Queens Campus
ENG 2200: Introduction to English Studies
(74052)
M.W.F. 10:10 - 11:05 a.m.
Dr. Derek Owens
“So You Want to Be an English Major”
Writing summaries, analyses, arguments, abstracts, & proposals;
conducting online, library, and ethnographic research; exploring
modes of reading literature, nonfiction, theory, cultural studies,
visual studies; investigating the profession, pedagogical
approaches, conferences, journals, the job market: all of this and
more.
ENG 2200: Introduction to English Studies
(74067)
M.W.F. 2:30 - 3:25 p.m.
Dr. Margaret Kim
The text and what to do with it are central to English
studies. In this course we will work on close reading of the
text, and thinking about approaching literature in different ways,
in political, cultural, and historical contexts, and in different
genres. We will read poems, novels, short stories, as well as
non-fiction.
ENG 2200: Introduction to English Studies
(73121)
T.R. 10:45 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.
Dr. Joanne Neff
The purpose of this required methods course is to prepare students
for their future in the English concentration. We will
emphasize close reading and effective critical writing. Our
major texts are Emily Dickinson’s poetry, Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein, and George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion.
Occasionally, we will watch the video tape versions to “Tell all
the truth but tell it slant.” As a result of our studies,
students will expand their awareness of culture and its literary
representations.
ENG 2300: Introduction to Literary
Criticism & Theory (74071)
T.R. 10:45 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.
T/B/A
An introduction to the history of critical theory, with emphasis on
contemporary literary theory, and its practical application.
ENG 2300: Introduction to Literary
Criticism & Theory (74066)
M.W.F. 3:35 - 4:30 p.m.
Dr. Willard Gingerich
The course is an introduction to literary theory and the practice
of criticism, designed for English majors, secondary education
students specializing in English, and anyone wishing to become a
more serious reader of literature and other texts. The course
will survey some primary texts of the critical tradition and will
touch on many different theories of reading and the construction of
meaning and art through language, from prehistoric practices of
oral tradition to the debates of structuralism and
post-structuralism, Marxism, feminism, cultural studies and other
movements. Concentration will be on the 20th century.
ENG 3130: Shakespeare: The Elizabethan
Plays (74065)
M.W.F. 10:10 - 11:05 a.m.
Dr. Lily Alexander
A close study of approximately seven plays representative of the
genres of history, comedy and tragedy and expressive of
Shakespeare’s early idealism.
ENG 3150: Elizabethan and Jacobean Plays
(74060)
T.R. 7:35 - 9:00 a.m.
Dr. Steven Mentz
Popular Drama in Early Modern England
What makes plays popular? Why did the plays performed in the
newly-built public theaters of Elizabethan London become so popular
with theatergoers in early modern England? These two
questions – one about theater itself, the other about the history
of the public stage in early modern London – frame this course’s
investigation of Elizabethan and Jacobean plays as the most durable
literary products of the English Renaissance. While many
plays were performed at court or in private theaters, the public
stage dominated the theatrical marketplace: playwrights earned
their keep by writing plays that were popular with paying crowds,
rather than simply by catering to elite tastes. These plays
mix high and low cultures; they were written by University
graduates and penniless hacks, acted by aspiring gentlemen and
boys, and produced in a boisterous, dangerous, and untidy
culture. The playwrights themselves were a combustible mix:
one (Ben Jonson) was tried for murder (he killed an actor), and
another (Christopher Marlowe) may have been assassinated because of
his work as a spy. We will read a representative sample of
six plays by popular early modern playwrights: the outrageous
Christopher Marlowe, the self-educated and pugnacious Ben Jonson,
the proto-Bohemian Robert Greene, the urban con man Thomas Dekker,
and the company man Francis Beaumont. We will explore
theatricality as a literary and extraliterary discourse, a space
for “play” outside of official cultural norms, and a new career
opportunity for the educated and unemployed. The course will
conclude with a very famous play – Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part I –
which will we consider less as an intellectual investigation of
politics and succession and more as a play that participates in
popular dramatic culture: a play about being king of the stage as
much as king of England.
ENG 3250: Victorian Literature
(72281)
T.R. 3:05 - 4:30 p.m.
Dr. Joanne Neff
The Victorian era (1838-1901) is filled with contradictions.
Its literature, remembered frequently for its prudishness, is
extensively coded with double meanings. It is the era of
religion and Darwinism, of laissez-faire economics and the
Communist Manifesto, of patriarchal power and rising
feminism. In this course, we shall examine gender, class, and
economics within their nineteenth century literary and historical
contexts. We will read essays that provide the framework for
understanding three of the key texts of Victorian Britain:
Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, Alfred Lord Tennyson’s Idylls of the
King, and Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations.
ENG 3340: American Realism and Naturalism
(74058)
T.R. 10:45 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.
Dr. Jennifer Travis
This course will examine how American writers in the years from the
Civil War to the First World War set about representing and
analyzing American social and political life. Topics include: the
changing status of individuals in the face of economic expansion,
representations of immigrants and issues of cultural dislocation,
westward expansion, the changing status of women, and the problems
faced by newly freed slaves.
ENG 3410: Modern Fiction
(74061)
T.R. 9:10 - 10:35 a.m.
Dr. Stephen Sicari
This course will trace the developments in technique and theme in
the Modern British Novel, from the turn of the twentieth century
with Conrad until the beginning of the Second World War with Woolf.
The Novel as a genre was inaugurated in the eighteenth century
largely as a response to new economic and political conditions that
demanded a new understanding of the individual, and the novel
always delights in portraying the experience of ordinary people
doing ordinary things. But as the genre develops through the
nineteenth century, the space for the individual to act and to will
seem to narrow considerably with the development of Realism and
Naturalism, the latter especially. At the turn of the
twentieth century, the plight of the individual seemed desperate,
to the point where Joyce begins Dubliners with these words, “There
was no hope for him this time.” The Modern British Novel
seeks to break apart narrative in order to make more room for
individual agency, and to bring historical and political concerns
from their former usually background role into open conflict with
the individual, playing out the tension between inner and outer,
private and public, individual and society. The novelists to
be read: Conrad, Forster, Ford, Joyce, Woolf, and Lewis.
ENG 3500: Classical Literature
(74405)
M.W.F. 12:20 - 1:15 p.m.
Dr. Bernard Cassidy
A study of Western writers from Homer and the Greek tragedians
through the Roman period, ending with St. Augustine.
ENG 3580: Postcolonial Literature
(74062)
T.R. 1:30 - 2:55 p.m.
Dohra K. Ahmad
This class provides a general introduction to the formidably large
category of twentieth-century literature from the parts of the
world that spent some time as colonial holdings. We will read
a wide range of fiction, poetry and drama, considering each text as
a product of its historical circumstances while also paying close
attention to literary style and compositional choices. The
category of writing called “Postcolonial Literature” came into
being, of course, through the process of European colonialism (and
in some cases American neo-imperialism); therefore, the syllabus
falls into the general areas of historical experience that we can
call colonialism (or imperialism), decolonization (or nationalism),
and post-colonialism (or neo-imperialism, or migration).
However, a central goal of the course will be to challenge the
evolutionary paradigm that such a schema may seem to imply.
ENG 3610 (=CLS 1290): Classical Drama in
Translation (74541)
M.W.F. 9:05 - 10:00 a.m.
Dr. Robert Forman
We will read as many of the tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and
Euripides as possible, and make comparisons with modern works
wherever appropriate. The comedies of Aristophanes and closet
plays of Seneca, so important in themselves, will serve primarily
as tools to the historical underpinnings of the three
tragedians.
ENG 3690: Special Topics in Literary &
Cultural Studies (74054)
T.R. 4:40 - 6:05 p.m.
Dohra Ahmad
"Global Vernaculars"
In this class we will read a broad range of twentieth-century
vernacular fiction and poetry from England, Scotland, Ireland, the
Caribbean, Nigeria, New Zealand, Australia and the United
States. As Nigerian poet and novelist Gabriel Okara wrote in
1963, the only accurate way to convey “African ideas, African
philosophy and African folklore . . . is to translate them almost
literally from the African language native to the writer.”
Therefore, Okara “endeavored in my words to keep as close as
possible to the vernacular expressions.” The result is a
highly stylized form of prose known variously as non-standard,
creole, pidgin, or in KenSaro-Wiwa’s words “rotten English”;
students of American literature will also recognize this approach
from the works of Mark Twain, Zora Neale Hurston and others.
Careful readings of these texts will bring a greater understanding
of language politics, authenticity, and the relationship between
author and narrator. Thinking as readers and as writers, we will
unravel the choices that every author makes in presenting
characters, settings and stories. While maintaining close
attention to aesthetic matters, we will also consider these works
in their particular historical contexts, examining the import of
vernacular writing in an era of globalization. Can we
understand vernaculars as stubbornly local phenomena, expressions
of transnational hybridity, or both?
ENG 3720: Introduction to Creative Writing
(74057)
M.W.F. 12:20 - 1:15 p.m.
Dr. Adeena Karasick
Focusing on a wide range of poetic writing strategies, this course
will aim to both workshop poems and explore a variety of
contemporary experimental procedures and poetic praxes. With
particular attention to the construction of genre, form, analysis
and revision, we will track through some of the most significant
postmodern texts of poetic thinking, and ground them within a
historical-cultural framework. In addition, this course will
also provide students with continual information on upcoming
readings, performances, open mics, slams and other poetry-related
events in the city.
ENG 3730: Poetry Workshop
(74056)
T.R. 1:30 - 2:55 p.m.
Prof. Lee Ann Brown
This workshop will alternate between reading poetry and essays on
poetics as models for our own works, and round-table group critique
of the new work we write. Both traditional poetic forms and
experimental forms will be presented and enacted. An
articulation of poetics, public distribution of creative work and
attendance of public literary events is required. No prior
experience writing poetry is required but you will be expected to
pursue and develop a daily writing practice during the run of the
semester.
ENG 3740: Creative Writing: Fiction
(74073)
W. 4:40 - 7:25 p.m.
Prof. Thomas Philipose
This fiction writing workshop will focus on your writing and your
thoughts. We will not rely on the thoughts/styles/critiques
of others to help us become careful readers and diligent
writers. An experimental and non-traditional approach will be
encouraged to help elicit fresh, unique work that reflects the
individual writers in our workshop. The majority of our
classwork will entail reading and discussing your stories. We
will use texts from various genres/media as guides for discovery of
what your voice/style can be.
ENG 4992: Seminar in American Literature
(74053)
M.W.F. 9:05 - 10:00 a.m.
Dr. Granville Ganter
U.S. Native American Literary Traditions
This course will primarily be a study of modern Native American
prose fiction, but it will include important non-fictional works
that have shaped contemporary U.S. Native American literary
identity. Major fiction writers will include Mourning Dove,
McNickle, Momaday, Silko, Erdrich, and Alexie. We will also
read from an anthology of U.S.-based Native American myths,
selections early Native American political oratory, and
non-fictional accounts of U.S. removal and extermination policies,
such as The Life of Black Hawk, the account of Chief Joseph’s
battles with U.S. troops, and Black Elk Speaks (which gives the
Sioux account of the death of “Long Hair” ---General Custer---at
Little Big Horn).
ENG 4994: Seminar in Themes/Genres
(74070)
M.W.F. 11:15 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.
Dr. Derek Owens
Utopia/Dystopia
This course will consider utopian and dystopian novels, focusing in
particular on 20th century speculative fiction and science
fiction. Our conversations will touch on feminist utopias,
intentional communities, internet utopias, and apocalyptic future
forecasts. Readings will likely include selections from The
Utopian Reader; William Gibson’s Neuromancer; Russell Hoban’s
Riddley Walker; Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower; Margaret
Atwood’s Oryx and Crake; Lois Lowry’s The Giver; Joanna Russ’s
Female Man; and David Harvey’s Spaces of Hope. Depending upon
your interests, writing projects can include analytical essays,
theoretical musings, pedagogical explorations, or fiction.
Staten Island Campus
ENG 2100C: Literature and
Culture
This course maybe taken by non-majors for St. John’s College Core
credit and for majors as an elective. The course addresses
specific topics that place literature in the historical context of
its culture.
ENG 2100: Literature and Culture: “The
Early Modern Life of Crime”
M.W.F. 10:10 - 11:05 a.m.
M.W.F. 1:25 - 2:20 p.m.
Dr. Melissa Mowry
Moll Flanders, Jonathan Wilde, Moll Cutpurse, and Mary Carleton
were all notorious criminals during their lifetimes. In this
class we’ll read several fictionalized accounts of their lives to
understand what fascinated, enthralled, repelled, and otherwise
captivated the English imagination.
ENG 2100: Literature and
Culture
T.R. 1:30 - 2:55 p.m.
Dr. Isabella Winkler
In this course we will examine poems, short stories, novels and
philosophical texts with a critical eye toward the difference
between productions of fiction and description of fact. By
studying a variety of phenomena as sources for cultural critique,
including advertising, addiction, and depictions of individuality
and community, we will uncover the cultural fables and allegories
that make our world appear coherent.
ENG 2200: Introduction to English
Studies
M.W.F. 11:15 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.
Dr. Robert Fanuzzi
This class teaches the fundamentals of literary scholarship and
critical thinking through engaging examples and assignments. A
selective survey of world literature and independent research
projects help students gain confidence and skills for thinking on
their own. Required for English majors.
ENG 2300: Literary Theory
T.R. 10:45 a.m. - 12 :10 p.m.
Dr. Isabella Winkler
In this course we will examine how contemporary critical
perspectives inform and limit the meaning of literature. We
will test these approaches on short stories, poems and the
occasional novel, asking such questions as, Why does theory seem to
be concerned with “minority” perspectives? Is theory an
afterthought to literature or an integral part of it? How
does theory affect our understanding of what a text is, and what it
means to read?
ENG 3300: Colonial American
Literature
M.W.F. 10:10 - 11:05 a.m.
Dr. Robert Fanuzzi
The attraction of Indian life to supposedly civilized Americans; an
epidemic of promiscuity and a rejection of perental control; and,
of yes, the founding of a nation. There are just some of the
challenges that had to face. The various political, social,
and cultural problems that accompanied the transition of the
United States from colony to nation make this one of the most
fascinating literary periods in American history. Writers
include Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, William Brockden Brown,
Mary Rowlandson, and Hector St. Jean Crevecoeur.
ENG 3110: Chaucer
T.R. 1:30 - 2:55 p.m.
Dr. Diane Cady
Students will learn to read Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales in their
original Middle English and in their historical and social
contexts. Although a medieval text, we will see that this
rich and important work explores a number of seemingly modern
concerns, such as economics, gender, race, ethnicity and class.
ENG 3170: Milton
M.W.F. 11:15 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.
Dr. Melissa Mowry
As the author of the English epic poem, Paradise Lost, John Milton
is often celebrated as one of the greatest English writers to ever
live. But Milton was also a man of his time and a man very
much embroiled in conflicts of his time. This class will
examine Milton’s major prose an poetry as well as the writings of
some of his contemporaries to see how people in the seventeenth
century used religious language to imaginatively discuss politics,
gender, and social policy.
ENG 3250: Victorian
Literature
M.W.F. 12:20 - 1:15 p.m.
Dr. Amy King
A study of the genres and functions of literature of Victorian
Britain, with emphasis on the emergence of the professional writer
as revolutionary, sage, and social critic.
ENG 3320: Nineteenth Century American
Fiction
ENG 3460: Contemporary Drama
T.R. 10:45 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.
Dr. Stephen Paul Miller
We will oscillate between science plays (i.e., Arcadia and
Copenhagen) and aburdist (i.e., Angels in America) plays.
ENG 3490: Special Topics in Modern
Literature: “Literature and Disease”
T.R. 9:10 - 10:35
Dr. Isabella Winkler
This course looks at literary representations of illness,
especially those with recent histories like hysteria, depression,
AIDS, allergy, ADD, addiction. We will read short stories,
plays and novels that discuss disease not only as metaphors for
social ills or human failings, but as models for ways of relating
to the world. Although depictions of disease often perpetuate
social hierarchies of gender, race and class, they also provide us
with such figures as the parasite, the virus, or the allergen,
which as we will see, are not always contaminants to be
avoided.
ENG 3720: Intro to Creative Writing
T.R. 9:10 - 10:35
Dr. Stephen Paul Miller
In this class we will write discursive, lyric narrative, and
descriptive poems; plays that directly engage an audience and
dialogic plays; and short short stories, creative non-fiction, and
fiction.
ENG 3730: Creative Writing:
Poetry
M. 7:00 p.m.
Prof. Laura Maffei
Learn to love language like you never have before. Express
yourself like you never have before. This course will introduce you
to the joys of reading and writing poetry. You will learn
about the elements of different kinds of poetry, old and new, and
more importantly, you will hear, feel, and taste poetry in the
vibrant way it should be experienced. The workshop-style
format of this course will be friendly and encouraging. By
the end of the semester, who knows what may come out of your
pen?
ENG 3740: Creative Writing:
Playwriting
T.R. 1:30 - 2:55 p.m.
Dr. Stephen Paul Miller
We will break drama down to basic elements. We will write
one-character, two-character, three-character, four character and
multi-character plays.
ENG 4991: Senior Seminar in Victorian
Literature: “The English Novel and the Everyday”
M.W.F. 1:25 - 2:20 p.m.
Dr. Amy King
A study of representative nineteenth-century fiction (with one key
foray into the early twentieth century) that emphasizes the novel’s
peculiar capacity to capture the “everyday” or the “ordinary
”. We will consider the depiction of everyday and repetitive
experiences of life-work, marriage, manners, and usual or recurrent
conditions such as shopping, eating, conversing-and the difficulty
of building a narrative around such topics. We will read
short selections from a range of theories of everyday life, but
will concentrate our efforts on reading a group of representative
classical novels by Austen, Gaskell, Eliot, Gissing, Trollope,
Hardy, Woolf.