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ENGL 0650B: Black Atlantic Narratives of Africa
1.00 Credits
Brown University
We will study fiction, drama, and autobiography by black writers who have used the motif of a literal or symbolic journey to Africa to explore in powerful ways issues of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, Africa as land and concept, individual and collective memory. Writers will include Maryse Condé, Charles Johnson, George Lamming, Paule Marshall, Toni Morrison, and Derek Walcott.
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ENGL 0650C: Englishness and Britishness in Contemporary Fiction
1.00 Credits
Brown University
How have writers of fiction responded to recent developments in British political culture? How has the category of Englishness changed during that period? This course offers an overview of some of the most important British writers of the last twenty years and an introduction to theories of culture and ideology. Readings include Ishiguro, Kelman, Caryl Phillips, Zadie Smith.
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ENGL 0650F: Is There a Theory of the Short Story?
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course considers the question in the title by looking at works of short fiction by Melville, Conrad, Bierce, Joyce, Lawrence, Kafka, Wicomb, Paley, O'Connor, Beckett, White, and literary theories by figures such as Lukacs, Bakhtin and Deleuze. Enrollment limited to 20 first-year students. Banner registrations after classes begin require instructor approval. FYS
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ENGL 0650H: Realism and Modernism
1.00 Credits
Brown University
The novel as a genre has been closely identified with the act of representation. What it means to represent "reality," however, has varied widely. This seminar will explore how the representation of reality changes as modern fiction questions the assumptions about knowing, language, and society that defined the great tradition of realism. Limited to 20 first-year students. Banner registration after classes begin requires instructor approval. FYS LILE
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ENGL 0650J: The Problem of Women's Writing
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Combines a survey of British and American women writers with an interrogation of the concept of women's writing. Authors will include Austen and Bronte, Walker and Viramontes; theoretical topics will include the figure of the author, subjectivity and ideology, the concept of a separate women's canon or tradition, and the complex differences within "feminine" writing and "feminist" reading.
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ENGL 0650K: The Roaring Twenties
1.00 Credits
Brown University
The 1920s helped solidify much of what we consider modern in 20th-century U.S. culture. This course reads literature of the decade in the context of a broader culture, including film and advertising, to think about the period's important topics: the rise of mass culture and of public relations, changes in women's position, consumerism, nativism and race relations. Writers include Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Larsen, Toomer, Parker. Enrollment limited to 20 first-year students.
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ENGL 0650M: Believers, Agnostics, and Atheists in Contemporary Fiction (JUDS 0050A)
0.00 Credits
Brown University
Interested students MUST register for JUDS 0050A S01 (CRN 14060).
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ENGL 0650M - Believers, Agnostics, and Atheists in Contemporary Fiction (JUDS 0050A)
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ENGL 0800: Introductory Special Topics in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
No description available.
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ENGL 0800 - Introductory Special Topics in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
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ENGL 0800A: City Novels
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
We will discuss 20th-century novels and films about the city from the U.S. and England to ask a range of questions: In these works, how does the city shape the way we grow up, think, move, and see? How is the city divided by class, by race, by gender? Do these novels imagine potential solutions to the problems it sees? Authors may include Crane, Dos Passos, Woolf, Wright, Cisneros, Smith, Calvino. Students should register for ENGL 0800A S01 and may be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 0800B: African American Literature and the Legacy of Slavery
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Traces the relationship between the African American literary tradition and slavery from the antebellum slave narrative to the flowering of historical novels about slavery at the end of the twentieth century. Positions these texts within specific literary, historical, and political frameworks. Authors may include Frederick Douglass, Harriet Jacobs, Charles Chesnutt, Octavia Butler, and Toni Morrison. Students should register for ENGL 0800C S01 and may be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class. DVPS
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