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Displaying results with search value "Potter" — 9 of 9 results

Approaches to Literature and Culture

ENGL 110

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potter-tiffany chapman-mary-ann burgess-miranda wong-danielle luger-moberley pareles-mo james-suzanne cavell-richard-anthony gooding-richard rouse-robert anger-suzy basile-jonathan baxter-gisele-marie fox-lorcan-francis
2023 Winter Term 1/2Credits: 3

Study of selected examples of literary and cultural expression: examples may include poetry, fiction, drama, life narratives, essays, graphic novels, screenplays, and narrative adaptations in film and other media. Essays are required.

Sections (84)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
001 1 Lecture M, W 9:00 - 10:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

400 Years of Asking the Big Questions

There will be shipwrecks, magic, mad scientists, beast-people, a garden party, and his first ball. As we read stories of wrecks and disasters—structural, personal, and social— we will consider the significance of the ways these stories ask some of the big questions human beings have struggled with for centuries: What makes us human and not animal? What is human nature, and is it really natural? What about gender, race, and other kinds of difference? Who has power and why? Do we just reflect reality with the stories we tell ourselves, or are we actually creating reality? Along with substantial work on poetry, this section of English 110 will focus on one play, one novel, and a group of short stories that engage the different ways that people respond to circumstances that challenge what they thought was “natural” or “universal.” This course introduces students to the analytical skills and critical thinking essential to university-level literary reading, thinking and writing. In large lectures and 30-student Friday discussion groups, students pursue hands-on practice of methods of literary analysis.

Please note that this is not a course on writing (that’s ENGL 100 or WRDS 150): we’ll spend our time on fabulous literature rather than essay-writing technicals.

Want a head start this summer? Choose HG Wells’ short but creepy mad scientist novel, The Island of Dr. Moreau or Shakespeare’s classic shipwreck+magic play, The Tempest. You can see videos of different productions of Tempest for free through the UBC library or stream the great 2010 film, starring Helen Mirren and Djimon Hounsou (but take a pass on the really, really terrible Island of Dr Moreau movie, trust me!).

002 1 Lecture M, W 10:00 - 11:00 Chapman, Mary Ann

Section Description

Imitation is at the heart of most works of literature. Even as critics and scholars celebrate authors’ originally, the truth is that all writers copy: They make allusions to other works of literature. They embed quotation in their works. They parody other writers and forms for satirical purposes. This particular section of ENGL 110 explores how a diverse range of US writers--poets, fiction writers, even rappers--find their original voices, paradoxically, by imitating earlier writers and genres. Students will explore how allusions--to both Broadway musicals and rap lyrics--inform the meaning of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s 2016 musical Hamilton. We will also consider how 20th-century African American poets parody Shakespeare and other poets in order to cultivate a distinctly African American poetic tradition. We will analyze how literal and literary inheritance are at the heart of the American novel. Finally, we will reflect on how artificial intelligence chatbots generate content through imitation.

Works will include:

  • Hamilton: The Musical by Lin-Manuel Miranda
  • Selected poems
  • Nella Larsen’s Passing OR Winnifred Eaton Reeve’s Cattle
003 1 Lecture M, W 12:00 - 13:00 Burgess, Miranda

Section Description

In relation: Identity, Inheritance, Survival, Love

The founding idea of western European and North American settler colonial versions of democracy is the primacy of the person (the self-identical subject, the distinctly human, the autonomous individual.) Yet societies considered globally offer many understandings of actual and ideal relationships between the thinking, feeling one and the gifts, obligations, and lived experience of the many. Even those European and Euro-American philosophers and poets who have longed for and celebrated the singular self-sufficient person have, inevitably, also uneasily acknowledged that people intrinsically and necessarily exist in relation to other people. Drawing on and considering works by Indigenous (Métis), Black (American), Vietnamese American, and Anglo-British authors, from the 19th century to the present, we’ll focus on four specific and elaborate investigations of identities and persons in relation to others. We’ll consider the way these texts represent relations between identity and community in the context of war, colonization, enslavement, and the rise of western European science. We’ll ask questions such as: what is kinship, and what do these texts propose it could be? How do these texts, and how should we, understand the connections between family and political understandings of community? What does, and what might, community look like in the continuing wake of genocide? How are identities shaped by inheritance—and what does an individual owe to ancestors and to history? How has, and how can, writing, and the writer’s art, critique, repair, and build community? We’ll focus, especially, on considering these ideas in conjunction with our own understandings of identity in relation to family, kinship, community, and society.

Major texts:

  • Thi Bui, The Best We Could Do (2017);
  • Cherie Dimaline, The Marrow Thieves (2017);
  • Toni Morrison, Beloved (1987);
  • Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelley, Frankenstein (1818)
004 1 Lecture M, W 13:00 - 14:00 Wong, Danielle

Section Description

The Body at the Border 

This course introduces students to methods for studying literature, media, and critical theory by focusing on the body’s relationship to borders. Through our engagement with North American cultural productions, students will develop skills essential to university-level reading, writing, and analysis by engaging contemporary North American cultural productions. We will focus on the relationships between race, gender, sexuality and narratives of migration within ongoing histories of imperialism and settler colonialism. The course uses the frameworks of literary theory, cultural studies, postcolonial theory, and diaspora studies in order to attend to formal and thematic components of cultural productions, and to put them in conversation with questions about borders and migration.

005 1 Lecture M, W 14:00 - 15:00 Luger, Moberley

Section Description

What can Literature do?: Counternarratives of the 21st Century

Scientists use data—gathered through experimentation, for example, or measurement—to discover and interpret the world around them. What do literary scholars use? What kind of “data” is a graphic narrative, a novel, or a poem? And what can the study of literature tell us about how we interpret the world we live in? In particular, what might we learn from literature that we can’t learn by other means?

The texts on this course include local and global stories written in this century. They will show us contemporary lives lived in different corners of the world—for example, a Pakistani university student in New York, an Indigenous hockey player in Ontario. These are personal stories about public events, and they are the stories that have generally been less discovered, measured, or recorded. They reveal the sometimes invisible, even erased, narratives and lives that lurk behind the headlines or history books. They invite us to ask, who gets to speak and who may be silenced? What kind of knowledge does literature give us access to—and what should we do with that knowledge?

Texts: Possible texts include The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui, The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid, Indian Horse by Richard Wagamese, Injun by Jordan Abel.

006 1 Lecture T, Th 11:00 - 12:30 Pareles, Mo

Section Description

Fictions of the Queer Past

Us. The word glided through her mind like a leaf, or a stone, troubling the waters. Over the years, she’d encountered a range of women who could be seen as part of this us, whether they’d admit to it or not…but wasn’t joining the trip a kind of incrimination? Five, together. She’d never heard of such a thing. --Carolina de Robertis, Cantoras

Who and what is queer? What counts as queer history and queer historical fiction? Focusing on two recent novels about the queer 20th century (Carolina de Robertis’s Cantoras and Michael Nava’s Carved in Bone), and reading other short fiction and poetry, we will explore these questions and pursue the pleasures of critical reading and writing. By the end of this first-year writing course, students will have developed the tools to succeed in humanities courses.

007 2 Lecture M, W 9:00 - 10:00 James, Suzanne

Section Description

Defining the Self

How do we define ourselves – as Canadians, as artists, as lovers, as survivors? These are some of the broad issues of identity and belonging we will explore through a selection of fiction, drama and poetry in this section of English 110.  We will consider ways in which individuals craft and perform the "selves" they wish to be, and the multiplicity of ways in which writers convey these identities through literary texts. To what extent do we control the person we become and to what extent are we shaped by our community? How meaningful are the concepts of ethnicity, gender and nationality in the creation of identity? How can a writer convey the complex and shifting nature of individual and group identity through the permanence of written discourse? Texts studied will include a novel (Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi), a play (The Rez Sisters by Tomson Highway), and a selection of short stories and poetry. In lectures and seminars, students will engage with concepts of genre and form in literature and will pursue hands-on practice of methods of literary analysis. Students will be encouraged to develop independent critical responses to the works studied. Assessment will include two in-class essays, a term paper and a final examination.

008 2 Lecture M, W 11:00 - 12:00 Cavell, Richard Anthony

Section Description

The course provides students with an understanding of relationships between literature and media. It further provides them with an understanding of literary genre, and of the ways in which different media function. There are modules on the electronic book, on the relationship between photography and narration, on information culture, on media history, on media metafictions, and on Indigenous media. In addition, the course encourages students in reading and writing strategies that will enhance their ability to communicate ideas effectively.

009 2 Lecture M, W 12:00 - 13:00 Gooding, Richard

Section Description

Literature for a Warming World

“People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are at the beginning of a mass extinction and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth.”  (Greta Thunberg, address to the United Nations General Assembly, 2019)

When we think about climate change, we may feel torn between concern for the fate of our planet and our desire for an unending supply of consumer goods. Depending on our politics, respect for scientific expertise, and ecological sensibility, we are likely to admire figures like Greta Thunberg or throw our lot in with her critics and plead the necessity of continued economic growth. Wherever our allegiances lie, we may wonder what potential worlds await us. In this course we will read a variety of literary representations of worlds altered by climate change. Readings will include a selection of poems and short stories, a novel (Catherynne M. Valente’s The Past is Red), and a graphic novel (Jacques Lob and Jean-Marc Rochette’s Snowpiercer: The Escape).

010 2 Lecture M, W 13:00 - 14:00 Rouse, Robert

Section Description

Fantastic Pasts and Science Futures: Speculative Fictions and Histories

Where have we been, and where are we going? Fantasy and Science Fiction – two of the genres that fit into the capacious mode of Speculative Fiction – have been at the centre of addressing these questions since the middle of the 20th century.  This course is structured in two parts: first examining the history and development of the genre of Fantasy – from JRR Tolkien to GRR Martin and beyond – and its role in mediating the multiple pasts of western society, and second an introduction to the ever-moving genre of Science Fiction and its probing speculations about our future. We will read a range of novels and short stories – and watch some film and TV – both classics and lesser known works, as we examine the role of these two genres in the exploration of how literature reflects, shapes, and reshapes our sense of our past as a society, and poses questions as to our possible futures.

Please note that this is not a course on writing (that would be ENGL 100 or WRDS 150): we will spend our time on fantastic literature rather than essay-writing technical skills.

011 2 Lecture M, W 14:00 - 15:00 Anger, Suzy

Section Description

Strange Science, Ghosts, Robots, and Literary Theory

In this section of English 110, we will read literary texts depicting ghosts, artificial life, and strange science. The course will teach you to think and write critically about literature at the university level. It will also introduce you to contemporary literary theories. We will examine a range of approaches to the interpretation of literature, including psychoanalytical, Marxist, feminist, and postcolonial, and use the theories to analyze the literature we study.

Texts:

Texts read will include Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, George Eliot’s “The Lifted Veil,” and Karel Čapek’s R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots).

012 2 Lecture T, Th 9:30 - 11:00 Basile, Jonathan

Section Description

Modernism, Science, and the Environment

The early twentieth century was a period of rapid technological change, coupled with unprecedented experimentation by artists reflecting on the transformations around them. We will read novels, poems, plays, and short stories from this time period with an eye toward how scientific authority and technological power is imitated, placed on stage, interrogated, and parodied. Themes to include: scientific experimentation and the scientist as cultural figure, representations of race, gender, and sexuality, ideas of heredity and evolution, fears of technology and apocalyptic imaginaries, environmental degradation and foreshadowings of climate change, and the changing relationship to nature, nonhuman life, and historical memory. Readings from Virginia Woolf, Ralph Ellison, George Schuyler, Samuel Beckett, Jorge Luis Borges, and others.

013 2 Lecture T, Th 11:00 - 12:30 Baxter, Gisele Marie

Section Description

Literary Monsters and Monstrous Literature

Rey: “You are a monster.”
Kylo Ren: “Yes, I am.”
– Star Wars: The Last Jedi

“Deformed, unfinished, sent before my time into this breathing world” – Richard III 1.i

What is a monster? We know monsters from myths and legends, folktales, horror fiction and film. We know their variety: the grotesque, the beautiful, the terrifying, the pitiable, the sports of nature and the forces of evil. Dragons, werewolves, vampires, zombies, Frankenstein’s Creature, Dorian Gray, the Joker, Hannibal Lecter, Marisa Coulter, many of the characters in The Walking Dead or Game of Thrones: they’re everywhere, from under the bed to the house next door to the battlefield, and right into a great deal of literature. Which leaves us here: in this section of 110 we’ll focus on how literary texts across the genres use representations of monstrosity in ways that inspire both terror and horror, as well as (let’s be honest) fascination and even enjoyment.

We’ll look at William Shakespeare’s Richard III (a play that meditates on villainy and ambition in demonizing its subject for Tudor audiences, yet still fascinates contemporary ones) and at Ian McKellen’s 1995 film adaptation, which shifts the setting to an alternate-reality 1930s England where fascism takes hold. We will also consider various stage and screen adaptations as approaches to the play, including recent ones using race and gender-diverse casting, and casting as Richard actors who are themselves physically disabled or disfigured. Other core texts include two novels: Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived in the Castle, as well as selected poetry (with a focus on the sonnet form).

Evaluation will be based on two timed essays, a home paper, and a final exam, plus participation in discussion.

Keep checking my blog (https://blogs.ubc.ca/drgmbaxter/) for updates concerning texts and requirements.

014 2 Lecture T, Th 14:00 - 15:30 Fox, Lorcan Francis

Section Description

This section of English 110 will introduce students to basic elements of university-level literary study by examining a wide range of works in three genres: poetry, prose fiction, and drama.  These works are of various literary eras and by authors from diverse cultural backgrounds.  Students will be taught methods of literary analysis that should enable them to read each work with care, appreciation, and (I hope) enjoyment.

  • two in-class essays: 20% each
  • home essay (1200 words): 30%
  • final exam: 30%

 Provisional Reading List:

poetry by Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn MacEwen, Michael Ondaatje, Jackie Kay, Hai-Dang Phan, and others (available online)

short fiction by Kate Chopin, Anton Chekhov, Margaret Atwood, Kazuo Ishiguro, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and others (available online)

Shakespeare, King Lear (Broadview) Samuel Beckett, Endgame (Grove)

01W 1 Waiting List M, W, F 9:00 - 10:00
02W 1 Waiting List M, W, F 10:00 - 11:00
03W 1 Waiting List M, W, F 12:00 - 13:00
04W 1 Waiting List M, W, F 13:00 - 14:00
05W 1 Waiting List M, W, F 14:00 - 15:00
06W 1 Waiting List T, Th 11:00 - 12:30
07W 2 Waiting List M, W, F 9:00 - 10:00
08W 2 Waiting List M, W, F 11:00 - 12:00
09W 2 Waiting List M, W, F 12:00 - 13:00
10W 2 Waiting List M, W, F 13:00 - 14:00
11W 2 Waiting List M, W, F 14:00 - 15:00
12W 2 Waiting List T, Th 9:30 - 11:00
13W 2 Waiting List T, Th 11:00 - 12:30
14W 2 Waiting List T, Th 14:00 - 15:30
LA1 1 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LA2 1 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LA3 1 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LA4 1 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LA5 1 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LA6 1 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LB1 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00
LB2 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00
LB3 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00
LB4 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00
LB5 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00
LB6 1 Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00
LC1 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LC2 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LC3 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LC4 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LC5 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LC6 1 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LE1 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LE2 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LE3 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LE4 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LE5 1 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LF1 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LF2 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LF3 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LF4 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LF5 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LF6 1 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LP1 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LP2 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LP3 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LP4 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LP5 2 Discussion F 9:00 - 10:00
LQ1 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LQ2 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LQ3 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LQ4 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LQ5 2 Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LR1 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LR2 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LR3 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LR4 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LR5 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LR6 2 Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LS1 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LS2 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LS3 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LS4 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LS5 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LS6 2 Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LT1 2 Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
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Approaches to Literature and Culture

ENGL 110

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cavell-richard-anthony potter-tiffany chapman-mary-ann luger-moberley dick-alexander guy-bray-stephen gooding-rick rouse-robert anger-suzy wong-danielle hunter-weldon
2024 Winter Term 1/2Credits: 3

Study of selected examples of literary and cultural expression: examples may include poetry, fiction, drama, life narratives, essays, graphic novels, screenplays, and narrative adaptations in film and other media. Essays are required. This course is not eligible for Credit/D/Fail grading.

Sections (66)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
004 1 In-Person Lecture M, W 13:00 - 14:00 Cavell, Richard Anthony

Section Description

Literature and the Media

This course provides students with an understanding of relationships between literature and media. It further provides them with an understanding of literary genre, and of the ways in which different media function. There are modules on electronic media and the book, on information culture, networks, surveillance capitalism, media metafiction, and on Indigenous cosmography. In addition, the course encourages students in reading and writing strategies that will enhance their ability to communicate ideas effectively.

001 1 In-Person Lecture M, W 09:00 - 10:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

400 Years of Humanity’s Big Questions

There will be shipwrecks, magic, mad scientists, beast-people, a garden party, and his first ball. As we read stories of wrecks and disasters—structural, personal, and social— we will consider the significance of the ways these stories ask some of the big questions human beings have struggled with for centuries: What makes us human and not animal? What is human nature, and is it really natural? What about gender, race, and other kinds of difference? Who has power and why? Along with substantial work on poetry, this section of English 110 will focus on one play, one short novel, and a group of short stories that engage the different ways that people respond to circumstances that challenge what they thought was “natural” or “universal.” This course introduces students to the analytical skills and critical thinking essential to university-level literary reading, thinking and writing. In large lectures and 30-student Friday discussion groups, students pursue hands-on practice of methods of literary analysis. Please note that this is not a course on writing (that’s ENGL 100 or WRDS 150): we’ll spend our time on fabulous literature rather than essay-writing instructions.

And remember: UBC Law, Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy, and Education all require 6 credits of first year English, so 110 will prepare you for lots of future paths!

Want a head start this summer? Choose HG Wells’ short and creepy mad scientist novel, The Island of Dr. Moreau or Shakespeare’s classic shipwreck+magic play, The Tempest. You can see videos of different productions of Tempest for free through the UBC library or stream the great 2010 film, starring Helen Mirren and Djimon Hounsou.

007 2 In-Person Lecture M, W 09:00 - 10:00 Chapman, Mary Ann

Section Description

This course is intended to introduce first-year students to the aims and techniques of university-level literary studies by exposing them to literature written in a range of genres—poetry, drama, narrative—in a range of social and historical contexts. The course balances professor’s lecture-format presentations (Mondays and Wednesdays) with more interactive discussions with TAs (Fridays).

This particular section of ENGL 110 will be organized around the relationship between works of literature, i.e. parody, allusion, quotation, homage. We will explore how allusions to both Broadway musicals and rap contribute to the meaning of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s 2016 musical Hamilton. We will explore Harlem Renaissance poetry’s engagement with poetic traditions through parody and allusion. We will then discuss poems by Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Claude McKay, and Countee Cullen. The course will wrap up with Winnifred Eaton Reeve’s novel Cattle, which cites conventions of the Western genre.

Readings will include:

  • Hamilton: The Musical by Lin-Manuel Miranda
  • Winnifred Eaton Reeve’s 1923 novel Cattle
  • Selected poems by Shakespeare, Harryette Mullen, Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, Langston Hughes and Gwendolyn Brooks
005 1 In-Person Lecture M, W 14:00 - 15:00 Luger, Moberley

Section Description

What can Literature do?: 21st Century Narratives and Counternarratives

Scientists use data—gathered through experimentation, for example, or measurement—to discover and interpret the world around them. What do literary scholars use? What kind of “data” is a graphic narrative, a novel, or a poem? And what can the study of literature tell us about how we interpret the world we live in? In particular, what might we learn from literature that we can’t learn by other means?

The texts on this course include local and global stories written in our current century. They will show us contemporary lives lived in different corners of the world—for example, a Pakistani university student in New York, an Ojibwe hockey player in Ontario. These are personal stories about public events, and they are the stories that have generally been less discovered, measured, or recorded. They reveal the sometimes invisible, even erased, narratives and lives that lurk behind the headlines or history books. They invite us to ask, who gets to speak and who may be silenced? What kind of knowledge does literature give us access to—and what should we do with that knowledge?

Possible texts include The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui, The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid, Indian Horse by Richard Wagamese, Injun by Jordan Abel.

002 1 In-Person Lecture M, W 10:00 - 11:00 Dick, Alexander

Section Description

After Frankenstein

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is by far the most influential work of literature in the English language. It has inspired plays, films, video games, comics, cartoons, stand-up comedy, dolls, cereals, and all manner of science-fiction, horror, and fantasy stories and novels. Many of these adaptations, including the most recent, have brought the concerns of their own time to bear on Shelley’s tale of scientific overreach, monstrosity, guilt, and rejection: these concerns include colonialism, racism, sexuality, artificial intelligence, the nature of life, birth, death, and society. But adaptations also enable us to see in critical and cultural perspectives, how such thorny issues, and our approaches to them, have evolved over time and alongside developments in artistic and other technologies. This course is thus about literary adaptation, but it is also about the histories and assumptions from which these adaptations, and our responses to them, emerge. After reading Shelley’s original novel, we will explore a selection of adaptations of Frankenstein, including the first dramatic adaptation of the novel, Richard Brinsley Peake’s Presumption, or the Fate of Frankenstein (1823), James Whale’s early cinematic masterpieces Frankenstein (1931) and The Bride of Frankenstein (1935), two novels, Alasdair Gray’s Poor Things (1992) as well as Yorgos Lanthimos and Tony McNamara’s recent award-winning film adaptation of it (2023), and Ahmed Saadawi’s Frankenstein in Baghdad (2013), and ending with Victor Lavalle’s disturbing but profound graphic novel, Destroyer (2022). Assignments will include short responses, quizzes, essays, and a final exam.

Please note: Frankenstein is a work of horror and, while it is not particularly graphic itself, many of its more recent adaptations have used it to probe challenging issues of violence, sexuality, racism, and war. These and other related issues will be discussed sensitively but openly in lectures and tutorials. Please be prepared.

003 1 In-Person Lecture M, W 12:00 - 13:00 Guy-bray, Stephen

Section Description

We’ll read plays, short stories, and poems from a range of periods in order to consider how texts work and how we can speak and write about them. The plays are William Shakespeare’s Macbeth, Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, and Suzan-Lori Parks’s Topdog/Underdog. We’ll read short stories from the last (almost) 200 years and poems from the last (almost) 500) years.

010 2 In-Person Lecture M, W 13:00 - 14:00 Gooding, Rick

Section Description

Literature for a Warming World

  “People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are at the beginning of a mass extinction and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth.” -- Greta Thunberg, address to the United Nations General Assembly, 2019

When we think about climate change, we may feel torn between concern for the fate of our planet and our desire for an unending supply of consumer goods. Depending on our politics, respect for scientific expertise, and ecological sensibility, we are likely to admire figures like Greta Thunberg or throw our lot in with her critics and plead the necessity of continued economic growth. Wherever our allegiances lie, we may wonder what potential worlds await us. In this course we will read a variety of literary representations of worlds altered by climate change. Readings will include a selection of poems and short stories, Catherynne M. Valente’s 2021 novel The Past is Red, and Bong Joon-ho’s 2013 film Snowpiercer.

008 2 In-Person Lecture M, W 11:00 - 12:00 Rouse, Robert

Section Description

Visions of the End: Reading the Apocalypse

Western culture has long been obsessed with the end. From Noah’s Flood to the Christian Apocalypse, the medieval millennial terrors of the year 1000 to the tech-panic of Y2K, narratives of ‘how it all ends’ are varied in scope and cause, but always present with us. In this course we will read a series of  texts that engage with a number of potential 20th and 21st century apocalyptic existential threats, from nuclear war to pandemics, from zombies to climate change. As much interested in the social implications of disaster as they are in its physical impacts, these novels offer not only warnings, but also hope in the human capacity for survival and reimagination.

011 2 In-Person Lecture M, W 14:00 - 15:00 Anger, Suzy

Section Description

Strange Science, Monsters, Robots, and Literary Theory

In this section of English 110, we will read literary texts depicting strange science and artificial life. The course will teach you to think and write critically about literature at the university level. It will also introduce you to contemporary literary theories. We will examine a range of approaches to the interpretation of literature, including Marxist, feminist, and postcolonial, and use the theories to analyze the literature we study. Texts read will include Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, George Eliot’s “The Lifted Veil,” and Karel Čapek’s R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots).

009 2 In-Person Lecture M, W 12:00 - 13:00 Wong, Danielle

Section Description

The Body at the Border

This course introduces students to methods for studying literature, media, and critical theory by focusing on the body’s relationship to borders.
In particular, we will examine how borders in their various forms are represented, interrogated, or reimagined in contemporary North American and diasporic literature and media. We will focus on the relationships between race, gender, sexuality and narratives of migration that illuminate ongoing histories of imperialism and settler colonialism. The course uses the frameworks of literary theory, cultural studies, postcolonial theory, and diaspora studies in order to attend to formal and thematic components of cultural productions, and to put them in conversation with questions about borders and migration. Students will develop skills essential to university-level reading, writing, and critical analysis.

014 2 In-Person Lecture T 14:00 - 15:30 Hunter, Weldon

Section Description

Instructor: Donald "Weldon" Hunter

Narratives of Creativity

In this course, we will examine the relationship between storytelling, artistic innovation, and the notion of creativity itself. Spanning a range of literary genres and cultural contexts, this course delves into how creativity has been understood, celebrated, and contested throughout history, from traditional notions of literary and artistic creation to contemporary forms of expression.

Through close readings —from the poems of Emily Dickinson to the visual works of Youtube “content” creators – we will consider how narratives of creativity reflect broader cultural, philosophical, and technological shifts. Key themes include the role of the “creator” in society, the tension between originality and imitation, and the social and political contexts in which culture gets made.

What is creativity and why is it so important in human life?  How does society encourage or discourage human creativity?  What are the relationships between creators, their creativity, and their creations?  And how is creativity related to inspiration, feelings, imagination, innovation, novelty, skill, and even productivity?  What are the best conditions for fostering creativity?

This course also poses critical questions about the future of creativity in an increasingly interconnected and technologized world. How will AI, digital platforms, and global connectivity redefine the creative process? Can creativity be algorithmically generated, or is it inherently human? What is the role of storytelling in an age dominated by data and virtual realities? In exploring these questions, we will interrogate the boundaries of human imagination and the ways in which narratives of creativity are likely to appear in the coming years.

A full reading list and syllabus will be available on the first day of classes in January, but students might begin by reading the following poems: “To Make a Prairie” by Emily Dickinson, “Any Lit” by Harryette Mullen, “The Young Poets of Winnipeg” by Naomi Shihab Nye, “Trying too Hard to Write a Poem Sitting on the Beach” by Philip Whalen – which can be found on  poets.org and The Poetry Foundation’s website.

 

LW1 2 In-Person Discussion Th 14:00 - 15:30 Hunter, Weldon
LV1 2 In-Person Discussion Th 11:00 - 12:30
LU1 2 In-Person Discussion Th 09:30 - 11:00
LP4 2 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00
LC2 1 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Guy-bray, Stephen
LS4 2 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LR6 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LF1 1 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Cavell, Richard Anthony
LQ4 2 In-Person Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LQ3 2 In-Person Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LA3 1 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00 Potter, Tiffany
LB4 1 In-Person Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Dick, Alexander
LT3 2 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LR4 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LF3 1 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Cavell, Richard Anthony
LQ2 2 In-Person Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LP2 2 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00
LR2 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LS2 2 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LE2 1 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Luger, Moberley
LE1 1 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Luger, Moberley
LC3 1 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Guy-bray, Stephen
LR3 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LP5 2 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00
LA4 1 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00 Potter, Tiffany
LT1 2 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LB1 1 In-Person Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Dick, Alexander
LP3 2 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00
LR1 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LA5 1 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00 Potter, Tiffany
LQ5 2 In-Person Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LS1 2 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LB3 1 In-Person Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Dick, Alexander
LE3 1 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Luger, Moberley
LC4 1 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Guy-bray, Stephen
LC5 1 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Guy-bray, Stephen
LP1 2 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00
LE5 1 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Luger, Moberley
LF4 1 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Cavell, Richard Anthony
LC1 1 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Guy-bray, Stephen
LR5 2 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00
LT2 2 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LT4 2 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00
LF5 1 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LA1 1 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00 Potter, Tiffany
LA2 1 In-Person Discussion F 09:00 - 10:00
LB2 1 In-Person Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Dick, Alexander
LB5 1 In-Person Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Dick, Alexander
LB6 1 In-Person Discussion F 10:00 - 11:00 Dick, Alexander
LE4 1 In-Person Discussion F 14:00 - 15:00 Luger, Moberley
LS3 2 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LC6 1 In-Person Discussion F 12:00 - 13:00 Guy-bray, Stephen
LS5 2 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00
LQ1 2 In-Person Discussion F 11:00 - 12:00
LF2 1 In-Person Discussion F 13:00 - 14:00 Cavell, Richard Anthony

Literature in English to the 18th Century

ENGL 220

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fox-lorcan-francis potter-tiffany
2023 Winter Term 1/2Credits: 3

A survey of prose, poetry and drama to the 18th Century. For ENGL courses at the 200- or 300- level, prior completion of at least one 100- level ENGL course is recommended.

Sections (2)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
001 1 Lecture M, W, F 12:00 - 13:00 Fox, Lorcan Francis

Section Description

This course focuses on selected English writers of poetry, drama, and prose from the late 14th to the 18th centuries.  The following literature will be studied: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight; Shakespeare’s King Lear; selections from John Milton’s Paradise Lost; Part 4 of Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels; Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park.  Class discussion of each work will sometimes focus on its treatment of social, political, and economic issues of the period in which it was written: for instance, the alleged corruption of the late medieval Church and the questioning of conventional gender roles in the early modern period.

Course requirements: two quizzes (20% each); research essay, 1500 words (30%); final exam (30%)

Texts:

  • Joseph Black et al., eds., The Broadview Anthology of British Literature, Concise Edition, Volume A (The Medieval Period, The Renaissance and the Early Seventeenth Century, The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century), Third Edition
  • Jane Austen, Mansfield Park (Broadview)
002 2 Lecture T, Th 9:30 - 11:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

Pleasure, Tension, Contention: Literature in England before 1700

This course will provide a series of alternately sparkling and gritty snapshots that together will bring into focus the tensions among canonical traditions and alternate discourses of literary culture in England from the Medieval period to around 1700. This is a tasting menu, not a buffet. Texts are selected to offer a starting point on the vast expanse of content in the first few hundred years of English literary history, organized to lead us to a critical process of collaborative learning rather a high speed overview. We will consider a moderate number of selected readings around conflicts and continuities, both those occurring in the cultures of composition and those emerging subsequently in literary scholarship. At different times, we will interrogate textualizations of the emerging idea of the self, the representation and constitution and destabilizations of presumed-natural notions of gender and difference, the place of social issues and religion in art, the complexity of the English tradition in the much wider world, and the braided threads of love, art and sex.

Want a head start? Consider Middleton and Dekker’s 1611 gender-disruptive comedy The Roaring Girl about a famous female thief.

Literature and Film

ENGL 246

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potter-tiffany
2023 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

Approaches to the study of the relationships between literature and film. For ENGL courses at the 200- or 300- level, prior completion of at least one 100- level ENGL course is recommended.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
002 2 Lecture T, Th 12:30 - 14:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

On Literature on Screen

This course will seek to change conversations on book-to-screen adaptations by asking not boring questions of fidelity (is it the same as the book? Yes/no. I love/hate that), but rather, what is significant about the way that stories get told and retold on page and screen. We’ll get the critical and theoretical tools we need to go far beyond those YouTube best/worst/coolest conversations and to level up into the ideological, political or cultural work that gets done, sometimes almost invisibly, by putting on screen a new or old story we think we already know. This course will lean in to literary and critical methodologies more than cinematography and film studies (there’s a different department for that!), and we will spend multiple weeks on each text/film adaptive relationship and what it can tell us. Want to get ahead this summer or on December break? The preliminary reading list focuses around three stories about creating and navigating life: Frankenstein (Karloff v DeNiro); Pride and Prejudice (with Lizzie Bennet Diaries + Bride and Prejudice); and Life of Pi plus a sci-fi short story or two…

Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature

ENGL 351

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potter-tiffany
2023 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

British and Global literature from the Restoration of the Monarchy to the Enlightenment with a focus on intellectual and political contexts. Consult department website for current year's offerings. Credit will be granted for up to 6 credits of ENGL 351 and/or 357. For ENGL courses at the 200- or 300- level, prior completion of at least one 100- level ENGL course is recommended.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
001 1 Lecture M, W, F 11:00 - 12:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

So much drama! Eighteenth-century Theatre

After the silence of the Puritan Commonwealth, London’s theatres burst into social, artistic and ideological prominence (and no small fabulousness) with the restoration of King Charles II. Through tragedy, burlesque, and several types of comedy, plays contributed to cultural dialogues on the relative identities of the nation and the individual through sites of tension among conflicting elements like noble heroics, brilliant wit, political subversion, historical revisionism, and some rather explicit sex. We will consider the ways that English playwrights and stage practices echoed and interrogated the implications the ways the dramatic genres of the era embraced both spectatorship and readership and made the political into the (very) personal.

Looking for a head start this summer?

Consider the pairing of Wycherley’s Country Wife and Behn’s The Rover, two very different takes—sparkling and pitch dark—on the stakes and implications of the Restoration’s most lasting genre, the ostensible comedy of libertine seduction. Or the quite startling, proto-postmodern comedy with a Nabokov-esque mad editor in Fielding’s Tragedy of Tragedies.

Eighteenth-Century Literature - Eighteenth-Century Literature

ENGL 353A

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potter-tiffany
2024 Winter Term 2Credits: 3

Intellectual developments and Literary experiments, in British and Global contexts. May encompass multiple genres and contexts. Consult department website for current year's offerings. Credit will be granted for up to 6 credits of ENGL 353 and/or 358. For ENGL courses at the 200- or 300- level, prior completion of at least one 100- level ENGL course is recommended.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
A_001 2 In-Person Lecture T, Th 09:30 - 11:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

Popular Culture and the Eighteenth Century

Studies of modern popular culture have illuminated the complex relationships that individuals and groups maintain with the larger artistic, political, economic, and social movements around them. Through detailed engagements with eighteenth-century popular culture, this class will work collaboratively to illuminate the relationships among high culture, women’s culture, and popular culture, and the ways in which the conventional masculinization of high culture constitutes the feminine as the popular. Recognition of the historically naturalized links between the feminine and the popular in fiction (both frivolous products of fashion, determined by performance and consumption) will provide a scaffold for our work in other literary and cultural contexts that have previously been regarded as separated by less nuanced boundaries of high and low culture, including blockbuster plays like The Beggar’s Opera, shocking fiction like Behn’s The Fair Jilt, and the literary hissing match around the pop cult  phenomenon Pamela (read in excerpt), and one of the most adapted of Regency fictions, Jane Austen’s Emma. While most of this course will focus on popular culture created in the eighteenth century, we will end with a section on the implications of eighteenth-century women in modern popular culture, including screen adaptations of Emma, likely including Emma (1996), Emma Approved (online, 2013) and/or Clueless (1995). But not the excruciating 2020 version.

Want to get ahead? Read Emma over the break and watch some adaptations—in March you will be glad you did!

Children's Literature - Children's Literature

ENGL 392A

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bose-sarika
2025 SummerCredits: 3

Genres and texts written for and appropriated by young readers. Consult department website for current year's offerings. Credit will be granted for up to 6 credits of ENGL 392 and/or 468. For ENGL courses at the 200- or 300- level, prior completion of at least one 100- level ENGL course is recommended.

Sections (1)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
A_98A Online Lecture Bose, Sarika

Section Description

“Down the Rabbit Hole”: Child, Nation and British Fantasy Literature

 Children’s books—encountered in the earliest stages of children’s development—can have a lasting influence on children’s views of their world and themselves. English 392 investigates how narratives of national identity in the folklore and myth-narratives are deployed in fantasy texts written for children in England. Some of our texts will come from Canadian Indigenous traditions to provide a comparison with classic texts from England. Texts will include fairy tales, The Hobbit, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, “Coyote Columbus”, and The Graveyard Book. These will be examined through a broad range of critical perspectives which are literary, socio-political and historical. The pictures of nation constructed in children’s books represent particular national myths and culturally-informed identities. We will look at the ways both “classic” and less traditionally canonical children’s texts create intertextual narratives that expand, resist, subvert and adapt each other’s work. This fully asynchronous 13-week course runs from May to August, with writing assignments and weekly discussion posts. The final examination, set in August, is the only synchronous component, and will be invigilated through Zoom. This course is part of the English Minor program in the Department of English Language and Literatures, but is open to English majors and to students in other programs.

 

 

Literature Majors Seminar

ENGL 490

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ho-janice luger-moberley potter-tiffany deer-glenn mackie-gregory partridge-stephen gooding-rick
2024 Winter Term 1/2Credits: 3

Required of all Literature Majors. Restricted to fourth-year English Majors in Literature and Language and Literature. See Department website (www.english.ubc.ca) for seminar topics. This course is not eligible for Credit/D/Fail grading.

Sections (7)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
003 1 In-Person Seminar F 14:00 - 16:00 Ho, Janice

Section Description

Literature and the City

A promise of opportunity; a site of misery and alienation; an escape from the country; a space of deviance and crime—the city has historically alternately fascinated and repelled, a spatial locus that mediates the dreams and fears saturating our cultural imaginaries. This course will focus on twentieth- and twenty-first century literary and filmic representations of the city and the urban experience. We will take a broad global and temporal perspective: that is to say, we will read early twentieth-century modernist texts that sought to come to terms with the experiences of alienation and consumerism signified by the city; move on to consider late twentieth-century postmodern representations of city space as a site of futuristic technology and simulacra; and finally, turn to postcolonial renditions of cities in what is known as the “global South”—in sites like Johannesburg, Mumbai, or Lagos—to think about how forms of global socioeconomic and racial inequities are spatially reproduced. Texts may include Joseph Conrad's The Secret Agent; Jean Rhys's Good Morning, Midnight; J.G. Ballard's High Rise; Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities; Phaswane Mpe's Welcome to Our Hillbrow; Teju Cole's Open City; or Chris Abani's GraceLand.

004 2 In-Person Seminar M 12:00 - 14:00 Luger, Moberley

Section Description

“The Hatred of Poetry” or Poetry and/in Crisis

This seminar will consider contemporary poetry – not only individual poems but also the “social form” (Harrington) of poetry: the genre itself. What does it mean to say one “loves” or “hates” poetry? How are our attitudes toward poetry formed by popular culture or school? To explore these questions, we will consider how poems respond to crisis—both public and private—as we also consider whether the genre is, as some warn, itself “in crisis.” Is poetry dead, as critics seem perpetually to declare? Where does it lurk, on what occasions does it emerge, and how does it function in our social and political landscapes? If Taylor Swift’s album, The Tortured Poets Department, is currently ruling the Billboard charts, what might that mean for poetry, its pasts and futures? Readings will include 20th & 21st century poems by John McRae, Muriel Rukeyser, Amiri Baraka, Jordan Abel, Claudia Rankine, and more, as well as poetry criticism by scholars like Alan Golding, Joseph Harrington, Stephanie Burt, Carolyn Forché, and Ben Lerner.

002 1 In-Person Seminar W 12:00 - 14:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

Adaptation in/and/of the Eighteenth Century

King Lear as a comedy. Antony and Cleopatra as romantic melodrama. Classical epistle as erotica. Jane Austen and zombies. Eighteenth-century literature adapted classical and conventional literary forms in ways that interrogated contemporary cultural practice, and in recent years, the era has been a rich source of historical fiction and film. In this seminar we will examine the theory and practice of literary adaptation in the long eighteenth century. First, we will first use a combination of both modern and historical theorizations of adaptation to examine practices of adaptation in the eighteenth century, including poetic forms like the classical imitation, dramatic adaptations of well-known plays, and fictional retellings. Once we have come to terms with the cultural work being performed by the period’s own narrative re-inventions, we will skip ahead to modern adaptations of eighteenth-century narratives with text and screen adaptations of Pride and Prejudice. Adaptation studies long ago left behind worrying about fidelity to source texts in order to address both the critical implications of the choices made by adapters and the revisionist engagements of culture that are embodied in these acts of artistic dialogue.

Want to get ahead? Read or watch Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra to get ready for Dryden’s version, or King Lear to brace yourself for Tate’s adaptation (free through UBC library databases!). Or (re)read Pride and Prejudice and watch some adaptations. Be surprised by the intelligence of the book Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, but under no circumstance watch the Pride and Prejudice and Zombies film, which is so terrible it does not deserve even to be streamed for free.

001 1 In-Person Seminar T 11:00 - 13:00 Deer, Glenn

Section Description

he Culinary Imagination: Reading Culture Through Food, Cooking, and Eating

Food, cooking, and eating are biologically necessary and socially powerful: we produce and cook food to survive, but also to reinforce social bonds, to celebrate tradition, to evoke memories of home, to compete with other cooks, to impress the eater, and even to beguile and seduce.

This course will explore food in literature, particularly life narratives, cookbook selections, and films across different cultures and borders, from the transnational to local Vancouver contexts. The production of food is essentially linked to histories of empire, colonial power, capital, racialized and gendered labour, and ecological change. Our discussions will explore these intersections.

Readings will include selections from Gitanjali Shahani (Food and Literature), Amitav Ghosh (The Nutmeg’s Curse), Sandra Gilbert (The Culinary Imagination) , Monique Truong (The Book of Salt), MFK Fisher (How to Cook a Wolf), Cheuk Kwan (Have You Eaten Yet?), Fred Wah (Diamond Grill), and Austin Clarke (Pigtails ‘n’ Breadfruit). Tasteful excerpts from cookbooks by local artist Janice Wong and the local anthology edited by Brandy Lien Worrall-Soriano, Eating Stories: A Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck, will be sampled.   Films will include Gabriel Axel’s Babette’s Feast,  Juzo Itami's  Japanese "noodle western" Tampopo,  Ang Lee's Eat Drink Man Woman, the restaurant  documentaries of Cheuk Kwan, and excerpts from the recent television series The Bear .

We will host some class dialogue with food writers and filmmakers, and students will be able to research local restaurants, gardens, or farms as optional final projects.

Multimedia examples of previous student projects for my food-themed courses can be found at the following Richmond Museum exhibit, “Our Journeys Here” (2017-2018)

007 2 In-Person Seminar Th 12:00 - 14:00 Mackie, Gregory

Section Description

All About Sherlock Holmes

This section of ENGL 490 (Majors seminar) will offer students the opportunity to explore the astonishingly resilient popularity of the greatest of all fictional detectives. Since his emergence into print in a British magazine in 1887, Sherlock Holmes has become a cultural icon around the world. In this course, we’ll be asking why, for whom, and to what end(s). We’ll read original (“canon”) Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle along with some non-original ones; we’ll also have a look at contemporary parodies and sleuthing competitors. Students will examine a multiplicity of Holmesian adaptations from the last hundred-plus years, and in the process we will embark on an investigation into the history of fandom and fan cultures. The game is afoot!

005 2 In-Person Seminar W 14:00 - 16:00 Partridge, Stephen

Section Description

Contemporary Chaucers

In the first few weeks we will read a number of the most important and influential Canterbury Tales in a modern English translation. One focus of our discussion will be the range of sources and traditions, from Europe and beyond, that informed Chaucer’s writing of the Tales. We will then consider some of the best-known modern and contemporary adaptations, focusing on particular pilgrims and tales (the Miller, the Wife of Bath, the Pardoner) and areas (including the African diaspora in Britain, America, and the Caribbean). Works we read together may include, for example, Patience Agbabi, Telling Tales; Zadie Smith, The Wife of Willesden; Marilyn Nelson, The Cachoeira Tales and Other Poems; Kim Zarins, Sometimes We Tell the Truth; one or more collections of Refugee Tales by various writers. Class members will develop projects exploring the many ways that Chaucer is represented in the 20th-21st centuries: adaptation in fiction, including for children and young adults, and in poetry; stage, film, animation; translation; illustration; various kinds of allusion such as dramatic monologues based in Chaucer’s work and life. Each class member will give a presentation; there will be opportunities to present on Chaucer and his contexts, and on contemporary responses to his work.

006 2 In-Person Seminar W 10:00 - 12:00 Gooding, Rick

Section Description

Great Filters

The Great Filter, a term coined by Robin Hanson in 1998, is a way of explaining why there’s no evidence of extra-terrestrial civilizations. The idea is that in the course of evolution some obstacle arises that constrains (or even destroys) life before it develops the capacity for sustained interstellar communication or travel. If that filter lies in our past—for example, in the difficulty of developing brains capable of abstract reasoning—then humans might be extremely rare and lucky lifeforms who are on the verge of exploring a vast (but possibly unpopulated) universe. But if the Great Filter still lies ahead, then humanity might be on the verge of an existential crisis.

As mainstays of speculative fiction, Great Filters offer writers opportunities to examine present-day concerns. In this course we will read novels that use the idea of the Great Filter to comment on the priorities—and anxieties—of modern life. Some of these depict familiar apocalyptic scenarios: Russell Hoban’s Riddley Walker takes place in the distant future after nuclear war devastates England, Greg Bear’s Blood Music chronicles the emergence of artificial intelligence from nanotechnology, and Catherynne M. Valente’s The Past is Red offers a deeply personal and heartbreaking representation of loneliness and hope in a post-climate-change civilization living on the Pacific Garbage Patch. Other novels are more whimsical. In Happiness, Will Ferguson imagines a very funny, world-ending contagion of self-help culture, while Jon Bois’ multimedia 17776 (What Football Will Look Like in the Future) imagines a world where the elimination of reproduction, aging, and death have resulted in a civilization devoted almost entirely to sports.

Note: The reading list for this class is still under consideration, and we may add one or two titles—and modes of destruction—to the above list. A full list will be available later this summer.

Studies in Bibliography - BIBLIOGRAPHY

ENGL 501A

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potter-tiffany
2023 Winter Term 1Credits: 3

Sections (2)
SectionTermDelivery ModeFormatDay(s)Time(s)Instructor(s)SyllabusDetails DataDetails
001 1 Seminar M 14:00 - 17:00 Potter, Tiffany

Section Description

Creating a Scholarly Edition

This is a hands-on course in scholarly editing and publishing, in which we will work collaboratively across the term on a complete edition of Hobomok, the 1824 romance by American human rights campaigner Lydia Maria Child. The edition is under contract for 2025 publication by Broadview Press, and we will also develop some additional material for possible inclusion in the online resources for the Broadview Anthology of American Literature.

We will work on the text itself (cruxes, textual editing principles), on the identification and selection of historical appendices and illustrations, and on the critical introduction, footnotes, headnotes and contextual essays for a classroom edition of this complex fictionalization: in the (historical) Plymouth Colony, a (fictional) woman resists Puritan constraint and later marries Hobomok, a (historical) Pokanoket pniese and advisor to the Wampanoag sachem Massasoit. Child also published actively in the anti-slavery movement, and the course includes opportunities to work on her abolitionist writings. Students who complete the course will be named on the acknowledgements page in the published edition, and there will be an additional published teaching resource to which student-editors may be able to contribute.

This course will make use of scholarship on critical editing; on creating materials for decolonizing pedagogies; on the novel and its author; on women’s responses to Puritan patriarchies, romance as resistance, and the implications of colonial imaginings of Black and Indigenous lives by settler women; and on the historical Hobomok and his communities’ nuanced resistance to colonial violence and settler encroachment.

Course work will include one article-length essay (focused on either original scholarship or critical scholarly pedagogy), reviews of secondary readings (with short presentation), and several short researched editorial contributions (annotations, appendices, headnotes, illustrations).

01W 1 Waiting List M 14:00 - 17:00