LAS Courses
PLAYWRITING II
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This advanced workshop expects students to have some familiarity with playwriting and/or dramatic literature. Over the course of the semester, each writer will create an original evening-length work intended for live performance. The class will engage in various in-class writing prompts, share work through individual workshops, study revising/editing techniques, and attend local theatre. We will discuss various plays, theoretical texts, and other literary works as material for understanding narrative strategy and performance style. This class asks for a sense of camaraderie between writers as we will be reading each other's work and providing feedback in real time.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
ADVANCED POETRY WORKSHOP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The Advanced Poetry Workshop is an intensive project-based poetry workshop for students with previous workshop experience and a portfolio of revised work on which to build. The course centers on workshop: peer critique by students with previous practice in poetry writing, and the shared goal of completing a semester-long publication/performance project. Students are expected to have a strong commitment to active participation in contemporary poetry as readers, writers, curators, performers, and audience. Teaching and learning methodologies include close reading of exemplary texts, experimentation with forms, revision, online/print publication, and performance. Texts will include poetry collections published in 2019 and 2020, as selected by students and instructor. The workshop welcomes work in any language and from any tradition of poetry. To the greatest extent possible, the work should speak for itself. But mediation, translation, contextualization also play a vital role.
Prerequisite: LAS E411 - Beginning Poetry Writing Workshop.
Elective
ADVANCED FICTION WRITING WKSHP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The advanced workshop assumes that students have some experience with writing fiction and are ready for an environment that will challenge them to hone, revise, and distill their craft. A writer begins inspired by dreams, language, a face in a crowd. But inspiration is only the beginning of a writer's work. In this course we'll study form, theme, voice, language, character, and plot. We'll also read and talk about stories by masters of the craft. The aim of the workshop is to help you discover what your stories want to be and fulfill the promise of your original vision.
Prerequisite: LAS E412 - Beginning Fiction Writing Workshop.
Elective
GRAPHIC NARRATIVE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course will deal with graphic narrative in many of its forms: fiction, memoir, historical (auto)biography, journalistic investigation. We will be reading graphic narratives that helped create the genre of Comics Studies, as well as more contemporary narratives that are re-imagining and re-shaping the possibilities within the genre. We will also be reading scholarship that deepens our understanding of some of the ways these texts can be understood within a larger critical context. Students will have the opportunity to frame their responses to the readings in both traditional and visual modes. We will be reading such authors as: Art Spiegelman, Alison Bechdel, Jean Yuen Yang, Marjane Satrapi, Joe Sacco, Lynda Barry, Ron Wimberly.
Elective
LIARY
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The word liary references the seven volumes of Anais Nin's diaries, which, upon their publication, were denounced by Nin's friends as utter fiction, as the "liary." This course will treat this insult as the basis for a literary genre: the fiction of life itself. We will focus on the production of liaries: fiction using real life - your own. But rather than thinking about lived experience as the raw material of fiction which finds expression through words, we will think about words themselves as the medium through which the fiction of life can be constructed. In this course, we will be fully invested in the materiality of words and the functionality of fiction. We will collide with words as if they were a particularly willful batch of clay, to find different ways in which fictionality is created when a word is imagined to give contour to the slippery moments of living.
Elective
SHORT STORY WRITING WORKSHOP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
In this writing workshop, we will explore the short story, working to put into words what we--as individual readers and writers--hope to find in it. We'll consider what makes a story a story, while acknowledging that it is often something ineffable, indefinable. We'll read a range of contemporary and classic writers and will also read essays on craft. A significant amount of class time will be devoted to in-class writing and peer workshops. At the end of the term, students will be expected to submit a portfolio made up of reflections, rough drafts, and revised stories.
Elective
READING AND WRITING LITERARY NONFICTION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course will give students the chance to read exemplary works of contemporary masters, including John McPhee, Jo Ann Beard, Denis Johnson, David Foster Wallace, Ta-Nehisis Coates, Leslie Jameson, Zadie Smith, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Joan Didion. Reading closely, students will gain broad exposure to a range of styles and concerns, which in turn may inform the nonfiction writing they do in this class. Students will have the option of working on a single long piece of approximately 20 pages or two pieces, 10 pages each. The work will be expected to do more than merely recount lived experience. At the heart of the writing should be an issue the writer is working to fathom.
Elective
MOTHERS & DAUGHTERS: IT'S A COMPLICATED NARRATIVE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The stuff of myth, lore, literature, and cinema, the tender in parts-fraught in others equation between mothers & daughters has spawned art across centuries. And this writing workshop! Welcome to Mothers & Daughters: It’s a Complicated Narrative, where we will read, analyse, and create writing that dives through the heart of this relationship. We will be reading poems, stories, essays, and graphic narratives, look sideways at cinema and television, and examine scholarly material, to consider how mothers & daughters have committed the relationship to art. We will study how authors explore the sharing of space, gender roles and expectations, body and witnessing, and intergenerational trauma in contemporary literature and undertake writing of parent-child relationships. The class will include analysis by way of reflection essays, writing in poetry, fiction/graphic narrative, nonfiction modeled after our readings, and lively classroom discussion.
Readings may include “Motherhood & Daughterhood” by Adrienne Rich, excerpts from The Homeric Hymn to Demeter, Sophocles' Electra, Annie John by Jamaica Kincaid, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, My Name is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout, The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters, The Carrying by Ada Limon, Ladybird dir. by Greta Gerwig, Are You My Mother? by Alison Bechdel, and poems by Diane Seuss, Dorothy Chang, Preeti Vangani, Ishle Yi Park, Taylor Byas.
Elective
FROM LITERARY TO CULTURAL STUDIES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Cultural studies has made its mark in the humanities as a structured discipline since the 1960s. It emerged from a dissatisfaction with traditional literary criticism and sought to widen the latter's focus on aesthetic masterpieces of high culture by incorporating "low," popular, and mass culture in an interdisciplinary analysis of "texts," their production, distribution and consumption. Varied "texts" from the world of art, film, TV, advertising, detective novels, music, folklore, etc., as well as everyday objects, discourses, and institutions have since been discussed in their social, historical, ideological and political contexts. This course will provide an introduction to the field and its concerns. It will also encourage students to practice some of its modes of analysis.
Elective
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PHOTOTEXTUALITY: LITERATURES OF THE EMBEDDED IMAGE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Photography and Literature are often seen as separate, yet kindred, disciplines, each working to depict, contest, alter, and reframe that which we think of as reality. This course will explore various ideas about the melding of photography and literature by looking at texts that work to create dialogue between the two mediums, as well as theoretical writings that offer ways of contemplating such fusions. We will study texts by writers/photographers such as: Walker Evans, James Agee, W.G. Sebald, Sigmund Freud, Roland Barthes, Teju Cole, John Berger, Sophie Calle, Paul Auster, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, and Lance Olsen. Students will write several short essays about the readings, as well as a longer project, which will combine photography and writing.
Elective
BEYOND HUMAN: GPT-4 & THE EXTENSION OF LITERARY CONSCIOUSNESS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
In this forward-thinking course, we will explore the potential of GPT-4 as a catalyst for extending and enhancing literary consciousness. As artificial intelligence reshapes the landscape of language and literature, we will consider how GPT-4, with its advanced generative capabilities, can serve as a creative collaborator in the writing process, pushing the boundaries of human imagination and storytelling.
Students will engage with a range of texts and theories to better understand the implications of AI in the realm of literary art. We will examine the ethical, aesthetic, and critical considerations of collaborating with AI, while also assessing how GPT-4 can help writers tap into new perspectives, styles, and techniques. Throughout the course, students will work on a series of creative assignments that involve both human and AI-generated content, learning to strike a balance between their own instincts and the generative power of the machine.
By the end of the course, students will not only develop a deeper understanding of the potential for human-AI collaboration in literature but also gain valuable insights into their own creative processes. They will be equipped with the knowledge and skills to navigate and contribute to the ongoing conversation surrounding the role of AI in language art. The course will culminate in a final project, which may be a creative work, critical analysis, or research paper, showcasing the student's engagement with the literary possibilities and implications of the GPT-4 era. Topics to be covered in this course include:
The history of writing technologies and their impact on human consciousness
The history and development of GPT-4 and the implications for literature and language art
Strategies for effectively guiding and refining GPT-4-generated content
Exploring different genres and forms of writing with AI assistance
Ethical considerations in human-AI collaboration and authorship
The future of collaborative writing with advanced AI systems
Elective
DARK WATERS: THE BLUE HUMANITIES & THE BLACK ATLANTIC
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Below a certain depth in the ocean, a human body cannot remain. Not without imploding like a dying star. And yet oceans, bodies of water—such as the Atlantic—contain countless vital remains. Despite humanity’s vast technological advancements, the sciences continue to grapple with the ocean’s unreachable depths. On another disciplinary shore, critical ocean studies scholar, Steve Mentz, invites students of literature to “read for the salt.” While we may never experience an unmediated encounter with the chasmic depths of the Mariana Trench, the literary arts are saturated in blue matters. “Dark Waters” approaches modern anglophone literatures of the Atlantic—from England to Jamaica, from the U.S. to Nigeria—as a transnational, transhistorical archive whose oceanic histories are polluted equally by the chattel slavery of the middle passage and the oil spills of fossil fuel industries. Wading into the poetry of M. NourbeSe Phillip or Shailja Patel, the novels of Helon Habila, George Lamming, or John Lanchester, or the stories of Saleen Haddad, Virginia Woolf, or Mulk Raj Anand, this course invites students to create inlets and pursue tidal flows between the creative and the critical, and also amongst the entangled scientific and cultural materialities of our hydro-modernity. Sampling the critical-philosophic offerings of others—such as Alexis Pauline Gumbs' “undrowned,” Stacy Alaimo’s “transcorporiality,” Christina Sharpe’s “being in the wake,” and Elizabeth Deloughery’s “Heavy Waters”—students will use writing and other expressive media across two core projects and associated preparatory work to explore and, finally, offer their own ideas on the texts we have plumbed together.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
HAUNTING TOLKIEN: GHOSTS OF THE WEST
SECTION DESCRIPTION
A study of the works and influence of J.R.R. Tolkien at the intersection of Postcolonial studies, Classics, and Byzantine and Medieval Studies. Particular attention is paid to themes including: the influence of 19th-century scholarship and its fixation on ideologies of the Volk and the genealogies and wanderings of nations; legacies of empire and colonialism; discourses of Orientalism and antisemitism; medieval nostalgias from the Victorian to the Second Elizabethan Era; the Claims of Philology; source criticism and Tolkien's literary/historical influences; distortions and elisions of Byzantium and other cultures in the discursive construction of Western Civilization; and contemporary concerns including racist backlash to the casting of people of color in recent adaptations.
Elective
JOYCE, SYNGE, YEATS, AND THEIR ANTECEDENTS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Ireland has a long history of literature, stretching from pre-Christian epics through monastic manuscripts right up to the thriving contemporary scene. While there are many important Irish writers before the beginning of the twentieth century, clearly the birth of the Abbey theatre and the poetry of W. B. Yeats and the prose of James Joyce created reverberations still felt in Ireland today. Using Joyce, Synge, and Yeats as a beginning point in this seminar we will look at a series of contemporary Irish writers whose works is building upon the foundation established in the early years of the twentieth century. One of the themes we will return to again and again in this course is the theme of loss - loss of language, loss of sovereignty, loss of loved ones. What does Stephen mean when he says, "History is a Nightmare from which I am trying to awake"? Why is Yeats' left in "the foul rag and bone shop of the heart"?
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
EATING THE WAY BACK HOME: FOOD, LITERATURE AND IDENTITY
SECTION DESCRIPTION
In The Wretched of the Earth (1961), Frantz Fanon writes, "The relations of man with matter, with the world outside, and with history are in the colonial period simply relations with food." Fanon recognizes that for the colonized subject existence itself is so threatened that every bit of food one can gain access to is, as he writes, "a victory felt as a triumph for life." The foods people choose to eat and the ways they prepare those foods speak volumes about their relationship to the land and reflect their history. Postcolonial storytellers, writers, and filmmakers use food and foodways as markers of independence, as symbols of cultural colonization, and as signs of continued deprivations. Through foodways one can glimpse famines, invasions, and historical access to trade networks, and food itself can even serve as a vehicle for communication. Since these stories are not constructed in a vacuum, they also can reveal something about what food means in specific historical moments, in specific places, and for specific populations. This course will look at the roles food and foodways play in a series of narratives from formerly colonized spaces. Writers we will read may include Chris Abani, Bessie Head, Tsitsi Dangarembga, and Ken Saro-Wiwa.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
LAS OPEN SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The LAS Open Seminar is devoted to the development of undergraduate and graduate degree projects that engage the discipline of literary arts and studies, and involves the writing of a longer, research-based project (thesis, artist's statement, creative work, etc). This engagement may take a variety of different forms, including a direct referencing or interaction with literary texts or issues; a focus on textuality and/or narrativity; a concern with research and the mechanics of writing a longer project. Therefore, as the course title indicates, the seminar has an open structure to accommodate our ability to address and foster each student's interests and concerns. As the semester progresses, we will move from a discussion of texts that introduce key concepts in the framing of interdisciplinary projects to group analyses and the workshopping of each student's project. In the first part of the semester, we will discuss a number of conceptual tenets that will ground our theorization of the artistic process, including issues of intentionality and audience; issues of translation and interdisciplinarity; and the relation of form to content. The second part of the semester will be organized and driven by group analyses of the degree and related written project of each class member.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement