peacock 

This English Composition class will focus on developing your skills as a critical reader and writer. The class theme, “Us & Them: A Critical Look at Stereotypes and Misconceptions,” looks at misconceptions and prejudices that create social barriers. We will read articles throughout the semester, and will use these as a starting point to take a critical look at social difference. Beyond that, we will have class discussions, weekly reading responses, and four formal writing projects throughout the semester.

 

Professor Meghan Punschke
Exploring Disparate Identity through the Critical and Creative

Do I contradict myself?
Very well then I contradict
            myself,
(I am large. I contain multitudes.)-          Walt Whitman, “Song of Myself”The “self” is a complex form of identification that is made up of many disparate parts. Fortunately, the written word is one of the most powerful tools for expressing and uniting these fundamental facets of identity.This course will provide an overview of the dynamic nature of identity through various types of texts and composition, both critical and creative. Throughout the semester, students will examine how others classify themselves through a diverse set of readings, and start to piece together the many divergent components that make-up the “identified self.” They will simultaneously explore their uniqueness in terms of these ideals, and attempt to further define their own identities through their writing.This writing intensive course will cover the core forms of academic composition and the associated process in a collaborative environment— ideas will regularly be shared through peer-review and group discussion. These activities will help students sharpen their critical thinking skills and become better scholarly readers and writers. As a result, each student will leave a written legacy, which will showcase his/her reflective identity via a portfolio that is analytical and artistic in nature.  

 

Nicola Ruiz

Finding ourselves, finding our voices  This class is all about YOU! Using in-class writing prompts and a selection of non-fiction writing, you will unearth your own, individual narratives. Everyone has a unique story within them. For your semester-long project you will be asked to think about your personal history, how and where you were raised, the stories passed down to you, influential or life-changing moments, and the people in your lives. Piece by piece, week by week this narrative will grow and evolve and you’ll begin to learn more about yourselves, your pasts and how these pieces of the puzzle impact who you are as individuals today.You’ll discover how to take your ideas and develop, organize, revise and edit them into a coherent and compelling text. Using a variety of research tools, from interviewing the “characters” in your narratives to digging up historical facts online and in the library, you’ll learn how to deepen and strengthen your narratives.In this class writing will be an exciting, challenging and collaborative process and we’ll explore how writing is inextricably linked to the larger questions of culture and community. In sharing these stories with your peers you will learn about one another and about different cultures and ways of life. 

 

Professor Tara Roeder
Forms that Challenge: Traversing Genre

Artists and intellectuals have a commitment to try to make their work […] not in the watered down forms that only capitulate to the mediocracy, but in forms that challenge, confront, exhilarate, provoke, disturb, question, flail, and even fail. Charles Bernstein, “Revenge of the Poet-Critic” 
         I couldn’t agree with the above quote more. That’s why this course is designed to give you, as artists and intellectuals, the opportunity to explore writing through multiple lenses, forms, and approaches.  For the next few months, we will become a community of writers, thinking about our craft and looking at how a variety of texts—especially your own and those of the other writers in class—work.
         The texts you create this semester will come out of your passion, your experiences, and your beliefs, and they will grow as you critically re-envision them.  I will not give you a list of topics to write about; this course will allow you the opportunity to create your own content, exploring concepts like self, family, memory, place, culture, and politics through the use of forms such as memoir, research project, documentary, manifesto, poetry, graphic text, critical analysis, and letter.  You will have the opportunity to craft your own vision as a writer while exploring the conversations surrounding various genres.
         As you compose your texts, both your work and you as a writer will grow in significant ways.  We’ll look at writing both as an act of self-construction and a way of connecting to a larger world, and we’ll engage in a process of dialogue with each other, one that includes drafting, sharing, responding, listening, and revising.  We'll move through various genres, exploring their possibilities and pushing their boundaries, as we attempt to make meaning out of issues we care deeply about.   

 

Professor Deborah Taranto 
         

Writing is a powerful tool for learning.  When we write we become conscious of ourselves.  We define ourselves, and we come to understand our lives.  We give our inner voice a more public place in the world.  By choosing Memoir as the focus of this class, it becomes a window into our life.  Memoir-making offers a chance to pause and take a vantage point from which to explore the inner and outer landscape of our lives.  Students will have occasion to pause and ask questions of themselves that they may not ordinarily do, or may deliberately shy away from.  What window are you opening?  What is its frame?  When I look at my past is there a pattern that tells me something about my relationships and myself? What have been my standards?  What do I regret?  Working with these questions and with examples of contemporary memoirs and guided exercises, this course will help to give the student the confidence he/she may need to be honest and open about expressing themselves in their writing and in their class.
                   These exercises will teach the student discipline, how to choose what to keep in one's work and what to take out, editing, the importance of revision, the basic landscape of what we know and understand to be the art of writing.
Through the various readings the student will discuss the author's particular issues and come to understand the motivation behind the action and/or thoughts.  Questions such as: "How does this apply to my life? "When have I felt these same emotions?" and many others will be addressed and connections between the readings and the student will be realized.  It will also serve as a bridge of cultures and genders by openly exploring the commonalities that populate our communities, environments and world.    

 

Professor Bill Torgerson 

Taking a cue from Nicholas Carr’s book The Shallows: What The Internet is Doing to Our Brains, I ask the students I work with to consider a series of questions: Where are you spending your time online? Toward what purpose? What does it mean to be digitally literate? These are all questions students will investigate as they write a digital literacy narrative. Conversation will be a major feature of the course and take the form of face-to-face discussions, hand-written notes, Tweets around the hash tag #torgchat, excerpts from books, and the creation of a short documentary film. The notion of what it means to write will be expanded. Students will have the freedom to take on additional inquiry projects of their choosing and write a documentary-style research text that weaves scholarly sources with a personal story. Final writing portfolios will be turned in electronically through the Digication ePortfolio platform. It’s my hope to reinvigorate intellectual curiosity and to begin conversations that will continue long after the semester ends.  

 

Professor Christine Utz

If all writing is a form of self-expression, what are we saying about ourselves when we put pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard)? Identity is conveyed through various means, from the clothes we wear to the people we associate with, but among these cues, our voice says a great deal about who we are and what we believe in. In this class, we will explore what it means to have a “voice” not only in writing, but also in the way we think and respond to various modes of communication. How do our backgrounds, experiences, culture, family, and friends affect the way we think, read, and write?Though we will be working toward a similar goal—whether that involves writing a particular kind of essay, or reading the assigned text—we will all approach it from different perspectives. This is the beauty of our differences, the value of individuality. By embracing your unique perspective, you will be able to produce original writing that is thoughtful and creative, while also adhering to academic conventions. You will learn to take your essays through multiple revisions in order to re-visit your purpose and re-shape your ideas, understanding that an essay might never be totally “finished;” even professional writers write, and rewrite, and rewrite again. Throughout your investigation of self, you will examine and try your hand at various genres of writing, such as the personal essay, analytical essay, research essay, documentary proposal, letter, dramatic dialogue, editorial, and analogy. We will work collaboratively to respond to each others' written work in peer groups and as a class, and we will continually question, study, and comment on perceptions (and misconceptions) of identity. The course will conclude with the handing in of a final portfolio that displays the quality and breadth of your work over the course of the semester  

 

Professor Nick Young
Writing for Self, College, & World

In this course, you will be challenged to immerse yourself in writing through a variety of practices: pre-writing and generating techniques, multiple approaches for developing and organizing the unique message that you would like to convey, strategies for revising and editing your own texts, planning your time and efforts to meet deadlines, and ways of preparing your writings for public audiences.  You will be asked to take on a meta-awareness of writing.  This means that you will be asked to speak to the multiple processes of writing for both yourself and others rather than simply seeing writing as the final essay that you submit or an essay test for you to pass.  You will have many opportunities to discuss writing with your peers, attend writing conferences, and meet with consultants at the writing center.  You will discover how, in so many ways, you are already a writer and we will build from that strength!