Ph.D. Seminars
ENG 504 Chaucer
Instructor: Hahn, T.
Wednesdays, 2:00-4:40
CRN 97837
In his poetry, Chaucer repeatedly “impersonates” the mother
tongue. As a writer aspiring to high art and “poesie,” he
often reproduces the cadences of “ordinary” speech that had
developed among oral communities over the previous three centuries or
more; as an auctour (itself a new word in English) in a language never-taught
and seldom written in books, he expressed constant anxiety about the
hypothetical and real make-up of his audiences. This seminar will concentrate
on the ways in which Chaucer insistently returns to and reshapes vernacular
style and sexual identities (including his own cross-dressed impersonations
of a feminized mother tongue) in the Book of the Duchess, the Parlement
of Fowls, the House of Fame, the Legend of Good Women, Troilus and Criseyde,
and a dozen or so of the Canterbury Tales. We will focus on real and
represented scenes of reading, their placement within and outside architectural
spaces and cityscapes, and their implications for habits and protocols
of interpretation. Besides Chaucer’s poetry, we will look at contemporary
materials, including religious and political controversies about literacy,
imitations and reactions to Chaucer’s poems (including a bit of
the “Chaucer apocrypha”), and secondary materials both historical
and critical.
Eng 514 Renaissance Instrumental Aesthetics
Instructor: Guenther, G.
Tuesdays, 2:00-4:40
CRN 92563
This seminar will examine early modern claims for the instrumental efficacy
of literary texts, such as Spenser’s claim that the general end
of The Faerie Queene was to fashion a gentleman or a noble person in
virtuous and gentle discipline. We will begin with Kant and the New Critics
in order to locates discourses that set out the terms for twentieth-century
discussions about literary aesthetics, and we will look at Marxist and
New Historicist critiques of those terms in order to articulate and question
some of our present assumptions about Renaissance aesthetics in particular.
We will then turn back to Plato and work our way forward into the early
modern period, where we will read The Defense of Poesie, The Faerie Queene,
and The Tempest. We will ask: what were Renaissance instrumental aesthetics?
What were its historical determinants, and its intellectual and cultural
premises? What role did its emergence play in its historical moment?
How did it work in particular tests, and to what ends? As we address
these questions, we will consider what critical methodologies we need
to develop in order to study Renaissance instrumental aesthetics as a
historical object of knowledge.
ENG 539 Taylor, Whitman, and Dickinson
Instructor: Shuffelton, F.
Mondays, 2:00-4:40
CRN 92572
This seminar will examine and discuss major poetic texts by the three
most important American poets before 1800: Edward Taylor, Walt Whitman,
and Emily Dickinson. We will look at this poetry in terms of thematic
issues for each poet, as significant explorations of lyric form, and
as implicated in evolving positions in poetic careers.
ENG 552 Marxism and Literary Studies
Instructor: Kegl, R.
Mondays, 10:00-12:40
CRN 47127
This seminar provides a background in the Marxist theory that has most
influenced our understanding of literary studies. It is designed for
students who are interested both in Marxist theory and in why literary
scholars have found Marxist theory useful.
We begin by focusing our attention on the logic, rhetoric, and context
of key arguments by Marx and Engels. The seminar then divides into three
sections that focus on Aesthetics and Politics, Humanism and The Humanities,
Intellectuals and Education. In each section, our readings and discussion
emphasize a careful consideration of arguments and concepts (for instance,
agency, contradiction, hegemony, ideology, mediation, mode of production)
whose relevance to literary studies might not be immediately apparent,
and an equally careful consideration of what those arguments and concepts
might tell us about our discipline – how they influence the analytical
practices of literary scholars (both Marxist scholars and scholars whose
understanding of history, interdisciplinarity, or cultural studies is
not explicitly Marxist), how they influence scholars who attempt to sort
through the shifting definition of literary studies and its shifting
role in university and non-university life, and how they might provide
one theoretical framework for assessing the explanatory power of contemporary
work in our discipline.
Our readings will include writing by Adorno, Althusser, Benjamin, Bourdieu,
Brecht, Engels, Foucault, Gramsci, James, Hall, Lukacs, Marx, and Williams,
as well as writing that focuses more explicitly on literary studies (including
work by John Guillory, Richard Halpern, Frederic Jameson, Mary Poovey,
and Gayatri Spivak).
ENG 557 Writing Home
Instructor: London, B.
Thursdays, 2:00-4:40
CRN 47140
The last decades of the 20th century and the first of the 21st have
seen a virtual explosion of writing by women, with novels by women constituting
some of the most widely read and critically admired work being produced
today. Among the distinctive features of this writing has been its experimentation
with new voices and narrative forms, often resulting in novels that blur
the traditional borders of the genre. At the same time, much contemporary
writing by women has deliberately turned to the past for its inspiration
and self-consciously appropriated, or rewritten, earlier literary and
cultural forms. Central to much of this work (and to its dual forward-
and backward-looking impulses) has been an interrogation of the vexed
question of “home,” particularly as it manifests itself in
literature of possession, dispossession, exile, migration, and hybridized
identity. Looking at the way ideas of home (as domestic space and as
homeland or nation) have both enabled and inhibited women’s voices,
this course invites students to explore what it means for women to claim
home in their writing. We will read a number of fictional works by British
and American women (from a variety of race, class, regional, and ethnic
positions) as well as writings by women whose homelands are in Africa,
south Asia, and the Caribbean. Readings will also include theoretical
work on feminism, postcolonial studies, globalization, and new immigrant
literatures and identities.
ENG 560 Studies in Rhetoric and Literacy: Recent Trends in Rhetoric
and Composition
Instructor: Bleich, D.
Wednesdays, 10:00-12:40
CRN 91162
The seminar aims to familiarize master’s and doctoral candidates
in English with the fields of rhetoric and composition. Concentrating
on recent scholarly and professional trends, the seminar presents some
of the history of this discipline, which has been present in universities
in various forms for more than a century. The course aims to provide
some preparation for those wishing to answer job announcements in both
literature and rhetoric/composition.
Issues of interest are: composition theory and pedagogy, the history
of rhetoric, and the history and practices of literacy. For each issue,
attention is given to connections between literacy and deeper attitudes
toward language in Western cultures. The seminar gives attention to the
early history of writing pedagogy in the late nineteenth century, to
the revival of classical rhetoric in the 1960’s, to the interest
in group processes and collaboration in the 1980’s and 1990’s,
to “argument” pedagogy, everything that has been tried in
the last century, the debates about how to approach this subject (such
as whether literature belongs in a composition course), as well as its
changing status in colleges and universities. Some attention is given
to how secondary education has treated literacy pedagogy, and what differences
have emerged between secondary approaches to writing pedagogy and current
post secondary approaches.
Writing: weekly commentaries; final project.
Other Graduate Courses
ENG 401 Old English Literature
Instructor: Higley, S.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 11:05-12:20
CRN 92404
"To men I shall speak wisdom where none speak a word on earth;
though sons of land-dwellers now eagerly seek after my tracks, I sometimes
hide my path from everyone." Riddle 94 of the Exeter Book. In following
the dark tracks of the Old English writers who left their almost unrecognizable
English words on tenth-century vellum, we will have to acquire skills
and tools. This course will ask you to learn the Old English language,
but translations will also be provided for most of the texts. With these
in hand, we will explore the dark world of Anglo-Saxon writing for its
illuminations, but our emphasis will be on loss, love, hardship, riddle,
wisdom, and the spiritual and magical powers of writing in a culture
that stood on the cusp of orality and literacy. Texts: The Wanderer,
The Seafarer, The Wife's Lament, Wulf and Eadwacer, Gnomes, Enigmas,
The Dialogues of Solomon and Saturn, Walter Ong's Orality and Literacy.
ENG 404 Chaucer
Instructor: Peck, R.
Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays 12:00-12:50
CRN 92410
Chaucer is one of the wittiest, most congenial, and yet most intellectually
alert of all British poets. He is also a marvelous craftsman and social
commentator. As a brilliant protagonist within one of England's first
circle of poets he develops a rhetoric suited to philosophical poetry
that still amazes his readers with its range of empirical, speculative,
and observational psychology. English 204 provides intensive analysis
of most of Chaucer's writings dream visions (Book of the Duchess, Parliament
of Fowls, and House of Fame), poetics (the Prologue to The Legend of
Good Women), his great romance Troilus and Criseyde (arguably the greatest
poem in the English language), and the Canterbury Tales. All readings
from Chaucer will be in Middle English. As background material to Chaucer
we will read Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy and Guillaume de Lorris
and Jean de Meun's Romance of the Rose (both of which works Chaucer translated,
though we will read them in a modern English versions, with occasional
reference to Chaucer's translations). The readings are at times difficult,
but well worth the effort and rich rewards of studying his work in his
original dialect. The instructor makes a sustained effort to effect the
performative components of medieval literature in terms of its ideas,
rhetoric, and orality in an effort to investigate but also transcend
the ravages of time. Classes will consist primarily of lecture with some
discussion and occasional quizzes Students will write two papers and
take a final examination. Class attendance is required.
ENG 413 Renaissance Women’s Writing
Instructor: Kegl, R.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9:40-10:55
CRN 95504
Over the last few decades, we have come to appreciate women’s
extensive contributions to Renaissance drama, verse, and fictional and
nonfictional prose (including household manuals, medical treatises, proposals
for educational reform, and religious prophecies). This course focuses
on the critical problems that inform our search for and analysis of English
women’s writing in the 16th and 17th centuries. We discuss how
16th- and 17th-century English women produced and distributed their writing,
and how their audiences received those works. We ask how literary, historical,
and feminist analysis might help us to sort through key questions of
style, genre, authorship, literacy, education, and audience. And we consider
how the study of Renaissance English women’s writing might help
us to better understand the aesthetic and social categories that inspired
contemporary readers, and those that continue to shape our enjoyment
and analysis of Renaissance writing more generally, and of women’s
writing in subsequent centuries. We organize our discussions around the
particular interpretive questions that arise from a careful reading of
Renaissance women’s writing. Additional readings include excerpts
from the writings of their contemporaries, and from articles by literary
critics and historians.
ENG 421 Victorian Literature
Instructor: Ablow, R.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 11:05-12:20
CRN 92428
In 1840 Thomas Carlyle proclaimed that although in previous ages the
priest, prophet, or king constituted the source of the community's values,
in his own time the "Man-of-Letters Hero must be regarded as our
most important modern person . . . What he teaches, the world will do
and make." In this course we will examine how writers in the mid-
to late-19th century responded to Carlyle's challenge: how they understood
the responsibilities of the writer, and how they understood those responsibilities
in relation to the changing economic, social, and political landscape
of the Victorian period. Specifically, we will ask how a variety of different
writers of prose, poetry, and novels, imagined their relationships to
- and their readers' relationships to - English national identity, class,
ethnicity, gender, sexuality, the private sphere, and public life. We
will examine writers' differing understandings of psychology and interiority.
We will discuss genre and literary form. And we will examine the idea
of "culture" as a distinctly Victorian notion that continues
to govern debates about education and society today. Writers for the
class will include: C. Bronte, Dickens, G. Eliot, Hardy, Tennyson, the
Brownings, the Rossettis, Ruskin, Mill, Carlyle, Arnold, Darwin, and
Wilde.
ENG 422 19th-Century British Novel
Instructor: Ablow, R.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 2:00-3:15
CRN 92432
Why do so many 19th-century British novels end with marriages? According
to George Eliot, by "marriage," we should understand "all
the wondrous combinations of the universe whose issue makes our good
and evil." Such an account begins to suggest how marriage is able
to represent not just a personal relationship in the nineteenth century,
but also a social institution, the coming-together of two principles,
or entities, and a central means by which the known world is reproduced.
This course explores the nature, implications, and development of the
marriage plot through novels by Austen, C. Bronte, Dickens, George Eliot,
Wilde, Ford. Key topics for the class will include (but will not be limited
to): the relation between realism and idealism; the "woman" question
and the development of the private sphere; imperialism, nationalism,
ethnicity and race; and changing notions of class.
ENG 427 American Moderns (Formerly ENG 223)
Instructor: Grella, G.
Mondays and Wednesdays 3:25-4:40
CRN 46755
The course covers the period roughly between World War I and World War
II, dealing with the rich creativity we associate with Modernism. We
will read and discuss such writers as Eliot, Faulkner, Hemingway, Dos
Passos, Steinbeck, etc., studying not only the works but some of the
major trends in art, culture, and knowledge that make the modern period
so important and exciting. The method will be a combination of close
reading, lecture, and discussion.
ENG 430 Asian American Literature
Instructor: Niu, G.
Tuesdays and Thursdays 12:30-1:45
CRN 46776
Asian American Literature is primarily a literature of the 20th and
21st centuries, with dramatic growth in the past half century or so.
We will focus on the literary genres of APA works from the past century--drama,
fiction, poetry, memoir--and we will also pay attention to cinematic
texts. Our literature includes works by Chinese American, Filipina American,
Indian American, Korean American, Japanese American, and Vietnamese American
authors. Some prior knowledge of 20th century U.S. literature or Asian
Pacific Islander American history will be helpful, but not necessary.
(For those who have not taken history courses or who wish for a “refresher” see
the books by Sucheng Chan or Ronald Takaki, listed under recommended
texts.) In addition to the study of genres, we will analyze Asian/Pacific
Islander/American texts by interrogating myths, "foundational fictions",
fantasies and the fantastical. Edward Said usefully argues in Orientalism
that Europe imagined the "Orient" since it "helped to
define Europe (or the West) as its contrasting image, idea, personality,
experience" (1978). We will read works of Asian American literature
that revise and incorporate Asian myths, and contrast these with the
West's popular imagination of the "Orient".
ENG 436 Contemporary Fiction - "True" Stories
Instructor: Anastasopoulos, D.
Mondays and Wednesdays, 6:15-7:30
CRN 92449
Many recent American novels have been billed as fictional depictions
of "true stories," narrative imaginings culled from memoirs,
diaries, or historical records. In this course, we'll explore a range
of fiction and imaginative non-fiction, which emphasize, critique, and
consider their basis in real events. We'll read between and around modes
and genres such as memoir, anti-memoir, journal, diary, autobiography,
with the intention of examining contemporary representations of the "real" in
order to draw conclusions about the nature of fiction's traditional domain,
the imagination itself. If, as Maurice Blanchot writes, "The essence
of fiction is to make present an unreal world, to make present to me
that which makes it unreal," then the actual events portrayed in
these novels appear radically displaced in their fictional context. Readings
will include the fictional autobiography A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering
Genius by Dave Eggers, a blend of fictional and non-fictional family
history in The Family Orchard by Nomi Eve, crime reportage as literature
in Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, the memoir Henry & June by Anaïs
Nin, a eulogy in the form of Peter Handke's A Sorrow Beyond Dreams, the
historical fiction Tent of Orange Mist by Paul West, Erasure--a novel-as-cultural-critique--
by Percival Everett, and the biographical novel Haussmann, or The Distinction
by Paul LaFarge.
ENG 438 Studies in Modern and Contemporary Literature
Instructor: Scott, J.
Mondays and Wednesdays, 12:30-1:45
CRN 92520
What can the fiction of the 20th Century tell us about imagination?
Who imagines what in the influential novels and stories of the past one
hundred years? What can we learn from imaginative literature about the
idiosyncratic workings of the mind? These are some of the questions we'll
ask in this survey of modern and contemporary fiction. We'll read fiction
in English, and in translation. Writers we'll study include Joseph Conrad,
Gertrude Stein, Samuel Beckett, Virginia Woolf, Ernest Hemingway, James
Baldwin, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Italo Calvino, William Gass, and Rikki
Ducornet. We will have a chance to discuss the process of writing with
William Gass, who will visit the class.
ENG 446 Detective Fiction: The Birth of the Detective
Instructor: Gladfelder, Hal
Mondays and Wednesdays, 12:30-1:45
CRN 92476
This course focuses on the emergence of mystery and detective fiction
in Britain in the later eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Often grouped
under the heading sensation fiction, these works aimed both to entertain
a mass (especially urban) audience and to comment on contemporary institutions
of criminal justice in particular the newly professionalized police and
detective forces. Their representations of extreme, violent, and bizarre
behavior also reflected contemporary fascination with the field of abnormal
psychology. Readings to include works by William Godwin, Sheridan LeFanu,
Wilkie Collins, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Baroness Orczy, R. Austin Freeman,
Arthur Machen, Arthur Conan Doyle, Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, and G. K. Chesterton.
ENG 448 Contemporary Women's Writing
Instructor: London, B.
Tuesdays and Thursdays 11:05-12:20
CRN 46821
The last decades of the 20th century and the first of the 21st have
seen a virtual explosion of writing by women, with novels by women constituting
some of the most widely read and critically admired work being produced
today. Among the distinctive features of this writing has been its experimentation
with new voices and narrative forms, often resulting in novels that blur
the traditional borders of the genre. At the same time, much contemporary
writing by women has deliberately turned to the past for its inspiration
and self-consciously appropriated, or rewritten, earlier texts. Looking
at a range of recent novels by British and American women (from a variety
of race, class, regional, and ethnic positions) as well as writings by
women whose homelands are in Africa, India, Pakistan, and the Caribbean,
this course will explore the diverse shapes of contemporary woman's imagination
and attempt to account for this new resurgence of women's writing.
ENG 450 Representing Race in American Culture
Instructor: Michael, J.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 11:05-12:20
CRN 92487
In this course students will confront and analyze a wide assortment
of influential representations of race, especially but not exclusively
representations of African Americans, drawn from the long history of
this nation's racialized struggles. We will draw examples not only from
literature and film but also from history, sociology, and popular discourses.
We will also consider the nature of representation itself, and the related
questions of authenticity and identity. Of course, we will make no attempt
at an exhaustive historical survey of such a complex and conflicted subject,
but we will attempt to ground student understanding of contemporary discourses
and polemics about race in a more sophisticated comprehension of modes
of racial representation in America and their history. These include
stereotypical popular portrayals of Africans and African Americans from
the past and from the present in "serious" literature and in
popular entertainment, in scientific considerations of difference including
nineteenth- century American anthropology and in contemporary sociology
and politics. We will consider the ways in which both black and white
Americans have constructed representations of African and African-American
identity in the U. S. public sphere and the ways in which those representations
have reflected and helped shape the problems and the promises of race
in America. We will also consider constructions of race in a global and
comparative context.
ENG 452 Theater in England
Instructor: Peck, R.
Wintersession
CRN 46839
English 252: Theater in England will be conducted in London & Stratford-upon-Avon
from Sunday, January 1, 2006, through Saturday, January 14, 2006 (14
nights). We will see 18 plays. Classes are held in the Harlingford Hotel
in London, where we reside. The schedule of plays is not yet available,
but it will include a full range of genres, from tragedy, history, and
comedy to pantomimes and musicals, We will see the best of what is on
when we are there. If you wish to see what students have seen on previous
years go the Website for the course where you can investigate various
aspects of the seminar syllabuses from 1992 to the present, student journals,
information about the Harlingford Hotel at 61-63 Cartwright Gardens,
the London Theatre scene in general, our trip to Stratford-upon-Avon,
the visit to Warwick Castle, a host of pictures of students doing things,
and so on. The course is restricted to 23 students and carries four credits.
The fee is $1950.00, which includes tickets to all plays and housing,
but not transportation to and from London. A down payment of $700.00
is due at the English Office in Morey Hall on or before Monday, October
10. The remaining $1250.00 will be charged to your November term bill.
Students must obtain passports and make their own travel arrangements
to and from London. You will need to leave the United States on the evening
of December 27, at the latest. Return flights may be scheduled for Sunday,
January 15, or later. The UR second semester begins on Wednesday, January
18, 2006. The grade for the course is based primarily on the student
journal. You may obtain the application form from the English Department
or Professor Peck. You need permission of the instructor to register.
See Professor Russell A. Peck, Rush Rhees 416 (Robbins Library), MW 12:00-1:30
or by appointment (phone 275-0110 or 473-7354). Email: rpec@troi.cc.rochester.edu.
ENG 455 Silent Cinema (Formerly ENG 133)
Instructor: Loughney, P.
Tuesdays 6:30-9:30 p.m.
CRN 46842
An introduction to the art, technology, and culture of silent film,
with all screenings accompanied by live music. Special attention will
be paid to the pioneers, Lumiére, Melies, and D.W. Griffith, but
the course will include a variety of films from the United States, Germany,
Russia, France, and Japan, all projected from pristine copies in the
George Eastman House's world-famous collections. Discussion sections
will cover the origin and development of film genres and technology from
1894 to the introduction of sound in 1927. Broad issues relating to the
transformation of American and world popular entertainment forms and
traditions, in relation to the established performing arts of the period,
will also be covered. George Eastman House's film restoration facilities
will be visited in the course of the semester. Meets at George Eastman
House. Enrollment limited at 20.
ENG 459 Popular Films Genres: The Detective Film
Instructor: Grella, G.
Wednesdays 6:15-10:00 p.m.
CRN 46850
The course will consider that large, unusual, and varied group of motion
pictures known, for reasons of style and content, as film noir - dark
films - which includes horror, gangster, detective, and crime movies.
We will examine some of the history of the term and the kinds of movies
it refers to, study some relevant primary and secondary sources, and
of course, screen, analyze, and discuss a dozen or more motion pictures.
Possible titles to study include Murder, My Sweet, Touch of Evil, Gilda,
The Third Man, Double Indemnity, Night and the City.
ENG 462 Studies in an International Cinema: Chinese Cinemas
Instructor: Niu, G.
Tuesdays and Thursdays 3:25-4:40
CRN 91030
The course examines diasporic Chinese cinemas from the People's Republic
of China (PRC), the Republic of China on Taiwan (ROC), Hong Kong (HK),
the U.S. and Canada. We will pay special attention to the migrations
of individuals (actors, actresses, directors, cinematographers, and others)
and to texts (the films and in some cases television programs). We will
cover a wide variety of genres, including epic, martial arts, action,
thriller, comedy, and drama. Some experience with film studies, especially
world cinema, and Chinese history will be helpful but not required. Outside
screenings of films are required.
ENG 462 Studies in an International Cinema: British Cinema
Instructor: Gladfelder, H.
Mondays and Wednesdays, 4:50-6:05
CRN 92554
This course traces the major developments in British cinema from the
silent period to the 1990s. In addition to providing an historical overview
of major filmmakers and movements, the course places special emphasis
on the interplay between nostalgia and modernity in British culture.
Films to include Hitchcock's Blackmail; Michael Powell's Life and Death
of Colonel Blimp and Peeping Tom; Carol Reed's The Third Man; David Lean's
This Happy Breed and Oliver Twist; Robert Hamer's Kind Hearts and Coronets;
Stephen Frears's My Beautiful Laundrette; Jack Clayton's Room at the
Top; Terence Davies' Distant Voices, Still Lives; Ken Loach's Riff-Raff;
and Lynne Ramsey's Ratcatcher.
ENG 275 Advanced Fiction Writing
Instructor: Anastasopoulos, D.
Wednesdays 2:00-4:40
CRN 46873
This workshop is for advanced fiction writers. The course emphasizes
the development of each student's individual style and imagination, as
well as the practical and technical concerns of a fiction writer's craft.
Students will not only be asked to locate a context for their fictions
by situating their poetics among a community of other fiction writers,
but also to envision how their stories might intersect with other fictional
works. Each writer will be expected to conceive each story within the
scope of a larger fiction project as well as to revise extensively in
order to explore the full range of the story's narrative themes. Three
short stories or novel chapters are required. Applicable English Cluster:
Creative Writing.
ENG 476 Advanced Poetry Writing
Instructor: Sally Keith
Tuesdays 2:00-4:40
CRN 91113
Advanced creative writing workshop in poetry. Work by various contemporary
poets will provide the framework for explorations into technique and
poetic narrative. Students' poems will be discussed weekly. Students
will be expected to do extensive reading and research on their own and
to keep a poetic journal. Assignments will be given, but there is a lot
of latitude for students who wish to design a poetic project or work
on a series. Permission of instructor is required (submit 3-5 typed poems,
preferably before the first class).
ENG 484 Orality, Language, and Literacy
Instructor: Bleich, D.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 12:30-1:45
CRN 98602
This course considers the issues raised in Walter Ong's 1982 study,
Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word. His account related
the growth of writing and print to the development of science and modern
rational thought, exploring possible changes in collective consciousness
as a result of the shift of media emphasis. We will examine some classical
sources, including Plato's suspicion of the power of oral poetry, and
consider the levels of literacy achieved in ancient society; we will
also look at European medieval traditions. Central to these discussions
will be the roles language and literature played in the lives of non-literate
people as contrasted with literate. Study of the modern and contemporary
periods focusses on such practices as conversation, becoming literate,
collection of oral accounts and their uses, the uses of ethnographic
writing, and the different approaches to speech, writing, and language
in African American and white communities. A key aim of the course is
to show the politics, mutual dependency, and reciprocity of oral and
literate uses of language in literary and nonliterary contexts.