2024-2025 Academic Catalog
|
ENG 281 - Special Topics in 19th-C American Literature Special topics in 19th-century literature through the Civil War invite in-depth consideration of how extraordinary cultural, political, and technological changes made this one of the most vibrant and studied periods of the American literature.
For English majors this course satisfies the D-2 requirement. For English minors, this course counts as a 200-level English seminar. May be repeatable for credit.
SPECIAL TOPIC FALL 2023: TRANSPACIFIC CROSSINGS IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY LITERATURE AND CULTURE
What desires, curiosities, and fears first motivated US exploration and commercial ventures in east Asia and the Pacific? How have writers supported the cause of anti-imperialism in the South Pacific and Southeast Asia? Who were the earliest Asian American writers? This seminar evokes such questions as part of a broader reconsideration of the history of nineteenth-century North American literature. Although this literature is commonly understood in terms of the continent’s transatlantic relations with Europe and Africa, we will prioritize transpacific geopolitics and cultural exchanges to broaden our perspective on its complex development. With this goal in mind, we will read works by some canonical US authors, such as Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, and Mark Twain, but also those of lesser-known writers of color, such as Lili’uokalani, Wong Chin Foo, José Rizal, and Edith Maude Eaton (a.k.a. Sui Sin Far). Additionally, we will examine more recent theoretical and creative works by scholars and artists to help us analyze nineteenth-century sources in terms of race, ethnicity, indigeneity, gender, sexuality, the environment, and social class, while also working to uncover an instructive “history of the present” in transpacific relations of a past era.
Prerequisites: Prerequisites: One 100-level English literature course (ENG 100-199) or permission of instructor
Anticipated Terms Offered: Periodically
|