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ENGL 2760Q: Ways of Seeing: Modern American Fiction and Photography
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Reads a number of important modernist novels alongside the work of early 20th-century American photographers, focusing on what this fiction's engagement with photography has to teach us about the reproduction and circulation of American identity and history. Writers include James, Dos Passos, Hurston, Agee, Welty, and Ellison; photographers include Stieglitz, Strand, and Weston. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2760Q - Ways of Seeing: Modern American Fiction and Photography
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ENGL 2760R: Realism and the American Novel
1.00 Credits
Brown University
An inquiry into the form, purpose, longevity, and afterlife of American realism. In what way did it differ from its British counterpart? In what ways was it different from naturalism, modernism, and romanticism? What was its aesthetic and political legacy? How has it been read by critics? Writers to include Melville, Dreiser, Norris, James, Chestnutt, Wharton, Jewett, and Wright. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2760R - Realism and the American Novel
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ENGL 2760T: Postmodernism and Literary Form
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Intended for graduate students interested in the relationship between socio-historical conditions and literary form, and for those interested in thinking beyond a narrowly periodized notion of the postmodern. Beginning with Lukács's The Theory of the Novel, considers the problematic of literary representation as it emerges in the modern age. Readings include Beckett, Nabokov, Burroughs, Amis, Rushdie, McEwan, Lyotard, and Moretti. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2760T - Postmodernism and Literary Form
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ENGL 2760U: Reading the Black Masses in Literature and Critical Practice
1.00 Credits
Brown University
For more than a century, African American literature and criticism have been definitively shaped by claims about the linked fate of the black masses and the world of letters. These contested assertions provide occasions for rethinking the traditional ends of black literary production. Class conflict, the waning of black nationalism, and diasporic identity politics, are among the topics examined under this rubric. Likely literary writers include Washington, Larsen, Ellison, Brooks, and Wideman. Enrollment limited to 15 graduate students.
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ENGL 2760U - Reading the Black Masses in Literature and Critical Practice
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ENGL 2760V: Neo-Victorianism: Rewriting the Long Nineteenth Century
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This seminar examines recent novelists rewriting canonical 19th-century texts by Dickens and others, playing with matters of postcoloniality and gender. Jack Maggs, for example, answers the questions, "Can the subaltern speak?" and "Does the empire write back?" while Fingersmith offers a lesbian version of the Victorian sensation novel. Patchwork Girl rewrites Frankenstein, stitching together fiction, gender, and identity. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2760V - Neo-Victorianism: Rewriting the Long Nineteenth Century
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ENGL 2760W: American Literature and the Visual Arts
1.00 Credits
Brown University
With the publication of several recent studies of cinema and modernism, interest in the relation between literature and the visual arts has never been higher. We will chart the forms this relation takes in the modern era by reading both theoretical attempts to diagnose it (Benjamin, Barthes, Derrida, Rancière) and literary attempts to enact it (James, Stein, Ellison, Williams, Agee). Enrollment limited to 15 graduate students.
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ENGL 2760W - American Literature and the Visual Arts
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ENGL 2760X: After Postmodernism: New Fictional Modes
1.00 Credits
Brown University
What happens when the "postmodern," the period that did away with periodization, is over? This class will discuss issues such as contemporaneity, materiality, subtraction, subjectivity, the event, and the frame in approaching British and American literature at the turn of the 21st century. Readings include Ishiguro, Cooper, Toussaint, Seth, Coetzee, Chatwin, Danielewski, Deleuze, Bergson, Badiou, Lukács, Voloshinov, Adorno, Pasolini, Nancy. Enrollment limited to 15 graduate students. Banner registrations after classes begin require instructor approval.
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ENGL 2760X - After Postmodernism: New Fictional Modes
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ENGL 2800: Graduate Independent Study in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
1.00 - 5.00 Credits
Brown University
Section numbers vary by instructor. May be repeated for credit. Instructor's permission required.
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ENGL 2800 - Graduate Independent Study in Modern and Contemporary Literatures and Cultures
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ENGL 2900: Advanced Topics in Critical and Cultural Theory
1.00 Credits
Brown University
No description available. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2900 - Advanced Topics in Critical and Cultural Theory
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ENGL 2900A: Contemporary Feminist Theory: Feminist Address
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Recent feminist theory addresses identity politics and the critique of the subject; problematics of race, class and gender; the challenge of queer theory; the demand for materialist analysis. We consider these topics in light of the problematics of address. What are the forms of feminist address? How are they received or refused? Who are the subjects of contemporary feminisms? Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2900A - Contemporary Feminist Theory: Feminist Address
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