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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Twentieth-Century Queer Literature. Sam See. mw1-2.15 WR,Hu (0) The use of mythology and mythopoeia (myth-making) by twentieth-century British and American writers to develop queer literary and historical communities. Readings include classical, biblical, and contemporary mythic texts as background for readings in modernist and postmodernist literature. Authors include James Joyce, Hilda Doolittle, Jeanette Winterson, and Tony Kushner.
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3.00 Credits
AlaAlryyes. For description see under Literature.
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3.00 Credits
James Berger. For description see under American Studies.
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3.00 Credits
Michele Stepto. m 1.30-3.20 Hu Meets RP (0) An eclectic approach to stories and storytelling for and by children. Authors include Nathaniel Hawthorne, Louisa May Alcott, J. K. Rowling, Leo Lionni, Laurent de Brunhoff, Dr. Seuss, Maurice Sendak, and children themselves.
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3.00 Credits
Jill Campbell. For description see under Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies. Libr engl 369b/ er&m 367b/ wgss 369b, Adoption Narratives. Margaret Homans. wf 11.35-12.50 WR,Hu (0) Amer A survey of nineteenth- and twentieth-century U.S. and British representations of adoption in fiction, memoir, poetry, drama, film, and social science writing. Special attention to the implications for adoption narratives of recent theories of race, gender, identity, and trauma.
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3.00 Credits
Lawrence Manley. mw 2.30-3.45 WR,Hu (0) Pre-1800 A survey of English lyric poetry from the early sixteenth century through the mid-seventeenth, focusing on poetic forms and traditions and the place of poetry in the social, political, and religious life of the time. (Formerly engl 406a)
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3.00 Credits
Murray Biggs. For description see under Theater Studies.
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3.00 Credits
Margaret Homans. t 1.30-3.20 WR,Hu (0) Historical survey of works of fiction that have shaped feminist and queer thought from the late eighteenth century to the present. Authors include Wollstonecraft, C Bront?, Gilman, Chopin, Woolf, Lessing, Wittig, Walker, Morrison, Churchill, and Winterson.
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3.00 Credits
Paul Grimstad. tth11.35-12.50 Hu Meets RP (0) The relation between literature and science, including philosophical, ethical, and political questions. Focus on science fiction as a genre. Science and the scientist as represented in works of fiction. Works by Mary Shelley, Nathaniel Hawthorne, H. G Wells, Charles Darwin, Octavia Butler, Alan Turing, Sigmund Freud, Aldous Huxley, Stanley Kubrick, Ursula Le Guin, Richard Powers, Philip K. Dick, and David Cronenberg.
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3.00 Credits
Joseph Roach. For description see under Theater Studies.
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