This version of the 成人VR视频 Department of English, Undergraduate Studies site is deprecated but has been preserved for archival reasons. The information on this site is not up to date and should not be consulted. Students, faculty, and staff should consult the new site using the link below.
鈥嬧婣ll 500-level courses and a certain number of 200-, 300- and 400-level courses have limited enrolment and require instructors' permission. Students hoping to enroll in these courses should consult the course descriptions on the Department of English website for the procedures for applying for admission.听
ENGL听301 Earlier 18th Century Novel
Professor David Hensley鈥
Fall Term 2018
TR 11:35-12:55
Full course description
Prerequisite:听 none.
Description: This course will canvas some of the 鈥渙rigins鈥 of the English novel and trace its development (particularly as anti-romance satire and realism) up to the mid-eighteenth century. Our readings and discussion will refer to the European context of the evolution of this narrative form in England. We will consider the novel as responding to a network of interrelated problems 鈥 of the self and its imaginative politics 鈥 at the representational crossroads of medieval epic, courtly romance, spiritual autobiography, picaresque satire, colonialist adventure, gallant intrigue, baroque casuistry, bourgeois conduct book, sentimental love story, moral treatise, psychological realism, and mock-heroic 鈥渃omic epic in prose.鈥 As the emerging literary 鈥渇orm of forms,鈥 the early modern novel vibrantly juxtaposes and interweaves all these different generic strands. Our work together will aim at a critical analysis of the textual ideologies articulated in this experimental process of historical combination.
Texts: The required reading for this course will include most or all of the following books, which will be available at The Word Bookstore (469 Milton Street, 514-845-5640). (The list of texts below is tentative and incomplete, to be confirmed in September 2017.)
Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun, The Romance of the Rose (Oxford)
Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur (Oxford)
The Letters of Abelard and Heloise (Hackett)
Lazarillo de Tormes (Norton)
Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quijote (Norton)
Madame de Lafayette, The Princess of Cl猫ves (Norton)
Aphra Behn, Oroonoko (Norton)
Eliza Haywood, Love in Excess (Broadview)
Daniel Defoe, Moll Flanders (Norton)
Samuel Richardson, Pamela (Oxford)
Henry Fielding, Joseph Andrews and Shamela (Oxford)
Evaluation:听Paper (50%), tests (40%), participation (10%). Regular attendance is required for a passing final grade (a maximum of two absences will be allowed except for documented medical or similar emergencies).
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture
ENGL听307 Renaissance English Literature 2听
Professor Maggie Kilgour
Winter 2019
MW 14:30-16:00
Full course description
Prerequisite:听 none.
Description: A survey of 17th-century poetry and prose (excluding Milton). In England, the 17th century was a time of revolution: of social upheaval and Civil War, as well as radical changes in philosophy and science. The literature of this turbulent time also is marked by its vitality and its variety. In this course, we will read representative works by writers including Jonson, Donne, Herbert, Herrick, Marvell, Cowley, Lanyer, Cavendish, Philips, Bacon, Burton, Browne, discussing aesthetic developments in the context of the events of the period.
罢别虫迟蝉:听The Broadview Anthology of 17th Century Verse & Prose (available at 成人VR视频 Bookstore)
Other supplementary materials will be posted on Mycourses.
Evaluation: Midterm (20%), 8-page term paper (40%), final exam (30%); participation (10%).
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听311 Poetics
All sections offered in the FALL TERM 2018
Section 001 -听Professor听Brian Trehearne听
MWF 13:35-14:25
Section 002 -听Professor听Michael Nicholson
MW 14:35-15:55
Section 003 - Instructor Megan Taylor
MWF 10:35-11:25听
Section 004 - Instructor Catherine Nygren
TRF 8:35-9:25听
Full course description
Prerequisite or co-requisite:听ENGL 202. This course is open only to English majors in the literature stream.听 This course is to be taken in the Fall semester of U1 or in the first Fall semester after the student鈥檚 selection of the Literature Major program.
Description:听This course introduces students to the formal and stylistic elements of poetry and prose fiction, provides them with a shared vocabulary for recognizing and analyzing different literary forms, and develops their reading, writing, and critical discussion skills.
Although many critical methods can be applied to the works in this course, Poetics focuses on teaching students how to talk and write precisely about a wide range of formal and stylistic techniques in relation to literary meaning in poetry and prose fiction. All the critical methodologies you will learn in your other English courses will benefit from your knowledge of the material of ENGL 311. You will read some works in Poetics that are also required in other courses, such as ENGL 202 and 203, the Departmental Surveys of English Literature. In Poetics, we study such works not primarily in historical context, or as engagements with literary, cultural or social history, but for the techniques of literary art with which they communicate to and move us. The course instructors assume that students enrolled as English majors will already have some facility explaining what given works of literature mean; we instead focus on understanding how literature creates meaning. Discussions and assignments will therefore involve the memorization, identification, and application of concepts and terms essential to the study of literary techniques. The English Literature program requires that ENGL 311 be taken in U1 so that all Literature students will be well prepared for their other studies with a shared terminology and training in critical writing.
Texts:听
- Abrams, M.H., and Geoffrey Galt Harpham.听听A Glossary of Literary Terms.听 10th听edn.听 Thomson-Wadsworth, 2009.
- Bausch, Richard, and R.V. Cassill, eds.听听The Norton Anthology of Short Fiction.听 Shorter 7th听edn.听 New York: Norton, 2006.
- Ferguson, Margaret, Mary Jo Salter and Jon Stallworthy, eds.听听The Norton Anthology of Poetry.听 Shorter 5th听edn.听 New York: Norton, 2005.
Note: The following textbook will be assigned for purchase to certain students.听 All students are encouraged to buy it, or to consult one of the copies on Course Reserves in the MacLennan Library.鈥
- Messenger, William E., et al., eds.听听The Canadian Writer鈥檚 Handbook.听 5th听edn.听 Toronto: Oxford, 2010.
Evaluation: first essay, close reading, 4 pp., 10%; second essay, comparison of poems, 5 pp., 15%; third essay, on short story, secondary research required, 6-7 pp., 15%; mid-term exam, 10% (in class); formal final examin颅ation common to all sections of Poetics, 30%; class attendance and participa颅tion, 10%; willing and effective completion of occasional short assign颅ments, such as pop quizzes, writing exercises, scansions, and recitations, including such assignments and discussion opportunities as may be posted on the course website, 10%. This evaluation is the same for all sections of Poetics.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听312 Victorian and Edwardian Drama 1听
Professor Denis Salter
Winter Term 2019
TR 10:30-12:00
Full course description
Prerequisite:听None
Expected Student Preparation:听Previous university-level courses in drama and theatre, literature, or cultural studies. Or my permission of the instructor.
Description:听The objective of our seminar is to examine a selection of nineteenth-century British plays in performance. While we shall be engaged in a close reading of these plays by means of various interpretative strategies, in doing so, we shall give detailed analytical attention to how they were originally performed, taking into consideration the 鈥渕aterial conditions of performance.鈥 Some of these include licensing regulations; actresses, actors, and acting styles; costuming practices; scenography;听 approaches to the creation of the mise-en-sc猫ne; lighting practices; theatre architecture; demographics; the nature of audiences鈥 affective responses to productions; sociology; art history; music history and musicology; directors and directing styles (directors in this period were normally called 鈥渁ctor-managers鈥 or 鈥渁ctress-managers鈥 as they not only directed their productions but customarily played in their leading roles); technological developments; critics and criticism; the composition of audiences, considered in relation to the holy trinity of race, class, and gender (among other 鈥榗ategories鈥); international influences; plays and playwrights (and editing practices and genres); experiments in dramaturgy and theatricalization; the archive of the repertoire; studies of the novel; economics and class, particularly the fraught issue of what it cost to go to the theatre; and the impress of 鈥渇oreign鈥 influences on all of the subjects listed above. (Note that this is not an exhaustive list.) Information about these (and related) matters is contained within the set-text for the course, whose title is a lucid articulation of exactly what we shall be covering and doing: The Broadview Anthology of Nineteenth-Century British Performance, ed. Tracy C. Davis (Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, c. 2012) and whose overall critical introduction, critical introductions to the plays, meticulous end-notes and iconographic material are indispensable.
A corollary objective is to read / imagine / conjure the plays in a doubled perspective: why, how, and to what ends they existed in their own time, partly as a function of how their audiences engaged in serving as their co-creators of 鈥榤eaning鈥; and doing likewise for their existence in听our own time, an objective which will be accomplished in part by a good deal of reading texts out-loud, in round-the-table fashion, or by means of each student taking on specific parts. [Acting experience is not required!]听 We might also want to stage scenes from selected plays. Arts W-25, where the class meets, is an adaptable space.
We shall also be considering the ideological, geo-political, and historical contexts in which these plays were performed, and how the plays were not only in part a consequence of these contexts, shaped by them in various ways, but also how the plays themselves, particularly听 in performance, but also in reading, intervened in the social order, often contributing to the discourses around key issues, such as empire and colonization, race, gender demarcations of identities and exercises in power, the 鈥淣ew Woman,鈥 the Suffragette Movement, the intimate connections amongst race, class, and art in the fin de si猫cle, social classes and their malcontents, constructions of the Other, the efflorescence of ideas, prejudices, and movements in relation to pro- and anti-Semitism, global and multi-sited models of theatrical ethnography, the obsession with various types of degeneracy and the concomitant rise of the discipline of criminology, theatre and / as exercises in the carnivalesque, particularly in connection with the venerable traditions of British pantomime, and both explicit and covert understandings of what the vexed term 鈥淏ritish鈥 meant or could mean or should mean. (Think about the debates about 鈥淏rexit.鈥 What goes around comes around.)
The plays will be chosen from a selection (many of them available in the Davis anthology)听 of George Colman, the Younger鈥檚 The Africans; or, War, Love, and Duty, Col. Ralph Hamilton鈥檚 Elphi Bey; or, The Arab鈥檚 Faith, James Smith and R. B. Peake鈥檚 Trip to America, Dion Boucicault鈥檚 The Relief of Lucknow, T. W. Robertson鈥檚 Ours, B. C. Stephenson and Alfred Cellier鈥檚 Dorothy, J. M. Barrie鈥檚 Ibsen鈥檚 Ghost; or, Toole Up-to-Date, Paul Potter鈥檚 Trilby (along with reading George du Maurier鈥檚 novel, Trilby, on which the play was based), 听Nina Syrett鈥檚 The Finding of Nancy, Leopold Lewis and Henry Irving鈥檚 The Bells, Oscar Wilde鈥檚 The Importance Of Being Earnest and Salome, Elizabeth Robins鈥 Votes For Women, and possibly a work by Gilbert and Sullivan, depending of which play The Savoy Society produces in Moyse Hall, a production we would see together.
Evaluation: Consistent and consequential participation in the ongoing intellectual and cultural life of the seminar: 15%; One seminar presentation on a play. This will lead to writing a distilled听critical argument advanced in an 8-page (maximum) double-spaced essay. The presentation and the paper will be worth 35%; 16--page long (maximum) double-spaced听major scholarly essay听(choice of individually-negotiated essay topics): 50%.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures, long, medium, and mini; PPPs; led-discussions on salient issues; student presentations with the possibility of engaging in exercises in Praxis.
Average enrollment: 22 students听
ENGL听313听Canadian Drama and Theatre
The Case of Quebec
Professor Erin Hurley鈥
Fall 2018
TR 16:00-17:30
Full course description
Expected Preparation:听Previous university courses in drama and theatre, literature, or cultural studies.
Description:听This course will offer a selective survey of drama and theatre in Quebec from the 1950s to the present. With a focus on French-language theatre (to be read in English translation), we will trace the changing aesthetics and politics of this dynamic tradition, being careful to read them in light of the shifting performance and social contexts. A secondary focus will be minority-language dramatic output and theatrical production in Quebec in the same period, with a particular emphasis on that produced in English and in Yiddish.
This course also offers the opportunity to conduct primary-source research and analysis on under-documented aspects of Quebec theatre. To this end, we will explore the holding of the 成人VR视频 Archives and Special Collections as well as those at the National Theatre School. The archivist at the Jewish Public Library will engage us in a workshop on the history of Yiddish theatre in Montreal. We will hear from theatre artists working in Montreal today in the form of guest-lectures and interviews. Moreover, we will build a shared calendar of notable theatre performances in Montreal (in French, English, and Yiddish) for the 2018-19 season. From these, we will select two to see as a group, one of which will be the object of a short paper. 听
Texts:听Coursepack of critical and secondary readings
Plays will be selected to capitalize on the theatrical offerings in Montreal in Fall 2018. However, aignificant texts such as the following may feature on the reading list.
- Claude Gauvreau, The Charge of the Expormidable Moose (La charge de l鈥檕rignal 茅pormyable)
- Jovette Marchessault, Night Cows
- Michel Tremblay, Les belles-s艙urs 听
- Collective, La nef des sorci猫res
- David Fennario 鈥 Balconville.
- Larry Tremblay, The Dragonfly of Chicoutimi.
- Omari Newton, Sal Capone, The Lamentable Tragedy of
- Wajdi Mouawad, Scorched
- Evelyne de la Cheneli猫re, Bashir Lazar
- Annabel Soutar, Seeds and/or Fredy
Evaluation:听Participation; Posted class notes; Group research project; In-class author presentation; Short paper.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Discussions, discussions, discussions; lectures, small, medium-sized, long; presentations / performances and other pedagogical means which can be arrived at through an exchange about possibilities.
ENGL听315 Shakespeare
Professor Wes Folkerth鈥
Winter 2019
MWF 9:30-10:30
Full course description
Description:听In this course we will focus only on the first half of Shakespeare鈥檚 career, the Elizabethan portion, which coincided with the rise of the professional theatre as the centerpiece of an emerging entertainment industry. We will begin with a number of very early plays, including The Comedy of Errors, Titus Andronicus, Love鈥檚 Labor鈥檚 Lost, and The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Then we will focus on three plays 鈥 Richard II, Romeo and Juliet, and A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream (world classics of history, tragedy, and comedy) 鈥 which he wrote all within the space of about a single year. The Merchant of Venice, and Henry IV, part one round out the decade of the 1590s, and our course. The plan is to cover approximately one play per week. Are you Shakespearienced? After this course you will be. The pace will be fast and unrelenting, with a view to giving students in the English major and minor programs a fuller appreciation of the scope of Shakespeare鈥檚 accomplishment in the first half of his career.
罢别虫迟蝉:听The Norton Shakespeare Volume I: Early Plays and Poems. 2nd edition. ISBN 978-0-393-93144-0. Available at The Word Bookstore on Milton Street.
Evaluation:听midterm exam (30%); final essay (30%); final exam (30%); conference participation (10%)
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听316 Milton
Professor Maggie Kilgour
Fall 2018
MW听16:30-18:00
Full course description
Prerequisite: None.
Expected Student Preparation: Previous university courses in English literature, especially ENGL 202; some knowledge of Renaissance literature or culture is desirable.
Description: A study of the poetry and selected prose of one of England鈥檚 most important, influential, and still controversial writers. While to many people today Milton seems the epitome of literary and political orthodoxy, in his own time he was known as a radical thinker, an advocate of regicide and divorce. His writing is complex and challenging, demanding close and active engagement from his readers. In this course we will take up his challenge to see especially how he speaks to current concerns. In the first few weeks, we look at Milton鈥檚 early poetry and some of his political writings, tracing his development as a poet in relation to his social, political, and literary context. The centre of the course will focus on a close reading of Paradise Lost. In conclusion, we will look briefly at his last works, Paradise Regain鈥檇 and Samson Agonistes, and discuss Milton鈥檚 later reputation and his continuing role in the Western literary tradition.
Texts: (required texts are available at 成人VR视频 Bookstore)
Stella Revard ed, John Milton: Complete Shorter Poems (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009)
Barbara Lewalski, ed. John Milton: Paradise Lost (Blackwell, 2007).
Selections from the prose: on MyCourses
Mary Shelley, Frankenstein (recommended)
King James Bible (recommended)
Evaluation:听25% mid-term; 40% term paper on Paradise Lost; 25% take-home exam; 10% class participation.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听317 Theory of English Studies 1
Philosophical Approaches
Professor David Hensley
Fall 2018
TR 8:30-10:00
Full course description
Note: Limited to students in English programs.
Description: This course will survey the emergence of theories and methodologies in philosophy and scholarship, especially in literary criticism, both from ancient intellectual models and in modern thought since the seventeenth century. As a basis for understanding and evaluating the role of 鈥減hilosophical approaches鈥 in literary and cultural studies, we will compare and contrast several kinds of critical thinking with the distinctive claims of philosophical formalism articulated influentially by Immanuel Kant. The Kantian legacy 鈥 not only its principles of moral and aesthetic autonomy and disinterestedness but also its emphasis on the conditions of knowledge and criteria of judgment 鈥 provides a powerful and continuing alternative to the nineteenth-century revival of dialectical thinking in Hegel, hermeneutics, and Marx. Our readings will reflect the far-reaching impact of the ideological opposition between the Enlightenment and Romanticism as exemplified by Kant and Hegel. We will examine the history of this opposition as a pattern of methodological assumptions and institutional practices. We will also review the claim that one literary genre in particular 鈥 the novel 鈥 embodies or expresses the characteristic philosophical problems of modernity.
罢别虫迟蝉:听Most of the books for this course will be available at The Word Bookstore (469 Milton Street, 514-845-5640). The following texts will be among those required (please note that Pluhar's translation of Kant is the only acceptable edition!):
- Hazard Adams and Leroy Searle, eds., Critical Theory Since Plato, third edition (Thomas Wadsworth)
- Immanuel Kant, Critique of Judgment, trans. Werner S. Pluhar (Hackett)
- Georg Luk谩cs, The Theory of the Novel (MIT)
- Gerald Graff, Professing Literature (University of Chicago)
Evaluation:听Papers (80%), test (10%), participation (10%). Regular attendance is required for a passing final grade (a maximum of two absences will be allowed except for documented medical or similar emergencies).
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures
ENGL听319 Theory of English Studies 3
Professor Trevor Ponech
Winter 2019
WF 13:00-14:30
Full course description
Description:听TBA
Texts: TBA
Evaluation: TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures and discussions
ENGL听320 Postcolonial Literature
Professor Richard So
Winter 2019
WF 13:00鈥14:30
Full course description
Description:听TBA
Texts: TBA
Evaluation: TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures and discussions
ENGL听326 Nineteenth-Century American Prose
Fiction After the Civil War: Regionalism, Urbanism, Internationalism
Professor Peter Gibian
Fall 2018
TR 11:30-13:00
Full course description
Prerequisite: None.
Expected Student Preparation: Previous university-level course work in American Literature, preferably before 1900; or previous study in British Literature before 1900; or permission of instructor.
Description:听A mid-level survey of later-19th-century prose fiction forms representing a wide range of literary movements and modes. The course will be organized to trace ever-widening geographical, literary, and cultural horizons. A first unit will explore 鈥渞egionalist鈥 or 鈥渓ocal color鈥 writings (by authors such as Harris, Harte, Twain, Chopin, Stowe, Jewett, Cable, Chestnutt, and Alcott) rooted in the specificity of a unique geographical place that is seen to define a unique cultural or psychological identity. The second course unit will survey classic writerly responses to the late-19th-century city鈥攕een (in authors such as Crane, Dreiser, James, and Wharton) as a new sort of hybrid place in which diverse strangers from a variety of homes and backgrounds are brought together to work out forms of coexistence. The final unit will then follow another group of turn-of-the-century writers as they expand American horizons even further, reflecting the nation鈥檚 move into the international arena with new fictional treatments of the International Theme. Authors such as James and Wharton ground their writing in the ever-shifting experience of cross-cultural travel and meditate anxiously on the situation of the writer as 鈥渃osmopolite鈥--perfectly placed (or dis-placed) to explore the problems and possibilities of inter-national interchange in a modern, globalizing world.
Texts (Tentative; editions TBA):听 To be selected from authors noted in description above, and from works tentatively listed below. Readings will include not only short stories but also several longer novels; the amount of assigned reading will be fairly intensive. Editions TBA.
- Coursepack of photocopied short stories.
- Alcott, Little Women;
- Dreiser, Sister Carrie;
- Wharton, The Age of Innocence;听
- James, The Portrait of a Lady;
- Baym, ed., The Norton Anthology of American Literature (9th ed., Vol. C).
Evaluation (Tentative): 25% mid-term exam; 25% essay; 10% conference participation; 40% formal, 3-hour final exam. (NB: All forms of evaluation in this course鈥攐n exams as well as essays鈥攖est abilities in literary-critical writing and analysis; there will be no short-answer or multiple-choice exams graded by computer.)
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听327听Canadian Prose Fiction 1
Professor Brian Trehearne
Winter 2019
WF 11:35-12:55
Full course description
Expected student preparation:听No formal pre-requisite, but students will be expected to have the skills of close reading and command of critical terms developed in ENGL 311 (Poetics).听 ENGL 228 (Introduction to Canadian Literature 1) provides appropriate background knowledge for this course
Description:听A survey of the emergence and development of Canadian prose fiction in English from the later nineteenth century to the centennial of Confeder颅ation in 1967.听 We will seek to grasp the developing poetics and shifting generic boundaries of the Canadian novel to 1967, including works of political romance, prairie pastoral, modern prairie and urban realism, and experi颅mental modernism.听 A substantial portion of our studies will involve the situation of Canadian fiction within the context of the novel鈥檚 international development from realism to modernism.
罢别虫迟蝉:听TBA, including 6-8 of the following:
- Richardson, Wacousta (1832)
- Moodie, Roughing It in the Bush (1852)
- DeMille, Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder (1888)
- Duncan, The Imperialist (1904)
- Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables (1908)
- Leacock, Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town (1912)
- Ostenso, Wild Geese (1925)
- Knister, White Narcissus (1929)
- Grove, Fruits of the Earth (1933)
- ---.听 Settlers of the Marsh (1925)
- Callaghan, They Shall Inherit the Earth (1935)
- Ross, As For Me and My House (1941)
- MacLennan, Two Solitudes (1945)
- ---.听 The Watch that Ends the Night (1956)
- Smart, By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept (1945)
- Klein, The Second Scroll (1951)
- Buckler, The Mountain and the Valley (1952)
- Wilson, The Equations of Love (1952)
- Watson, The Double Hook (1959)
- Laurence, The Stone Angel (1964)
- Cohen, Beautiful Losers (1966)
Evaluation:听
1.听 An essay of 10-12 pages, from a choice of assigned topics (50%)
2.听 A formal final examination, involving both short-answer and essay questions (40%)
3.听 Partici颅pation in class discussions, 10%.听 Please note before choosing this course: I assess active participation in discussion, not attendance.听 Full attendance throughout the semester without speaking will earn 0/10 in this category and will substantially affect your final grade.
Please note regarding this evaluation:
There is only one essay in this course.听 It is longer than most essays assigned at the 300-level, and it weighs more heavily in your final grade than most such assign颅ments.听 Please consider these issues carefully in making your final course choices.
To help you succeed with such an essay, I encourage you to submit the following voluntary preparatory materials throughout the semester.听 You may submit one, two, or all three (the first is particularly strongly recommended for anyone new to my courses and my high marking standards).听 Each task below that you choose to complete will reduce the total weight assigned to the essay itself by 5%:
- a two-page close reading of a poem by a poet on the reading list you think you might like to discuss in your essay, to be submitted no later than January 30th.听 You may alter your choice of poet and topic after completing this task.
- a sentence outline of your argument, breaking the paper down into at least three major sections, each of which is to be broken down at least one further level (see your Canadian Writer鈥檚 Handbook for information about sentence outlines).听 You may not alter your choice of poet and topic after completing this task.
- a draft of your paper鈥檚 opening paragraph, in which you identify and detail your topic and state your paper鈥檚 thesis.听 You may not alter your choice of poet and topic after completing this task.
Thus if you complete all three of these voluntary tasks your essay will be worth 35% of your total mark.听 Note however that if your mark on any of these assignments is lower than the mark you receive for the completed essay itself, the higher mark on the essay will stand.听 Thus the essay鈥檚 weight of 50% will only be lowered by preliminary assignments that improve on the grade you receive on the essay itself.听 This is clearly to your advantage.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听329 English Novel of the Nineteenth-Century I
Professor Tabitha Sparks鈥
Fall 2018
MW 10:05-11:25
Full course description
Description:听This course uses five wide-ranging British novels to study a foundational relationship in nineteenth-century fiction: the romantic relationship as a synecdoche of social organization.听 Perhaps more precisely, the relationships we will analyze in the course novels reveal anxieties and realities of social disorganization 鈥 with broken engagements, and failed or fractured marriages operating as signs of the century鈥檚 disruptive transformations in class structure and geopolitical identity.听听 With this topic in mind, we will better understand how the dominantly private settings in the nineteenth-century British novel and intimate plots yield commentary on industrial, economic, and political change. 听
罢别虫迟蝉:听
- Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility 1811
- Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist 1838
- Anne Bront毛, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall 1848
- George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss 1859
- Wilkie Collins, The Law and the Lady 1875
- 329 Course pack
Evaluation:听
- Participation: 20% (includes reading quizzes)
- Close reading assignments: 30%
- Midterm essay: 25%
- Final exam (in class): 25%听
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听330 English Novel of the 19th听Century II
The Search for Vocation
Professor Yael Halevi-Wise听鈥
Winter 2019
TR 10:00-11:30
Full course description
Description:听The primary goal of this course is to acquaint students with English masterpieces from the second half of the 19th Century and a German bildungsroman influential at this time. While keenly engaged with the spirit of 鈥榩rogress鈥 and 鈥榬eform鈥 sweeping through their continent, writers in this period tended to set the action of their novels a few decades back from their time of composition and publication. Keeping this historical perspective in mind, we will focus on how our novelists portray characters who struggle to find love and meaningful employment in an increasingly secular society still hedged in, however, by barriers of class, gender and religious affiliation.听
Texts:
- 鈥The Apprenticeship of Wilhelm Meister by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- David Copperfield 听by Charles Dickens
- Villette by Charlotte Bront毛
- Middlemarch by George Eliot
- Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy
Evaluation:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion
ENGL听332 Literature Romantic Period 2
Professor Michael Nicholson
Fall 2018
MW 16:05-17:25
Full course description
Description: This seminar analyzes a range of English writings from the later Romantic period to provide insight into a number of major literary developments across the prose fiction, poetry, and critical prose of the second generation Romantics. This particular syllabus allows us to explore literatures of revolution and utopia, innovations in feminist poetics and theory, the rise of domestic and gothic fiction, new emphases on satire and free indirect discourse, the appearance of the Romantic lyric and the closet drama, aspects of Romantic love, sensibility, and incest, the emergence of cosmopolitanism and tourism, developments in literary and aesthetic theory, and poetic flights of fancy and imagination.
Our syllabus neither follows a strict chronological nor historical narrative. Instead, we will look at several related clusters of development within Romantic writing during the Regency period. As a result of this survey鈥檚 emphasis on important constellations of early nineteenth-century literature and culture, certain formal and historical topics will recur throughout the syllabus: representations of war, revolution, and imperial conflict; attempts to define genius and the solitary self; depictions of emotional and sexual intimacy; vacillations between idealism, irony, and skepticism; critiques of science, technology, and industry; representations of the child, the original, and the juvenile; haunting invocations of the dead, the dying, and the elegiac; engagements of ecological and nonhuman rhythms; and anachronistic returns to the medieval, the classics, and the gothic.听
罢别虫迟蝉:听Selected works by Lord Byron, John Keats, Mary Shelley, Jane Austen, Percy Bysshe Shelley,听Walter Scott, Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L.E.L.), Felicia Hemans, Alfred Tennyson, and John Clare
Evaluation:听
10% participation
20% first paper
30% exam
40% second paper
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion.
ENGL听333 Development of Canadian Poetry 2
Professor Robert Lecker
Fall 2018
TR 10:00-11:30
Full course description
Description: This is a course about really reading poetry, in this case, Canadian poetry. It focuses on a group of approximately ten Canadian poets who have formed and responded to the Canadian literary landscape since World War II. Most of the poets covered in the course are writers who confront modern and contemporary ideas about the nature of self, society, sexuality, gender, and art, but we also look at the ways in which these writers are trying to deal with the existential implications of new views about science, God, and the poet鈥檚 place in his or her rapidly changing world. Since part of the reading involves thinking about aesthetic and theoretical issues, the course will deal with these issues, just as it will pay close attention to the meaning and resonance of particular poems. At the same time, it will consider the ways in which these poets (and us, as readers) construct the place called Canada as a metaphor that鈥檚 central to our daily lives. Students are encouraged to explore multi-media material related to each poet in question. The writing component of the course (frequent short essays but no term papers or exams) is designed to improve interpretive abilities and to encourage creative forms of critical expression. Students enrolling in this course should be prepared to write short essays on a weekly basis, and to participate actively in class discussion.
罢别虫迟蝉:听Lecker, Robert, ed. Open Country: Canadian Poetry in English. Toronto: Thomson Nelson, 2007.
Evaluation (Tentative): a series of short essays on each of the poets studied in the course, 80%; attendance, 10%; participation, 10%.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion.
ENGL听336听Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature 2
Postwar British Fiction
Professor听Allan Hepburn
Fall 2018
TR 14:30-16:00
Full course description
Prerequisites: Students should have 2 or 3 prior university courses in literature听
Description:听This course will focus on British novels written after the Second World War and before the end of the century. This survey of novels will focus on class, the Welfare State, responses to the war, housing, conceptions of the future, the status of children and refugees, evil, women, gender, the decline of imperialism, Thatcherism, and fictional technique. Generic conventions of comedy and tragedy as they get mixed with novelistic representation will inform some lectures. The turn to history in the 1970s and 1980s will also be addressed.
罢别虫迟蝉:听
Ivy Compton-Burnett, Manservant and Maidservant
Graham Greene, The End of the Affair
Alan Sillitoe, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
Muriel Spark, Memento Mori
John Le Carr茅, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
Barbara Pym, Quartet in Autumn
Evaluation:听paper 30%: second paper 30%; attendance and participation: 10%; final exam 30%
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and discussion.
ENGL听345 Literature and Society
Professor Paul Yachnin鈥
Winter 2019
TR 10:00-11:30
Full course description
Description:听In this course, we ask, is Shakespeare modern? Is he a precursor of the political culture of modernity? Is he the author of our ideas about what it is to be a happy and fulfilled person? And what, after all, do we mean when we say the word 鈥渕odern鈥? We address these questions by thinking about our own ideas and practices, by reading plays by other early modern playwrights, some other works from the period and a few key readings in political philosophy. But the focus of our attention is a selection of plays by Shakespeare himself.
We also will spend time developing effective written and oral presentation skills鈥攈ow to gather, organize, and analyze evidence, how to develop an idea/argument, how to engage and persuade your readers or auditors.
Texts:
Taming of the Shrew, ed. Frances E. Dolan (Bedford / St. Martin鈥檚)
The Roaring Girl and other City Comedies, ed. James Knowles (Oxford)
Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus, ed. Sylvan Barnett (Signet Classics)
Tempest, ed. Stephen Orgel (Oxford)
Merchant of Venice, ed. Jay Halio (Oxford)
King Lear, ed. Russell Fraser (Signet)
Other readings will be provided in electronic form.听
Evaluation:
Short essays (2 pages, 650 words approx.), 5 x 8% each 40%
I鈥檒l count the best four of five, provided that you write all five.
Presentation (3 minutes) 15%
Participation 15%
Take-home Exam (on King Lear) 30%
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lecture, workshop, discussion.
ENGL听346听Materiality and Sociology of Texts
Professor Eli MacLaren鈥
Winter 2019
MWF 8:30鈥9:30
Full course description
Prerequisites: none
Description: The material forms and circumstances of texts fundamentally affect their meaning. This premise underlies the history of the book, a field of theory and historical scholarship aimed at understanding the circulation of ideas in connection with technology, sociology, and economics. If the book is not only a vessel of ideas but also a thing of industrial manufacture that is marketed and consumed, then knowledge of the book industry and of the forces that influence it becomes important to literary and historical interpretation. In this course we will survey defining contributions to bibliography and book history, reading works of literature in light of new studies on the socioeconomic factors behind their creativity and reputation. Topics will include analytical bibliography, scholarly editing, books before print, copyright, and the cultural history of authorship, publishing, and reading. Emphasis will be placed on the history of the book in Canada. Students will become familiar with defining contributions to the field, learn how to analyze the physical form of books, review a critical essay, and study the transmission of a work of Canadian literature.
罢别虫迟蝉:听tentative list
- Michelle Levy & Tom Mole, ed., The Broadview Reader in Book History (Broadview, 2015) ISBN 978-1-55481-088-8
- Allan Greer, ed., The Jesuit Relations: Natives and Missionaries in Seventeenth-Century North America (Bedford, 2000) ISBN 978-0312167073 $22.32
- Susanna Moodie, Roughing It in the Bush, ed. Carl Ballstadt, Centre for Editing Early Canadian Texts (Ottawa: Carleton UP, 1988 / distributed by 成人VR视频-Queen鈥檚 UP), ISBN 9780886290450
Evaluation:
Bibliography Assignment (20%)
Response (30%)
Essay (40%)
Participation (10%)
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture and Discussion听
ENGL听348 Great Writings of Europe 2
Instructor Manuel Cardenas
Fall Term 2018
MWF 9:35-10:25
Full course description
Prerequisite:听 No formal prerequisite, but previous or concurrent university-level work in literary studies and a familiarity with the basics of literary analysis are expected for this 300-level class.
Description: This course examines several major works of European literature that significantly influenced Western conceptions of literate practice, authorship, religion, and the place of the individual human in society and in the universe. Course texts include examples of literature (in translation) spanning from Late Antiquity to the Italian Renaissance. As such, ENGL 348 is suitable for those looking to fulfill curricular requirements in the medieval era.
The course has two main objectives: to introduce students to early literature as an object of study in its own right; and to explore this literature as an important background for the study of subsequent Western literature and culture, including in England. This will involve substantial reading, but the focus will be on key moments from the texts, allowing English students to come away with a solid working knowledge of the texts and their influence. We will emphasize themes of continuity across the periods we call 鈥淟ate Antiquity鈥, 鈥渢he Middle Ages鈥 and 鈥渢he Renaissance鈥 while still recognizing the differences between our own historical perspectives and those of the writers. The course will consider the following topics in particular: language and signification; autobiography and conversion; and sacred and secular. All course texts were written on the European continent and will be read in modern English translation.
罢别虫迟蝉:听All of the following required works will be available from The Word bookstore.
Augustine,听Confessions听(Oxford World鈥檚 Classics ed) [ISBN: 0199537828]
Boethius,听The Consolation of Philosophy听(Penguin ed) [ISBN: 0140447806]
Chr茅tien de听Troyes,听Arthurian Romances听(Penguin ed) [ISBN: 0140445218]
Dante,听The Portable Dante听(Penguin ed) [ISBN: 0142437549]
Marie de France,听The Lais of Marie de France听(Penguin ed) [ISBN: 0140447598]
Petrarch,听Selections from the Canzoniere and Other Works听(Oxford World鈥檚 Classics ed) [ISBN: 0199540691]
Evaluation:听Take-home Midterm Exam: 25%;听Take-home Final Exam: 35%; Final Essay: 30% (7-8 pages; may be composed of two shorter essays);听Participation and attendance: 10%
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures
ENGL听352 Theories of Difference
TBA听
Winter 2019
WF 8:30-10:00听
Full course description
Description:听TBA
Texts:听TBA
Evaluation:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures and discussions
ENGL听355听Poetics of Performance
Professor Erin Hurley鈥
Winter 2019
TR 12:30-14:00
Full course description
Expected Preparation: This course is intended for students in the Drama and Theatre stream who have completed ENGL 230: Introduction to Theatre Studies. It is to be taken in the Winter term of U1 or in the first Winter term after the student鈥檚 selection of the Drama and Theatre major or minor program. For Drama and Theatre majors, this is a required course.听
Description:听This course has three interrelated goals. First, it introduces students to the formal and stylistic elements of drama, theatre, and performance. How do drama (as a work of imaginative literature) and theatre (as a live, time-based performance) communicate to readers and audiences? By what technical, stylistic, and affective means do they make meaning? Second, the course offers instruction in a range of critical approaches to interpreting and analysing dramatic texts and live performance 鈥 that is, both text-based and image-based works of theatre. Finally, the Poetics of Performance explores issues and debates that have structured theatre and performance practice and scholarship from Aristotle鈥檚 Poetics to the 鈥渘ew dramaturgy鈥 of post-dramatic theatre.
Students must come to class prepared with all of the assigned reading and will be expected to participate verbally in class on a weekly basis. By collectively interpreting samples plays and performances in class, and in debating the readings of each unit, we will build a concrete, shared, discipline-specific vocabulary and sets of analytical practices for the interpretation of the dramatic text and the theatrical event. In this way, this required course for Drama and Theatre majors, prepares Drama and Theatre students for all other courses in the stream.听
Texts:听a course-pack of readings in dramatic and performance theory including texts in aesthetics, staging, reception, semiotics, phenomenology, narratology, dramaturgy, reading the body, structuralism and post-structuralism, and more.
Recommended texts: Patrice Pavis, Dictionary of the Theatre: Terms Concepts, and Analysis. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1998; Paul Alain and Jen Harvie, The Routledge Companion to Theatre and Performance. New York: Routledge, 2006
Evaluation:听In-class participation; short, critical interpretation papers; group project; final take-home exam.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures, group discussions, in-class close-reading and analytical exercises.
ENGL听357听Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales *Newly-Scheduled Offering for Winter*
Patrick Outhwaite鈥
Winter 2019
MW 11:30-1:00
Full course description
Description:听The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories that range from cutting religious and cultural satire 鈥 featuring the best sex jokes and toilet humour of the Middle Ages 鈥 to sincere pious reflection. The work functions both to instruct and amuse, to unsettle and reaffirm, to provoke and console. The genres of the tales are similarly various, including courtly romance, comic fabliau, saint鈥檚 life, and beast fable. More than eighty-two manuscripts of Chaucer鈥檚 tales survive, making his series of pilgrims鈥 tales one of the most popular works of the period. Unfinished at the time of Chaucer鈥檚 death, The Canterbury Tales has developed a vibrant afterlife, spurring numerous translations, additions, and adaptations. This course is devoted to a close reading of Chaucer鈥檚 experimental masterpiece. We will situate The Canterbury Tales in the turmoil and unrest of late fourteenth-century England, examining how Chaucer responds to pressing contemporary debates about the English language, threat of religious dissent, emergence of a merchant class, and social position of women. By looking at sources and analogues of the tales, we will observe how Chaucer at once follows and departs from medieval literary conventions and positions himself in the literary canon of Europe. The course will pay special attention to late-medieval manuscript production and circulation. Chaucer鈥檚 works began as hand-written documents that had to be copied by his scribes in order for them to be circulated to his original audience. By the end of this course, students will be able to identify and analyse the major themes of Chaucer鈥檚 seminal work against the backdrop of medieval manuscript culture.
We will read Chaucer in the original Middle English, though no previous experience with Middle English or medieval literature is required. Instruction in Middle English will be provided.
Texts:听Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. 2nd edn. Ed. V. A. Kolve and Glending Olson. New York: Norton, 2005. ISBN 978-0-393-92587-6. [Students are required to use this edition]
* Text is available at the Word Bookstore (469 Rue Milton).
Evaluation:听Participation听10%;听Close reading exercises听5 x 3% (15% total);听Midterm test听15%;听Essay听35%;听Take-home exam听25%.
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures, class discussions.
ENGL听359 The Poetics of the Image听
Professor Ara Osterweil鈥
Winter听2019
TR 16:00-17:30
Full course description
Description:听TBA
Texts:听TBA
Evaluation: TBA听
Format: Seminar
ENGL听360 Literary Criticism
Professor Sandeep Banerjee
Fall 2018
MW 14:30-16:00
Full course description
Description:听This course explores several topics that are central to modern and contemporary literary criticism and critical theory such as (but not limited to): interpretation; culture; ideology; hegemony; class, race, and gender; signification; discourse; postcolonialism; postmodernism. While we engage with these complex and contested issues of interpretation and criticism, we will read key texts from a range of critical schools and practices, including Structuralism, Post-Structuralism, and Marxism. We will also read selections from, among others, the writings of Matthew Arnold, Jacques Lacan, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Karl Marx, Judith Butler, and Edward Said. These texts will help us articulate and interrogate some of the most fundamental questions pertaining to the practice of literary studies: What constitutes literature? Who determines what texts mean, and how? How do texts relate to broader social structures? Considering these questions and texts will necessitate careful and patient reading as well as sustained engagement with lecture and discussion during class. Some of the readings for this course will be difficult and dense. Thorough preparation for each class meeting is essential. The course is required for 鈥 but not restricted to 鈥 honours students in the English department鈥檚 Literature stream.
Texts:听
- Terry Eagleton 鈥 Literary Theory: An Introduction
- Selections from the texts by critics and theorists听
Evaluation:听TBD
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lectures and discussions
ENGL 365 Costuming for the Theatre I
Instructor听Catherine Bradley听
Fall 2018
TR 10:00-11:30
Full course description
Prerequisite:听 None. Permission of the instructor required for registration.听
Description:听Costuming I focuses on skills acquisition. The focus is on industrial sewing machine use, and hand sewing techniques. Both beginners and more advanced students will have equal opportunity to gain skills. We will practice the skills needed to make costumes with a small practical project. This will provide an opportunity to become comfortable with industrial machinery, while gaining skills and confidence needed for fittings.
Character analysis and research inform our design choices.听听 The director will provide students with an initial directorial concept and vision for the show, emphasizing clear character delineation. Our design discussion will focus on color palette, mood and the individual characters. Later, the director will assess the students鈥 inspiration images, and decide which images will carry forward into the production design. The design for the production will be chosen using the students鈥 inspirational images.听 Each student will make a costume or costume element based on the production design.
Texts:听the play script will be supplied on mycourses
Required tools:听Sewing kit: thimble, fabric scissors, stitch ripper, one package of needles, one box of dressmaking pins, a pencil and small notepad.
Optional additions: measuring tape, pin cushion, metal pushpins, tracing wheel, tailoring wax, needle nosed pliers, and a small sharp pair of fabric scissors.
Evaluation: TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lectures, hands on projects, demonstrations, and practical work.听 Additional production hours outside of class time are required, and are often substantial.听 Expect a minimum of 9 hours per week.听 There is no maximum.
Average enrollment:听10 students, by permission of the instructor. Selection process is by interview with the instructor.
ENGL 366听The Horror Film
Professor Ned Schantz
Winter 2019
MW 11:30-13:00
Full course description
Prerequisite: None
Description:听Divided into a range of concerns and subgenres (the question of sound, the slasher film, the gothic) that ultimately converge on the problem of vulnerable bodies in space, this course will introduce students to the versatility of horror and pose the question of its ongoing adaptability. Central to our approach will be the complication of affect. In other words, no longer will we be content to judge simply whether a horror film is 鈥渟cary;鈥 instead, we will explore the genre鈥檚 production of a broad palette of feeling, including key cousins of fear such as disgust, humour, and shame. Indeed, even fear itself might be usefully divided into slow dread and fast panic (which is one reason why the speed of zombies matters). It is ultimately this rich interplay of response that will help us articulate the genre鈥檚 corresponding socio-political work, including its special importance for feminism and queer theory. Possible films include Halloween, Suspiria, Freaks, Babadook, and Get Out.
Texts:听coursepack
Evaluation:听two short assignments 25%; posted class notes 5%; term project 40%; participation 10%; quizzes 20%
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lecture/discussions and weekly conferences
Avg. enrollment:听65听students
ENGL 368 Stage Scenery and Lighting 1
Instructor听Keith Roche
Fall听2018
TR 10:00-11:30
Full course description
Description:听TBA
Format:听TBA
Evaluation:听TBA
ENGL 370 Theatre History: The Long 18th Century听*Newly-Scheduled Offering for Winter*
Catherine Quirk
Winter 2019
TR 9:00-10:30, in Arts West 25
Full course description
Expected student preparation:听Previous university courses in Drama and Theatre, Literature, or Cultural Studies.
Description:听This course explores the changing theatrical landscape in Britain from the Restoration to the mid-nineteenth century (1660-1843). Organized around key legislation pertaining to the theatre of the period, the course will provide an overview of dramatic forms and theatrical practice from the reopening of the professional theatres to the rise of melodrama. We will examine representative theatrical figures and dramatic works, treating the plays as performance events rather than literary documents. In addition, we will work with such historical source material as reviews and excerpts from contemporary acting handbooks to consider how both performers and audience members reacted to the changing forms of theatrical representation.
Texts:听(tentative): Peter Thomson, The Cambridge Introduction to English Theatre, 1660-1900 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006); coursepack containing source material and the following plays: Aphra Behn, The Rover (1677); George Farquhar, The Recruiting Officer (1706); John Gay, The Beggar鈥檚 Opera (1728); David Garrick, The Country Girl (1766); Hannah Cowley, The Belle鈥檚 Stratagem (1780); Joanna Baillie, De Monfort (1800); Douglas Jerrold, The Rent Day (1832).
Format:听lecture, discussion, practical work
Evaluation:听(tentative): participation 10%; practical assignment 15%; short writing assignment 15%; midterm 20%; final research essay 40%.
ENGL 372 Stage Scenery and Lighting 2
Instructor听Keith Roche
Winter听2019
鈥婽R 10:00-11:30
Full course description
Description:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听TBA
Evaluation:听TBA
ENGL 377 Costuming for the Theatre II
Instructor听Catherine Bradley听
Winter Term 2019
TR 10:00-11:30
Full course description
Prerequisite: None. Permission of the instructor required for registration.
Description:听This semester, emphasis is on building sewing skills and costume construction techniques. There are two main learning modules in advanced costuming: Technical Skill Development, and Draping. Sewing skills that were gained in the first semester will be built upon through specific practical exercises in a skill building project. Draping techniques will be practiced on half-scale mannequins, and will culminate in a themed project. The focus of the semester鈥檚 work is on costuming the English Department Mainstage production.
The costume class will see the production through from inception to closing night. We begin with the text, and create charts as a medium for script analysis. Next, the characters are translated into image form, through the Inspirational Images project. The costume design springs from the Image project, and each student will create a costume based on their own design. The hands-on process of making the costume is the Production Project. Costuming II differs from Costuming I in the level of independence expected from the students. The various aspects of production will take a substantial amount of time throughout the semester. Students who are unprepared for the time commitment are asked to reconsider accepting a place in the class.
Each student will also have a specific Production Duty that takes shape during the semester, and culminates at the end of term as the production is presented.
Students take an active part in defining and outlining their specific production duties by formulating a contract with milestone dates and deadlines, in collaboration with their classmates and instructor.听 This will give students an opportunity to manage all aspects of their production duties independently. Students are expected to refer back to their contract throughout the semester in order to maintain the schedule that they formulated.听
Texts:听the play script will be supplied on mycourses
Required tools:听Sewing kit: thimble, fabric scissors, stitch ripper, one package of needles, one box of dressmaking pins, a pencil and small notepad.
Optional additions: measuring tape, pin cushion, metal pushpins, tracing wheel, tailoring wax, needle nosed pliers, and a small sharp pair of fabric scissors.
Evaluation:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lectures, hands on projects, demonstrations, and practical work.听 Additional production hours outside of class time are required, and are often substantial.听 Expect a minimum of 9 hours per week.听 There is no maximum.
Average enrollment:听10 students, by permission of the instructor.
ENGL 378 Media and Culture: Canadian Inuit, M茅tis, and First Nations Literature Video and Film
Professor Marianne Stenbaek鈥
Fall 2018
TR 8:30-10:00
Full course description
Description:听TBA
Texts:听TBA
Evaluation:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures, discussion, screening and field trips.
ENGL 381听A Film-Maker 1
Todd Haynes and the Pastiche of Authorship
Professor Derek Nystrom鈥
Fall听2018
TR 14:30-16:00
Full course description
Prerequisite:听None
Expected Student Preparation: Familiarity with concepts and terminology from film studies and cultural studies will be very useful.
Description:听First emerging as one of the key filmmakers of what B. Ruby Rich called the New Queer Cinema of the early 1990s, Todd Haynes has produced a body of work that interrogates gender, sexuality, illness, stardom, and the notion of authorship itself. We will explore Haynes鈥檚 films through the category of pastiche, as his films critically appropriate the visual and narrative tropes of various cinematic genres and modes (from melodrama to documentary) as part of their inquiry into the constructed nature of experience in postmodern life. But while Fredric Jameson has denounced the postmodern use of pastiche as apolitical 鈥渂lank parody,鈥 we will examine how Haynes鈥檚 films deploy their cinematic devices so as to de-familiarize and de-nature them, encouraging a mode of spectatorship that we might characterize, following Laura Mulvey, as 鈥減assionate detachment.鈥 This course will survey Haynes鈥檚 oeuvre, from the famously banned Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story to his most recent film, 2017鈥檚 Wonderstruck. We will also screen a number of films and other media materials that his films rework and re-imagine, in order to examine critically the category of authorship, cinematic and otherwise.
Texts:听
The Cinema of Todd Haynes: All That Heaven Allows, ed. James Morrison
Course pack
Films:
- Longtime Companion (Norman Rene, 1989)
- Poison (Todd Haynes, 1991)
- Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (Todd Haynes, 1988)
- Safe (Todd Haynes, 1995)
- Velvet Goldmine (Todd Haynes, 1998)
- All That Heaven Allows (Douglas Sirk, 1955)
- Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1974)
- Far From Heaven (Todd Haynes, 2002)
- I鈥檓 Not There (Todd Haynes, 2007)
- Dottie Gets Spanked (Todd Haynes, 1993)
- Mildred Pierce (Todd Haynes, 2011)
- Carol (Todd Haynes, 2015)
- Wonderstruck (Todd Haynes, 2017)
Evaluation:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lecture, discussion, weekly screenings
ENGL听383 Studies in Communication 1
The Mute in Literature and Film
Professor Berkeley Kaite
Fall 2018
TR 16:05-17:25
Full course description
Description:听This course addresses the presence of mute characters in films and fiction. These characters 鈥 mute by virtue of deafness, a coma, trauma, or by apparent choice or inexplicable reason 鈥 don鈥檛 use vocal speech but communicate via sign language, the written text, embodied expression, their actions, and their silence. This last phenomenon 鈥 the one who doesn鈥檛 speak by volition or without underlying cause 鈥 is perhaps the most interesting. We have to ask what the silence performs and what it is the text can鈥檛 bring itself to say. We will focus on what the silence of the mute character amplifies, activates, propels, reveals, puts into motion, and represses. We will be in tune with the themes, motifs, metaphors that animate these texts. Among them are: music, the materiality of language, violence, death.
Language fails us: this could be the theme of this course. The focus is thus not on silence as a sign of repression or oppression but as a productive site which has the effect of amplifying voices, anxieties, and forces around it. That is to say, we will ask what interests are filled in to replace the silence of the mute. One could also say this is a course about cultural ventriloquism. We will of necessity discuss the fetishization of truth, identity and voice. The theoretical framework is drawn from some of the ideas of Michel Foucault on the productivity of power via silence; as well there are a few short readings on silence and voice which use some Foucauldian ideas.
Texts:听鈥
- Mister Sandman, Barbara Gowdy
- The Seal Wife, Kathryn Harrison
- Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, Jonathan Safran Foer
Short story, chapters and article:
- Karen Russell, 鈥淎ccident Brief,鈥 The New Yorker (June 19, 2006)
- Chloe Taylor, 鈥淐onfession and Modern Subjectivity,鈥 The Culture of Confession from Augustine to Foucault: A Genealogy of the 鈥楥onfessing Animal (Routledge, 2008)
- Michael Chion, 鈥淭he Mute Character鈥檚 Final Words,鈥 The Voice in Cinema, ed. and trans by Claudia Gorbman (New York: Columbia UP, 1999)
- Valerie Hazel, 鈥淒isjointed Articulations: The Politics of Voice and Jane Campion鈥檚 The Piano,鈥 Women鈥檚 Studies Journal, 10:2 (September 1994)
Films:
- Persona听 (dir. Ingmar Bergman)
- The Shape of Water (dir. Guillermo del Toro)
- The Piano (dir. Jane Campion)
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo鈥檚 Nest (dir. Milos Forman)
- Johnny Belinda (dir. Jean Negulesco)
- Talk to Her (dir. Pedro Almodovar)
Evaluation:听(tentative) 10% short essay on the short story; 70% two short essays (35% each); 10% participation; 10% short responses
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture, discussion, screenings
ENGL 385 Topics in Literature and Film
Solitude in Literature and Film
Professor Berkeley Kaite鈥
Winter 2019
WF 16:05-17:25听
Full course description
Description:听This course confronts a central modern ambiguity: to be fully human 鈥 i.e., social 鈥 is to be alone. We live among others and according to shared assumptions and norms and yet are capable of, and equipped for, self-contemplation, even self-absorption. This courses addresses the literary and cinematic/televisual manifestation of solitude in a short story, novels, films, non-fiction essays and a TV show. We will examine how it is imagined, elaborated and, if not exalted, presented as inescapable: the experience of being one in a world. Our characters negotiate 鈥渢he self鈥 in relation to, among others: their environments; geographic location; nature; their history; official history; their location or dislocation within culture; the central ambiguities of modern life; memories and official memory, or memory as solitude; others; their emotions, desires and fears; their intellect and intellectual apprehension; intuitive and authoritative knowledge; the family; narrative, 鈥渢ruth,鈥 and, perhaps foremost, language itself. A central human paradox is that we have words to describe the indescribable. Solitude may be indescribable but it still seeks expression in language, metaphor and images. All our characters are marginal in some way or another and that means they foreground questions about what constitutes a center. Our works depict hope, longing, and creative imaginings of understanding and existing.
Texts: books 鈥撎 (tentative)
Open City, Teju Cole
Exit West, Mohsin Hamid
The History of Love, Nicole Krauss
Doctor Glas, Hjalmar S枚derberg
Funeral for a Dog, Thomas Pletzinger
Seeking Rapture, Kathryn Harrison
Films 鈥
Hiroshima, Mon Amour (dir. Alain Resnais, 1959)
Last Tango in Paris (dir. Bernardo Bertolucci, 1972)
Paris Texas (dir. Wim Wenders, 1984)
The Straight Story (dir. David Lynch, 1999)
In Treatment (HBO, 2010)
Short story, chapters & article and selection 鈥
Lorrie Moore, 鈥淧eople Like That Are the Only People Here: Canonical Babbling in Peed Onk鈥
Jonathan Franzen, 鈥淔arther Away: Robinson Crusoe, David Foster Wallace, and the island of solitude鈥
Nina N酶rgaard, 鈥淧leasure and Pain 鈥 Solitude as a Literary Theme: A Review Article鈥
Edward Engelberg, 鈥淚ntroduction,鈥 Solitude and Its Ambiguities in Modernist Fiction
鈥Selections from Janet Malcolm, Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession听
Evaluation:听(tentative) 10% discussion paper (900 words); 40% first short essay (2000 words); 40% second short essay (2000 words); 10% participation
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lecture and discussion; screenings
ENGL 388 Studies in Popular Culture
What's 'Quality' About Quality TV?
Dr.听Josie Torres Barth
Winter 2019
WF 14:30-16:00
Full course description
Description:听
鈥淚 could see it was quality television, but I didn鈥檛 like it.鈥
-Viewer quoted in Sarah Cardwell, 鈥淚s Quality Television Any Good?鈥
What makes a program 鈥渜uality鈥 TV? Who decides? In this course, we will trace the evolution of television as a medium and technology through discourses surrounding its value, beginning with the 鈥済olden age鈥 of early live television and concluding with contemporary 鈥渃omplex鈥 TV. We will examine what factors鈥攁esthetic, moral, and political鈥攈ave been used to determine the 鈥渜uality鈥 of a television show at different moments in the medium鈥檚 history. What textual and aesthetic strategies are associated with quality? What are the commercial implications of this concept? Who makes, watches, and is depicted on quality TV? What kind of TV is not 鈥渜uality鈥? We will examine the larger implications鈥攊n terms of gender, race, class, and nation鈥攐f these distinctions, and the limitations of quality TV as a designation.
By the end of the course, students will be able to discuss the ways 鈥渜uality鈥 TV has been defined historically, culturally, and industrially in the U.S. and Canada, and understand the difference between evaluative and analytic discourses (the difference between writing and discussing TV as a critic and as a scholar).
Texts: TBA
Evaluation:听Participation (15%), midterm reading quiz (25%), short paper (25%), final paper or project (35%)
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lecture with discussion, screenings
ENGL 389听Studies in Popular Culture
The Teen Film in U.S. Cinema
Professor Derek Nystrom
Winter 2019
MWF听10:30-11:30听
Full course description
Prerequisites: None.
Expected Student Preparation: Familiarity with concepts and terminology from film studies and cultural studies will be very useful.
Description:听This course will engage in a more or less chronologically organized survey of the American teen film, understood as a genre that is not only about but also made for teenagers (although a few of our screenings will test this definition). We will begin in the 1950s, when 鈥渢he teenager鈥 as a sociological category (and target market) took on a new prominence in American cultural life, and the films about them developed more intentional strategies of addressing the teen audience. As we trace the genres development, we will explore how it functions as an arena in which anxieties about individual subject formation and the larger social order are played out. As Jon Lewis has argued, teen films are about the breakdown of 鈥減atriarchy, law and order, and institutions like the school, the church, and the family鈥 even as they often conclude with 鈥渢he eventual discovery of viable and often traditional forms of authority.鈥 In other words, teen films depict stories of social control and resistance while also operating as their own form of interpellation. But we will also investigate the ways in which the films provide textual resources for their young audiences that do not necessarily line up with dominant forms of power. In short, this course will examine the complex cultural work that the teen film performs.
Required Films: These will likely include many of the following titles:
Blackboard Jungle (Richard Brooks, 1955)
Rebel Without a Cause (Nicholas Ray, 1955)
Beach Blanket Bingo (William Asher, 1965)
American Graffiti (George Lucas, 1973)
Cooley High (Michael Schultz, 1975)
Over the Edge (Jonathan Kaplan, 1979)
Little Darlings (Ronald F. Maxwell, 1980)
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (Amy Heckerling, 1982)
The Outsiders (Francis Ford Coppola, 1983)
The Breakfast Club (John Hughes, 1985)
River鈥檚 Edge (Tim Hunter, 1986)
Heathers (Michael Lehmann, 1988)
Dazed and Confused (Richard Linklater, 1993)
Totally F***ed Up (Gregg Araki, 1993)
Clueless (Amy Heckerling, 1995)
Kids (Larry Clark, 1995)
Thirteen (Catherine Hardwicke, 2003)
Elephant (Gus Van Sant, 2003)
Evaluation:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lecture and discussion; screenings
ENGL 390 Political and Cultural Theory
Professor Paul Yachnin
Fall 2018
TR 11:30-13:00
Full course description
Description:听In this course, we study key literary works that have been central to the creation of our ideas about the private and the public. These include two plays by Shakespeare, readings from the two influential 鈥渃onfessions鈥 of St. Augustine and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the great nineteenth-century novel Jane Eyre, and Katherine Boo鈥檚 brilliant novel-like account of life in the 鈥渦ndercity.鈥 Our literary reading will be supplemented by the work of a number of important thinkers, including Hannah Arendt, J眉rgen Habermas, Michael Warner, and Martha Nussbaum.
The course is about the history of the ideas and practices that have created the shifting zones of private and public life. We鈥檒l move toward a deeper understanding of how our world has been shaped by the history of privacy and publicity (i.e., the condition of being public). We will also work on critical writing skills鈥攈ow to select evidence from a literary or philosophical text, how to analyze that evidence creatively and critically, how to build on evidence, and how to develop a coherent, persuasive, and moving argument. Students in the course will write four one-page argumentative, evidence-based essays. Students will also write two four-page essays鈥攎ore reflective but still evidence-based and argumentative. The take-home exam will focus on privacy, publicity, and the question of justice.
Participation counts a lot in the course. That means being there and it also means bringing your ideas and questions to class. It is really true: there is no such thing as a stupid question. Questions of all kinds will drive the intellectual work of the course forward.
罢别虫迟蝉:听(available at Paragraph Books):
Shakespeare, Hamlet, ed. A. R. Braunmuller (Pelican)
Shakespeare, Othello, ed. Michael Neill (Oxford)
St. Augustine, Confessions, trans. Henry Chadwick (Oxford)
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, ed. Margaret Smith (Oxford)
Katherine Boo, Behind the Beautiful Forever: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity (Random House, 2012)
Other readings will be provided in electronic form.
Evaluation:听
One-page papers 听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听 20%
I will calculate this grade based on the best three out of four one-page papers鈥攑rovided that you write all four papers.
Four-page papers听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听 40%
Participation听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听 15%
Take-home Exam听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听 25%
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lecture and discussion
ENGL 391 Special Topics in Cultural Studies 1
Media Ethics
Professor Marianne Stenbaek
Winter 2019
WF 16:00-17:30
Full course description
Description:听TBA
罢别虫迟蝉:听TBA
Evaluation:听TBA
贵辞谤尘补迟:听lecture and discussion
ENGL听395 Contemporary Canadian Community- and Politically-Engaged Theatre
Professor Denis Salter鈥
Fall听2018
TR 13:00-14:30
Full course description
Expected Preparation: Previous and / or coterminous university courses in film, literary, cultural, theatre, drama, and performance studies. Or by permission of the Professor.听
Description:听This course will combine the reading of plays, essays, articles and chapters with the creation of an original play / staged performance put on by groups of students working in Ateliers. The essays and articles will come from two anthologies edited by Julie Salverson and from online journals. Authors will include Salverson, Sherene H. Razack, Honor-Ford Smith, Catherine Graham, Ingrid M眉ndel, Jennifer H. Capraru, Jan Selman, Alan Filewod, Savannah Walling, Denis Salter, Nandi Bhatia, Aparna Dharwadker, and Edward Little. The plays will include Eight Men Speak by Oscar Ryan et al, Waiting For Lefty by Clifford Odets, The Monument by Colleen Wagner, Bhopal by Rahul Varma, and Palace Of The End by Judith Thompson.听 All of these readings will be contextualized in relationship to the work of various theatre companies, together with an examination of a range of historical, political, community, social, racial, ideological, and gendered subject-positions and the kinds of theatre that they have enabled, now enable, and will continue to enable.
The course is unusual in the (intense) degree to which it will engage with close readings of texts along with the creation of original plays / performances.
As with any performance-based course, especially one that is based on the principles and practices of collective creation (to choose but one term for this way of working) all students will need to make an unconditional, disciplined, highly focused, and co-operative engagement with the work of conceptualizing, developing, researching, writing, rehearsal, and performance of their (new) play, always practising the discourse of 鈥渞espectful dialogue.鈥 Similarly, the close readings, by various interpretative means, of the plays, essays, and articles will be demanding. All activities will be time-consuming.
There are four 鈥渕antras鈥 that I shall be urging you to practise to guide you and your ensemble on what will indeed become a journey:
- Teesri Duniya Theatre鈥檚 motto: 鈥淐hange the world, one play at a time.鈥
- Some sage words often ascribed to Hippocrates, though the attribution is in doubt: 鈥淒o no harm.鈥
- Two pithy statements by Mahatma Gandhi: 鈥淔irst they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, and then you win鈥; and 鈥淭he best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others.鈥
Participation counts a lot in the course. That means being there and it also means bringing your ideas and questions to class. It is really true: there is no such thing as a stupid question. Questions of all kinds will drive the intellectual work of the course forward.
Texts:听
Salverson, Julie. Ed Community Engaged Theatre and 听Performance. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press, 2011.
---. Ed. Popular Political Theatre and Performance. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press, 2010.
Filewod, Alan. Committing Theatre: Theatre Radicalism and Political Intervention in Canada. Toronto: Between The Lines, 2011.
Ryan, Oscar et al. Eight Men Speak: A Play by Oscar Ryan et al. 听Ed. Alan Filewod.听 Ottawa: U of Ottawa P, 2013.
Odets, Clifford. Waiting for Lefty. New York: Dramatists Play Service, Inc. [1935], 1962.
Wagner, Colleen. The Monument. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press, 1996.
Varma, Rahul. Bhopal. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press, 2004.
Thompson, Judith. Palace of the End. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press, 2007.
Diamond, David. Theatre for Living. Foreword by Fritjof Capra. Victoria: Trafford Publishing, 2007.
There are also two online articles by Julie Salverson to read:
鈥淐hange on Whose Terms? Testimony and an Erotics of Inquiry,鈥 Theater 31.3 (Fall 2001): 听[118]-125.
鈥淧erforming Emergency: Witnessing, Popular Theatre, and the Lie of the Literal,鈥 Theatre Topics 6.2 (1996): 181-191.
Instructive articles in relation to Rahul Varma, Bhopal, and Teesri Duniya Theatre include:
Bhatia, Nandi, 鈥淒iasporic Activism and the Mediations of 鈥楬ome鈥: South Asian Voices in Canadian Drama,鈥 Studies in Social Justice 7.1 (2013): 125-41. (Open Source.)
鈥Dharwadker, Aparna. 鈥淒iaspora and the Theatre of the Nation鈥 Theatre Research International 28.3 (October 2003): 303-325. The section on Teesri and Varma is on pp. 309-317. (e-journal)
Little. Edward. 鈥淚ntercultural Mediation: Inter-, Intra-, and Crosscultural Approaches to Cultural Democracy.鈥 In Culture pour tous. Actes du Colloque international sur la m茅diation culturelle. Montr茅al 鈥 D茅cembre 2008. 7 Pp. [un-numbered].
Open source:
Or use:
This article by Professor Little is very instructive in relation to the contexts in which Teesri鈥檚 work, and that of similar activist theatre groups, has taken place. There is an excellent set of photos in colour.
Salter, Denis.听 鈥淐hange the World, One Play at a Time: Teesri Duniya Theatre and the Aesthetics of Social Action: Denis Salter talks with Rahul Varma, Ted Little and Jazwant Guzder.鈥澨Canadian Theatre Review听125 (Winter 2006): [69]-74. (Print)
I shall be inviting Rahul Varma to visit our class.
Evaluation:听The creation of the performance, the performance itself, the post-performance discussion and the rehearsal 鈥渄iary鈥濃攖o which everyone in a given Atelier will contribute--will be worth 60 %.听 (The grade is for all members of a given Atelier.); A presentation on a play, essay, chapter, or article, along with an 8-page paper in the form of a distilled critical argument: 30%; Continuing and full participation in the intellectual and creative life of the seminar, adding substantially to discussions: 10%
贵辞谤尘补迟:听Lectures, discussions, presentations, out-loud readings, student-generated performances.