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ENGL 1760R: The Roaring Twenties
1.00 Credits
Brown University
The 1920s crystallized 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 analyze the period's central features: the rise of mass culture and of public relations, changes in women's position, consumerism, car culture, nativism and race relations. Writers include Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Larsen, Toomer, Parker. First-year students and students who have taken ENGL 0650K may not register for this course. Enrollment limited.
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ENGL 1760R - The Roaring Twenties
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ENGL 1760S: Law and Literature: From Response to Responsibility
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Explores modernism as it is shaped by the normative and ethical concerns of a rapidly changing world through literary works, legal writing, and legal opinions. Examines the conceptual, psychological and rhetorical connections between literature and law, and considers how both disciplines shape the imagination but also aim to elicit response and responsibility. Authors include Walter Benjamin, Joseph Conrad, Virginia Woolf, Rebecca West, Chinua Achebe; legal texts include Blackstone, Holmes, Bentham, Cover and a number of legal opinions. Enrollment limited to 20 juniors and seniors.
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ENGL 1760S - Law and Literature: From Response to Responsibility
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ENGL 1760T: Literary Africa
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Explores the sense in which the word "Africa" has come to carry a range of disparate moral, epistemological, and political connotations in literary and related discourses. We will study 19th century autobiographical and travel writing by black African agents of Christian missionary organizations (Ajayi Crowther, Birch Freeman, Philip Quaque, Joseph Wright); critical essays by contemporary scholars of postcolonial cultures (Appiah, Bhabha, Mudimbe, Peel, Pratt); and imaginative literature by African writers (Achebe, Soyinka, Ngugi, Marechera, Vera). Enrollment limited. Not open to first-year students. DVPS
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ENGL 1760T - Literary Africa
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ENGL 1760V: Lying, Cheating, and Stealing
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Explores literature's treatment of transgressions large and small, with particular attention to the way in which modernist narratives expose, obstruct, condone, or condemn acts of wrongdoing. What is the relationship between a misdeed and its retelling? Does writing right the story of a wrong? Readings from Rousseau, Graham Greene, Oscar Wilde, Lauren Slater, Nietzsche, Freud, as well as film, television, and select readings from law. Enrollment limited to 20 seniors and juniors. LILE
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ENGL 1761A: Nationalizing Narratives: Advanced Studies in the Twentieth-Century U.S. Novel
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Focuses on the complex relationship between the genre of the novel and nationalist rhetorics in the modern U.S. Gives particular attention to how literary discourses of nationalism articulate with those of race, gender, and sexuality.
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ENGL 1761A - Nationalizing Narratives: Advanced Studies in the Twentieth-Century U.S. Novel
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ENGL 1761C: Race, Writing, Manhood:Rhetorics of the "Authentic" in 20th-Cent African + Asian American Literature
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Explores the interrelatedness of racial, sexual, and literary identity in works by U.S. black and Asian male writers. Particular interest given to how the issue of homosocial desire frames literary accounts of racial authenticity. Writers and theorists studied may include James Baldwin, Frank Chin, Ralph Ellison, Frantz Fanon, David Henry Hwang.
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ENGL 1761C - Race, Writing, Manhood:Rhetorics of the "Authentic" in 20th-Cent African + Asian American Literature
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ENGL 1761L: Reading the Black Masses in Literature and Critical Practice
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
African American literary and critical practice in the twentieth century was definitively shaped by claims about the linkages between literature and mass politics. We will unpack the continuities and divides that constituted such assertions. Historical nodal points in our investigations will include racial uplift, the Harlem Renaissance, the Black Power Movement, and the post-identity debates.
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ENGL 1761L - Reading the Black Masses in Literature and Critical Practice
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ENGL 1761M: Asian American Travel Narratives
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Examines mobility and movement as key motifs in Asian American fiction. The course will focus on Asian American literary texts that are structured around travel, both in relation to the United States and to Asia. Our approach will draw from Americanist and Asian Americanist cultural theories about narratives of mobility and from postcolonial theories about travel writing. Enrollment limited.
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ENGL 1761M - Asian American Travel Narratives
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ENGL 1761N: Natural and Supernatural: Issues in the Study of Science and Religion
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
Religion has been studied in a number of fields (anthropology, classics, history, philosophy, psychology, sociology) as a complex of human/cultural phenomena to be examined and explained naturalistically or, as it is said, "scientifically." The course focuses on a set of key classic and contemporary texts in this tradition and on the issues they raise for current understandings of science, religion and the relations--historical, intellectual, cultural and political--between them. Enrollment limited to 20 juniors, seniors, and graduate students.
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ENGL 1761N - Natural and Supernatural: Issues in the Study of Science and Religion
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ENGL 1761O: "Everything that is must be destroyed": American Modernism
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
This class will attempt to discover whether there is such a thing as American modernism, examining the connections between works and movements as different as Gertrude Stein's highly experimental Three Lives, the Harlem Renaissance (Larsen, Hurston), American Gothic (Anderson, Faulkner), social realism (Wharton, Wright), the cosmopolitan fiction of Fitzgerald and Hemingway, and the proto-postmodern work of Barnes and West. Enrollment limited.
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ENGL 1761O - "Everything that is must be destroyed": American Modernism
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