Section | Semester | Instructor | Time | Location | Course Areas |
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1 | Fall 2022 | Flynn, Catherine
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MW 5-6:30 | Wheeler 301 |
This year marks the centenary of James Joyce’s Ulysses, widely considered the most important novel of the twentieth century. We will consider the book at a variety of scales: word, sentence, narrative strategy, and organizational structure. We will also consider it from a variety of perspectives: as an expression of the historical and political context of 1904 and of the years leading up to its publication in 1922, as a primary force in the ruptures and inventions of literary modernism, as a mirror and a harbinger of transformations in the social understanding of gender, sex, and the individual, and as the focus of evolving literary critical responses over the past hundred years,
Please click here for more information about enrollment in English 190.
fall, 2022 |
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Research Seminar: Crisis and Culture: The 1930s, 1970s, and post-2008 in Comparative Perspective |
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190/7 |
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190/8 |
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190/9 |
spring, 2022 |
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Research Seminar: Race and Travel: Relative Alterity in Medieval Times and Places |
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190/8 |
fall, 2021 |
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Research Seminar: Literature on Trial: Romanticism, Law, Justice |
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190/8 |
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190/11 |
spring, 2021 |
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Research Seminar: Literary Collaboration: Samuel Coleridge and William and Dorothy Wordsworth |
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Research Seminar: Black Postcolonial Cultures: Real and Imagined Spaces |
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190/7 |
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190/8 |
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190/9 |