Fall 2008

GRADUATE FLYER – FALL 2008

QUEENS CAMPUS

E. 100: Modern Critical Theories (74886)
W. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Granville Ganter
This course is intended as an introduction to the theoretical approaches generated by the “linguistic turn” of the twentieth century: Saussure, formalism, structuralism, and post-structuralism. We will survey some landmark texts and movements in the first half of the class, including Foucault’s History of Sexuality.  By mid-semester, however, students will be asked to start articulating contemporary theoretical problems they wish to pursue and we will develop our course bibliography accordingly.

E. 120: Composition Theory (74884)
R 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Anne Ellen Geller
This course introduces students to the many issues, battles, disciplinary turns, research efforts, and pedagogical shifts that continue to shape the field of composition studies and considers theory and praxis in relation to writing instruction – in English studies, writing centers, across the curriculum.  We’ll consider how composition pedagogy has evolved in recent decades with research and theory on composing processes; the text itself, writing behavior, relationship between cognition and writing, writing contexts and communities, development of the individual writer.  Our goal will not be to attempt to cover everything that is composition, but rather to build a foundation of knowledge about some of the key theories, assumptions, approaches and debates about written communication practices and literacy education.  Readings, research/writing, and in-class dialogue will range from the practical and pragmatic, to the cultural, theoretical and political, and we will consider composition theory in relation to English studies and literary/cultural/critical theory.

E. 160: Research Methods in English Studies (75127)
M 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Harry Denny
Under the umbrella of English Studies, many currents of scholarship explore texts through aesthetic, formalist, archival and interpretive lens, ways of doing research that much of teaching indirectly or directly addresses.  Another wide swath of English Studies intersects with a multitude of humanities and social science disciplines—from cultural studies and history to sociology, anthropology, political science and linguistics.  Composition and writing center studies, emergent concentrations in our department, situate themselves at the intersection of all these intellectual pursuits.  Learning to write a Milton essay shares a good deal of common ground with developing an essay analyzing social organization of First Nations people.  Similarly, the research process – be it inductive or deductive – involves posing hypothetical questions, considering means for testing them out, crafting rhetorical devices to presenting results, and challenging one’s own and other’s findings.  This course intends to introduce graduate students to a wide set of techniques and debates for conducting research in a variety of contexts.  Building from other courses, students will continue explore community building and collegial conversations through workshopping drafts and collaborative revision with a eye toward professional outlets for their work (conferences, journals, etc.)

E. 380: Topics in Early Modern Studies Law and Literature (74877)
R 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Brian Lockey
    This course will consider literary, philosophical, and historical intersections between Renaissance law and literature. Students will consider prose, poetic and dramatic works that engage with significant questions of Renaissance law and legal theory, and in the process, they will consider the most important legal conflicts and debates of the period, including the tensions that existed between the common law tradition and the civil and canon law traditions. Other topics will include custom and equity, the postnati, and jurisdictional disputes between the common law courts and Chancery. Readings will include works by such English jurists as Sir Edward Coke, Thomas Egerton, Baron Ellesmere, Sir John Fortescue, Sir John Davies, Alberico Gentili and Francisco de Vitoria as well as works of fiction by William Shakespeare, William Warner, John Webster, Edmund Spenser, Sir Philip Sidney, and John Milton.

E. 540: Science, Poetry, and Prose in Victorian England (74923)
T. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Amy King
Mathew Arnold in his 1883 essay “Literature and Science” wrote: “not only does a man tell us that when a taper burns the wax is converted into carbonic acid and water, as a man may tell us, if he likes, that Charon is punting his ferry-boat on the river Styx… but we are made to see that the conversion into carbonic acid and water does actually happen. This reality of natural knowledge is, which makes the friends of physical science contrast it, as a knowledge of things, with the humanist’s knowledge, which is, say they, a knowledge of words.” The vexed relation between the “two cultures” that is incipient in Arnold’s essay has properly been questioned by science and literature studies, even as it is evident that scientific knowledge enjoys an ever more privileged status in both the academy and more broadly in culture.  This course explores a time when the disciplinary boundaries that separate literature from science had not solidified into their modern form; science was more clearly a part of culture, an aspect of larger intellectual life rather than a separate sphere reserved for specialists. As a result, Victorian science often bears the imprint of the literary, while scientific concerns also found their way both directly and obliquely into the period’s poetry, fiction, and prose. Topics such as the scientific challenge to Genesis by geology, Victorian theories of mind, natural history and poetic observation, and the intersection of imaginative literature and Darwin will organize the course.  This course will consider the relation between four central Victorian sciences— geology, evolutionary science, natural history, and psychology— and their relation to the period’s literature.  Readings from: M. Shelley, C. Brontë, Tennyson, G. Eliot, T. Hardy, Kingsley, Hopkins, C. Darwin, P.H. Gosse, C. Lyell, H. Miller. 

E. 670:  Topics in 19th Century American Literature (74880)
M 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Robert Fanuzzi
Trans-American Literature:  Hemispheric Literary Politics
Cuba, Mexico, and all the nations of the Caribbean and Latin America, it turns out, have their American literature, too.  And much of it directly addresses or indirectly challenges the claim of the United States to cultural, political, and ideological dominance in the hemisphere.  So while it is true that many nationalist movements and literature of the Americas were conceived in explicit homage to the United States, the first nation to break free of its colonial master and a leader in the struggle to “de-colonize” the hemisphere, the writers of this other American literature eventually found themselves in another snare.  By the time Jose Marti wrote, “Our America,” to inspire the Cuban liberation movement of the 1890s, it was clear that the United States had vanquished the Spanish empire in the hemisphere only in order to replace it.
     Whose hemisphere is it?  This course elaborates this question with a wide survey of literary genres and national traditions across the Americas, from Herman Melville’s Benito Cereno and Frederick Douglass’s Heroic Slave in the United States to the classics of Cuban and Mexican literature—such as Cirilo Villaverde’s romantic novel of forbidden love, Cecelia Valdez, Jose Vasconcelos’s utopian fantasy of race mixing, The Cosmic Race, and the “magical realist” Alejo Carpentier’s novel of the Caribbean, Explosion in the Cathedral—that helped inspire their respective sense of nationhood.  And to truly disturb our sense of borders just in time for the immigration debate, we will also be examining the Mexican literature of the United States, Maria Ruiz de Burton’s Who Would Have Thought It, and Gloria Anzaldua’s feminist poetic manifesto, Borderlands, or the New Mestizo.  With the further assistance of post-colonial theory and imperial history of the hemisphere, this course hopes ultimately to imagine not just a different kind of American literature but a different kind of America.   

E. 750: Contemporary Drama (75050)

M. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Angela Belli
This course examines the ways in which the theater of our time reflects changing cultural attitudes vis-à-vis the human condition as reflected in selected plays.  Social and philosophical issues maintain a central focus in our analysis of the creations for the contemporary stage.  Theater in the post-modern era will be explored taking into account a global perspective. We will examine the intersection of art and the sciences in providing a new dimension to the theatrical vision, taking into account advances in new disciplines that yield varied perspectives in viewing the human condition.  Both the substance and the style of the contemporary plays selected for study will be analyzed.

E. 755: Topics in Twentieth-Century African American Literature
(74885)
Jazz Writing
W. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. John Lowney 
 This course examines literary representations and adaptations of jazz from the New Negro Renaissance of the 1920s through the present.  Through the study of exemplary literary texts that feature jazz as a social discourse as well as a mode of artistic expression, we will investigate how jazz has been represented as both a distinctive mode of African American cultural expression and a complex medium of interculturalism.  African American jazz literature often underscores the rebellious desire implicit in jazz expression, whether it transgresses racial boundaries or asserts black autonomy and self-determination.  At the same time, jazz literature also foregrounds interracial and intercultural conflict, conflict that is often related to the transgressive sexuality that often has been attributed to the music.  Emphasizing the importance of jazz for African American modernism, this course will consider how literary interpretations of jazz relate to theoretical articulations of internationalism as well as U.S. and African American cultural nationalism.  Readings will include fiction by Claude McKay (Banjo), James Baldwin (Another Country), Toni Morrison (Jazz), and Paule Marshall (The Fisher King); poetry by Langston Hughes, Bob Kaufman, Jayne Cortez, and Nathanael Mackey; jazz autobiographical writing; documentary film; and essays. 

E. 880: Topics in Interdisciplinary Studies (74924)
Ethnic Literary Theories
T. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Elda Tsou
This course will focus on literary theory and theories about reading that are written by ethnic “minority” thinkers. The class will serve as an introduction to theories about literature from the viewpoint of “minority” thinkers. In examining these theoretical texts, we will be contemplating several questions: What is literature? What does it mean to read “ethnic” literature? Are there methodologies appropriate to reading an “ethnic” text? What is a “text”? What does it mean to “read”? The course will move between literary texts that pose this question and theories of literature and literary criticism to consider the relationship between literature and society. Some key theorists we may cover: Gates, Fanon, Achebe, Said, Spivak, Morrison, Bhabha, Anzaldua, Kingston.

MANHATTAN CAMPUS


E. 761: Caribbean Literature, Culture and Theory (74894)

W. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Lisa Outar
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 and theory.  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. 878: Workshop in Poetry & Poetics (72987)
W. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Prof. Lee Ann Brown
This course will combine live poetry readings of select major 20th Century poets with a generative poetry workshop.  Research into the sonic elements and live performance by the poets studied will be central to the course which incorporates attendance of three readings at The Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery, a major international NYC venue for contemporary poetry.  These three readings will be held roughly during our class time and are mandatory.  Each reading will feature two poets and the course will be structured in three cycles of reading and research, attendance of the reading, and then workshopping of our own new poems.  To prepare, we will read the work of each of the six poets in depth before each reading, then formulate both creative and critical responses of our own and respond to them as a writing collective.  In this way, students will be able to develop their own manuscripts of poetry in context of a larger literary field. Readings incorporating the historical contexts, as well as new developments in the field of contemporary poetry will be featured, as well as explorations into the relationship of poetry to other artistic media such as performance, music and visual arts.  Recommendations for other relevant readings and events will be made throughout the semester and each student will be responsible for keeping a journal that reports and observes on a set number of these, and as a workbook for their own poetic process. The semester will conclude with a reading of our own at the Manhattan campus. Students will be able to develop their own manuscripts of poetry in context of a larger literary field, and exploring the nature of that field, lend their own voices to it.

E. 500: Colloquia (70495)
E. 900: Master’s Research (71763)
E. 901: Readings & Research (71764)
E. 925: Maintaining Matriculation  (MA) (70212)
E. 930: Maintaining Matriculation (DA) (70211)
E. 975: Doctoral Research Essay (DA) (70210)