LAS Courses
LAEL 1012-01
PUBLIC PRESENTATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course, taught by a working professional actor/director with experience in stage, radio, tv and film, is centered on the belief that speaking skillfully in public is a way to self-discovery, self-improvement and self-confidence. It is also a tenet of this course that skillful public speaking is a fundamental element of a humane society. Students will deliver five major speeches, including self-written speeches of introduction, ceremonial speeches, informative speeches and persuasive speeches. The oral interpretation of literature will also be explored. Each class meeting will require every student's speaking participation in order to develop skills in the areas of voice, diction, managing speech anxiety, research and organization, use of microphones and video, and use of visual aids. The latter phase of this course will focus on concentration, credibility, and familiarity with argument, debate and parliamentary procedure. Attendance at each class is vital and mandatory; furthermore, students will be required to dress up for their presentations.
Elective
LAEL 1012-101
PUBLIC PRESENTATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course, taught by a working professional actor/director with experience in stage, radio, tv and film, is centered on the belief that speaking skillfully in public is a way to self-discovery, self-improvement and self-confidence. It is also a tenet of this course that skillful public speaking is a fundamental element of a humane society. Students will deliver five major speeches, including self-written speeches of introduction, ceremonial speeches, informative speeches and persuasive speeches. The oral interpretation of literature will also be explored. Each class meeting will require every student's speaking participation in order to develop skills in the areas of voice, diction, managing speech anxiety, research and organization, use of microphones and video, and use of visual aids. The latter phase of this course will focus on concentration, credibility, and familiarity with argument, debate and parliamentary procedure. Attendance at each class is vital and mandatory; furthermore, students will be required to dress up for their presentations.
Elective
LAEL 1050-101
THEATER PRODUCTION WORKSHOP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Be part of a unique ensemble of students as we work through a workshop process of producing an original or adapted work for the stage. Together the ensemble will devise, create, design, produce, and perform this production, culminating in two live public performances of our work. Students in this course will be asked to: rehearse and perform assigned roles; assist in graphic, projection, scenic, and property/costume design; and aid in stage management. Everyone is responsible for stage and backstage work and to commit to a flexible rehearsal schedule outside of class meetings. Students will also be expected to study the performance techniques, dramaturgical elements, and production requirements of the theatre as it relates to the work produced. Come ready to collaborate and make something great! Waiting list is curated by the instructor.
Elective
LAEL 1127-01
ENVIRONMENTAL HUMANITIES RESEARCH SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Practitioners in the Environmental Humanities (EH) engage in disciplinary and cross-disciplinary research in the humanities to think about representation, meaning, value, ethics, and power in relation to environmental questions, issues, and crises. EH offers a capacious umbrella under which to gather inquiry in anthropology, art and design, critical animal studies, cultural studies, film studies, history, literary studies, philosophy, and visual studies, among other disciplines, methodologies, and modes. In this course, Environmental Humanities Research Seminar, students will engage in independent, liberal arts-based research in the environmental humanities in order to contextualize, extend, and/or refine an existing project or to develop a new project. The work under development could be either a liberal-arts based project or a studio-based project that would be deepened through liberal-arts based research. In addition to deep curiosity about one's subject matter, receptivity to the messiness of the research process, and a willingness to support other classmates in their research, this class requires excellent time management skills. Assignments will include: an annotated bibliography, reflective writing, a final paper, and a final presentation.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
LAS E101-01
FIRST-YEAR LITERATURE SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
An introduction to literary study that helps students develop the skills necessary for college-level reading, writing, research and critical thinking. Through exposure to a variety of literary forms and genres, historical periods and critical approaches, students are taught how to read closely, argue effectively and develop a strong writing voice. The course is reading and writing intensive and organized around weekly assignments. There are no waivers for LAS-E101 except for transfer students who have taken an equivalent college course.
First-year students are pre-registered for this course by the Liberal Arts Division.
Incoming Transfer students, along with continuing Sophomore, Junior, and Senior undergraduates, enroll in their designated section(s) through Workday.
Major Requirement | BFA
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
LAS E101-02
FIRST-YEAR LITERATURE SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
An introduction to literary study that helps students develop the skills necessary for college-level reading, writing, research and critical thinking. Through exposure to a variety of literary forms and genres, historical periods and critical approaches, students are taught how to read closely, argue effectively and develop a strong writing voice. The course is reading and writing intensive and organized around weekly assignments. There are no waivers for LAS-E101 except for transfer students who have taken an equivalent college course.
First-year students are pre-registered for this course by the Liberal Arts Division.
Incoming Transfer students, along with continuing Sophomore, Junior, and Senior undergraduates, enroll in their designated section(s) through Workday.
Major Requirement | BFA
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
LAS E101-03
FIRST-YEAR LITERATURE SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
An introduction to literary study that helps students develop the skills necessary for college-level reading, writing, research and critical thinking. Through exposure to a variety of literary forms and genres, historical periods and critical approaches, students are taught how to read closely, argue effectively and develop a strong writing voice. The course is reading and writing intensive and organized around weekly assignments. There are no waivers for LAS-E101 except for transfer students who have taken an equivalent college course.
First-year students are pre-registered for this course by the Liberal Arts Division.
Incoming Transfer students, along with continuing Sophomore, Junior, and Senior undergraduates, enroll in their designated section(s) through Workday.
Major Requirement | BFA
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
LAS E101-04
FIRST-YEAR LITERATURE SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
An introduction to literary study that helps students develop the skills necessary for college-level reading, writing, research and critical thinking. Through exposure to a variety of literary forms and genres, historical periods and critical approaches, students are taught how to read closely, argue effectively and develop a strong writing voice. The course is reading and writing intensive and organized around weekly assignments. There are no waivers for LAS-E101 except for transfer students who have taken an equivalent college course.
First-year students are pre-registered for this course by the Liberal Arts Division.
Incoming Transfer students, along with continuing Sophomore, Junior, and Senior undergraduates, enroll in their designated section(s) through Workday.
Major Requirement | BFA
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
LAS E209-01
EPIC
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Epic narratives seem antagonistically devoted to their predecessors in the genre and to the cultural mythologies of their own times. Students in this course will read a series of epics written from antiquity to the present and consider as well the genre's incursions into film. Texts might include: Homer's Iliad or Odyssey, Virgil's Aeneid, Dante's Inferno, and Walcott's Omeros. There will be midterm and final examinations, an independently researched essay, and regular short writing assignments.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
LAS E235-01
21ST CENTURY POETRY
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The course title 21st Century Poetry bristles with question marks, even if they are invisible: 21st Century Poetry where? 21st Century Poetry in what languages? 21st Century Poetry in 2026? Isn’t that too soon? Why not just teach Contemporary Poetry? We’re a quarter-century in—enough to investigate what might be distinctive about 21st century poetry. And enough distance for perspective on poetry of the previous century.
The 20th century came in with a roar, at least as reflected in European and Anglophone poetry— Futurism, Dada, Surrealism, the Harlem Renaissance and Modernism. The 21st century—a new millennium as well as a new century—came with a sense of dread: Y2K, 9/11, the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars, the Indian Ocean tsunami, Hurricane Katrina, the financial crash. How did poetry respond?
Certain subjects remain constant: war, death, nature, joy. Certain movements bridge both centuries: Slam, Spoken Word, electronic literature. And poetry remains constant in being bound always to both tradition and innovation. Even the 20th century slogan “Make It New” has roots in 12th century neo-Confucian scholarship and possibly the Shang Dynasty (second millennium BCE). And Anne Carson’s 21st century “book” Nox is an epic unfolding inside a poem by Catullus (c.84-c.54 BCE).
But much has changed. In this course we will study collections, movements, media, archives, institutions, disciplinary reach, business, economics, technology, publications, priorities, practices, and poetics particular to 21st century poetry in English or translation. Some practitioners bridge both centuries. Some were born in the 21st. Texts may include Claudia Rankine’s Citizen: An American Lyric (2014), David Jhave Johnson’s Aesthetic Animism: Digital Poetry's Ontological Implications (2016), Harryette Mullen’s Regaining Unconsciousness (2025), a contemporary anthology, and essays by Anne Carson.
There will be a midterm and final. Students will also undertake a research project and do exercises related to the thinking and writing conditions of 19th, 20th, and 21st century poetry, which may result in poems.
Elective
LAS E236-101
THE FUTURE OF LITERATURE OR HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
In this class, we will explore the future of literature and language art made with and about computers. We investigate the real danger and the revolutionary power of data, software, social media, memes, natural language processing, and artificial intelligence and we will cultivate new ways of relating to digital technology. We will examine the genealogy of writing as a technology in order to gain a better understanding of current and future possibilities. What is the role of the artist in computer-generated artwork? How will the co-evolution of human and machine affect the future of language art? In this course, we will discuss the ethical, aesthetic, and critical dimensions of artificial intelligence and machine learning in relation to the production of new forms of language art. In this class, we examine how artists can use computers as a tool or a collaborator to create the language art of the future. Students will learn to think analytically critically about computer mediated language art and and learn to articulate their process and goals for their work. Students should expect weekly readings, writing and creative assignments that will nourish a final project.
Elective
LAS E247-01
VIRGINIA WOOLF & MODERN FICTION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Students will emerge from this class with a thorough overview of Woolf's life, world, and life's work. The heart of the course will be our study of Virginia Woolf's major novels: Jacob's Room, Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, Orlando, and The Waves. However, our reading list will also include short stories, essays, and selections from her published letters and diaries. In particular, students can expect to become skilled readers of the stream of consciousness style of narration that characterizes Woolf's fiction and to engage with themes that run through much of her writing such as the creative process, modern subjectivity, sexuality, gender, domestic space, and war.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
LAS E262-101
PUNK PRODUCTIONS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
A subculture characterized as part youth rebellion, part artistic statement, punk has lingered and transmogrified in popular discourse since its heyday in the 1970s. In this class we'll delve into the history of social, musical, and aesthetic manifestations of punk in the U.S. and UK and investigate the connections between punk's DIY, anti-authoritarian ethos and the politics of the late-twentieth century. We'll embrace a cultural studies framework to examine punk production in its various material and discursive forms-- music, fashion, film, manifestos, revolutions, etc. Throughout, we'll turn a critical eye towards investigating expectations and performances of gender, race, and class in a range of punk communities (i.e. Queercore, Riot Grrl, etc). Our discussions and your writing will be informed by scholarly books and articles, narrative accounts of punk, film screenings, and a lot of loud music.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
LAS E279-101
HORROR STORIES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Horror stories are a literary & artistic expression of anxiety. It's not odd at all that we still write about ghosts when we're busy churning up & examining the crimes of our ancestors, or that we write contagion stories (zombies!) during a pandemic, or apocalyptic horror as we face the effects of climate change. Horror stories can be-as is true of any literature-artful, profound, entertaining, and -as Ezra Pound would say-news. We'll read a selection of stories-fundamental classics, lesser-known but influential stories, and contemporary attempts-to identify genre characteristics and to locate elements that define the genre's power. We'll also read works written about horror by horror authors and test their claims. To deepen our understanding of the genre even further-in addition to essays & exams-students will have the option to try their hand at writing an original horror story.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
LAS E299-01
THE LESBIAN NOVEL
SECTION DESCRIPTION
To be a lesbian, according to Monique Wittig, seems the simplest and most complex mode of desiring: she who was interested in 'only' half of the population and had a violent desire for that half. In a world overcrowded by the voices and bodies of men, how does a lesbian carve out physical and imaginative space to let her desires free? This course will explore how this question has been addressed by daring, renegade lesbian writers who have used the medium of textual narrative to produce both history and future. Rather than reading these novels as historical document, sociological artifact, or even personal testaments, we will digest them as performance, wish-fulfillment, blueprint for a world in which love and sex between women reign.
Elective
LAS E308-01
KAZUO ISHIGURO AND/AS WORLD LITERATURE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course considers the fiction of the Japanese British Nobel Prize-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro in a world literary context. Based on a selection of his short stories and novels we will discuss, among other things, the different critical perspectives relevant to reading globally in terms of which both the author and his work have often been read, including the manner in which putative signs of Englishness and "Japaneseness" have been attributed especially to his early texts. At the same time, we will consider the intriguing ways in which the author's fiction comments implicitly on its own reading as well as ways of reading world literature. The course also has a film component in that we will view and discuss a film adaptation of one of Ishiguro's novels as well as two other relevant films as a basis for examining how the author's adaptive use of certain narrative techniques has helped shape his style and fictional worlds. In this way, the course engages questions related to ethics, knowledge, cultural translation, narrative and cultural representation, as well as interpretation and critique central to both Ishiguro's fiction and the reading of world literature.
Elective
LAS E311-01
BAD BLOOD: THE FAMILY IN LITERATURE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
After a good dinner one can forgive anybody, writes Oscar Wilde, even one's own relations. While the domestic sphere is often understood as a refuge from the quarrels and dangers of the perilous outside world, the family home can also be a site of tension, violence, and competition. Literature and cinema show us time and again that some of the most bitter and bloody conflicts unfold in the intimate battleground of hearth and home. This course tracks the seemingly timeless idea of the family in its historical evolution, from patrilineal dynasties to the nuclear family of suburban postwar America. Why do the horrors of home-life shock and fascinate us? What is gained or sacrificed in the name of “family values,” and why is the gothic so closely tied to the domestic? Texts and excerpts include: Medea, The Tempest, Wuthering Heights, The Turn of the Screw, “The Fall of the House of Usher,” The Importance of Being Earnest, The Metamorphosis, Kindred and Psycho, with secondary readings from No Future and Abolish the Family. Students will write three argument-driven essays including a research project on one of our course-texts.
Elective
LAS E315-01
BYZANTIUM & GLOBAL MEDIEVAL LITERATURES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The Middle Ages were defined by translation, and at the hub of the interlingual and intercultural networks crisscrossing western Eurasia was the Greek-speaking civilization known today as Byzantium. In this class we approach literature of the medieval millennium (roughly the 5th to the 15th century CE) by focusing on the period's truly global best-sellers: works of fiction, mysticism, folktale, romance, and philosophy that were each translated multiple times from one language to another, and that enjoyed massive popularity in each new cultural setting. Instead of being viewed as an incubator of distinct "national" literatures, the medieval period becomes an opportunity to explore literary forms, themes, and universal human concerns that transcended linguistic, religious, and national borders. Texts studied include both works originally written in Greek as well as others that made their way from Persian, Arabic, Syriac, and Georgian into Greek, and then through Greek into other languages of the Near East and Europe. Readings include but are not limited to: Barlaam and Josaphat; The Book of Syntipas the Philosopher ("the Byzantine Sinbad"); the Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius; The Alexander Romance; and John Climacus's Ladder of Divine Ascent. Assessments include a short response paper, midterm examination, and a final research paper.
Elective
LAS E324-01
CONTEMPORARY ECOPOETRIES: NORTH AMERICAS+
SECTION DESCRIPTION
In this course, Contemporary Ecopoetries: North Americas+, students will examine poems published after 1970 in order to explore how they encounter, diagnose, and respond to environmental topics such as climate change, extinction, extractivism, (in)justice, place, and toxicity, among other concerns. As the course title indicates, one grounding assumption of the course is that there are many, differently-experienced North Americas. Authors may include Sherwin Bitsui, Lorna Dee Cervantes, Natalie Diaz, Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, dg nanouk okpik, Craig Santos Perez, Juliana Spahr, and Natasha Trethewey. Course activities will include reading, analyzing, and discussing poems and critical essays, as well as regular writing assignments. These course activities will prepare students to embark on their own ecopoetries research in order to complete the final project. For the final project each student will produce a mini-anthology on a topic of their choosing that gathers, introduces, and critically responds to a set of existing ecopoetic texts.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
LAS E335-01
LITERATURE OF THE INDIAN OCEAN
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course examines the movement of people and the creation of new foods and foodways around the Indian Ocean world. Edward A. Alpers points out in The Indian Ocean in World History, the region is rich in “the uneven distribution of both natural and manufactured products,” and those uneven distributions led to a flourishing trade in spices, dates, pearls, wood, ivory, cotton, and silk. Both Perth and Mogadishu are parts of the Indian Ocean World, and it contains cultures as disparate as Bedouin and Tamil. Perhaps no region in the world has as long a history of transoceanic trade, and as people moved along those trade routes, they brought cultural beliefs and practices with them. Those trade routes are responsible for the Farsis in India and for the Gujaratis in Kenya. They are also responsible for bunny chow in Durban and pad Thai in Bangkok. Writers we will look at may include Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay, Lindsay Collen, Amitav Ghosh, Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, Bruce Pascoe, and M.J. Vassanji.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration