Section | Semester | Instructor | Time | Location | Course Areas |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 | Spring 2019 | Starr, George A.
Bader, Julia |
Tues. 5-8:30 (incl. 1/2 hr. break) | 300 Wheeler |
In this course short 19th- and 20th-century writings available electronically, by such authors as G. W. Harris, J. J. Hooper, Mark Twain, F. P. Dunne, G. Ade, R. Lardner, J. Thurber and the like, will be read and discussed, with the aim not of constructing a history but of exploring the roles of psychology, society, politics and language in American humor. Much of the course will follow the shift from live stage and printed word to radio and movie as the chief vehicles of American humor by focusing first on Chaplin, Keaton and other masters of the silent era, then on the range of comic styles and genres of the 30’s and 40’s. Developments since W. W. II, including the advent of television and new generations of humorists, will also be considered.
Writing will consist of two essays of 5 or 6 pages each or one essay of 10-12 pages. There will be no exams, but the hope is to conduct this course as a seminar, in which case attendance and participation will be expected, and will affect grades.
spring, 2022 |
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165/1 |
summer, 2022 |
||
165/1 |
Special Topics: Writing at the University: A Writing Studio for Transfer Students |
Atkinson, Nate
|
fall, 2021 |
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165/2 |
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165/3 |
Special Topics: Rebel Slaves and Dark Doubles: Black Women Writers' Engagements with Jane Eyre |
spring, 2021 |
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165/2 |
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165/3 |
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165/4 |
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165/5 |
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165/6 |
Special Topics: “Moments of Truth”: Narrating the Endings of Lies, Disinformation, and Deceit |
Ramona Naddaff
|
summer, 2021 |
||
165/1 |
Special Topics: Writing at the University: A Writing Studio for Transfer Students |
Atkinson, Nate
|