Literature
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"the splendor of truth": James Joyce and the Tedium of Sublimity — LIT4590.01
20th Century Afrocaribbean Writers — LIT2537.01) (day/time updated as of 10/9/2023
A Collective Portrait of America: Literary Memoir Since the Civil War — LIT2282.01
Abolitionist Poetry — LIT2585.01
How did American poets contribute to the fight for the abolition of slavery in the 19th Century? And how have contemporary poets carried forward that legacy? This 2-credit, 7-week course will focus primarily on poetry of the mid-1800s published in abolitionist newspapers like The Liberator, including works by William Lloyd Garrison, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Adaptation — DRA2249.01
Adler, Didion, and Sontag: Personal Politics — LIT2378.01
Advanced Dramaturgy — DRA4190.01
Advanced Screenwriting — LIT4533.01
Advanced Screenwriting — LIT4533.01
Advanced Translation Workshop — LIT4596.01
Afro-Futurism and Black Horror — LIT4289.01
American Captivity — LIT4610.01
The captivity narrative is a uniquely American literary form, a distinct, adventure-driven offshoot of the Puritan spiritual autobiography--with affinities to the slave narrative--that has more in common with today's reality-based media programming that you might think. We'll spend the term looking closely at the captivity narratives that form the canon, beginning with the
American Others: Experimental American Literature — LIT4221.01
Animal Tales: Fundamentals of Creative Writing — LIT2330.01
Anne Carson — LIT4382.01
Are We There Yet: Visions of Dystopia — LIT2518.01
It is a commonly felt experience, in our current age of climate crisis, misinformation, pandemics, declining birth rates, late-stage capitalism, and the apparent twilight of democracy, etc., that we are living through (or at, or near) the end of the world. Where do we look for precedents for this feeling? To what extent does this dark life imitate art, or vice
Art of the Sonnet: Conventions and Inventions — LIT4113.01
Art of the Sonnet: Conventions and Inventions — LIT4113.01
Aspects of the Novel — LIT4193.01
Auden and Isherwood — LIT2498.01
Bad Romance: Shakespeare's Poetry — LIT4380.01
Bad Romance: Shakespeare's Poetry — LIT4380.01
Beat By Beat Script Interpretation: Pulitzer Version — DRA4192.01
Students in this class will read a weekly selection of Pulitzer Prize winning plays and be required to analyze and explore these plays beat by beat in class discussion and weekly critical writing exercises. This is an in-depth script interpretation class in which theme, dramatic structure, arc, character development, tone, style and extensive study of the given playwrights