Spring 2018 Class Schedule
Course | Title | Co-List | Instructor | Lecture | Discussion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
COMP_LIT 202-0-20 | Interpreting Culture, “Doctor Zhivago in Cultural and Historical Context” | Nina Gourianova | TuTh 2pm - 3:20pm | ||
COMP_LIT 202-0-20 Interpreting Culture, “Doctor Zhivago in Cultural and Historical Context”This course is designed as a following sequence to SLAV211-1, a general survey of early 20c. Russian Literature, focused on the interconnections between new ideas in culture and politics. It explores in detail the legendary novel Doctor Zhivago (1957), written by the Noble Laureate Boris Pasternak. This major literary work is discussed in the broad Russian and European cultural and historical context of the Cold War era, and we will follow and compare the paths of literary heroes and their real-life prototypes: Pasternak himself and his long-time companion Olga Ivinskaya. Doctor Zhivago was harshly criticized and censored in Soviet Union, then smuggled to the West with the help of the CIA to be preserved and published for the first time, finally becoming a world literary sensation and winning the Nobel Prize. Through the tumultuous publication history of this manuscript, students can gain a foundational knowledge of the history of the Soviet Union, and an understanding of the changes in the literary climate throughout the history of Soviet Russia. | |||||
COMP_LIT 205 | Feminist Theory & Media in S. Asia | ASIAN_LC 290-0-22 GNDR_ST 341 | L. Brueck | TuTh 2pm - 3:20pm | |
COMP_LIT 205 Feminist Theory & Media in S. AsiaThis course will introduce students to the ways in which South Asian (dominantly Indian, but also Pakistani, Sri Lankan, and diasporic) feminist intellectuals, artists, and activists help to shape the global discourse of feminism. After an introduction to the major contours of South Asian feminist discourse and artistic and activist practice, we will pay special attention to modern and contemporary media forms (film, web serials, blogs, journalism etc.) in South Asia that bring a feminist perspective to myriad social issues (gender identity, sexuality, caste, classed labor etc.). Students will also collaborate on critical multimedia media projects of their own | |||||
COMP_LIT 207 | Intro to Critical Theory | Tyler Zimmer | MW 9:30am - 10:50am | ||
COMP_LIT 207 Intro to Critical TheoryIn this class, we will focus on the foundations of critical theory in the works of Marx, Nietzsche, Weber, and Freud, paying particular attention paid to methods they devise and deploy in their treatment of moral and religious phenomena. Lectures will primarily involve a close analysis and discussion of the readings. | |||||
COMP_LIT 210 | The Bible as Literature | Barbara Newman | MWF 1pm - 1:50pm | ||
COMP_LIT 210 The Bible as LiteratureThis course is intended to familiarize literature students with the most influential text in Western culture. No previous acquaintance with the Bible is presupposed. We will consider such questions as the variety of literary genres and strategies in the Bible; the historical situation of its writers; the representation of God as a literary character; recurrent images and themes; the Bible as a Hebrew national epic; the New Testament as a radical reinterpretation of the "Old Testament" (or Hebrew Bible); and the overall narrative as a plot with beginning, middle, and end. Since time will not permit a complete reading, we will concentrate on those books that display the greatest literary interest or influence. From the Torah we will read Genesis, Exodus, and parts of Deuteronomy; from the Prophets, Amos, Jonah, Second Isaiah, and Daniel; and from the Writings, the books of Judges, Ruth, Psalms, and the Song of Songs, along with the saga of King David and portions of the Wisdom literature. In the New Testament, we will read the Gospels according to Matthew, Luke, and John and the book of Revelation. We'll look more briefly at issues of translation; traditional strategies of interpretation, such as midrash and allegory; and the historical processes involved in constructing the Biblical canon. | |||||
COMP_LIT 211 | Topics in Genre, “Intro to Premodern Chinese Poetry” | Corey Byrnes | MW 3:30pm - 4:50pm | ||
COMP_LIT 211 Topics in Genre, “Intro to Premodern Chinese Poetry”This course offers an introduction to the main forms, genres, texts and authors of Chinese poetry from the earliest period up through the end of the Tang Dynasty (618-907), the so-called golden age of Chinese lyric poetry. It explores not only how Chinese poetry was written, but also why it was considered one of the most important literary forms in pre-modern China. Poetry was far more than simply a form of expression during this period. It also served as a powerful social lubricant, a mode of moral instruction, a key topic in the civil service examination and a means of transcending the very bounds of time and space. Rather than offering a strict chronological account, this class is designed around three "alternative histories" that explore the development of Chinese poetry through: 1) goddesses, shamans and the poetry of desire; 2) space and the poetry of nature; and 3) homesickness and the poetry of travel. There are no pre-requisites for this class. All readings will be in English translation, though original classical Chinese versions for some of the material will also be available. | |||||
COMP_LIT 301 | Resisting Interpretation | ENGLISH 368 | S. Gottlieb | TuTh 2pm - 3:20pm | 9am, 10am, 3pm |
COMP_LIT 301 Resisting InterpretationLiterature always resists -- even as it demands -- interpretation. In certain texts of modern literature, the resistance to interpretation issues into a particularly violent struggle in which points of defiance are difficult to distinguish from moments of defeat. This class will examine some of the literary texts of modernity and the tendency of these texts toward two interpretive gestures or situations: incomprehensible self-closure (and the attendant contraction of a space for self-legitimation) and an equally incomprehensible self-expansiveness (and the exhilarating, scary freedom it entails). We will begin the course with the enigmatic words of resistance repeated by Melville's odd scrivener, Bartleby ("I prefer not to"), and end with the apocalyptic conclusion to Ellison's Invisible Man ("Who knows but that, on the lower frequencies, I speak for you?"). | |||||
COMP_LIT 301 | Practices of Reading, “Contemporary Theory & Homer’s Odyssey” | Marianne Hopman | MW 3:30pm - 4:50pm | ||
COMP_LIT 301 Practices of Reading, “Contemporary Theory & Homer’s Odyssey”Ever since Plato, philosophers and linguists have developed theories about, for instance, how language works; the respective role of authors, texts, and readers in the construction of literary meaning; and the relations between literature and history. How may that rich and diverse body of theoretical works help us develop more sophisticated readings of ancient texts? This course offers an introduction to contemporary approaches to literature including structuralism and post-structuralism, reader-response theory, Marxism, and feminism, in dialogue with Emily Wilson's 2018 translation of Homer's Odyssey. We will explore the various ways in which scholarly interpretations of Homer's Odyssey have engaged with and sometimes re-defined contemporary theory, and we will draw on those analytical tools to produce our own readings of the epic. | |||||
COMP_LIT 303 | Literary Movements, “Epic in Cross-Cultural Contexts” | William West | TuTh 9:30am - 10:50am | ||
COMP_LIT 303 Literary Movements, “Epic in Cross-Cultural Contexts”In our time of Snapchat and Twitter, the term epic has entered the urban dictionary. As the genre of "heroic song," though, one way it defines itself, epic predates even the invention of writing, so that epic is perhaps the oldest continuing form of poetic production. What has allowed such epic success? The persistence of epic through cultural and linguistic change is one of the form's central themes: how can words heroically uttered and deed heroically dared be passed on from one lifetime to those that follow? How are they transformed? What does it mean to take up as one's own something that has been passed down from a culture no longer present? Such questions become even more pressing in moments when one culture encounters another and is asked in its new context what to retain, what to adopt, and what to invent. In this course we will consider how epic narrative projects, recalls, and reworks its history as tradition?literally as what is handed over?and follow several examples of epic through their cross-cultural contexts. We will survey four thousand years of epic poetry, at least glancing at works from Indic, Irish, Germanic, and Finnish traditions. The bulk of our time, though, will go to reading and analyzing Homer's Iliad, Vergil's Aeneid, The Song of Roland, Camões' Lusiads, Milton's Paradise Lost, and Wolcott's Omeros. | |||||
COMP_LIT 305-0-20 | World Cinemas, “Time, History, Film” | Christopher Bush | TuTh 9:30am - 10:50am | ||
COMP_LIT 305-0-20 World Cinemas, “Time, History, Film”Chris Marker (1921-2012) was one of France's major filmmakers, but his work goes far | |||||
COMP_LIT 305-0-21 | World Cinemas, “Italian Film and Transnational Cinema” | Domietta Torlasco | TuTh 11am - 12:20pm | ||
COMP_LIT 305-0-21 World Cinemas, “Italian Film and Transnational Cinema”The film movement known as Italian Neorealism has changed the way in which we understand cinema and its relationship to reality. It has produced masterpieces such as Roberto Rossellini's Rome, Open City (1945) and Vittorio De Sica's Bicycle Thieves (1947) and inspired generations of filmmakers in countries as diverse as Brazil, France, India, Iran, Senegal, and the United States. This course will explore the history of Neorealism and its aftermath from a global, transnational perspective. Neorealism was soon marked as "Italian" and yet its origins and influence go well beyond the boundaries of a single nation, one of the aims | |||||
COMP_LIT 312 | Authors and Their Readers, “Nietzsche: Eternal Return & Will to Power” | Sam Weber | MW 12:30pm - 1:50pm | ||
COMP_LIT 312 Authors and Their Readers, “Nietzsche: Eternal Return & Will to Power”The class will consist of three parts: First, a brief résumé of Nietzsche's conception of language and rhetoric; second, a discussion of his conception of "The Eternal Return?"; and finally an interpretation of his efforts to think "The Will to Power". In addition to reading the relevant texts by Nietzsche, attention will be paid to Heidegger's discussion of the Will to Power in the first volume of his twovolume study of Nietzsche. Purpose of the course will be to illuminate the three different directions of Nietzsche's thought - language, eternal return, will to power, by focusing on their mutual interdependence, and above all, on the way his practice of writing provides the indispensable context for understanding the concepts it articulates. The literary dimension of Nietzsche's writing - evident in Thus Spoke Zarathustra, but prevalent throughout - consists in the prioirity of the "how" of his writing over the "what" of its "content". The class will consist of lectures and discussion, involving short student reports and a longer 15 page term paper. | |||||
COMP_LIT 312-0-21 | Texts and Contexts, “Art of Rabbinic Narrative” | Barry Wimpfheimer | MW 2pm - 3:20pm | ||
COMP_LIT 312-0-21 Texts and Contexts, “Art of Rabbinic Narrative”Rabbinic literature contains a large corpus of stories. In this course we will explore different methods of reading such stories. These range from naïve historiography to sophisticated historiography, from reading these stories as fables with didactic morals to reading them as windows onto a class-stratified and gender-divided rabbinic culture. Our analysis of these methods of reading rabbinic stories will be conducted in conversation with different twentieth century literary theorists. | |||||
COMP_LIT 313-0-20 | Texts and Contexts, “Caste in Indian Society & Literature” | Laura Brueck | MW 9:30am - 10:50am | ||
COMP_LIT 313-0-20 Texts and Contexts, “Caste in Indian Society & Literature”In this class, we will focus on caste and social hierarchy in India from classical Hindu religious and legal literature to contemporary political and cultural movements, with a specific focus on anticaste Dalit (Untouchable) literature (poetry, fiction, and autobiography). We will pay special attention to the way in which caste is imagined, maintained, and defied, and seek to understand how various people articulate | |||||
COMP_LIT 375-0-20 | Literature and its Others, “Shakespeare and Music” | Linda Austern | MW 11am - 12:20pm | ||
COMP_LIT 375-0-20 Literature and its Others, “Shakespeare and Music”This course offers students the opportunity to explore some of the many intersections between Shakespearean drama and music from the late sixteenth century through the early twenty-first, not only in many sorts of performance of the plays themselves, but also in opera, ballet, film, musical theatre, artsong, popular music, and the symphony, to name only a few. Textual languages include not only The Bard's original English and its more modern forms, but also French, Italian, Japanese, and Russian for starters. Given the character and complexity of the material, and the multimedia and interdisciplinary natures of Shakespeare-inspired musical works and scholarship, this course is open to students whose primary interest or field of study is comparative literature, film, English, performance studies, or theatre, as well as any area of music. Because the original productions of all of Shakespeare's plays included music, and each one has inspired many musical interpretations since that time, we will concentrate on three. Students will have the opportunity to work with other plays for research and/or performance projects. It is hoped that the diverse backgrounds and perspectives that inform class discussion in this venue can further inspire unique collaborative and cross-disciplinary work long after the quarter is over. | |||||
COMP_LIT 390-0-20 | Topics in Comparative Literature, “On Debt” | Rocio Zambrana | MWF 11am - 11:50am | ||
COMP_LIT 390-0-20 Topics in Comparative Literature, “On Debt”This course will be taught by the Edith Kreeger Wolf Distinguished Visiting Associate Professor, Rocio Zambrana. Debt is a social relation. It has received cosmological, theological, and economic articulation for centuries. Yet, at its core, debt is a form of social binding, hence a social bond. This course will examine debt as an economic, social, and historical relation in order to consider its critical function, thereby exploring the very idea of a critique of debt. We will read texts by Nietzsche, Marcel Mauss, Walter Benjamin, Jacques Derrida, David Graeber, Maurizio Lazzarato, Eletra Stimilli, among others. We will also consider ancient and contemporary articulations of debt forgiveness, relief, or cancellation (as articulated, for example, by Strike Debt or the Committee for the Abolition of Illegitimate Debt). This will give us an opportunity to refer to cases of debt in Latin American and the Caribbean. | |||||
COMP_LIT 390-0-21 | Topics in Comparative Literature, “Post-Revolutionary Iranian Female Writers” | Seyede Pouye Khoshkoosani | TuTh 12:30pm - 1:50pm | ||
COMP_LIT 390-0-21 Topics in Comparative Literature, “Post-Revolutionary Iranian Female Writers”This course examines literary works by Iranian women writers after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. We will investigate how these writers define gender and femininity in literature after the revolution and during crucial moments of the eight-year war between Iran and Iraq. The Islamic Republic of Iran implemented changes that influenced the role of women in both social spaces and their private lives. We will examine how authors employed their characters to speak out about women's pre-existing and emerging | |||||
COMP_LIT 412 | Literary Studies Colloquium, “Forms of Life” | Alessia Ricciardi | Th 5:15pm - 8:05pm | ||
COMP_LIT 412 Literary Studies Colloquium, “Forms of Life”Even more than he does in his late books, Michel Foucault identifies the history of philosophy in his last two seminars at the College de France (1982-1984) with the invention of new ways of living and new forms of subjectivity. This course examines how, in these seminars, Foucault displaces the concept of truth from the domain of logos to that of life. We will focus in particular on Foucault's interrogation of two ideas: parrh?sia (or fearless speech) and forms of life. According to his analysis, the two notions are related to each other, as fearless speech reveals itself to have not only a political dimension but also an ethical one, which aims at transforming the subject's way of life through the exercise of courage. Foucault traces the argument of his seminars back to an array of Greek, Hellenistic, and Roman sources. Finally, although he does not make gender an overt central focus of his late thought, we will consider to what extent this category may be seen to play a crucial role in extending the practices of truth-telling and care of the self. We will place Foucault's final seminars in dialogue with a selection of excerpts from ancient texts including Plato's Apology and Laches, Euripides's Ion, and Epictetus's Discourses as well as from contemporary works such as Hadot's Philosophy as a Way of Life, Foucault's own The Hermeneutics of the Subject, Agamben's The Highest Poverty, and Sara Ahmed's Living a Feminist Life. | |||||
COMP_LIT 413 | Comparative Studies in Theme, “Romanticism: East and West” | Clare Cavanagh | Th 2pm - 5pm | ||
COMP_LIT 413 Comparative Studies in Theme, “Romanticism: East and West”Much scholarship has focused in recent decades on Romanticism and various forms of historicism, with Edward Said's influential concept of an "orientalizing" West dependent on an imagined Eastern Other at the fore. What do notions of empire, colonization, Orient and Occident look like from the vantage point of an expanding Eurasian empire (Russia) and a colonized nation at the juncture of Eastern and Western Europe (Poland)? What does Romanticism look like as it moves eastward to what Louis Phillipe, Comte de Segur, called, in 1779, "the Orient of Europe"? We will explore these and other questions chiefly through the work of three figures, George Lord Byron (1788-1824), Adam Mickiewicz (1798-1855), and Aleksandr Pushkin (1799-1837) In the seminar we will read key texts from the vast secondary literature on Byron to examine recent AngloAmerican approaches to literary studies; to test their applicability to the very different literary traditions of Poland and Russia; and to challenge the critical and theoretical vocabulary in Slavic and Anglo-American Romantic scholarship alike. We will also address key topoi in the Romantic movement generally (the Romantic hero, Romantic nature, Orientalism, nation, politics, prophecy) by way of works in multiple genres: lyric, drama, narrative poem, novel in verse. All works will be available in translation. Slavic students will be expected to read Russian texts in the original. Polish texts will be available in the original and in both Russian and English translation. Questions of literary and cultural translation will form part of our discussion. | |||||
COMP_LIT 481 | Studies in Literary Theory, “Visual Culture and Media” | Domietta Torlasco | Tu 3pm - 6pm | ||
COMP_LIT 481 Studies in Literary Theory, “Visual Culture and Media”The aim of this course is to introduce graduate students to twentieth-century theories of visual culture, sound, and media, with special emphasis on the French and German contexts. Rather than | |||||
COMP_LIT 486 | Studies in Lit and its Disciplines, "Indian Ocean Epistemologies" | Evan Mwangi | M 2pm - 5pm | ||
COMP_LIT 486 Studies in Lit and its Disciplines, "Indian Ocean Epistemologies"With the dominance of the Atlantic as a model for the study ofcultural exchanges between continents, the Indian Ocean is often excluded from critical theory discussions despite its centrality in the circulations of various philosophical traditions in Africa, Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and Latin America. This course will use literary and philosophical texts from and about the Indian Ocean to comparatively examine how intellectuals and artists have viewed the world using scripts and terms different from those developed in the West. It is out of convenience that we use epistemology as an entry point toward a comprehensive engagement with Indian Ocean critical theory; much of the philosophical debates from the region (e.g., work by Mbiti, Nyerere, Tempel, Masolo) are on epistemological issues. However, a transdisciplinary reading of each text will engage with various perceptions of the critical practice the Global South, including the interface of aesthetics and activism. Taking Indian Ocean theories of knowledge as multiple because of their diverse sources and cross-cultural interactions for centuries, the course will be interested in unearthing the splintering differences among the philosophers and the changes over time in what might beconsidered a single school of thought. We read works by such thinkers as Bonaventura de Sousa Santos, Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Valentin Mudimbe, Sugata Bose, Sharifa Ahjum,and Achille Mbembe, especially in relation to their critiques or repurposing of western epistemologies. Indian Ocean philosophical traditions to be compared with western ones (and with one another) include Sufism, Negritude, Creolite, Transmodernism, Coolitude, and Ubuntu. | |||||
COMP_LIT 486 | Studies in Lit and its Disciplines, "Writing & History: Religion, Gender, Politics" | Christina von Braun | M 3pm - 5:50pm | ||
COMP_LIT 486 Studies in Lit and its Disciplines, "Writing & History: Religion, Gender, Politics"This interdisciplinary seminar examines the history of writing from a wide variety of perspectives, with particular attention to the implications of different writing systems in the determination of religious practices and gender roles as well political and economic orders. The seminar will begin with a review of recent work on the history of writing, which locates some of the first earliest forms in the systems of debt and finance that made possible large-scale, geographically diverse political orders. The seminar will then turn toward a reflection on the consequences of the invention of printing technologies, which made it possible for nations to see themselves as collective ?families,' thus producing the conditions for the emergence of nationalist ideologies. Writing systems are also deeply implicated in theological programs and religious practices. Monotheism is closely connected with the advent of Semitic abjads (consonant alphabets), which, among other effects, fosters abstract conceptualization. The seminar will similarly investigate the ways in which differences between Judaism and Christianity are related to the differences in the written embodiments of their respective holy books. Throughout the seminar, we will consider the gendered character of the opposition between writing and orality, where the former is generally associated with masculinity, the latter with femininity. Gender roles have created specific genealogies based on a paternal line; until the development of genetic fingerprinting, written records formed the ultimate basis of patrilineal descent. Among the topics under discussion in this segment of the seminar is the exceptional matrilineal character of descent in Jewish law, for, as a consequence of the Diaspora, the body of the mother replaced the homeland, complementing the ?portative homeland' of the Torah. The seminar will conclude by investigating how contemporary society?with its reliance on digital writing systems?has become a network of signs encoding our very lives. All readings and discussions will be in English The course will be taught by Professor Christina von Braun. Professor von Braun is the 2018 Max Kade Distinguished Visiting Professor of German. A renowned scholar in the fields of Gender Studies and Media Theory, she is a recent recipient of the Sigmund-Freud Culture Prize and held for many years a chair in the Institute for the History and Theory of Culture at the Humboldt University, Berlin. | |||||
COMP_LIT 487 | Studies in Lit and the Arts, "Post-fascist Aesthetics" | Patrick Noonan | Th 2pm - 5pm | ||
COMP_LIT 487 Studies in Lit and the Arts, "Post-fascist Aesthetics"This course explores cultural and aesthetic responses to fascism in the wake of World War II. With a focus on Japan, and reference to the German and Italian contexts, we consider the uneasy relationship between fascist aesthetics and aesthetic critiques of fascism in the postwar era. We begin by examining how writers, filmmakers, and other artists in the immediate aftermath of the war produced moralizing narratives about the evils of fascism. We then turn to critiques that claimed such narratives reinforced the binary logic of fascist ideologies and challenged the totalizing tendencies of all moral discourses. These critiques lead us to a set of questions about "post-fascist aesthetics:" How did the cultural politics of fascism shape the range of aesthetic responses to it and forms of authority in the postwar era? How might works of literature and film illuminate the breaks and continuities between fascism and postwar political regimes? What images, rhetorical styles, and aesthetic techniques were used within and across various cultural contexts in responding to the aesthetics of fascism? Throughout the course we will consider the implications of the term "post-fascist" and how it has been used to define cultural and political movements since the war. All material will be available in English translation. | |||||
COMP_LIT 488 | Special Topics in Comparative Literature, "Fictions and Frictions to Power" | Leo Bersani | M 3pm - 5:50pm | ||
COMP_LIT 488 Special Topics in Comparative Literature, "Fictions and Frictions to Power"The exercise of various modes of power: social, political, erotic, dialogic. How has resistance to power been imagined and carried out? | |||||
COMP_LIT 488 | Special Topics in Comparative Literature, "Toward a Decolonial Critical Theory" | Rocio Zambrana | W 2pm - 4:45pm | ||
COMP_LIT 488 Special Topics in Comparative Literature, "Toward a Decolonial Critical Theory"This course will be taught by the Edith Kreeger Wolf Distinguished Visiting Associate Professor, Rocio Zambrana. This course will consider key texts in Frankfurt School Critical Theory alongside Decolonial Thought and Decolonial Feminism. Discussions will consider conception of critique at work in these texts in order to construct a decolonial critical theory of society. Readings will include texts by Gyorgy Lukacs, Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Anibal Quijano, Nelson Maldonado-Torres, Santiago Castro-Gomez, Maria Lugones, Yuderkis Espinosa-Minoso, and Gloria Anzaldua. |