Spring 2006

Queens Campus

ENG 100: Modern Critical Theories (13392)
W. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Melissa Mowry
Culture Wars.  Most of us have heard this phrase in one venue or another.  And most of us have some understanding that the culture wars are synonymous with conservative attacks on liberal representations—those that seem outside the traditional values of “family unity” (where family is understood as nuclear), conventional gender roles, and, with the advent of the Patriot Act, representations that challenge the authority of various branches of government.  Most of us also believe that the culture wars are a “new” feature of the post 9/11 world.  The truth is that American and European culture has been in the grips of a protracted culture war since the end of WWII.  The culture wars of the early 21st century are simply the latest version of the conflict between those who view cultural authority with profound distrust and those who view cultural authority as the only real vehicle to social stability.  Regardless of which side of the issue you stand on, this debate that has radically altered the way those of us working in the humanities generally and literature departments in particular teach and research.  In this class, we will explore both the historical and intellectual antecedents of the rich and nuanced conflict over cultural authority in post-WWII Europe through the writings of Foucault, Derrida, Althusser and few others.  We will then move on to examine the conflict over history sparked by post-colonial theory’s challenges to the dominant cultural narratives of the West.  During the second half of the semester, we will consider the implications of these earlier incarnations of the debate for new theoretical work on cultural and literary forms, literary research methodology, and the shape of literature curricula. Students should expect to write several short papers that will culminate in a larger project that may or may not take the shape of a conventional seminar paper.

ENG 115: Arthurian Romance (14499)
M. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Margaret Kim
In this course we will read medieval romances built around the figure of Arthur, from Chretien de Troyes, Wolfram de Eschenbach, to Malory.  We will study the genre and convention of romance, its significance as historical and political writing in the Middle Ages, and explore the prominent themes of gender, class, and history in these texts.

ENG 290: Seminar in 16th and 17th Century British Literature (14497)
W. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Brian Lockey
New World Encounters and Conquests in Renaissance Literature
What are the historical, cultural, and literary antecedents to the Anglo-American notion of a humanitarian war, such as the invasion of Iraq, the purpose of which was purportedly to “bring democracy to the Iraqi people?” This course will consider how such a notion of charitable conquest originates in the Early Modern period within fiction written about the conquests and settlements of Ireland and the New World. In addition to investigating Early Modern rationales for “ethical conquest” and “lawful” acts of war, we will consider the way in which literary works differentiate between the Irish and New-World colonial contexts as well as how Ireland was viewed by many Renaissance writers as a natural “jumping off” point into the New World.  Our readings will be primarily literary, but there will also be some focus on the historical context that produced such literary works.  For example, we will explore the Spanish writings (in translation) that influenced English ideas on exploration and overseas settlement.  We will also read the historical and literary critical work on this growing subject. A brief list of authors and works to be read: Shakespeare’s The Tempest, Sir Thomas More’s Utopia, Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene and A View of the Present State of Ireland, Aphra Behn’s The Widow Ranter, Mary Rowlandson’s The Captive, Christopher Columbus’s writings, Bartolome de las Casas’s A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies.

ENG 351: Seminar in 18th Century British Literature (14569)
R. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Kathleen Lubey
Reading Sex in the Eighteenth Century
In recent years, historians and literary critics have “discovered” the origins of modern pornography in the literature of the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.  In political and religious satire, in scandalous amatory fiction, and in England’s fascination with translations of erotic French texts, these critics suggest, we see the emergence of a resilient interest in sexual matters, plots, and descriptions.  And indeed, this erotic canon comprises works that, even by modern standards, discuss sex boldly and explicitly.  Our course will evaluate this view of pornography’s history by examining ostensibly erotic works from 1670 to 1770.  As we read in this period, we will pursue several questions concurrently.  First, to what degree do the sexually explicit texts of this period correspond to our modern definition of pornography—namely, a genre primarily aimed at arousing its audience?  Second, is it only in “low” and vulgar literature that we witness a recurrent interest in sexuality?  And might we see writers testing things other than their readers’ libido as they present erotic scenes? Our reading will include works that manifestly center themselves on questions of sexuality (Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, Rochester’s libertine poetry, Haywood’s amatory fiction, writings on prostitution) as well as texts that more delicately discuss the body, the senses, and feelings of ecstasy (aesthetic philosophy, Pope’s Rape of the Lock, the sentimental novels of Sterne and MacKenzie).  Evaluation will be based primarily on class participation and a seminar-length paper, due at the end of the course.

ENG 560: American Novel to 1914 (14498)
Hybrid Online class: 4:40-6:40 p.m. every other Thursday night beginning 1/19/06
Queens Campus
Dr. Jennifer Travis
The identification of men with the public sphere and women with the private sphere posed an artificial divide on American culture in the nineteenth century: polarizing men and women, male spaces and female spaces, romantic literature and domestic literature.  Nina Baym famously described this separation of the literary landscape as the “melodrama of beset manhood”: the hypothesis that American literature dramatized by definition man’s escape from the feminine sphere of sentiment and intimacy.  Together we will complicate this framework.  We will examine American women writers who command us to rethink the boundaries of “separate spheres,” and we will analyze women’s contributions to the history of the novel in the U.S., from seduction and sentiment to romance and realism. This will be a hybrid online course.  We will meet as a group on the following dates: January 19, February 2, February 16, March 2, March 23, April 6, and April 27.  On weeks that we do not have class students will post responses to assigned readings on WebCT. Please note that E. 876, taught by Dr. Owens, will also be a hybrid online course, with classes meeting on the opposite Thursday nights on the Manhattan campus: January 26, February 9, February 23, March 16, March 30, April 20, May 4.  This will allow students to register for both courses if they wish, even though they both meet 4:40-6:40 on Thursday nights.  Students registering for this course can e-mail Dr. Travis at travisj@stjohns.edu for more information.

ENG 685: Literary Modernism (14496)
M. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Stephen Sicari
In this course we will examine the emergence and development of modernism in literature from 1900 through WWII as a series of imaginative responses to some enormous political events.  Distinguishing between modernity and modernism, we will try to historicize modernism in literature as an artistic counter-movement to modernity in general.  The readings will be organized around three aspects of modernity that roughly form a linear sequence: Heart of Darkness, Howards End, and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man as responses to imperialism; The Waste Land and To The Lighthouse as responses to the Great War; The Cantos, The Revenge for Love (Wyndham Lewis), Between the Acts (Woolf’s posthumous novel), and the poetry of Wallace Stevens as responses to the rise of totalitarianism.

ENG 695: Topics in American Studies (14570)
T. 6:50-8:50 p.m.
Dr. Granville Ganter
Native American Literature
This course will attempt to straddle both anthropological and literary aspects of U.S. Native American literary traditions. In terms of anthropology and culture, we will look at selected North American myths; some of the speeches and addresses of Red Jacket and William Apess; and the narratives of Black Hawk and Black Elk.  In a more traditional literary vein we will look at some of the landmark novels written by U.S. Native Americans, such as John Ridge’s Life and Adventures of Joaquin Murieta; Darcy McNickle’s Surrounded; Momaday’s House Made of Dawn; Erdrich’s Love Medicine; Silko’s Ceremony; and Sherman Alexie’s stories.

ENG 861: Art and Propaganda (14548)
T. 4:40-6:40 p.m.
Dr. Gregory Maertz
An advanced course on the political uses of literary and visual culture (art and film) from the rise of Napoleon to the collapse of Nazi Germany.  Writers and artists to include Jacques Louis David, William Blake, Mary Wollstonecraft, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Arno Breker, Ernst Widmann, and Leni Riefenstahl.  Students will develop original projects and present their research and submit a term paper before the end of the term.  Readings and discussion will be supplemented by slides, films, and visits to the Metropolitan Museum, MoMA, the Guggenheim, and the Neue Galerie.
Suggested background reading:
William Vaughan, Romanticism and Art (Thames & Hudson).
Toby Clark, Art and Propaganda in the Twentieth Century (Abrams).
David Welch, The Third Reich: Politics and Propaganda (Routledge).

Manhattan Campus

ENG 876: Writing Nonfiction (14629)
Hybrid Online class: 4:40-6:40 p.m. every other Thursday night beginning 1/26/06
Dr. Derek Owens
This is an introductory workshop exploring various genres of nonfiction, with special emphasis on the essay, literary journalism, and memoir.  Half of the course will be in the form of a writing workshop where we critique each other’s nonfiction; the other half will revolve around discussions of classic and contemporary nonfiction prose.  Students will have the option of choosing to write on a range of themes; possible topics might include neighborhood portraits, childhood memories, biographical reflections, or cultural investigations.  Suggested texts might include selections from Phillip Lopate’s The Art of the Personal Essay and Sims & Kramer’s Literary Journalism, along with Dave Egger’s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, Maxine Hong Kingston’s No Name Woman, and works by Michel de Montaigne, Joan Didion, Frank McCourt, Jamaica Kincaid, and others. This will be a hybrid online course.  We will all be in e-mail contact beginning the first week of the semester.  However, we will only meet as a group on the following dates: January 26, February 9, February 23, March 16, March 30, April 20, May 4.  On weeks that we do not have class students will post responses to assigned readings on WebCT.  Please note that E.560, taught by Dr. Travis, will also be a hybrid online course, with classes meeting on the opposite Thursday nights: January 19, February 2, February 16, March 2, March 23, April 6, April 27.  This will allow students to register for both courses if they wish, even though they both meet 4:40-6:40 on Thursday nights. Students registering for this course can e-mail Dr. Owens at owensd@stjohns.edu for more information.

Staten Island Campus

ENG 201: Major British Author of 19th Century (14585)
T. 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Dr. Amy King
“Jane Austen Today”
This course proposes to concentrate on the work of a single author, Jane Austen (1775-1817); and the various ways in which her work may have been understood and ideologically situated both in her own moment and in ours.  Austen’s novels have assumed a pivotal position in the way our culture narrates courtship and gender norms, and understands received notions of taste.  We will read the major works—including Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), Emma (1816), Northanger Abbey (1818), and Persuasion (1818)—alongside the major contemporary critical debates that surround Austen’s fiction.  In addition, we will engage selected contemporary reactions to and adaptations of her work by recent films and novels (including, for instance, the novel Bridget Jones’s Diary and the film Clueless).  We will seek to understand Austen in her own time, in relation to the politics, culture, aesthetics, and literary landscape of the late eighteenth century, and “today,” taking into account the work that Austen’s name and narratives perform in our contemporary moment.

ENG 900 Master’s Research (10258)

ENG 901 Readings and Research (10257)

ENG 925 Maintaining Matriculation (MA) (10255)

ENG 930 Maintaining Matriculation (DA) (10254)

ENG 975 Doctoral Research Essay (DA) (13512)