Spring 2007

Queens Campus

E. 100: Modern Critical Theories (12978)
M. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Granville Ganter
The intention of this course is to be an introduction to the “linguistic turn” of twentieth century literary theory.  During the first two or three weeks of the class, we will survey the work of formalists and Saussure using an anthology of literary theory.  After that work has been accomplished, I would like students as a group to choose 5 or 6 primary texts to focus on for the balance of the course, such as Bahktin’s, Dialogic Imagination, Foucault’s, History of Sexuality, or Katherine Hayles’s, How We Became PostHuman.  In other words, students will have the opportunity to shape the course in the direction they would like to go.

E. 120: Composition Theory & Teaching of Writing (14564)
R. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Derek Owens
This course introduces students to the theory and praxis of writing instruction.  It has been designed for current or future writing instructors at the middle school, high school, or college level.  We’ll look briefly at the history of writing instruction in the U.S. and then focus most of our attention on how composition pedagogy has evolved in recent decades.
Readings and conversations will range from the practical and pragmatic (writing a syllabus, designing assignments, responding to student writing, teaching grammar and mechanics, grading and evaluation), to the cultural and theoretical (the impact of digital technology, alternative and hybrid discourses, race/class/gender in the classroom).  Students will have a chance to observe first-year writing courses in action and conduct research in the new Institute for Writing Studies.  Also, all students will have a chance to spend at least one day attending panels at the Conference on College Composition and Communication, the largest national conference for college-level writing researchers and instructors, to be held in Manhattan (March 21-24).

E. 230: Chaucer (14565)
T. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Margaret Kim
In this course, we will read and enjoy the Canterbury Tales, the best-known work of the fourteenth-century English poet Geoffrey Chaucer.  The course begins with an introduction to Chaucer’s language, Middle English, and the political significance of his writing in the vernacular.  We will acquire enough familiarity with Middle English to understand, enjoy, and analyze Chaucer’s poetry intensively.  Besides Chaucer’s language, we will analyze and study the Canterbury Tales in the context of the poet’s engagement with the social and political issues of late medieval England.  From the formation of literary tradition to the theology and reform of the Church, to social hierarchy and the theorizing of political authority, we will read the Tales as a series of dynamic debates and discussions on crucial issues of the poet’s time.  Moreover, Chaucer’s (possibly notorious) views on Jews and his ambiguous record on women (he was interested in women and yet had legal entanglements with Cecily Champagne on her “raptus”) take us to an exploration of the role of the author for readers and the theoretical connection, as well as divide, between our present and the author’s controversial past.  Is the author a moral figure?  What is the link between poetry and morality?  Should there be?  And how do we come to terms with a poet with an imperfect record on social issues?

E. 380: Topics in Early Modern Studies (14566)
T. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Melissa Mowry
“Early Modern Hermeneutics of Community”
It has long been an axiom that between 1660 and 1800, English culture witnessed the triumph of Enlightenment individualism.  But over what did Individualism triumph?  Or  to put matters a different way, if “Individualism” seemed like the answer, what had been the question?  In this class we will pose these questions and others, by looking at the multiple ways it was possible for people to imagine what a community might look like during the century between 1640 and 1740.  To this end, we will begin by reading the work of a variety of sectarian women (Quakers, Baptists, and Anabaptists) who wrote and spoke about their relationship to their congregation, neighborhoods, and government.  We will also familiarize ourselves with the political writings of John Harrington and other radicals of the English civil wars (1641-1648).  We will then move on to read the work of Restoration writers in a variety of genres, including, but not limited to, Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko, Thomas Otway’s Venice Preserv’d, Jane Barker’s A Patchwork Screen for the Ladies, Eliza Haywood’s Fantomina, Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, and Delariviere Manley’s The New Atalantis.

E. 590: Topics in 19th Century British Literature & Culture (14567)
W. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Rachel Hollander
“Late Victorian and Edwardian Fiction: Aesthetics and Politics”
The end of the nineteenth century to World War I is a vibrant but occasionally neglected period of transition in British literature and culture.  The optimism of the mid-Victorian years was giving way to heightened anxiety on many fronts, as England grappled with the woman question (including the suffrage movement and the “new woman”), the implications of the theories of Darwin and Marx, intensifying imperialist competition and colonial resistance, and the increasingly cosmopolitan metropolis of London.  The course will focus on literature’s relationship to this unstable and dynamic historical moment, paying special attention to debates about the relationship between politics and fictional forms.  Authors may include Conrad, Hardy, Stoker, Wilde, James, Gissing, and Woolf, along with non-fiction writings on aesthetics, women’s rights, colonialism, labor movements, and urban culture.

E. 600: 19th Century Public Culture (14568)
W. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Jennifer Travis
Literary Bestsellers
Page-turners and tear-jerkers: what books did the nineteenth-century American reading public love and why?   What can our reading of these works tell us about the society that produced and avidly consumed them?  These are some of the questions that this course—a literary and historical survey of American bestsellers—will investigate.  We will ask not only which books became popular, but why they did, and how their formal qualities and thematic engagements motivated contemporary readers to buy and read them so voraciously.  By looking at literary bestsellers, we will frame questions about audience, taste, and the development of literary canons, and ask what role the rise of professional authorship played in the formation of social and national identity in the United States.  Authors may include: Susannah Rowson, Benjamin Franklin, Washington Irving, Herman Melville, Nathanial Hawthorne, Susan Warner, and Harriet Beecher Stowe.

E. 761: Caribbean Literature, Culture & Theory (15316)

R. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Lisa Outar
Caribbean Literature, Culture and Theory
This course will examine Caribbean pre- and post-independence literary and cultural production.  We will trace the contours of a Caribbean literary and theoretical tradition via a careful consideration of novels, short stories, poetry, plays, manifestos and criticism.  The course will challenge the common divisions made along the region’s linguistic differences – Hispanophone, Anglophone, Francophone, etc. – and consider the Caribbean as a whole and in relationship to its former colonizers as well as to its powerful neighbor to the North.  In addition to tracking the intersections of race, gender, class, ethnicity and colonial histories in the selected works, we will assess the emergence of several key Caribbean texts as foundational for the field of postcolonial studies and the implications for the canonization of certain Caribbean texts in American literary curricula.

E. 775: Topics in 20th Century British Literature & Culture (14569)
M. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Stephen Sicari
Joyce’s Ulysses
We will read and enjoy Joyce’s Ulysses
That should be enough of a description, because that’s a worthy goal in and of itself.  But so that we may not offend, let me say more.  We will also learn to appreciate the place Joyce’s text has in various important contexts: as the culmination of the history of the novel (which is how he saw it); as the epitome of literary modernism; as an attempt to write a modern epic; and as an attempt to write allegory.
These “contexts” for our text will place some demands on us to read broadly and widely, and our class discussions will reflect this double focus on text and context.  To be ready for this course, students might wish to refresh their knowledge of Homer’s Odyssey; brush up on some Dante, reread Hamlet; review The Waste Land; and reacquire a superficial sense of the history of the novel (Watt will do, McKeon does better).  We will read Dubliners for the first meeting, and A Portrait for the second, so you might want to get a jump on those too.

MANHATTAN CAMPUS

 
E. 877: Workshop in Fiction (14897)

T. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Prof. Gabriel Brownstein
This is a creative workshop.  You’ll get to tell your own stories, to explore your own language, and to consider fiction from the point of view of the writer.  The course is designed for both beginning and experienced writers, but explicitly for graduate students in English, people who think seriously and critically about language and storytelling.  We will read a number of interesting writers—among them Ernest Hemingway, Ha Jin, Alice Munro, George Saunders, and Bharati Mukherjee—and as we read and write and study, we will explore their aesthetics and our own.

STATEN ISLAND CAMPUS

E. 300: Shakespeare & Early Modern Studies (15085)

M. 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Dr. Brian Lockey
“Cosmopolitans on Stage”
How did Renaissance English dramatists depict encounters between English subjects and foreign peoples?   This course will consider the Renaissance stage as a context for playwrights and spectators to consider cosmopolitan forms of mortality.  As we shall see, one form of cosmopolitanism manifested itself as a transnational or universal moral standard that accompanied the building of an empire.  Cosmopolitanism, however, could also resist the dominant universalizing tradition and give birth to a second dependent tradition that emerged from the marginalized, exiled, or banished subjects of the imperium.  We will attempt to trace the latter of these two traditions in works by Shakespeare, George Peele, Christopher Marlowe, Ben Jonson, and Aphra Behn.

E. 500:  Colloquia (10243)
E. 900: Master’s Research (10242)
E. 901: Readings & Research (15269)
E. 925: Maintaining Matriculation (MA) (10240)
E. 930: Maintaining Matriculation (DA) (10239)
E. 975: Doctoral Research Essay (DA) (13070)