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ENGL 1561I: Gender, Narrative, and the 19th-Century Novel
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Like Freud, Victorian novelists tell stories of desire that often center on a female character. This seminar examines some of the contexts, conventions, and tensions that go into the making of a "portrait of a lady" in this novelistic tradition. Texts to be studied include Freud's case history Dora, and novels by Brontë, Collins, Eliot, and James. Enrollment limited to 20.
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ENGL 1561I - Gender, Narrative, and the 19th-Century Novel
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ENGL 1600: Independent Study in the Enlightenment and the Rise of National Literatures and Cultures
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Tutorial instruction oriented toward a literary research topic. Section numbers vary by instructor. Instructor's permission required.
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ENGL 1600 - Independent Study in the Enlightenment and the Rise of National Literatures and Cultures
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ENGL 1610: American Poetry II: Modernism
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Study of modernist American poetry. Readings include Pound, Eliot, Stevens, Williams, H.D., Moore, Hughes, and others.
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ENGL 1610 - American Poetry II: Modernism
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ENGL 1650: Modernist Fiction
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Readings in British and American fiction and culture in the early 20th century, with particular attention to the relationships between modernist literary experiment and contemporary questions about empire, race, the changing status of women, and the grounds of literary authority. Writers may include Conrad, H.D., Joyce, Larsen, Lawrence, Rhys, Toomer, Woolf. Two lectures and one discussion meeting weekly. Students will be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 1650 - Modernist Fiction
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ENGL 1710: Special Topics in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
No description available.
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ENGL 1710 - Special Topics in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
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ENGL 1710A: "Extravagant" Texts: Advanced Studies in Asian American Literatures
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Examines Asian American writings that are difficult, complex, and/or experimental-that are, in Kingston's phrase, "extravagant." Explores the issue of what is at stake-politically and aesthetically-in writing that explicitly challenges the generic conventions with which much Asian American literature is linked: autobiography, the Bildungsroman, ethnography, realism, and sentimentalism.
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ENGL 1710A - "Extravagant" Texts: Advanced Studies in Asian American Literatures
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ENGL 1710B: American Vertigo: How the World Sees the U.S.
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Why does America exercise such an extraordinary attraction for foreign writers? And why, moreover, is the America that appears in those writings so often unrecognizable? This class examines the representation of American life from DeTocqueville to Henry-Levy, looking at work by Amis, Antonioni, Adorno, Nabokov, Kincaid, and others. Two lectures and one discussion meeting weekly. Students will be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 1710B - American Vertigo: How the World Sees the U.S.
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ENGL 1710C: Race and Nation in American Literture
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
From the heyday of literary realism through the rise of modernism, race definitively shaped the national literature of the U.S. This course will consider representations of racial identities in relation to key historical and aesthetic developments within these two periods. Authors include Mark Twain, Frances Harper, Charles Chesnutt, Stephen Crane, William Faulkner, and John Fante.
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ENGL 1710C - Race and Nation in American Literture
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ENGL 1710D: Anglo-American Nonfiction: Sages, Satirists,and New Journalists
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
After examining the relations between fiction and nonfiction, the class will consider the work of Tom Wolfe, Joan Didion, Annie Dillard, and others within contexts created by essayists (Montaigne), satirists (Swift), and Nineteenth-century sages ( Carlyle, Thoreau, Nightingale, and Ruskin). The class will become acquainted with various nonfictional forms including prose satire, the meditative essay, sage-writing, autobiography, and travel literature. WRIT
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ENGL 1710D - Anglo-American Nonfiction: Sages, Satirists,and New Journalists
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ENGL 1710E: Reading Race in Black + Yellow:Comparative Studies in 20th-C African American + Asian American Fictn
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Focusing on pairs of African American and Asian American works that address parallel concerns, we explore the continuities and discontinuities between these literary traditions. Authors we examine may include: James Weldon Johnson and Winnifred Eaton, Richard Wright and Carlos Bulosan, Chang-rae Lee and Toni Morrison, Karen Tei Yamashita and Caryl Phillips.
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ENGL 1710E - Reading Race in Black + Yellow:Comparative Studies in 20th-C African American + Asian American Fictn
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