LIT - Literature

To view planned offerings for the current academic year, please visit this page.

LIT 1 Literary Interpretation

Close reading and analysis of literary texts, including representative examples of several different genres and periods. An introduction to practical criticism required of all literature majors; should be completed prior to upper-division work in literature.

Credits

5

Instructor

Rodrigo Lazo, Chris Chen

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements. Enrollment is restricted to first-year students and sophomores, or literature and proposed literature majors and literature minors.

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall, Spring

LIT 42D Student Directed Seminar: Critical Engagement with Capitalism Through Literature and Media

Familiarizes students with key topics in socioeconomic and societal critique of capitalism through a variety of readings. By the end of the course, students will engage with important concepts through a variety of literature and media in order to provide a multifaceted introduction to literary modes of social criticism and analysis.

Credits

5

LIT 60A The Graphic Novel: Memoirs

Survey of graphic novel memoirs. Class focuses on how the pairing of text and images in sequential art offers a form of disclosure for conveying experiences of personal identity, self-invention, and environmental degradation. Special attention is given to the work of non-binary, queer, and feminist perspectives. Students write weekly creative-critical responses and a final creative-critical paper.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer

LIT 61C Devils, Dervishes, and Bawdy Tales from Baghdad to Canterbury: The Story within the Story

A story within a story, the frame tale is a playful and enduring literary genre. Focuses on frame tales of the global middle ages, tracing their movement from the Indian subcontinent to the British Isles. Readings include selections from Fables of Bidpai, The Arabian Nights, Libro de Buen Amor, and The Canterbury Tales. (Formerly The Frame Tale.)

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo

General Education Code

CC

LIT 61F Introduction to Reading Fiction

Close reading of short stories and some novels with the aim of developing critical methods for the analysis and interpretation of prose fiction. Topics include character, plot, narrative structure, and the poetics of prose. The course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 61H Reading the Movies

Introduces techniques for the close reading of film (shot-by-shot analysis, etc.), with particular attention to what makes film different from other media. Films studied will cohere around a specific theme, geography, or genre, like film noir. (Formerly Introduction to Film Analysis.)

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

IM

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 61J Introduction to Jewish Literature and Culture

Surveys 3,000 years of Jewish literature and culture. Themes include origins of the Jews in the ancient world; formation and persistence of the Jewish diaspora; coherence and diversity of Jewish experience; Jewish narrative and textual traditions; interaction between Jews and other cultures; tensions between tradition and modernity.

Credits

5

Instructor

Bruce Thompson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 61K Introduction to the Fairy Tale

Introduces the fairy tale as a genre, including historical, cultural, and political contexts; relation to identity, performance, transnationalism; contemporary transformations of tales and their expression in other media (e.g., film, art, theater); and current scholarship.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kimberly Lau

General Education Code

TA

LIT 61L True Stories: Memoir

Historical overview of the genre from Augustine to contemporary experiments in memoir. Student write weekly creative-critical responses and a final creative-critical paper.

Credits

5

Instructor

Micah Perks

General Education Code

PR-C

LIT 61M Approaches to Classical Myth

Introduction to Greek myths, including selected ancient texts and visual artifacts, historical and cultural context of their creation and reception, modern theoretical approaches such as structuralism and psychoanalysis, and interpretations in various media.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

General Education Code

TA

LIT 61N Introduction to Children's Literature

Introduction to children's literature as a literary genre, including historical, cultural, and political considerations of the genre's relationship to gender, race, sexuality, nationalism, colonialism, and popular culture through primary texts, secondary criticism, and other media (e.g., film, illustration, comics).

Credits

5

Instructor

Micah Perks

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 61P Introduction to Reading Poetry

An introduction to selected modes and forms of poetry with an emphasis on close textual analysis. Examples will be taken from different historical periods and poetic traditions. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 61R Race in Literature

An investigation into the various uses and abuses of race in literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christine Hong

General Education Code

ER

LIT 61S Sacred Texts

Studies religious texts held sacred by different cultures and communities around the world, concentrating primarily on their literary dimensions. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

CC

LIT 61T Travel Narratives

Travel narratives may be of many types: odysseys of self-discovery, adventures in nature, or journeys to exotic lands off the beaten track. This course examines travelers' accounts drawn from periods ranging from the Middle Ages to the contemporary.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

General Education Code

CC

LIT 61U Introduction to Speculative Fiction

Examines speculative and science fiction (SF) texts to develop critical methods for the analysis and interpretation of SF as a critique of science, technology, and culture. Themes include encounters across species; novelty and change; expanded concepts of life; and the role of technology in human development.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zachary Zimmer

General Education Code

PE-T

LIT 61W Writing and Research Methods

Intensive training in the practice of literary analysis and the writing of polished research papers. Topics include manuscript sources, variant editions, reading techniques, publication technologies, web research. Workshop format. Strongly recommended for majors and/or transfer students who have completed LIT 1 or its equivalent.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 61X Tragedy: Learning Through Suffering

Reading representative Greek tragedies with attention to history, form, and content. Course examines how Greek tragedy responds to the fact of human mortality, i.e., to the myriad and culturally specific ways in which characters in tragedy accept, evade, or deny death.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 61Y Arthurian Romance

Reading of selected Arthurian romances in verse and prose from the French, Welsh, and English traditions.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

General Education Code

TA

LIT 61Z Introduccion a generos literarios de Espana y America Latina

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. The study of poetry, drama, and prose in Spain and Latin America.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

General Education Code

TA

LIT 80B Monsters and Literature

Every age has the monsters it needs. From medieval marvels to GMO chimeras, monsters serve as figures of a culture's deepest fears, anxieties, and hidden desires. This course takes a multidisciplinary, transhistorical approach to the problems and promises of monsters, and introduces monster theory.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 80D Literary Traditions of India

Introduces the fundamental questions of interpretation and cultural analysis through engagement with varying literary and cultural traditions of the Indian subcontinent since antiquity. Emphasis is on language, communicative media, literary form, memory, transmission, interpretive approaches, and translation. The course topics change; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 80E Animals and Literature

Examines the copresence in literary works (fiction and non-fiction prose and poetry) of nonhuman and human animals from antiquity to the present across a variety of cultures.

Credits

5

Instructor

Carla Freccero

General Education Code

TA

LIT 80H The Politics of Fashion

Surveys the politics of fashion, focusing on how style has shaped ideology, culture, power, revolution, resistance, and a variety of identities, including nation, race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and class.

Credits

5

Instructor

Vilashini Cooppan

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 80I Topics in American Culture

A history of one or more cultural genres in written, visual, and/or musical forms. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 80K Topics in Medical Humanities

Medical Humanities designate an interdisciplinary field of humanities (literature, philosophy, ethics, history, and religion) concerned with application to medical education and practice. The humanities provide insight into the human condition, suffering, personhood, and our responsibility to each other; and offer a historical perspective on medical practice.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

PE-T

LIT 80L The Holocaust: The Destruction of European Jewry

Focus is on the destruction of the Jews of Europe by Nazi Germany. Issues are historically grounded, and include works of literature, social sciences, philosophy, and film.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LIT 80M China in the Post-Reform Period

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Mandarin Chinese required. Lectures, discussions, writing assignments, and all readings in Chinese. An investigation of Chinese culture, society, and politics in the post-1978 period through literature, film, critical essays, and internet media. Topics include labor, gender, generational divisions, family, urban life, social media, nationalism.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

TA

LIT 80N Latino Expressions in the U.S

An introduction to Latino literature and culture in the U.S. A study of the creative expressions of Chicanos/as, Nuyoricans, Cuban Americans, and other Latin Americans in the U.S.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kirsten Silva Gruesz

General Education Code

ER

LIT 80O Love, Anarchy, Revolution

Considers love, anarchy, and revolution as three modes of liberation. Concentrating on the contemporary period, with explorations of philosophy, literature, film, popular culture, political movements and manifestos, and personal or collective experience, this course considers these variant, but overlapping, scenes of the dialectics of liberation.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

PR-E

LIT 80Q Jane the Virgin: Latinx Readers and (Latin) American Literature

What does a telenovela spoof about a virgin Latinx mother and aspiring romance novelist have to do with literature? Course explores Jane the Virgin as a commentary on the tastes, identities, and politics of 21st-century Latinx readers and writers.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

General Education Code

CC

LIT 80T Literature and Magic

Explores the history of magic in relation to the written word. Concerns include the gendering of magic; interconnections among Judaic, Arabic, and Christian worlds; magic in the age of rationalism; and the recent popular fascination with magic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 80U Introduction to Contemplative Reading

Combines contemplative practice, including meditative practice, with close reading of literary works to provide students with a more precise ability to interpret and respond to texts, both literary and non-literary. Works include poetry, imaginative prose, and essays.

Credits

5

General Education Code

PR-C

LIT 80V Literature and History

Examines literature's relationship to the past and to the experience of history. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 80W Captive Minds: The Literature of Pre-modern Slavery

Examines the literary production of slave societies by looking at the literatures of several pre-modern slave societies; also develops a cultural-historical narrative that explains the origins of genocidal forms of plantation slavery in the Americas by tracing their origins back to Greece and Rome.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

General Education Code

CC

LIT 80X Global Narratives

A survey of global narratives, with a focus on the novel over several centuries, traditions, languages, and cultures.

Credits

5

Instructor

Vilashini Cooppan

General Education Code

TA

LIT 80Y Harry Potter

From The Sorcerer's Stone to The Deathly Hallows, this course approaches the Harry Potter books and films from a variety of critical angles, using the analytical tools of literary and cultural studies to shed new light on this dizzying phenomenon.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox

General Education Code

TA

LIT 80Z Introduction to Shakespeare

Study of representative plays. No previous experience with Shakespeare is assumed.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 81A Homer's Odyssey

Introduction to Homer's Odyssey, its hero, and its world. An epic tale of a man who abandons his family to fight in the Trojan War, then returns two decades later, the Odyssey was a profound influence on the culture of ancient Greece and Rome, and continues to shape our self-understanding today.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

General Education Code

TA

LIT 81B Literature and Photography

Explores the close relationship between photography and literature, from the origins of photography to 19th-century realism and the contemporary photographic novel, interpreting photographs and literature to study how these fields influence each other and how their forms of representation relate.

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LIT 81C The Novels of Toni Morrison

Examines novels by Toni Morrison, including The Bluest Eye, Song of Solomon, Sula, and Jazz, as sites of discontent and transformation, while also considering literary techniques such as form, voice, metaphor, and narrative structure. Includes discussion of Morrison's ideas about the intersection of race and sexuality, blackness as a shifting signifier, the role of the artist in society, and uses of literature for re-imagining the relationships between history, culture, and individuality.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LIT 81D The Prophet and the Qur’an

Introduction to the life of the Prophet Muhammad as a literary text and as a primary hermeneutic framework for understanding the Qur'an, including its relationship to a deep narrative prophetic tradition shared with other Abrahamic traditions.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Rivas-Gomez

General Education Code

CC

LIT 81E Social Media and Society

Introduction to social media's evolving impact on society. How are social media changing communication, politics, identity, privacy, and what we believe? Materials include critical texts and real-world case studies, as well as films and short fiction.

Credits

5

Instructor

Dorian Bell

General Education Code

PE-T

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 81F Ghosts of Slavery, 1960-80s/2000-20s

Why does the history of slavery reappear at certain moments in literary and popular culture? Course focuses on the 1960s and the 2000s, when slavery was frequently featured in popular and academic history, fiction, film, and television, in both imaginative and documentary forms.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

American History and Institutions

Yes

General Education Code

IM

LIT 81G The Good Life

Do current social, political, and psychological conditions make it more difficult to live a good life? Drawing on the broad tradition of critical theory and utopian imaginings, the course aims to give practical and theoretical guidance toward achieving a good life.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

TA

LIT 81H Literature and Pandemic: The World at the End of the World

Surveys some of the most famous accounts and representations of historical and fictional pandemics in the history of literature, mostly from the Western tradition. Students read excerpts from works by Thucydides, Lucretius, Boccaccio, Manzoni, Poe, Camus, London, and Elkhadem. Conversation centers on the question of how Western literature have attempted to both document and investigate the destruction of human society, but also to recreate it.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 81I Engineering California

Online course using literary and artistic texts to investigate the history and engineering of California, and to imagine a virtual, material, and cultural infrastructure for California's future. Course begins and ends with the Internet, and includes topics such as cyberspace, the Gold Rush, Spanish/Mexican missions, wartime development, and early cybernetics.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zachary Zimmer

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 81J The 1001 Nights

An exploration of the great story tradition of the Arabian Nights, or, closer to its Arabic title, The 1001 Nights. Course traces the tales' origins and diffusion through world literature, focusing on its cultural contexts and powerful exploration of folk, mythical, and psychological themes of fate, gender, jealousy, and the act of telling stories.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 87 Introduction to Literary Topics

Introduces topics in literature. The course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

2

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 90 Introduction to Creative Writing

Introduction to the culture and values of creative writing as an academic and artistic discipline. Introduces the practice of the writing life. Students write and/or revise weekly fictional, poetic or creative nonfiction experiments and discuss these experiments in two weekly peer workshops led by their teaching assistants. Students attend weekly lectures in which working writers read fiction or poetry, and hybrid creative forms, and answer questions about the writing life. Alternately, the instructor will give craft lectures and relevant writing prompts based on the readings. The visiting writers’ work and the other readings are used as inspiration for students’ own creative and critical reader responses.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Requirements

Prerequisite: satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing Requirement.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-C

LIT 90X Introduccion a la Escritura Creativa/Introduction to Creative Writing

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish is required. Explores creative writing from a bilingual (Spanish-English) perspective, and considers bilingualism in the literary arts (como el ejercicio de una identidad), as a way of thinking and a way of being, as a creative lens (el pensamiento de frontera), as a framework, as a border (que quiere ser cruzada).

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing requirement. Enrollment is restricted to first-year, sophomore, and junior students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-C

LIT 91A Intermediate Fiction/Prose Writing

An intermediate-level course in fiction designed for prospective applicants to the creative writing concentration.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-C

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 91B Intermediate Poetry Writing

An intermediate-level course in poetry designed for prospective applicants to the creative writing concentration.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-C

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 99A Tutorial

Study of literature in English or English translation. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 99B Tutorial

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish or other non-English language required. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 99C Tutorial

Study of creative writing. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 99F Tutorial

Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

2

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 101 Theory and Interpretation

Contemporary approaches to literary and cultural theory, with emphasis on how theoretical perspectives advance and broaden the reading of literary texts. Introduction to important new theoretical developments and their antecedents. Literature majors should complete this course as early as possible. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

A, Hunter Bivens, Carla Freccero

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Winter, Spring

LIT 102 Translation Theory

Promotes the understanding of translation and its role in redefining meanings across epochs and cultures, in establishing common norms, and in advancing mutual intelligibility; but also providing encounters with absolute alterity. Actual translations are used as case studies.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari, Sharron Kinoshita

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): one year of college-level, non-English language study or the equivalent reading ability in a non-English language.

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Winter, Summer

LIT 108A Literature Internships

Provides literature majors with pre-professional experience in a variety of fields to enable students to envision career pathways and to conceive of multiple ways for literature and humanities majors to work in and engage the world. Students meet three times as a cohort during the quarter of their internship and keep a reflective journal during that time, with a brief final report at the end. Internships can be located on or off campus. Enrollment is by application through the Literature Department website. Enrollment is restricted to declared and proposed literature majors and Italian studies minors.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gómez-Rivas

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-S

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer

LIT 108B Literature Internships 2

Provides literature majors with pre-professional experience in a variety of fields to enable students to envision career pathways and to conceive of multiple ways for literature and humanities majors to work in and engage the world. Students meet three times as a cohort during the quarter of their internship and keep a reflective journal during that time, with a brief final report at the end. Internships can be located on or off campus. Enrollment by application through the Literature Department website. Enrollment is restricted to literature majors and minors and proposed literature majors and Italian studies minors.

Credits

2

Instructor

Camilo Gómez-Rivas

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-S

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer

LIT 109X Marxist Literary Criticism

This course is an opportunity for students to engage with the tradition of Marxist literary and cultural criticism. The course begins with Marx’s own writings and then explores how Marx’s thought has been adapted and developed in diverse contexts, but always taking as its point of departure the complicated relationships between social life, exploitation, and regimes of representation from classical modernity through the present. The class is intended to focus on methodological and theoretical approaches to the study of culture.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 110A The Traditional British Canon, Part I

The constitution of the canon of English literature from Chaucer to Cowper. Critical approach designations: Canons. Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 110B The Traditional British Canon, Part II

Explores poetry and prose from 1800 to 1950 through extensive reading in the Romantics, Victorians, Moderns, articulating the connections among them, and connecting their work to key social, political, scientific, and technological moments defining these eras. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

LIT 110C The Traditional U.S. Canon: Beginnings to 1900

Major works from the colonial and early national periods to 1900, with attention to their social and cultural context. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

General Education Code

ER

LIT 110D The Traditional U.S. Canon, 1900 to the Present

Major works from 1900 to the present, with attention to their social and cultural context. Critical approach designation: Canons, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Chen

LIT 111B Geoffrey Chaucer

Close study of Chaucer's poetry, with some attention to relevant cultural, philosophical, and historical issues in the context of the late medieval period. Particular emphasis on The Canterbury Tales. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 111C John Milton

Selected poetry and prose. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750, Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 111D William Shakespeare

Study of representative works by William Shakespeare. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Media. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sean Keilen

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Spring, Summer

LIT 111E Edmund Spenser

Studies in Spenser's major poetry: Faerie Queene, Book I; Epithalamion; Mutabilitie Cantos. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 112A Jane Austen

Representative Austen novels within political, historical, and cultural context; considers form and genre, nationalism, feminist, postcolonial, and other critical readings. Examines poetry and other writings that illuminate cultural issues of the period, as well as film and other adaptations of Austen's novels. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories.

Credits

5

LIT 112C Charles Dickens

Study of representative work by Charles Dickens. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

John O. Jordan

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Summer

LIT 112E Bob Dylan as Poet: From Folk Hero to Electric Messiah

Focuses primarily on the poetry and poetics of Dylan's by now substantial canon of works--early, middle, and late. Stresses poetic syntax, various lyric genres, surrealist imagery, and narrative tactics used, as well as the more socially expansive dynamics of how Dylan forged his prophetic/visionary imagination.

Credits

5

Instructor

Robert Wilson

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 112G William Faulkner

A survey of Faulkner's early fiction; focus on development of theme and technique. Also considers Faulkner as a Southern historian, stressing the relationship between personal and regional experience in time. Critical approach designations: Canons, Geographies.

Credits

5

LIT 112I Kafka

An intensive study of the works of Franz Kafka, with reference to the literary, social, and historical context in which his work emerged. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. (Formerly Kafka in Translation.)

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 112K Herman Melville

Study of representative work by Herman Melville, including novels and short stories. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

PE-E

LIT 112M Twain

A chronological survey of Twain's major works, with an emphasis on the development of style and content. Among other works, The Innocents Abroad, Roughing It, Life on the Mississippi, and Huckleberry Finn are considered. Critical approach designations: Canons, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

LIT 112P Gwendolyn Brooks

An examination of the major works of Gwendolyn Brooks, the first African American to win the Pulitzer Prize (in 1950), with particular attention to questions of race, gender, and class as modes through which to consider questions of form and content. Critical approach designations: Canons, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 114A Orlando Furioso

Reading the 46-canto Italian Renaissance adventure poem of Ludovico Ariosto, the most popular book of its century and a classic of humanist literature, students consider literary tradition, Renaissance humanism, and how entertainment literature may articulate moral and political criticism. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 114B Don Quixote de la Mancha

A close study of Books I and II of the Cervantes novel together with an examination of some of the criticism on this work written in English throughout the centuries. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

General Education Code

CC

LIT 114C Dante's Divine Comedy

Reading of the Inferno, the Purgatorio, and selected canti of the Paradiso, along with selections from Dante's lyrics and from medieval Italian and French poetry. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 114D Goethe's Faust

An intensive study of Goethe's Faust, Parts I and II. All works are read in English. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

LIT 114E One Way Ticket to Hell … and Back: Exploring Dante’s Inferno

Focuses on the Inferno, the first cantica of Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. Examines different uses of metamorphosis in Dante's representation of Hell, including the relationship between the ancient idea of human metamorphosis and Dante's representation of the Christian contrappasso (retribution), and the medieval concept of imago Dei (in God's likeness). Critical approach designations: Canons, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

General Education Code

TA

LIT 114F Finding Dante: A Reader’s Guide to Getting Out of Hell

An epic poem about a journey of self-discovery, Dante's Comedy challenges all assumptions about literary genres, styles, and the meaning of narrative and of life. Course covers Purgatory and Paradise. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

General Education Code

TA

LIT 116B Encountering Antiquity

Introduces selected modes and forms of poetry with emphasis on close textual analysis. Considers uses of Greek and Roman antiquity in English/Anglo-American poetic practice from early to post-modernity by historicizing the reproduction of antiquity through poetic forms. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

LIT 116C Ancient Myth/Modern Poetics

Reading of Greek and Roman texts (in English translation) which utilize mythic material juxtaposed with later poems written in response to them. Readings from Homer, Sappho, Greek drama, Petrarch, modern poets; discussion of concepts of myth, strategies of response. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 116F Knights, Ladies, and Werewolves: Medieval French Literature in Translation

Medieval French literature appeared rather suddenly in the the age of castles, Crusades, knights, and chivalry, and spawned a remarkable array of genres: epic, romance, lyric, lais, saint's lives, fabliaux (bawdy tales), drama, histories, and more. This course provides a sampling of the variety of this rich tradition. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

General Education Code

TA

LIT 116G Victorian Monsters

Through an examination of monsters in literature, course explores anxieties, fears, and ideals of Victorian society, paying close attention to issues of gender, sexuality, class, race, empire, scientific, and technology.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 116I Philosophy in India

Investigates various facets of premodern Indian thought. Emphasis of the course rotates and may fall upon metaphysics, epistemology, ontology, ethics, hermeneutics, or basic categories of Indian traditions (dharma, karma, samsara, moksha, etc.). Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahotoa

General Education Code

CC

LIT 117A Old Iranian Literature

The pre-Islamic literature of Iran is one of the world's richest literary traditions, and forms part of the Indo-European poetic heritage. Course offers an overview of and introduction to indigenous Iranian literary traditions. The course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 118A Hebrew Bible

Introduction to textual, source, redaction, historical, and literary criticism of individual books of the Hebrew Bible and to exegesis as science and ideology. Covers texts and iconography of neighboring mythological traditions (Mesopotamian, Ugaritic, Egyptian, Greek) when appropriate. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 120A Topics in Poetry

Close reading--critical and creative--of poetry. Examines how poets teach, through their writing, to radically attend to reading. The course topics changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 120B Poetry of the 17th Century

Readings in the works of Donne, Jonson, Herbert, Herrick, Marvell, and others. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 120C Victorian Poetry

A reading of the major Victorian poets from Tennyson to early Yeats. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 120D Nineteenth-Century American Poetry

The major figures and important movements from Poe to Emerson through Whitman and Dickinson. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kirsten Silva Gruesz

LIT 120E Early- to Mid-20th-Century American Poetry

Poets include Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, H.D. (Hilda Doolittle), William Carlos Williams, Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens, Langston Hughes, T.S. Eliot, and others, with attention to leading movements and critical issues. Critical approach designations: Canons. Genres. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

LIT 120F Topics in Modern Poetry

Survey of modern poetry; includes a variety of poetic forms. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 120H American Poetry Since World War II

Major poets since World War II, with attention to leading movements and critical issues. The course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Chen

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 120J Contemporary American Poetry

Surveys contemporary poetry with attention to race, sex, and gender; includes a variety of poetic forms. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 121A The Heroic Epic

A survey and analysis of primary epic: Gilgamesh, the Iliad, the Odyssey, and Exodus. Distribution requirement: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 121D Medieval Epic

Medieval reworkings of stories and motifs drawn from the barbarian or Germanic tradition including Beowulf, The Song of Roland, Nibelungenlied, Snorri Sturlason: King Harald's Saga from Heimskringla, and Njal's Saga. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 121G The Idea of Poetry

Focus is on the theories of rhetoric and poetry written between 1580 and 1620. Texts include English, Italian, French, and Spanish works. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sean Keilen

General Education Code

TA

LIT 121H Classical Poetics in Elizabethan Verse

An introduction to Elizabethan poetry and poetics, with emphasis on shorter lyrics (sonnets, ballads, etc.), pastoral, erotic epyllia, devotional poetry, etc. Examines various Classical and Continental strains of influence at play in the production of English verse in the later 16th century, including Classical rhetoric, Ovidian mythology, and Petrarchanism. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 121J Medieval Romance

A study of representative texts from the 12th through the 15th centuries. Questions of subjectivity, sexuality, and history in romance narratives are addressed. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

LIT 121K Radical Moderns/Poetry International

Focuses on a generation of early 20th-century poets from Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and beyond. Studying their poetic output through the lens of modernism and other genres, students discover a truly global moment in literature/politics. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 121L Green Ache: Ecopoetics, Race, and Material

Examines ecopoetics as theory, politic, and field of discourse. Focuses on literary and artistic production across a variety of texts that explore the role of race and representation, including literary theory, film, and visual art. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 121M Blue and Brown: Race, Gender, and Blackness

Examines Blackness as race, identity, politic, field, and discourse. Exploration guided by poetry, narrative fiction, video, film, music, and the daily news. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 121N RAGE: Race and Performance

Explores race, gender, and form in an interrogation of rage, and how it functions across an array of works by writers and artists in how they render rage's effects and configurations through poetry, prose, and performance. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 121O Body Theories and Embodied Poetics in Contemporary American Poetry

Course investigates the body as a site of political and theoretical significance in contemporary American poetry. Considers how and when corporeal poetics succeed (and fail) at capturing elusive and/or precarious subjectivities of race, sex, gender, grief, and violence. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

LIT 121Q Queer Lyrics: A History of LGBTQ Poetry in the United States

Considers theories of sexuality and the lyric side-by-side, through readings, lectures, class discussions, and writing assignments. Questions of language, community, and self-hood inform discussions of a wide range of poets. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 123C History of the Essay: From Seneca to Solnit

Chronologically charts the essay's arc from the age of antiquity to the contemporary period. Considers how the genre has changed through time with attention to its form, language, and content.

Credits

5

General Education Code

PR-C

LIT 124A Masters of Modernist Short Fiction

Acquaints students with the main stylistic features of modernism through the close reading of short stories. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories.

Credits

5

LIT 124B The Contemporary Latin American Short Story

An exploration of the genres, forms, and history of the Latin American short story. Focus includes contemporary women writers and writers of color from throughout Latin America in dialogue with the Latin American short story tradition. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

General Education Code

CC

LIT 125A Ancient Novel

Roman prose fiction--the ancient novel and texts from other genres--in relation to the history of the novel. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirements: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 125B Studies in the English Novel

From the 18th to the 20th century. The course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 125C Great French Novels

Provides an introduction to important French novels of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. All works are read in English. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies.

Credits

5

LIT 125D Modern and Contemporary German Literature

Selected readings from the novel and novella in modern and contemporary German literature. All works are read in English. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. (Modern German Fiction.)

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

General Education Code

TA

LIT 125H Modern Arabic Novel

Examines the literary and cultural production of the modern Arab world, with an emphasis on the novel since the 1950s. Includes discussion of film, poetry, and mass culture. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

General Education Code

CC

LIT 125I What is the Novel?

A survey of global narratives, focusing on the novel over several centuries, traditions, languages, and cultures. Examines the novel as a particular genre of literary expression; also examines its formative relationship with historical, social, cultural, and political processes. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Vilashini Cooppan

General Education Code

TA

LIT 125J French Science Fiction

Considers several French literary and cinematic examples of contemplating the present through the future—and the past—that paint a shifting picture of how time makes us human. Course also examines the French novel as it has developed in conversation with scientific thought since the late-19th century. All works are read in English. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies.

Credits

5

Instructor

Dorian Bell

General Education Code

TA

LIT 126A International Cyberpunk

Cyberpunk, considered a subgenre within science fiction, has achieved international prominence and presents interesting interpretative challenges. Course examines some issues as manifested in representative texts. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

PE-T

LIT 126F Speculative Fiction As Cultural Theory and Practice

Readings of contemporary and historical speculative fiction, including examination of representational practices, technologies, and politics that emerge from and/or circumscribe their interrelations. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gilman

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 126G Science Fiction and the Sublime: Science, Technology, and Subjectivity

Studies the sublime encounter in works of science fiction literature and film. Lyotard defined the sublime as the "presentation of the unpresentable." By examining what and who constitutes the sublime, we can explore relationships among fundamental concepts like knowing, being, and embodiment. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 126H Artificial Intelligence and Human Imagination

Uses a humanistic framework to study the promises and perils of artificial intelligence technosystems (AI). Studies cultural depictions of AI, co-creates cultural artifacts using AI, and analyzes the "anatomy" of specific AIs. (UCSC General Education Code: CC)

Credits

5

Instructor

Zac Zimmer

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 127D Travel Writing

Examines the genre of travel writing and the critical and cultural issues it engages. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirements: Global.

Credits

5

LIT 130A Ancient Literature in Cross-Cultural Perspective

Comparative approaches to the study of ancient literature and culture. Topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 130B Travel Writing and Intercultural Relations in the Middle Ages

Provides a historically-based and theoretically-informed introduction to medieval and early modern European contacts with other cultures. Readings include fourth through 17th-century writings about travel, discovery, and conquest in Asia, Africa, and America. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

LIT 130D The Global Middle Ages

Examination of texts from the global Middle Ages in a range of world cultures and traditions, with attention to their historical and social contexts. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Satisfies the Global and Pre- and Early Modern distribution requirements.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 131A Problems

Considers a range of phenomena from a critical world perspective: subject formation; human activity on a global scale; questions that demand a worlded answer. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 131B Space/Time

The world as understood through spatial and temporal divisions: regions, nations, empires, periods in a worlded perspective. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 131C Worldings

How to think about the world as a whole: representations, networks, systems, taxonomies, versions of globalization. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Vilashini Cooppan

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 131D Literature in a Global Context

Comparative examination of fiction in the modern world and of fictional responses to social change and crisis. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirements: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 132A Germany in War and Peace

Study of selected texts reflecting German society at war or in that ambiguous state called peace. Attention is given to the place of literature in German cultural life and its special role in the formation of national identity. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

LIT 133C Modern Japanese Novel

Important 20th-century novels and short stories in English translation may include works by Soseki, Kawabata, Mishima, Oe, and significant women authors. Discussion of literary themes in the context of changing Japanese society and thought. Japanese language skills are not required. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 133D Topics in the Literatures and Cultures of Southern Asia

Provides in-depth analysis of literary and cultural phenomena of southern Asia. The course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 133E Contemporary Chinese Society, Culture, and Politics

Focuses on contemporary China: society, politics, culture, and the economy. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global. (Formerly Topics in Asian Modernism.)

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

CC

LIT 133F Pacific Rim Discourse

Examines the rise of the idea of the Pacific Rim: its historical background, ideological assumptions, and various forms of its cultural manifestations. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Robert Wilson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 133G The Nuclear Pacific

Examines a range of cultural representations, literature, and films that chart the transnational history and representational legacy of uranium and nuclear power. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christine Hong

General Education Code

CC

LIT 133H Haunted by the Forgotten War: Literature and Film of the Korean War

The Korean War has the dubious distinction of being known as the Forgotten War in a U.S. context. Course examines novels, short stories, film, popular visual narratives, and historical accounts of the Korean War and its often-circuitous legacies.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christine Hong

General Education Code

CC

LIT 133I Global Japan: Literatures of the Japanese Diaspora

Examines the fiction of ethnic Japanese writers who are located outside of Japan. How do these writers situate themselves vis-a-vis Japan and the countries in which they were born or reside? How does their status as outsiders enable them to view Japan's social problems and colonial history? Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 134A Caribbean Literature

A study of major writing from the English-speaking Caribbean, with attention to the historical and cultural context out of which it arises and to which it responds. Critical approach designations: Canons, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 135A Topics in African Literature

Thematic and stylistic linkages: classical texts, oral traditions, and modern developments in African literature. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Vilashini Cooppan

LIT 135E The Historical Imaginary

A survey of historical literature in the Americas that examines fictional attempts to re-imagine New World histories. Readings focus on secret or mangled histories, the legacies of slavery and colonialism, gendered critiques of national histories, and U.S. imperialism. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

General Education Code

ER

LIT 135F Empire and After in the Anglophone Novel

Examines fiction written in English, 1883 to 1948, in order to consider the complex relations--complicit, resistant, both--between literary and imperialist discourses. Likely novelists for study are Schreiner, Haggard, Conrad, Kipling, Forster, Hilton, Paton. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies.

Credits

5

Instructor

Vilashini Cooppan

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 135G Postcolonial Writing

Introduces students to a selection of postcolonial theory and texts. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 135H African Futurisms

Explores expressions of African futurism in a range of creative media--novels, short stories, and films--and analyzes them in conversation with theoretical texts. Recognizes African cultural producers and theorists as central to conversations about anti-colonialism, revolution, futurity, and the nonhuman and beyond human. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

ER

LIT 136B Beat Literature and the World

Explores the sources and context of Beat writing, emphasizing the Beats' intense interest in and engagement with the world at large. Includes works by major and minor Beat writers. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Robert Wilson

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 137A Global Cities

Examines cities as social spaces and as local spaces in the global economy and global imaginary. Focus is interdisciplinary, including literature, film, cultural studies, history, and sociology. Topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 137C Imagining Paris

Examines ways in which Paris, France, a mecca of literature and art for the last two centuries, has spurred imagination, and has itself been the product of global imagination. Exploration of landmarks, monuments, and iconic aspects of Parisian culture via literary and artistic imaginings. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 138A Culture and Nation

Course explores the role of literature and culture in the production of national communities. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Vilashini Cooppan

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 138B Regions in American Literature

Examines development of regional writing in the U.S. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Robert Wilson

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 138C Modern Turkish Literature

Explores the formation of modern Turkish literature from the late-Ottoman tale to the postmodern novel. Introduces key critical concepts/debates (orientalism, canon formation, belatedness/modernization, national allegory) used in the study of non-Western literatures. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 139A Topics in American Literature and Culture

Studies in American literature and culture, with attention to historical context. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jennifer Tseng

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 139B Los Angeles Circa 1992

In response to the acquittal of white police who brutally beat black motorist Rodney King, thousands of people took to the street. This course examines cultural narratives that arose in the lead-up to and aftermath of the 1992 L.A. uprising. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christine Hong

General Education Code

ER

LIT 141A Early Mediterranean Cultures

Examination of representations of medieval and early modern Mediterranean history. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 141B Classical Chinese Culture and Literature, 10th Century B.C.E. through Sixth Century C.E

Survey of writing and culture from the 10th century B.C.E. through the sixth century C.E., focusing on poetry, philosophical and historical writing, supernatural fiction, Buddhist/Taoist texts in contexts of fragmentation, empire building, dynastic collapse, rebellion, eremitism, and courtly society. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

HIS 141A

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

CC

LIT 141C Classical Chinese Culture and Literature, Sixth Century through 16th Century

Survey of writing and culture from the Tang through early Ming dynasties (sixth century C.E. through 16th century C.E.). Themes include literary, religious, and philosophical innovation; courtly life; cultural contacts with non-Chinese people; and transformations of state and society. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

HIS 141B

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

CC

LIT 141D Classical Arabic Literature and Islamic Civilization

Examines the development of classical Arabic literature in historical context, including the appearance and importance of major genres and their broad relationship to the social and cultural history of the Arab-Islamic world. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750. (Formerly Arab-Islamic Literatures I: 500-1200.)

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

General Education Code

CC

LIT 141E Post-Classical Arabic Literature and Culture

Examines the evolution of Arabic and Islamic literatures and cultures through the late-Medieval and early-modern periods. These periods produce much of the body of literature and texts that survive today, and is profoundly influential. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750. (Formerly Arab-Islamic Literatures II: 1200-1900.)

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

General Education Code

CC

LIT 141G Granada: The Moor's Last Sigh and the Muslim's Frontier: The City in the Mediterranean Imagination

Traces the development of Granada from its first rise to prominence as Muslim city in the Ṭāʾifa Period (11th century) through its transformation into a Christian city in early modern Spain. Special emphasis is placed on its role as a point of contact between Spain and North Africa (or the Latin West and the Muslim Mediterranean more broadly) and the city's privileged position in the social and literary imaginaries of Muslims, Christians, and Jews, as a place of memory and intercultural contact. Distribution requirement(s): Pre-1750.

Credits

6

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

General Education Code

CC

LIT 144A Continental Renaissance

Introductory survey of great prose writings of the continental Renaissance in their cultural and historical contexts. Authors include: Machiavelli, Castiglione, Erasmus, Rabelais, Montaigne, and Cervantes. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 145A Colonial American Literatures

Surveys representations of the Euro-Amerindian encounter in the pre-national period. Readings include collective stories of indigenous peoples, European captivity narratives, reflections about spirituality and religion, poems, and a contemporary novel. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 146A Studies in Romanticism

A survey of major Romantic themes and authors between 1780 and 1820. Explores relationships to pre-Romantic and post-Romantic authors. The main goal is to achieve familiarity with a wide range of individual poems in the general context of Romanticism. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 146B Victorian Literature

British Victorian literature (1830-1901) featuring representative texts and authors. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 146C Victorian Prose

Victorian prophecy, Victorian criticism: an examination of some major writings of 19th-century nonfiction prose by Carlyle, Mill, Ruskin, Newman, Arnold, Pater, and Wilde, with a glance at the social context and the minor fictional forms of the era. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories.

Credits

5

LIT 146D Nineteenth-Century American Fiction

Examination of selected fiction written between the end of the 18th century and the Civil War, with attention to historical and cultural as well as literary issues. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

General Education Code

TA

LIT 146F The Dissenting Tradition in America

Antislavery writing of the 19th century profoundly shaped a resistant strain in American writing. By reading speeches, essays, and life writing along with more traditionally literary work, students examine what gives language the power to move people and to change the world. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kirsten Rodrigo

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 146G Queer(y)ing Victorian Literature

Examines mid- to late-19th-century English representations of non-normative gender and sexuality in popular culture. Considers how these figures in fiction conform to or resist established perceptions of gender, sexuality, race, and empire. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 147A Twain, Slavery, and the Literary Imagination

Using Mark Twain's later writings and other literary/non-literary materials, explores responses to popular and legal discourse on blood, race, sex, resurgence of racism, and imperialism. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

General Education Code

ER

LIT 148I Toni Morrison's Americas

Highlights the narrative innovations of Toni Morrison, reading several key works in the chronological order of their setting to show how the author retells American history through the lens of Atlantic slavery and racial capitalism.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kirsten Silva Gruesz

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer

LIT 149A Behind the Berlin Wall

Examines cultural life in the German Democratic Republic between 1946 and 1992 through films from the state-owned DEFA film studios. Topics include: socialist realism and international modernism in cinema; the representation of collective labor; the status of women; youth culture; and the texture of everyday life and consumer culture in socialism. Critical approach designations: Histories, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

General Education Code

IM

LIT 149B Contemporary American Literature

A selective examination of major writings since World War II, with attention to literary issues and historical context. Critical approach designation: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 149C The 1960s

An interdisciplinary study of the cultural and social movements of the 1960s. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

PR-E

LIT 149D Topics in Modern Literature

Study of 19th- and/or 20th-century literature, with attention to its literary and historical context. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 149E Modern Fiction and Poetry

Survey of modern fiction and poetry. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 149F Contemporary Mexican Narrative

Examines 20th and 21st century Mexican literature, with attention to literary critical issues as they relate to cultural, historical, and political contexts. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

LIT 149G War in Contemporary American Culture

Considers the treatment of war in American literature since World War II. Close attention paid to both literary form and historical context. Also provides perspectives on, and critical tools for thinking about, contemporary armed conflict. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 149H The Future

Examines modes of thinking and imagining the future throughout human history, and considers the fate of the future today. Topics include apocalyptic religion, utopia and dystopia, progress, revolution, finance, and everyday life. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

HISC 149H

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

PR-E

LIT 149I Contemporary Medievalisms

Explores contemporary representations of medieval cultures by considering questions of historical memory, limits of adaptation, and the power of satire. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 149J The Good Life

The social, affective, and psychic structures of our neoliberal era make it difficult to live a good life. Drawing on the broad tradition of critical theory and utopian imaginings, the course aims to give practical and theoretical guidance toward achieving a good life.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

HISC 149

Instructor

Christopher Connery

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 150D The Power of Writing: Books and Libraries 600-1500

Surveys the history of the book in the West from ca. 600-1500. Concentrates on the medieval illuminated manuscript and the first years of printing, and focuses on the relationship between text and image. Critical approach designations: Histories, Media. Distribution requirements: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LIT 150E Letters, Literature: A Correspondence Course

Examines the form and function of the letter in literature from antiquity to the contemporary moment. Considers all writing, from the most expressly public to the most seemingly private, as a form of correspondence, and we will contribute our own letters, in both creative and critical modes, in an effort to expand our capacities for critical analysis of texts. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 151B The Phenomenon of Tragedy

Examines the theory of tragedy from Aristotle to Nietzsche, while inviting students to read and discuss classic dramatic pieces to which the label tragedy was applied. Relies on student presentations and contributions, and teaches skills both in handling theory and in practical literary criticism. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 151G English Drama: 1576-1642

Study of representative plays. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Media. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 151K Gender, Race, and Disability in American Drama

An investigation of how American playwrights represent and criticize the concepts of gender, race and disability. Analysis of the genre of drama as a contact zone of gender, race, and disability by studying how American playwrights have critically responded to historical and social alienation, sexism, racism, and ableism in their works about "disabled" bodies. Students cannot receive credit for this course and CRES 114. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LIT 151L Theater in India

Historical introduction to the theatrical forms and dramatic performance styles that have characterized the Indian tradition at different times and places. Critical approach designations: Canons, Media. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

General Education Code

IM

LIT 154B Literature and the Arts

Literature and art challenge, collaborate with, and use each other as inspiration. Course examines the boundaries of and connections between literature and art; focuses on the relationship between self-expression, identity, and politics in art and literature. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

IM

LIT 154C Hip Hop Hi Art

Explores the U.S. born and now global phenomenon hip hop as poetic discourse, and analytical frame by examining questions of race, gender, and sexuality via analysis of rap lyrics, music, visual art, video, film, and performance. Satisfies the Poetry distribution requirement.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 154D Literature and Sound (and Soundscapes)

This course listens to 20th-century speculative fiction through a series of key words in sound study and themes in genre study. Topics include: sound and Afrofuturism, psycho-acoustic technologies in film, and extra-terrestrial musical voyages.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

PE-T

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 155A Cinema and Subjectivity

An examination of the ways in which the technological and institutional practices of cinema construct modes of modern and contemporary subjectivity. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

IM

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 155C New German Cinema

Surveys the work of Fassbinder, Kluge, Herzog, Schlöndorff, von Trotta, Reitz, Straub, Sanders-Brahms, and others. Major themes include post-fascism and the problems of history, the burden of memory, mass culture, gender, social class, and migration in postwar Germany. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

General Education Code

IM

LIT 155D Italian Cinema and Literature

Explores the rich history of Italian cinema. Special attention is given to the links between literacy and visual narratives, Italian films and Italian novels, autobiographies, and short stories on which the films are based. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Media.

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LIT 155E Cinema and Social Change in Latin America

Surveys selected Latin American and Latino feature and documentary films. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 155H The Horror Film

Shifting definitions of horror in the movies from the late silent period to the present through close analysis of representative films and critical texts. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

IM

LIT 155J The Films of John Carpenter

Study of development and central themes of preeminent genre director of the post-Hollywood era, concentrating on central core of major works in horror/science fiction genres from Halloween to In the Mouth of Madness, with attention to the comedies and action films. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

LIT 155L Vampire Film

Examines development and central themes of vampire film from the silent era to the present. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LIT 155N Cinema in India

Examines cinema in India from the silent era to the contemporary production of Bollywood films. Attention is given to the rise of the culture industry in urban centers such as Mumbai, and the dialectical relationship between socio-political change and cultural form. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Media. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

General Education Code

IM

LIT 155O Women In/As Horror: Critical Approaches to the Horror Film

What does horror film have to say about women? In treating horror film as text, students gain the necessary tools to read these movies as narrative; students also identify how race, class, gender, and genre function to create complex and challenging texts. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

IM

LIT 156A The Gothic Imagination in Fiction, Film, and Theory

Readings include theoretical essays by Freud and Lacan and such fictions as The Monk, Frankenstein, Dracula, Maus, The Yellow Wallpaper, and Beloved. Films change each year. Critical approach designations: Histories, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox

General Education Code

TA

LIT 156E Mapping Fictions: Geocritical Approaches to Cultural Studies

Studies how literature maps the world and in what ways our experiences of the world are informed by literary maps. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Media. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

General Education Code

IM

LIT 157A Modern Ancient Drama

The study of 20th- and 21st-century productions and adaptations of ancient Greek drama in theater, dance, music, and film, including Stravinsky, Graham, Pasolini, Breuer, and von Trier, discussing artists' goals, the sociopolitical context, ideas of authenticity, and audience response. Critical approach designations: Histories, Media. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LIT 157C Representations of Hamlet

Examination of Shakespeare's Hamlet from various perspectives, including as a literary and historical object, and as a mirror of socio-political concerns. Readings include both precursors to Shakespeare and modern adaptations and revisions of the Hamlet story. Critical approach designations: Canons, Media. Distribution requirements: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 157E Greek Drama/Modern Film

A reading of ancient Greek plays along with contemporary films similar to them in theme, form, and effect. Students discuss different definitions of tragedy; genre as a critical tool; and similarities and difference between the media of literature, drama, and film. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 159M The Curse of the Mummy

Relying on the collaborative expertise of an Egyptologist and a Victorian studies scholar, this course explores aspects of ancient Egypt that exploded into popular Western literature, art, film and other media in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Satisfies the literature major Pre-1750 distribution requirement.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

HIS 159M

Instructor

Renee Fox, Elaine Sullivan

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 160C Cruelty: Enjoying the Pain of Others

Cruelty is the unmotivated infliction of pain on someone else. This course investigates the notion of cruelty cultures raised by Claude Levi-Strauss through the literatures of ancient Rome and 15th-16th century Mexico as well as contemporary world literature. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 160E Theorizing Race and Comics

Examines comics' origins in the United States' legacies of racial caricature and political cartoons about slavery, Asian exclusion, yellow journalism, and imperial expansion. Analyses of graphic novel's 20th-century evolution around human-rights violations and post-atrocity representational strategies around race, nationalism and minority status. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christine Hong

General Education Code

ER

LIT 160F Topics in Cultural Studies

Investigates the ways in which cultural texts--literary, aesthetic, visual, performative, and a variety of popular forms--create and transform individual experiences, everyday life, social relations, and power. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jody Biehl

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 160G Topics in Literary Theory

Examination of major issues in contemporary theory, with emphasis on key concepts. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Chen

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 160I Race, Militarism, and Empire in Asia and the Pacific

Theoretical and historical inquiry into the relationship between race, militarism, and empire; a comparative examination of the Japanese and U.S. empires in the Asia-Pacific region; and a consideration of how liberal ideologies around race were wielded as a tool of imperial governance. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christine Hong

General Education Code

ER

LIT 160J Exile, Diaspora, Migration

Analyzes how the figure of the refugee, migrant, and other travelling communities are produced, engaged and represented in literary texts, cultural texts, and theories. Course materials include fiction, memoir, essay, legal tracts, and film. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 160K Race, Labor, and Migration

Examines racialized labor from the mid-19th century to the present, including the racial protest novel as a cultural form. Investigates race, gender, and citizenship as technologies used to regulate labor and to circumscribe labor's power. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Chen

General Education Code

ER

LIT 160L Literature and Philosophy

Provides critical insight into the complex dynamics that define our historical moment through an investigation of literary and philosophical treatments. Readings include novels, plays, philosophical essays, and political commentary. The course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

General Education Code

TA

LIT 160M The War on Terror

Investigates the logic of U.S. imperialism, with a specific focus on the War on Terror. Includes texts in critical race and ethnic studies, history, and literature, and a diverse, range of media; novels, poetry, film, graphic literature, and music. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

LIT 160N John Brown: Prophet or Fanatic?

John Brown was a 19th-century advocate of the use of armed insurrection to overthrow the institution of U.S. slavery. Why has a man dismissed as a fanatic been taken up as the subject of novels, biographies, popular songs, films, and even internet memes for the past 160 years? Course explores this question through readings in literature, history, and theory. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LIT 160P Misinformation, Disinformation, and Fake News

Our world is saturated with information and much of it is inaccurate. This class teaches how to to identify bad information and how to keep it from spreading. It explores the role and responsibility of journalism in the world and why it matters. It investigates where information originates and the motivations of those producing, spreading, and sharing it, and pushes students to consider their media diet and how it affects their life and understanding of the world.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jody Biehl

General Education Code

PE-H

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 160Q (Gender)Queer Theories

Examines theory and practice of (gender) queer- and trans-ness in the present historical moment. Drawing primarily on critical theory from trans and queer studies, alongside literary texts and popular culture, the course introduces intellectual and affective resources for navigating questions about gender non-normativity.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Summer

LIT 160R Gangsters, Bandits and Rogues: The Image of the Outlaw from the Middle Ages to the Present

Is the outlaw a revolutionary defender of the people? Or a pillager of the defenseless poor? A social outcast or a folk hero? This course explores the ambivalences and ambiguities of “the outlaw” in popular, literary, and historiographic representation. Distribution requirements: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 160S Cultures of Socialism

Emphasizes socialism as an important aspect of modernity. Beginning with an overview of the left avant-gardes of the early 20th century, students look at the debates about the political implications of realism, modernism, and socialist realism.

Credits

5

Instructor

Hunter Bivens

General Education Code

TA

LIT 160T Reading Torture

Course grapples with the ethical, political, aesthetic, racial, and cultural implications of torture. While the course analysis is grounded in looking at torture as practice—as a brutal manifestation of American nation- and empire-building—students will think conceptually about torture and pain. Materials draw heavily on writing from the U.S., but adopt global perspectives. The course is structured to begin with a theoretical introduction to the concept of torture before working through some historical examples, understanding how to “read” and interpret torture as represented in cultural production (literature, art, film), and finally devoting the last few weeks to our contemporary era and the so-called “war on terror.” The class works to uncover the underlying logic of torture that links histories of racism and war to its institutionalized present. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LIT 161A African American Literature

Examination of African American writing and cultural representations, with attention to the historical, cultural, and general literary contexts out of which they emerged and upon which they commented. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Chen

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 161B African American Women Writers

Explores the cultural, aesthetic, political, and feminist issues in select works by African American women. Through close analysis of the works, students develop an understanding of the intersections that race, gender, and class play in the literary imaginations of these writers. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Chen

General Education Code

ER

LIT 162A Asian American Literature

Examination of Asian American literary works (fiction, poetry, dramatic essays) in the context of the historical presence of Asian Americans in the United States since the 1850s. Emphasis on comparison of select works from ethnic Asian writings. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LIT 162B Literature of the Asian Diaspora

Study of literature of the Asian diaspora, attempting to discover and define a growing body of contemporary writing under this rubric, including immigrant/migrant histories, memories of exile and refuge, as well as the fiction of imagined homelands. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LIT 162C So Many Little Lives: Representations of Trauma in Asian American Literature

Explores representations of trauma in contemporary Asian American literature. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 163A American Indian Literature

Explores works of fiction, creative non-fiction, drama, and poetry written by American Indians. Focuses on historical and political issues within the text as well as on formal and thematic structures. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 164A Jewish Travel Narratives

Exploration of the idea of the Diaspora as a moving condition, and of the multli-dimensional character of global Jewish culture, covering authors who traveled across the Jewish world from medieval times to the present. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

LIT 164B Hebrew Poetry

Hebrew poetry-Biblical, medieval, modern-explores cultural and literary issues central to our contemporary world. Texts and discussion focus on Jewish and Israeli literary traditions. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 164C Global Jewish Writing

Comparative analysis of modern Jewish writers from Western and non-Western diasporas. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

LIT 164D Jewish Diaspora, Ethnicity, and Urban Life

Focuses on modern Jewish diaspora, ethnicity, and urban life. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Bruce Thompson

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 164G Literature and the Holocaust

Reading and analysis of fiction and poetry, focusing on Holocaust literature as a problem in critical theory, cultural studies, and literary history. Though most of the works are read in translation, some knowledge of European languages is helpful. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 164H Jewish Writers and the European City

Interrogates the master narrative of a specific European city and discusses the ways in which Jewish life and Jewish actions helped to shape that story and were shaped by it. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 164J Jewish Writers and the American City

An examination of some major Jewish writers and their responses to the American city. Major writers: Henry Roth, Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, J. Kaplan, Philip Roth. A look at Yiddish and other minority writers, and including sociological and historical materials on the American city. The course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Bruce Thompson

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 164K Jewish Comedy

Examines literary, theatrical, cinematic, and televised representations of Jewish culture, focusing on the ways in which Jews have negotiated the transition to modernity via comedy and humor. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Bruce Thompson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 165A Chicanx/Mexican American Literature

Considers the historical, current, and future directions of Chicano/a literary culture within the context of the long-standing exchanges of culture and politics across the U.S.-Mexican border and the challenges of globalization. Includes novels, essays, and films. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global. (Formerly Chicano/Mexicano Geographies.)

Credits

5

Instructor

Kirsten Silva Gruesz

General Education Code

ER

LIT 165B Latino Fictions of the Americas

Writers in the U.S., Latin America, and the Caribbean have been drawn repeatedly to the theme of intercultural conflict as they recall the traumatic history of the hemisphere. Examining fiction, poetry, and film expands the horizons of American literature. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global. (Formerly Latin/o American Fiction.)

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LIT 165C Mesoamerican Indigenous/Indigenista Literature

Analyzes literature about and by indigenous peoples in Mesoamerica: traces the construction of racialized categories of identity, such as indio and mestizo in Mesoamerican cultures and examines how they interact with definitions of the human that dominate in the West. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 166A Representations of Gender in Medieval Literature

Explores medieval literature alongside major contributions to queer and trans theory in order to understand how gender, sex, and sexuality were constructed in premodern Europe. Focuses in particular on erotic expression, courtly tradition, and queer textuality: Chaucer, Gawain, and Heldris de Cornuälle. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 166B Early Modern Representations of Gender

Explores representation of gender in early modern literature, with attention to contemporary aesthetic, cultural, and theoretical contexts. Texts include drama, poetry, and prose. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 166C Early Modern Italian Women Writers

In early modern Italy several factors converged to foster a boom in women's writing and publication. Course addresses the context and content of these writings, dealing with key theoretical and historical issues surrounding women's entry into authorship in Europe. Knowledge of Italian not required. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 166E Women's Literature

Works by women from the 18th century to the present, with special attention to the relationship of literature to history, psychology, and aesthetics. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

LIT 166J Women Modernists

Readings of a selection of British and U.S. women writers writing from 1920-1940, now critically framed and unearthed by feminist scholarship of the 1980s. Readings include: Jessie Redmon's The Chinaberry Tree, Vita Sackville-West's All Passion Spent, H.D.'s Asphodel, and Djuna Barnes' Nightwood. Also includes a selection of almost totally eclipsed female poets—reading selections of the poetry and prose of women writers including Dorothy Parker, Sarah Teasdale, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Marianne Moore, Louise Bogan, and Elinor Wylie. Discussion includes the varieties of modernism, canonicity, female literary collaboration and lesbian salons, and women writers' various negotiations of gender, race, and class intersectionality.

Credits

5

LIT 167B Monsters and Humans

Focuses on the historical development of what we broadly consider to be the human body from its Humanist instantiations in early modern Europe as seen through its alleged opposite: the monstrous body. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 167C Metamorphoses: Pre/Post Modern Transformations

Examines transformations between god, human, and animal from ancient literature to medieval, renaissance, modern, and postmodern (especially science) fiction and poetry. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Carla Freccero

General Education Code

CC

LIT 167E The Vampire in Literature and Popular Culture

Traces the vampire's appearance in different historical moments, cultural contexts, genres, and media to interrogate its place in the shifting cultural politics of gender and sexuality, as well as in relation to race, ethnicity, class, and other identity positions. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox

General Education Code

TA

LIT 167F Animals and Literature

Examines the disruptive presences of nonhuman animals and nonanimal aliens as they appear in a variety of narrative forms: prose fiction, non-fiction, and poetry. Organized around central themes relating to the presence of animals in literature, including representation, difference, desire, and subjectivity. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 167G Reading the Weather: Literature and Global Climate Change

An overview of climate change and its representations in literary and filmic texts. Asks how climate fiction and non-fiction narratives of climate change can help us to confront issues of environmental justice, inequalities of race and class, vulnerability, land rights, and refugeehood. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

PE-E

LIT 167H Disability in Transnational Asian American Studies

Investigates U.S. imperialism in the Asia-Pacific region by focusing on race and disability; examines how disabled subjects have responded to historical and social alienation. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

ER

LIT 167I The Enviromental Humanities

Explores how literary works and other cultural products have represented and defined relationships among the living and nonliving in the environment. Topics include the history of ideas about the nature/culture divide, the interconnectedness of life and non-life, and sustainability and reciprocity in ecological crisis.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PE-E

LIT 167J Exhibiting Monsters

Monsters have long been an integral part of popular culture, reflecting anxieties, desires, and imaginative possibilities across time and space. This course focuses on how students and scholars of monster studies can frame our scholarly explorations of monsters' historical and cultural popularity for a specifically popular audience: how do we transform our monster studies research into public exhibitions about monsters? This in-person, research-based course is simultaneously an introduction to monster studies and an introduction to public humanities work. Specific objects of study for this course rotate.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox

General Education Code

IM

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 168A The Culture of Islamic Law

Investigates the nature of Islamic law as a set of textual and interpretive practices that change over time and is fully enmeshed with Arabic culture, as well as its representation and role in literature as a force, standard, and context. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 168B Islamic Law and Society

Introduction to Islamic Law and its development as a set of discursive practices and institutional formations, from its origins to its transformation by modern state systems. Focuses on development of legal theory as textual interpretation and translation into social practice. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

General Education Code

CC

LIT 169A White Flow(n): Race, Gender, and Material

Examines the question of whiteness as race, identity, politic, and field of discourse, focusing on cultural literary and artistic production from the 1990s that brought about the field of critical white studies. Includes prose, poetry, literary theory, film, and visual art. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

General Education Code

ER

LIT 179A Advanced Writing: Fiction

Intensive work in writing fiction. Critical approach designation: Genres.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jennifer Tseng, Melissa Sanders-Self, Micah Perks

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to creative writing literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-C

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 179B Advanced Writing: Poetry

Intensive work in writing poetry. Critical approach designation: Genres.

Credits

5

Instructor

Gary Young, Ronaldo Wilson

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to creative writing literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 179C Methods and Materials

Focuses on a particular process or subject used in the production of a literary text. Course is intended to work as a bridge between invention and scholarship. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jody Biehl, Rob Wilson, Gary Young

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-C

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer

LIT 179E Writing for Transformation

Introductory cross-genre writing workshop exploring the social and political engagements of a wide array of BIPOC authors’ work. In interactive lectures and small group discussion,students analyze authors’ use of craft and form to inspire creation of our own poetry, flash nonfiction, and flash fiction. Course considers how authors thematize family, community, language, activism, love, culture, health, state and structural violence, relations with our natural environment, and more.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

Enrollment is restricted to declared and proposed literature and critical race and ethnic studies majors, literature minors, and Black studies minors.

Cross Listed Courses

CRES 179E

Instructor

Melissa Casumbal

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to declared and proposed literature and critical race and ethnic studies majors, literature minors, and Black studies minors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

PR-C

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 181A Biblical Hebrew, Part 1

Grammatical study interspersed with narrative excerpts from the Hebrew Bible. Recommended: previous study of a second language up to the advanced level. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 181B Biblical Hebrew, Part 2

Continuation of grammatical study interspersed with poetic texts from the Hebrew Bible. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750. Together, Biblical Hebrew 1 and Hebrew 2 fulfill the language prerequisites for LIT 102; together they also satisfy the intensive major second-language course requirements.

Credits

5

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 181A or the equivalent.

LIT 181C Coptic

Intensive introduction to fundamentals of classical Coptic grammar (Sahidic dialect) designed to move rapidly into reading of primary texts. Readings include The Martyrdom of S. Coluthus, Gospel of Thomas, and the Gnostic treatise Thunder: Perfect Mind. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 181D Reading Egyptian Hieroglyphs, Part 1

Introduction to Egyptian hieroglyphs as a graphic, conceptual, and communicative system. Covers the basic elements of classical Egyptian grammar, drawing primarily on inscriptions from extant Egyptian monuments. Students read one prose and one poetical text from the Middle Kingdom. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Media. Distribution requirement: Global, Pre-1750. Strongly recommended: two years previous study of a foreign language at the college level or the equivalent.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 181E Reading Egyptian Hieroglyphs, Part 2

Advanced Middle Egyptian grammar (two weeks). Close reading of the Tale of Sinuhe in Middle Egyptian, selected hymns and love poetry from the New Kingdom. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750. Together, LIT 181D and LIT 181E, Egyptian Hieroglyphs 1 and 2, fulfill the language prerequisites for LIT 102; together they also satisfy the intensive major second-language course requirements.

Credits

5

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 181D

General Education Code

CC

LIT 181F Reading Egyptian Hieroglyphs, Part 3

Close reading of the Tale of Sinuhe in Middle Egyptian. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 181E.

LIT 181G Sanskrit, Part 1

Systematic introduction to the grammar, syntax, and usage of Classical Sanskrit, to the oral dimensions of the language, and to the Sanskrit literary tradition. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

LIT 181H Sanskrit, Part 2

Continued study of the grammar, syntax, and usage of Classical Sanskrit, and the Sanskrit literary tradition. Students read the entire Bhagavad-Gita, including key sections in the original Sanskrit. Critical approach designations: Canons, Geographies. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry, Pre-1750. Together, LIT 181G and LIT 181H, Sanskrit Parts 1 and 2, fulfill the language prerequisites for Literature 102; together they also satisfy the intensive major second-language course requirements.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 181G.

LIT 182A Le Moyen Age

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. Study of 12th- and 13th-century texts, with attention to problems of history and social change. In modern translations with selected readings in Old French or Provencal. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 182E Etudes de Poésie

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. Emphasizes the close study of a limited number of poetic texts in terms of their linguistic, stylistic, and rhetorical devices. Course topic changes; please see Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 182F Le théâtre

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. Studies in French drama and theories of theatricality. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 182H Auteur et culture

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. Designed to provide an in-depth study of a given author's literary oeuvre and its cultural context. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 182I Littérature d'expression française hors de France

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. A study of texts written in French-speaking cultures: Belgium, Canada, Africa, the Caribbean. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 182J Theorie

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. A discussion of recent developments in French literary theory. Critical approach designations: Canons, Geographies.

Credits

5

Instructor

Carla Freccero

LIT 182K Textes et contextes

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. Examines implications of social and political change in terms of literary theory and practice. Places equal emphasis on literary and other kinds of cultural texts: historical, political, and cinematic. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita, Dorian Bell, Carla Freccero

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 182L Science-Fiction Française

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French required. Course considers several French literary and cinematic examples of contemplating the present through the future and the past. Learn how reading across different cultural contexts can blur the distinction between "science" and "fiction"; how to read fictional texts alongside the films they inspire; and how to produce more effective essays and presentations in French. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

Dorian Bell

General Education Code

CC

LIT 183A Einführung in der deutschen Literatur

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Wide reading of works representing the major authors, periods, and genres of German literature. Critical approach designations: Canons, Geographies.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

LIT 183B Themen in deutscher Literatur und Kultur

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Course studies German literature and culture, with attention to historical context. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 183D Die deutsche Romantik

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. A study of the emergence and development of German Romanticism. Central concerns are the Romantics' attitude toward the role of the imagination in literature and their attempts to revitalize myth and folklore in their works. Authors read include Tieck, Novalis, Hoffmann, Eichendorff, and Heine. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

LIT 183F Die deutsche Novelle

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. A study of Novellen of the major 19th-century German authors. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

LIT 183G Deutsche Komödie

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. A study of a series of comic works by authors writing in German. In addition to discussing the texts in depth, we also look at theories of humor and laughter developed by thinkers such as Freud, Schopenhauer, and Bergson. Critical approach designations: Canons, Media.

Credits

5

LIT 183H Das deutsche Drama

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Selected readings of major German dramatists; attention given to various movements in theater. Critical approach designations: Canons, Media.

Credits

5

LIT 183I Deutscher Film: Geschichte, Kultur, Gesellschaft

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Course plots the thematic and formal trajectories of cinema in the German Democratic Republic between 1946 and 1992 to examine the key stress lines of socialist culture in East Germany. Critical approach designations: Histories, Media. (Formerly German Cinema: History, Culture, and Society.)

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LIT 183K Moderne deutsche Literatur und Film

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Discusses a range of modern and contemporary German texts, including poetry, drama, and film. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 183M Moderne deutsche Fiktion

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Selected readings from the novel and novella in 20th-century German literature. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

LIT 183N Modern Deutsche Lyrik

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Intensive analysis of selected poems is complemented by broader reading in certain authors and periods.Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

LIT 183P Fremdenangst: Ausländerfeindlichkeit in der deutschen Literatur und Kultur

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in German required. Considers recent violence against immigrants and asylum-seekers in Germany, and moves on to examine images of people perceived as foreign or alien in German literature and culture from early times to the present. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

LIT 184A Introduction to Greek Literature

Reading proficiency in Ancient Greek required. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kristina Chew

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 184B Greek Drama

Reading proficiency in Ancient Greek required. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Media. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 184C Greek Poetry

Reading proficiency in Ancient Greek required. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 184D Prose Authors

Reading proficiency in Ancient Greek required. Course topic changes; see Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka, Anne Kreps

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 184E Special Topics in Greek Literature

Reading proficiency in Ancient Greek required. Readings in selected ancient Greek texts. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Focus is on translation and interpretation; requirements normally include translation exams and interpretive essays. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 185B Letteratura e cultura italiana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. In-depth examination of a topic in Italian literary and cultural studies. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

ER

LIT 185H L'Opera italiana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. Explores Italian opera as dramatic and spectacular cross-cultural phenomenon beginning in 1590s Florence through the 19th and 20th centuries. Attention to opera's function as a medium of cultural translation and political critique. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media. Prerequisite(s): Two years of university study of Italian language, or equivalent proficiency.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 185I Teatro italiano

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. Survey of Italian theater from its beginnings in medieval ritual through the development of Renaissance staged comedy and the commedia dell'arte, pastoral and tragicomedy, opera, melodrama, and 20th-century avant-garde and political theater. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

LIT 185J Poesia moderna

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. Study of development of the Italian lyric from romanticism to present, with close stylistic and thematic analyses of works of Leopardi, D'Annunzio, Ungaretti, Quasimodo, Pavese, and Montale. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Poetry.

Credits

5

LIT 185L La novella italiana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. Surveys short fiction in Italian, from bawdy medieval novellas to folk tales edited in the 19th century, to psychological and character studies. Focuses on the formal properties that distinguish short fiction from romances and novels and the social functions these writings can perform. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies.

Credits

5

General Education Code

TA

LIT 185M Fascismo e resistenza

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. The relationship between literature and Italian fascism is explored, including the rise and myths of fascism, critique and censorship, the persecution of minorities, the Resistance, the role of the intellectual. Authors include Borgese, Vittorini, Bassani, Pavese. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

General Education Code

TA

LIT 185N Le donne nell'Italia moderna

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. Explores the specificity of Italian women's writing and studies their literary activities in historical and social context. Readings include Italian feminist and some history as well as literary texts. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

LIT 185O ''I need a hero:'' Ariosto's (Un)Epic Renaissance

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. In this course, we will study the Italian Renaissance adventure poem by Ludovico Ariosto, Orlando Furioso (1532) and we will use it to penetrate the cultural, spiritual, and political tensions that marked the passage from pre- to early-modernity in the West. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

General Education Code

TA

LIT 185P Boccaccio: Decameron

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. Critical study of The Decameron. Critical approach designation: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 185Q Dante: Divina Commedia

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. Reading of the Inferno, the Purgatorio, and selected canti of the Paradiso, along with selections from Dante's lyrics and from medieval Italian and French poetry. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 185S Petrarca

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Italian required. The transition from medieval to Renaissance modes of poetry in the works of Francesco Petrarca. Readings in the Rime Sparse, the Trionfi, and the prose works. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 185Z Italian Studies Writing in the Discipline

Concurrent enrollment in an approved upper-division course in Italian literature, history of art and visual culture, or history satisfies the Disciplinary Communication requirement in Italian studies. Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to Italian studies majors and by permission of instructor.

Credits

1

LIT 186A Introduction to Latin Literature

Reading proficiency in Latin required. Course topic changes; see Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kristina Chew

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 186B Roman Poetry

Reading proficiency in Latin required. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 186C Prose Authors

Reading proficiency in Latin required. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 186D Special Topics in Latin Literature

Reading proficiency in Latin required. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 188A Literatura medieval

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Focuses on Spanish medieval literature, broadly covering the 12th to the 15th centuries. Examines and contextualizes literary genres developed in this period. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750. (Formerly Medieval Spanish Literature.)

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

General Education Code

CC

LIT 188B Literatura peninsular: de los orígenes al siglo XVIII

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. A critical study of several representative texts from the early period of Spanish literature in their sociohistorical context. Included among the readings are El Poema del Cid, the Romancero, La Celestina, Lazarillo de Tormes, and a Golden Age play. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

LIT 188E Teatro del Siglo de Oro español

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Studies in Spanish Golden Age theater. Critical approach designations: Histories, Media. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

General Education Code

CC

LIT 188F Cuentos del Siglo de Oro español

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Focuses on the prose in the Renaissance period and the different genres that flourished before the creation of Cervantes' Don Quixote. Chosen texts constitute an amalgam of Renaissance ideology, and provide examples of 16th-century literature, including the picaresque novel, pastoral novel, the Byzantine novel, and the chivalresque novel. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 188G Literaturay vida en Don Quijote y otros textos cervantinos

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. A close reading of the works of Cervantes, with particular attention to Don Quijote, in an attempt to discover how these works reflect the conflictive period in which the author lived. Also looks closely at the Cervantine view of the relationship of literature to life, as manifested in the works under study. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

General Education Code

CC

LIT 188H Erotismo y Mistica

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Examines the connections between erotic literature and mystical literature through poetic representations of sublime where Eros and Thanatos meet. As symbolisms of mystical and erotic experiences fuse and confuse each other, we are able to establish connections between Sufi, Hindi, and Judeo-Christian mystical poetry. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

General Education Code

TA

LIT 188I La novela picaresca

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. The picaresque novel of 16th-century Spain considers the fictive environment as reality in order to introduce its protagonist as a rebel against social dominion. The picaresque novel is the only literary genre comparable to what is now called literature of social protest. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

General Education Code

CC

LIT 188L Literatura de la guerra civil española

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Examines literature related to the period of the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) and the Franco years (1939-75). Includes works by Spanish writers in exile during this period; also examines literary texts written prior to the outbreak of the war. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities.

Credits

5

LIT 188M Literatura peninsular: siglos XIX y XX

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. A critical study of several representative texts from this period of Spanish literature. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

LIT 188R Humanidades Ambientales

Considers salient aspects of environmental aesthetics and ecological thinking in Latin America in a variety of genres including memoir, children's literature, graphic literature, documentary film, and visual arts. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

General Education Code

PE-E

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 188Z Literatura de España

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Examines works by Spanish authors with attention to historical and cultural as well as literary issues. Course topic changes, see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 189A De la conquista a Sor Juana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. A study of Hispanic American and Peninsular literatures from the chronicles of the conquest through the 17th century. Readings deal with transformations in both the idea of empire and the rights of the conquered. Includes the works of Colon, Cortes, El Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, and others. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Global, Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 189B El Siglo XIX en América Latina: cultura, política y sociedad

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Follows the literary manifestations of the growing consciousness of the Latin American writer: discovery of native themes, comparative analysis of Spanish American and Peninsular European models, search for a new language literally and figuratively. Relates historical events with literary movements. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Rodrigo Lazo

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 189C Introducción a Spanish Studies

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish is required. Explores the social, cultural, economic, and political changes that connect Latin America, Spain, and the United States Latina/o communities. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

SPAN 105

Instructor

Christian Ruvalcabra

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): SPAN 6 or SPHS 6 or placement by assessment.

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 189D Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. An in-depth examination of the life and work of Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, a 17th-century nun, poet, playwright, and woman of genius and intellectual prowess whose ideas and accomplishments were ahead of her time. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Pre-1750.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

LIT 189E Cuba

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Examines Cuban literature and culture, with attention to historical context. Course topic changes: please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 189F Literaturas Latinas en los Estados Unidos: en inglés, español y Spanglish

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Spanish-based, English/bilingual inclusive overview of Latino/a writing in the U.S. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

General Education Code

ER

LIT 189G Cine y Literatura

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Analysis and interpretation of Spanish-language films derived from literary works by Latin American and Spanish authors. Topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

IM

LIT 189H La Globalizacion en/del Cine Latin/o Americano

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Examines globalization of Latin/o American cinema as a cultural industry. Classical issues of cultural politics and political economy are revisited from the viewpoint of current global processes. Also provides access to the representation of different aspects of globalization in Latin/o American cinema. Critical approach designations: Media, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

General Education Code

IM

LIT 189I Literatura e indigeneidad

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Course examines the history, representation, and politics of Indigeneity and Indigenous literature in Latin America by analyzing novels, short stories, transcribed oral tradition, film, and radio. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

General Education Code

ER

LIT 189K El ensayo latinoamericano

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. A study of the essay in Spanish America from Sarmiento to the present, concentrating on problems of national or cultural identity. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

LIT 189L Poesía latinoamericana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Poets from modernismo to the present in Spanish America. Studies how this poetry attempts to define Latin America, its past, its present history, and its vision for the future. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirements: Global, Poetry.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 189M Prosa contemporánea hispanoamericana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Examines contemporary Spanish American prose. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LIT 189N Latinoamericano testimonio

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Contemporary non-fiction testimonial literature of Latin America. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

LIT 189O El Cuento Hispanoamericano: Variedades esteticas de la literatura breve en America Latina

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Explores various aesthetics of the Latin American short story including fantastic, detective, metaliterary, social critique, historical, and philosophical writings. Critical approach designations: Canons, Genres. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 189P Las mujeres en la literatura latinoamericana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Literary and sociological writings by and about women in Latin America-in Hispanic, indigenous, and African-Latino communities; in rural and urban settings; in historical and contemporary periods. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

LIT 189Q Ficción y marginalidad

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Marginalized perspectives take center stage in this course that studies ways Latin American/Latino authors textually contest dominant representations and realities, opening symbolic spaces for emergent historical subjects who gain agency and authority by re/presenting unmapped terrains. Texts include chronicles, testimonios, writings of the self, and novels. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

LIT 189R La Novela de la Dictadura

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. An analysis of novels which focus on the theme of dictators and the rhetoric of dictatorships in Latin America. Texts are studied as literary manifestations of particular historical and political periods. Critical approach designations: Genres, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

LIT 189S La cultura popular en la narrativa latinoamericana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Explores short stories and novels that have been greatly influenced by popular culture, not only in theme, but also by appropriation of popular forms of language and modes of representation. Includes works by authors from Mexico, Argentina, Cuba, and Colombia. Critical approach designations: Genres, Geographies. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

General Education Code

CC

LIT 189T Historia de la lectura y los lectores: Recepcion y consumo cultural en el mundo Latino Americano

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Explores historical readers and reading practices in at least three different formations: colonial, national-popular, and transnational. Proposes a historical-theoretical reconstruction of the place of reading and readers at key moments in the history of culture in Latin America. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

LIT 189U Modernidad y literatura: El Boom de la novela latinoamericana

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish required. Explores the relationships between literature and mass culture, modernization, and globalization through the study of the so-called Boom of Latin American narrative. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

LIT 189V Andean Indigenismo

An introduction to the indigenista movement in Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, and Paraguay, and to the literary and ideological debates surrounding it. Authors include Mariategui, Gonzalez Prada, Arguedas, Icaza, Alegria, and Vallejo. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zachary Zimmer

LIT 189X Estudios mediaticos

Investigates film, radio, video games, new media, and other newly emergent forms of cultural production in the Spanish-speaking world. Topics may include the historical study of media, media-focused analysis of literary texts, and new media translation. The course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Media.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zachary Zimmer

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

LIT 189Z Literatura de Chile

Speaking, reading, and writing proficienty in Spanish required. Focusing on narrative and poetry in Chile and their transformations during the 20th century, course examines the relationships between literature, nation, and representation. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Global.

Credits

5

Instructor

Juan Poblete

General Education Code

TA

LIT 190A Topics in Pre- and Early Modern Studies

Examination of individual authors or critical problems in ancient, medieval, or early modern/Renaissance literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirements: Pre-1750, Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 190F Studies in Poetry

Studies in English-language poetry. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirements: Poetry, Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Christopher Chen

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 190I Individual Authors

Intensive examination of works by individual authors. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Genres, Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kimberly Lau

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 190J Studies in English Language Literature

Studies of selected authors or issues in English language literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior Literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 190K Studies in U.S. Literature

Intensive examination of issues in U.S. literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Micah Perks

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 190L Topics in World Literature and Cultural Studies

Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirements: Global, Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith, G.S. Sahota

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 190N Studies in 19th-Century British Literature

Study of selected authors or issues in 19th-century British literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 190O Studies in Slavery, Race, and Nation in the Americas

Compares literatures and histories of slavery, abolitionism, and nationalism in 19th-century Cuba and the U.S. Readings include slave narratives and antislavery novels. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirements: Global, Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

LIT 190T Topics in Modern Literary Studies

Selected authors or issues in modern literary and cultural studies. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designation: Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Chris Chen, Kirsten Silva Gruesz

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter

LIT 190U Topics in Theory

Advanced work in theory (e.g., cultural, ideological, literary, social). Course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Canons, Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Dorian Bell

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors and minors.

General Education Code

TA

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 190V Fiction Senior Seminar

Satisfies the Creative Writing Literature concentration; also satisfies the senior seminar distribution requirement. Critical approach designation: Media. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jennifer Tseng

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior creative writing literature majors.

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 190W Poetry Senior Seminar

Satisfies the Creative Writing Literature concentration; also satisfies the senior seminar distribution requirement. Critical approach designation: Media. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior creative writing literature majors.

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 190X Temas de la literatura y cultura espanolas y latinoamericanas

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in Spanish is required. Examines authors or issues in Spanish and Latin American literature and cultures. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar. Spanish studies majors may use this course to satisfy the Spanish studies senior exit requirement.

Credits

5

Cross Listed Courses

SPAN 190A

Instructor

Amanda Smith

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to senior literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

General Education Code

CC

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 190Y Topics in Jewish Literature and Culture

Study of selected authors or issues related to modern Jewish literature and culture. Topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Histories, Power and Subjectivities. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar. Jewish Studies majors may use this course to satisfy the Jewish Studies senior exit requirement.

Credits

5

Instructor

Bruce Thompson

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements, and LIT 101 (for literature majors). Enrollment is restricted to senior literature and Jewish studies majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 190Z Topics in German Literature and Culture

Study of selected authors or issues related to German literature and culture. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic. Critical approach designations: Geographies, Histories. Distribution requirement: Senior Seminar. German studies majors may use this course to satisfy the German studies senior exit requirement.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

Requirements

Prerequisite(s): LIT 101 and satisfaction of the Entry Level Writing and Composition requirements. Enrollment is restricted to senior German studies and literature majors.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 191 Methodologies of Teaching

This three-credit course provides students with the theoretical and practical knowledge to help others become more careful, sensitive, and sophisticated readers of complex texts. Enrollment by permission of the instructor.

Credits

3

General Education Code

PR-S

LIT 192 Directed Student Teaching

Teaching of a lower-division seminar under faculty supervision. (See LIT 42.)

Credits

5

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 195A Senior Essay

Study of literature in English or English translation. Satisfies the Literature major senior exit distribution requirement. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to seniors.

Credits

5

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 195B Senior Essay

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish, or other non-English language required. Satisfies the Literature major senior exit distribution requirement. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Enrollment is restricted to seniors.

Credits

5

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 195C Senior Essay

Satisfies the Creative Writing senior exit distribution requirement. Prerequisite(s): LIT 101. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to senior creative writing literature majors.

Credits

5

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 198A Group Tutorial

Study of literature in English or English translation. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 198B Group Tutorial

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish or other non-English language required. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 198C Group Tutorial

Study of creative writing. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 199A Tutorial

Study of literature in English or English translation. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 199B Tutorial

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish or other non-English language required. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 199C Tutorial

Study of creative writing. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 199F Tutorial

Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.

Credits

2

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 200 Proseminar

The proseminar provides a common experience for entering students, facilitates exchange of ideas and approaches to literary and extra-literary texts, critical issues, and theoretical problems. It focuses on broad aspects of the history of theory and criticism, on the students' critical writing, and on aspects of professional development.

Credits

5

Instructor

Cooppan Vilashini

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 201 The Pedagogy of Literature

Provides training for graduate students in university-level pedagogy in general and in the pedagogy of literature specifically. Coordinated by a graduate student who has had substantial experience as a teaching assistant, under the supervision of a faculty member.

Credits

2

Instructor

The Staff

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 202 Colloquium

Student receives credit for attending a designated number of freestanding lectures, colloquia, symposia, or conferences during the term and reports orally, or in writing, to instructor. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

2

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 204 Readings in Literature

Focuses on selected texts or authors in literature and/or theory. Students meet with instructor to discuss readings and deepen their knowledge on a particular author, critic, theorist, or text.

Credits

2

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 205 Writing and Publication Practicum

Introduces the methods and practice of dissertation writing and publication in literature. Workshop format. Meets one hour per week.

Credits

2

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 206 Critical Writing Practicum

Reinforces writing and revision skills in the discipline of literary and cultural criticism and theory, covering various genres of writing in the profession. Designed for students preparing for QE or dissertation work. Workshop structure.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sharon Kinoshita

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 221 Canons

Considers literary canon formation through the lens of neglected or lost works by authors otherwise considered peripheral because of their language, cultural tradition, or regional affiliation.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 222 Topics in English Language Literature

Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sean Keilen

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 223 Periods and Movements

Examines a particular historical period or literary movement. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 224 Transnational Literatures

Investigation of English language literature which transcends national boundaries. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kirsten Silva Gruesz

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 230A Topics in Theory

Explores issues arising in both the modern practice of criticism and in writings on the theory of criticism. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 230B Narrative Theory

A survey of 20th-century narratology, emphasizing structuralist and poststructuralist theories of narrative.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 230C Feminist Theories/Historical Perspectives

A critical examination of feminist and related theories (queer, critical race, post-humanist) and criticism in historical and culturally specific contexts.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kimberly Lau

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 231A Studies in Literary and Cultural History

Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Renee Fox, Chris Connery

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 237A Modernism

Focuses on modernism and the intellectual and social forces which help illuminate that period. Considers concepts by which the innovative tendencies in 20th-century modernist literature and arts have been theorized and periodized, including high and late modernism, avant-garde and experimental, and the concept of global modernisms.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 240A Studies in Antiquity

An in-depth study of a topic in Mediterranean and Near Eastern antiquity.

Credits

5

Instructor

Martin Devecka

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Winter

LIT 240G History and Tragedy

Examines history, tragedy, and early science as ways of representing human experience in the Western canon. Topics include truth claims and questions of evidence, the nature of historical events, and tragedy as a political medium.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 243A Studies in Early Modernity

In-depth examination of a topic in Early Modern Studies. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Carla Freccero

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 243B Early Modern Colonial Encounters

This course will examine primary texts and interpretations, both fictional and archival, of the encounter between western Europe and non-European populations affected by European expansion from the 15th through the 18th centuries.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zachary Zimmer

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 246 Individual Authors

Focuses on work of a single author in literary historical and/or historical context. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Filippo Gianferrari

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 250 Theory and Methods

Global theories of history and cultural production. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zac Zimmer

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 251 Topics in Cultural Studies

The course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Susan Gillman, Christopher Connery

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 254 Religion and Post-Secular

An introduction to religion studies theory with emphasis on areas pertinent to literary and cultural studies and structured around the idea of the sacred text as scripture, as performed ritually and legally in society, and as problematized by post-colonial perspectives.

Credits

5

Instructor

Camilo Gomez-Rivas

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 279A Methods and Materials

A combined seminar and creative-writing workshop with a concentrated focus on a particular problem, aspect, or genre of poetry or prose writing. Includes reading and analysis of selected texts with critical responses and creative writing. Explores the productive interaction between various practices of scholarship and creative invention. The course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Chris Chen

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Spring

LIT 279B Writing Studio

In this graduate-level, multi-genre course, students develop their own creative projects of publishable quality under the guidance of the instructor.

Credits

5

Instructor

Ronaldo Wilson

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students in the creative/critical concentration or by permission of the instructor.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 282A Studies in Literary Genres

An in-depth examination of one genre of French literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 282B Studies in Literary and Cultural History

In-depth examination of one period of French literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Carla Freccero

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall

LIT 282C Texts and Contexts

The implications of social and political change examined in terms of literary theory and practice. Equal emphasis placed on literary and other kinds of cultural texts: historical, political, cinematic.

Credits

5

Instructor

G.S. Sahota

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 282D Topics in Theory

Credits

5

Instructor

Dorian Bell

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 282F French Literature Outside France

A study of texts written in French-speaking cultures: Belgium, Canada, Africa, the Caribbean.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 283A Deutsche Literatur und Kultur

Examination of topics within German literature. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

A. Hunter Bivens

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 285E Boccaccio

Critical study of the Decameron.

Credits

5

LIT 285H Studies in Italian Literature and Culture

Reading proficiency in Italian is required. Close examination of a topic in Italian literature and culture. Course topic changes; see the Class Search for current topic.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 288C Don Quijote

Concentrates on the study and analysis of Miguel de Cervantes' major work Don Quijote, with a three-part structure: life and literature in Don Quijote; Cervantes-the father of the modern novel; and madness and ingenio in Don Quijote.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 288F Writing and Re-Writing of the Conquest and Colonial Period in Spanish America

Study of 1) the writings (chronicles, memoirs, diaries, letters) comprising European and indigenous accounts of the encounter and indigenous, criolla, and mestiza writings during the colony; and 2) the re-writings of these events in contemporary post-colonial novels.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zachary Zimmer

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 288M Cuba

Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 288O The Conquest through the Eyes of Contemporary Writers

Analyzes contemporary writers who fictionalize the phenomenon of the conquest of the Americas. These authors, who combine chronicles, biographies, and accounts with fiction, offer an imaginative way to view history.

Credits

5

Instructor

Zachary Zimmer

LIT 288P The Avant Garde in Latin America

Emerging from a Europe in crisis, this 20th-century avante-garde movement opened a space in Latin/o American literature for the emergence of a post-western aesthetic exploring a cultural identity in difference. A deconstruction of vanguardismo, lo real maravilloso, lo fantástico, lo mítico-antropológico, and realismo mágico.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 288S Citiscapes

Theories of space/place poetics and politics, and the literary and visual re-presentations of urban spaces in Latin/o America. Questions of identity and location in modernist poetics, and the ways difference (gender, ethnicity, and sexuality) inhabit and imagine the post-modern lettered city.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 288U Spain in the Eyes/Camera of Pedro Almodovar

Contemporary Spain through the camera of Pedro Almodovar from transgressive enthusiasm, experimentation, and cultural disobedience of the 1980s to more universal themes of human nature and borderline experiences in the pursuit of love, relationships, beauty, and art.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jorge Aladro Font

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 288W Becoming European

Course considers the process of globalization as it has affected Spain in the last ten years. Through the study of a variety of cultural texts, it explores the challenges presented to national identity and the emergence of new subjectivities and collective identities.

Credits

5

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

LIT 288Y Teoria Critica en America Latina

Overview of contemporary theoretical issues in Latin American cultural critique. Course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Amanda Smith

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 288Z Literatura y sociedad

Analyzes the relationship between Latin American cultural products and their cultural, economic, and political contexts. The course topic changes; please see the Class Search for the current topic.

Credits

5

Instructor

Kirsten Silva Gruesz

Requirements

Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.

Repeatable for credit

Yes

LIT 291F Advising

Independent study formalizing the advisee-adviser relationship. Regular meetings to plan, assess, and monitor academic progress and to evaluate coursework as necessary. May be used to develop general bibliography of background reading and trajectory of study. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

2

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 293 Independent Study: Creative Writing

Individual study with a professor in the creative/critical concentration. Written work is required. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 294 Teaching-Related Independent Study

Directed graduate research and writing coordinated with teaching of undergraduates. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 295A Directed Reading

Study of literature in English or English translation. Directed reading that does not involve a term paper. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 295B Directed Reading

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish, or other non-English language required. Directed reading which does not involve a term paper. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 295C Directed Reading

Study of creative writing. Directed reading that does not involve a term paper. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 296A Special Student Seminar

Study of literature in English or English translation. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 296B Special Student Seminar

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish, or other non-English language required. Directed reading which does not involve a term paper. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 296C Special Student Seminar

Study of creative writing. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 297A Independent Study

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 297B Independent Study

Speaking, reading, and writing proficiency in French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish, or other non-English language required. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

10

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 297F Independent Study

Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment restricted to graduate students.

Credits

2

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 299A Thesis Research

Thesis Research

Credits

5

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring

LIT 299B Thesis Research

Thesis Research

Credits

10

Repeatable for credit

Yes

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Spring