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ENGL 0610D: Introduction to Asian American Literature
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course is intended to familiarize students with key issues that have shaped the study of Asian American writings and to provide a sense of the historical conditions out of which those works have emerged. As a literature course, it will focus on textual analysis--on how particular texts give representational shape to the social, historical and psychological experiences they depict. Readings consists primarily of works that have a canonical status within Asian American literary studies but also include newer works that suggest new directions in the field. It also strives to provide some coverage of the major ethnic groups. DVPS
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ENGL 0610D - Introduction to Asian American Literature
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ENGL 0610E: Postcolonial Literature
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Examines fiction, drama, poetry, travel writing, and cultural theory by contemporary writers from former colonies of the British Empire. We study works by Anglophone African, Caribbean, and South Asian writers. Issues include: nationalism and globalization; cultural identity and diaspora; individual interiority and collective aspirations; literary form and the very idea of "postcolonial" literature. Authors include: J. M. Coetzee, Amitav Ghosh, V. S. Naipaul, Michael Ondaatje, Caryl Phillips, Derek Walcott, Zoë Wicomb. DVPS
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ENGL 0610E - Postcolonial Literature
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ENGL 0610F: Introduction to Modernism: Past, Future, Exile, Home
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
An introduction to European Modernism with an emphasis on British Literature. We will address ideas of personal and national history through literary and aesthetic innovations of the first half of the 20th century, as well as the relationship--literary, cultural, historical and psychological--between constructions of home and abroad. Texts include James, Conrad, Forster, Joyce, Proust, Woolf, Faulkner, Waugh, and Freud, as well as films by Sergei Eisenstein and Fritz Lang. Students should register for ENGL 0610F s01 and may be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 0610F - Introduction to Modernism: Past, Future, Exile, Home
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ENGL 0610G: 20th-century American Fiction and Mass Culture
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
How did American fiction in the 20th century respond to the growing national influence of mass culture industries such as film, television, and recording? How have fiction writers represented the consumer culture that generated those industries? Questions along these lines frame the interpretation of works by Theodore Dreiser, James Weldon Johnson, Nathanael West, Richard Wright, Don Delillo, and John Edgar Wideman. Students will be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 0610G - 20th-century American Fiction and Mass Culture
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ENGL 0610H: Cultures and Countercultures: The American Novel after World War II
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
A study of the postwar American novel in the context of the intellectual history of the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. We will read the postwar novel in relation to the affluent society, the vital center, the lonely crowd, the power elite, the one-dimensional man, the post-industrial society. Authors to be considered include Baldwin, Bellow, Ellison, Highsmith, McCarthy, O'Connor, Petry, Pynchon, and Roth. Two lectures and one discussion meeting weekly. Students should register for ENGL 0610H s01 and may be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 0610H - Cultures and Countercultures: The American Novel after World War II
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ENGL 0610J: Contemporary British Fiction
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course covers the euphoric parochialism of the post-War years, the social polarization of Thatcherism, and the multicultural inclusiveness of the New Labour period. It is intended as an introduction to theories of culture, ideology and literary form, as well as an overview of some of the most important British writers of the second half of the last century, including both Amises, Ishiguro, Hollinghurst, Kelman, Spark, Naipaul, Smith. Students should register for ENGL 0610J S01 and may be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 0610J - Contemporary British Fiction
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ENGL 0610K: 20th-Century Literatures in English
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course offers a broad introduction to a range of literatures written in English, tracing shifts in the formal conventions of fiction and poetry. We examine ongoing debates about what literature is and what social role it plays. We consider how these debates respond to historical changes such as industrialization, the collapse of global empires, and movements for social equality. Writers include Dreiser, Woolf, Eliot, Hughes, Toomer, Cather, Morrison, Hwang, Rushdie. Students should register for ENGL 0610K S01 and will be assigned to conference sections by the instructors during the first week of class. DVPS LILE
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ENGL 0610K - 20th-Century Literatures in English
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ENGL 0610L: American Literature 1900-1950
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Through detailed readings of a variety of important and influential works, this class explores the ways fiction, drama, and poetry recorded the first half of what has been called the American century. Writers to include F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, Zora Neale Hurston, Eugene O'Neill, William Carlos Williams, T. S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, and Marianne Moore.
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ENGL 0610L - American Literature 1900-1950
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ENGL 0650: Introductory Seminars in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
1.00 Credits
Brown University
First-year seminars limited to 20 students.
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ENGL 0650 - Introductory Seminars in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
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ENGL 0650A: "Model Minority" Writers: Cold War Fictions of Race and Ethnicity
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Explores the construction of race and ethnicity in U.S. writings of the 50s, paying particular attention to how literary texts negotiate the ideological demands of Cold War anti-communism. Writers studied may include Saul Bellow, Carlos Bulosan, Ralph Ellison, Jack Kerouac, Norman Mailer, John Okada, and Jade Snow Wong.
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ENGL 0650A - "Model Minority" Writers: Cold War Fictions of Race and Ethnicity
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