Special topic courses: Spring 2020
Experience and Engage
Special topic course descriptions: Spring 2020
Click each title below to expand the descriptions of our special topic courses offered for Spring 2020. Please note, this selection showcases special courses only. This list cannot replace the support or knowledge of your advisor, especially in choosing for degree or minor competion. A comprehensive listing of courses is available through the CSU online course catalog and through RAMWeb.
Undergraduate Courses
E329 Pragmatics & Discourse Analysis | 3 credits | Luciana Marques | 2:00-2:50pm MWF
E329 introduces the study of Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis in natural languages, with examples
from English and other languages. Pragmatics is the study of general principles that communicators
invoke when producing and interpreting language in context. Discourse analysis studies the properties of
specific types of language use in specific settings, e.g., conversational, advertising, legal, medical,
educational, as well as such topics as politeness, gender, genre, identity, and culture, all areas of exciting
current research and discovery. In this class, you will understand and be able to make analytic use of the
essential concepts in the study of pragmatics and discourse analysis; you will become familiar with
variant terminology; you will become proficient in basic linguistic analysis and will begin to apply
analytic techniques to data you have collected yourself.
E333.001 Critical Studies of Popular Texts – Science Fiction | 3 credits | Lynn Badia |12:30-1:45pm TR
This course fulfills a Category 3 elective requirement for English majors.
How do we imagine the future in literary texts? From post-apocalyptic landscapes to the alternative
worlds of Indigenous futurism, we will analyze a range of speculative realities offered to us in science
fiction. This course explores the history of the genre and the topics that continually animate it, including
utopia/dystopia/heterotopia, artificial intelligence, genetic engineering, and resource wars. We will
examine science and speculative fiction through a range of media (novels, films, short stories,
manifestoes, etc.) and think critically about the questions it poses concerning science, community,
ecology, colonialism, and the future of the human species.
E337.001 Western Mythology | 3 credits | William Marvin | 12:00-12:50pm MWF
This course fulfills a Category 4 elective requirement for English majors and world literature
for English Education concentrators. It also counts toward the Religious Studies minor.
The gods who emerged from the timelessness of pre-creation, the cannibal gods and the cosmic gods
who with war shaped the order of existence, and the gods who loved sacrifice, ruled in discord, and had
ado with mortals in the guises of human-and-animal-kind: These are the personified inscrutables that
“western myth” built a coherent core of narration around, and to this narration attached plots and
characters in endless variety. Even the story-telling itself, like creation, began in time immemorial. Its
main cycles coalesced in spite of migrations and the wrack of civilizations, long even before the advent
of writing and literature. But literature, when it came, changed everything. No longer was hieratic myth,
the mythology of priests, to be solely the property of cult. This course is about how poets in the age of
writing reshaped the potential of the gods. We will track the gods’ wanderings from their cultic origins
in magic and hymn to their fluorescence in Sumerian and Greek creation myth, Indic and Germanic
dragon slaying, Greek siege epic around the war for Helen of Troy, up to the point of the Roman desacralization of the gods in a modern kind of erudite, humane irony. We shall discover furthermore how
myth first prompted literary criticism, when readers asked if what Homer said about the immortal gods
was true? So, the course will also cover the history of reading myth from classical antiquity to the
present, develop this history into a set of critical perspectives, and apply these as hermeneutic tools to
the myths as we read them.
E338.001 Ethnic Literature in the United States | 3 Credits | Leif Sorensen | 2:00-2:50pm MWF
This course fulfills a Category 3 elective requirement for English majors.
This class offers a survey of contemporary ethnic writing from the U.S. We will read a range of genres
(fiction, nonfiction, poetry, drama, and graphic novels). Because contemporary writing is in dialogue
with a range of media, we will also watch films and discuss digital art and storytelling. Our texts include
popular commercial blockbusters, critically acclaimed works from mainstream publishers, and lesserknown experimental works from small presses. Focusing on ethnic writing published since the year
2000 will give us an opportunity to think about how ethnicity functions in the twenty-first century U.S.
and to consider how different artists imagine the future of identity. Authors covered will likely include
Claudia Rankine, Colson Whitehead, Ocean Vuong, Valeria Luiselli, Ta-Nahesi Coates, Stephen
Graham Jones, and others. Students will write a final project on a topic of their choosing as well as a
series of short papers focused on individual texts.
E339.001 Literature of the Earth | 3 Credits | Lynn Badia | 11:00-12:15pm TR
This course fulfills a Category 2 or 3 elective requirement for English majors.
In this course we will explore how literary narratives shape our knowledge and experience of the natural
world. Covering several literary genres over the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries, we will gain
critical perspective on how literature and narrative shape our planetary and environmental
consciousness. Over the course of the semester, we will develop a critical vocabulary for thinking about
environmental issues while examining the history of concepts such as “nature” and “wilderness” and
their entanglements with literary and cultural projects. Readings will include the work of authors such as
Thomas King, Helon Habila, Barbara Kingsolver, and Leslie Marmon Silko.
E344.001 Shakespeare | 3 credits | Barbara Sebek | 11:00-12:00pm TR
This course fulfills a Category 1 or 4 elective requirement for English majors.
In this new incarnation of Shakespeare in the English curriculum, we will study six plays, one of which will
be selected by students. Students will have the option to study a play by one of Shakespeare’s popular
contemporary playwrights. Theatre historians estimate that 25,000 people per week attended performances in
and around London, totaling 50 million visits between 1576 and 1640. Shakespeare remains the most
familiar of those who wrote for this flourishing institution. We will study how different plays recast
important issues in the playwright’s culture. Shakespeare's era was one of rapid change and, for many of his
contemporaries, a time of disruptive upheaval in the social order and cultural values. How do Shakespeare's
plays register and intervene in debates about politics, religion, gender, family, and other social conflicts? In
addition to reading the plays in their historical contexts, we’ll consider recent screen productions as creative
appropriations that speak to our own moment.
E344.002 Shakespeare | 3 credits | Aparna Gollapudi | 9:00-9:50am MWF
This course fulfills a Category 1 or 4 elective requirement for English majors.
In this course, we will study a selection of Shakespeare's plays, from tragedies and comedies to histories
and romances. While we will focus on elements such as Shakespeare’s use of dramatic conventions and
modes, his dramatic vision, his figurative language, etc., the course also emphasizes the plays’ status as
theatrical performance. We will also place these texts in their social and historical context, examining
the issues of class, politics, nationalism, race, gender, and sexuality in these plays.
E345.001 American Drama | 3 credits | Ryan Claycomb | 4:00-5:15pm TR
This course fulfills Category 2 or 4 elective requirement for English Majors.
From our earliest texts, Americans writing in English have believed that the world is always watching
us; in response, we imagine ourselves as always on stage. Our drama reflects this: an understanding that
we perform who we are in public, that the vagaries of American place can and must be represented in
stage space, that the groups of people that we invite to the theatre reflect those people we invite into our
American communities. American drama, then, doesn’t just happen to be America, or even about
America—it’s often at its best working to enact America. As such, we will examine the
representational messages of plays from across this history, and how those messages influence their
audiences.
The semester will cover a range of historical periods and styles: 19th-century sentimental drama, social
realism, expressionism, epic theatre, agit-prop, and even performance art. We will examine these plays
and styles both for the political positions they espouse and for the way that these styles and forms use
the stage to achieve specific artistic and social ends.
E406.001 Topics in Literacy - Literacies, Borders, & (Counter) Narratives | 3 Credits | Tobi Jacobi | 9:30-10:45am TR
This course is for English majors and minors across all concentrations. It is required for Writing,
Rhetoric, and Literacy concentrators.
“Literacy is a bridge from misery to hope.” ~Kofi Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations (1997-2006)
This course will explore the bridges, edges, boundaries, and possibilities of literacyas central to our
lives. We’ll begin with these questions: How do borders—real and imagined— influence our
experiences as readers and writers? How might encounters with geographic, psychological, familial and
professional boundaries shape and be shaped by our language and literacy practices? We will explore
the consequences and possibilities through conversation, writing, and critique. We will explore a
multiplicity of narratives and diversity of literacy experiences by reading and responding across
historical contexts (U.S. and beyond) and looking deeply in our own neighborhoods through some local
archive work. Texts will include a prison memoir, a graphic novel featuring a (slightly) alternate reality,
and a heavily annotated map of a well-known metropolis—to name a few—as well as community-based
and critical texts.
As a class we will establish (and inevitably challenge) some working definitions for our key concepts
and apply them across varied contexts. Our primary goals, then, will be 1) to locate literacies
within/across diverse geographies and contexts; 2) to define, interrogate, and challenge the relationship
between literacy, borders, and counter/narratives through course readings and experiences; and 3) to
reflect upon and make sense of the implications of these insights through a community-based project.
Assignments will include short response papers, experimental writing, a research project, and, perhaps,
even map-making.
E441.001 American Prose Since 1900 - The Problem of Now: Reading the 2010s | 3 credits | Mark Bresnan | 10:00-10:50am MWF
This course fulfills Category 2 or 3 elective requirement for English Majors.
This course focuses on the very recent past, asking students to consider how contemporary literature fits
into the long tradition of literature written in English. When reading the last decade, how useful are
national boundaries, especially in contrast to ethnic and cultural categories? Is the literature of the last
decade fundamentally different than what came just a few years before it? How have advances in
information technology changed the status and content of contemporary literature? How does a book
become "literature" in contemporary culture? We will explore these questions by reading a broad range
of literary work including both familiar genres (novels, poetry, essays) and less familiar forms: a graphic
novel, a young adult novel, an experimental poetry collection, a collage essay, and a work of e-fiction.
E444.00 Restoration and 18th - Century Drama | 3 credits | Aparna Gollapudi | 1:00-1:50pm MWF
This course fulfills a Category 1 elective requirement for English majors.
Dangerously seductive rakes, pretty flirts, crotchety old men, garrulous servants, ruined maidens, saintly
wives, good-hearted beaux, merchants both greedy and generous – these are the colorful characters that
thronged the stage from 1660 to the end of the eighteenth century. This course studies some of the most
significant plays produced by this thriving theatre culture. Comedy was by and large the more popular
genre, so we will be reading some hilarious plays with razor-sharp wit and rollicking farce. Our
exploration of tragedies, though more limited, will focus on important milestones in the changing
notions of tragic experience in the period. The course will not only contextualize the plays within the
socio-cultural milieu but also study them as constructs meant for performance by enacting particular
scenes. The aim of the course is to encourage students to be perceptive readers and interpreters of
dramatic literature by introducing them to the exciting world of Restoration and eighteenth-century
drama.
E451.001 Medieval Literature - Writing the Crusades | 3 credits | Lynn Shutters | 3:30-4:45pm TR
This course fulfills a Category 1 elective requirement for English majors.
The Crusades are often imagined as a simplistic ideological conflict between medieval Christians and
Muslims centered on Jerusalem. The reality is much more complex: this series of wars spanning from
the eleventh to the fifteenth centuries encompassed multiple peoples, places, and political and cultural
imperatives. In this class we’ll examine medieval literary representations of the Crusades to consider the
many ways in which medieval authors re-imagined these wars as well as their reasons for doing so.
We’ll also examine Western representations of Islamic cultures more generally to get a sense of the
broader spectrum of European attitudes towards Muslims. Finally, we’ll study some Islamic accounts of
the Crusades and European Christians. While we’ll mostly read literature in translation, we’ll also study
a few texts in Middle English. No prior experience with Middle English is required, but you should be
ready and willing to work with it in this class.
E456.001 Topics in Critical Theory | 3 Credits | Paul Trembath |1:00-1:50pm MWF
This course fulfills a Category 3 elective requirement for English majors.
No description
E465.001 Topics in Literature and Language – World English(es) | 3 credits | Gerald Delahunty | 1:00-1:50pm MWF
This course fulfills the capstone requirement for all majors. For English Educations concentrators only,
it fulfills both the capstone and a Category 4 upper-division English requirement. English majors who
already have the capstone can count it as a Category 4 elective.
English is currently the world's most used language. It is written and spoken across the globe as a first
language, a second language, a foreign language, and as a lingua franca, especially for such special
purposes as diplomacy, education, science, and business. This course will briefly trace the history of
English from its Indo-European origins, through its establishment as a West Germanic language in
England, its near-death experience and subsequent transubstantiation as a result of the Norman
Conquest, its efflorescence during the Renaissance, its travels and travails as it spread beyond Britain to
the rest of the British Isles and thence to worlds new and not so new as Pilgrim warriors and the
Honorable East India Company gave it precarious perches west and east, which the engorgement of
empire congealed into solid footings, establishing its now undisputed position as the language-to-know
for world travelers, diplomats, entrepreneurs, and scholars. Along its way, English has butted up against
all of the world's major and many of its minor languages, cultures, and societies, destroying some,
borrowing from many, lending to others, so that it now has unprecedented expressive resources and
influence, but also so much internal variation that native speakers can find it hard to understand each
other and it seems to be coming apart at its dialectal seams. Is it still a single language? Has it already
divided into several languages, as Latin did into the Romance languages? (How can we tell?) How is it
responding to the competition from Mandarin, Hindi/Urdu, and Spanish, the world's next most-used
languages? All are welcome; no linguistics background needed.
E465.002 Topics in Literature and Language – Reading and Creating the Graphic Novel | 3 credits | Todd Mitchell | 2:00-3:45pm TR
This course fulfills the capstone requirement for all majors. For English Education concentrators only,
it fulfills both the capstone and a Category 3 upper-division English requirement. English majors who
already have the capstone can count it as a Category 3 elective.
Graphic literature is one of the fastest growing areas in publishing, education, and critical studies, with
some graphic memoirs recently winning awards such as the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award,
and the Printz Award.
In this interactive course we'll take a practitioner's approach to help us better understand graphic
texts and the many ways form and content interact. This means that in addition to reading and discussing
a diverse range of graphic memoirs, we'll work on creating our own graphic memoirs to explore the
multitude of choices writers and artists make when creating graphic texts. Formal elements such as page
layout, placement of text and images, use of different drawing and writing styles, as well as the process
of producing graphic texts (outlining, scripting, dummy creation, drawing, inking, lettering, and
coloring) will be discussed. The course will combine analytical work with creative work to meet the
entwined goals of increasing critical literacy while developing creative skills.
Students will participate in critical discussions of diverse graphic memoirs, presentations on the
evolving form, frequent creative activities, and several workshops of their developing creative work. Art
and design skills are not necessary. Even stick people can tell a powerful story (as some of the texts
we'll look at will demonstrate).
The course will culminate with students creating a graphic memoir portfolio of 15-25 pages of
original work, along with a 4-7-page analytical essay discussing the texts they encountered during the
course, and how these texts influenced their creative exploration of their selves. Overall, students will be
encouraged to use graphic memoirs to better understand themselves and the creative process, and the
creative process to better understand graphic texts.
Graduate Courses
E507.001 Special Topics in Linguistics – Language Across Cultures | 3 Credits | Tatiana Nekrasova-Beker | 11:00-12:15pm TR
Required Textbook: Bennett, M. J. (2013). Basic concepts of intercultural communication: Paradigms, principles, & practices. 2nd ed. Boston, MA: Intercultural Press.
The main goals of this course are:
- Examine the ways in which language and culture interact.
- Engage in empirical examinations of communication practices that reflect cultural
differences (including instances of both intercultural conflict and cooperation) and/or incorporate
empirical findings in pedagogical developments.
The course will provide theoretical and methodological insights into intercultural communication and will give students an opportunity to apply their knowledge through reflection and critical analysis of various manifestations of intercultural communication differences. Students will carry out a research/curriculum development project to explore the effect of cultural variables in language use, learning, and teaching.
E515.001 – Syntax for ESL/EFL | 3 credits | Gerald Delahunty | 3:00-3:50pm MWF
Teachers of English as a second or foreign language must be familiar with the major syntactic patterns of English, their typical meanings and uses, and with the inflectional and derivational morphology they entail. This knowledge will enable them to appropriately select and present this material in a variety of teaching circumstances, as well as to read and make use of grammatical descriptions of English and other languages.
Students completing this course will be able to understand the linguistic concepts in ESL/EFL pedagogical materials and in SLA research; they will be familiar with variant terminology; they will be proficient in basic linguistic analysis; and will be able to apply analytic techniques to learner data.
The course will focus on topics in English syntax and relevant morphology, but comparative/contrastive data from other languages will be introduced, especially from those languages whose native speakers our graduates are most likely to teach. The topics are selected so as to maximize the overlap with the topics, constructions, and terminology current in the major ESL/EFL grammar texts.
E527.001 Theories of Foreign/Second Language Learning | 3 credits | Tatiana Nekrasova-Beker | 2:00-3:15pm TR
Required Textbook: VanPatten, B., & Williams, J. (2015). Theories in Second Language Acquisition. An Introduction. (2nd edition). New York: Routledge.
This course provides an introduction to the field of second language acquisition (SLA) focusing
specifically on how humans learn a second (or third) language in addition to their native language and
the factors that affect variability in their language development. Areas covered in this course include
background on the historical development of the field, universal features of the L2 learner, interlanguage
development and variability, individual differences, and social factors affecting L2 learning. In addition,
the course introduces a variety of experimental methods used in SLA research and highlights the
implications of SLA findings for L2 teaching. Student will read and discuss research articles in SLA and
engage in the analysis of learner data.
E528.001 Professional ESL Teaching – Theory to Practice | 3 credits | Luciana Marques | 4:00-5:15pm MW
E528 offers pre-service TEFL/TESL teachers a guided opportunity to learn about and apply principles
for planning, designing, and carrying out effective classroom instruction and assessment. The main goal
of the course is to help establish connections between theory and practice and to engage students in
constructive interactions about language teaching experiences with colleagues. In this class, you will be
able to formulate a teaching philosophy, create theory-informed lesson plans and materials, deliver
appropriate EFL/ESL instruction in a controlled setting, and reflect on your own teaching practices, with
then ultimate goal of improving your knowledge and skills in EFL/ESL teaching, ensuring professional
growth.
E605.001 Critical Posthumanist Approaches to Reading and Writing | 3 credits | Ericka Szymanski | 3:30-4:45pm TR
Humanist traditions have encouraged attention to the individual writer and reader and their experiences. Today, many scholars find focusing on the individual human actor unproductive in a world characterized by the manifestations of mass denial of human interdependence. Posthumanist scholars have responded by rethinking reading and writing as interconnected beyond and outside the individual. Critical theorists, rhetoricians, and diverse writing scholars have made sense of writers as interdependent assemblages or ecologies, and of reading and writing practices as necessarily products of community and environment. Readers and writers have been identified as other-than-human and more-than-human, living and otherwise. In this class, we will investigate theories (and some practices) of posthumanist reading and writing across feminist, technology and innovation studies, digital rhetoric, cyborg,
indigenous, ecological, and environmental trajectories, asking how they respond to various manifestations of social (including environmental) injustices. We will each choose a contemporary question or issue of interest to us having to do with reading, writing, and/or literacy so that collectively, through the semester, we can ask: what do these various methods of reconfiguring “the writer,” reading, and writing, do in practice? How do they configure questions or problems of interest to us, and what can (and cannot) be gained as a result?
E630A.001 Special Topics in Literature: Area Studies – Medieval Emotion: Texts, Lives, and Afterlife | 3 credits | Lynn Shutters | 12:30-1:45pm TR
This course will examine medieval literary and non-literary texts as means to excavate how medieval peoples formulated and practiced emotions. We will also consider how non-medievalist scholars in the field of emotion studies have positioned the Middle Ages and what larger historical trajectories such positionings invite. For example, sociologist Norbert Elias influentially argued that medieval people were limited to childlike practices of emotion that would evolve as history progressed beyond the Middle Ages, while historian William R. Reddy has controversially claimed that present-day Western formulations of romantic love first took shape in medieval court culture. Who, if anyone, is right, and how does our answer to this question affect how we assess Western culture today? Finally, we will consider what specific interventions literary specialists can make in emotion studies. Traditionally, literary texts have been viewed as fanciful and therefore fundamentally untrustworthy as historical accounts of emotion. Literary specialists both within and beyond medieval studies have argued against this position, although on diverse grounds and via differing methodologies. In sum, this class will connect medieval, literary, and emotion studies to enrich our understanding of literature, historicism, and past and present practices of emotional life.
E632.001 Professional Concerns in English - Conceptualizing and Enacting Mindfulness Practices in Educational Settings | 3 Credits | Cindy O’Donnell-Allen | 4:30-6:00pm T
In case you haven’t noticed, mindfulness has gone mainstream. Self-help texts, websites, meditation apps, and podcasts underscore the benefits of “intentional living,” “being present,” and “self-care” for the individual ensnared in a busy world. Still, the current preoccupation with mindfulness indicates a continued relevance over time, particularly when informed by more considered views that are embedded in contemplative traditions, scientific research, and intentional personal and collective practice. This course is for you if you are interested in mindful, sustainable pedagogies that are animated by an ethic of activism, hope, and action around issues of social injustice, with the goal of enacting awareness-based change. This course is required for students in English Education, but students from all programs who expect to engage in formal or informal teaching at some point in their careers are welcome.
What will you do in this course?
You will explore mindfulness-based approaches to teaching and learning in varied formal and informal contexts and will examine the literacies that are implicitly and explicitly embedded within them. In so doing, you will trouble a view of mindfulness as encapsulated by an almost exclusive and optimistic focus on the “self” and will critique the principles and practices that undergird mainstream mindfulness approaches that oftentimes privilege a white, middle-class ethos and thus may fall short in addressing the identities and life conditions of historically marginalized students and the educators who work with them. Finally, though it is beyond the official scope of the course, I hope you will discover and reflect on the potential of a mindfulness framework to inform your living and learning as well.
What will you read?
You will read texts written by authors steeped in classic, contemplative traditions of mindfulness
(e.g., Thich Nhat Hanh and Pema Chödrön); critical literacy and mindfulness-based pedagogies (e.g.,
Django Paris & Samy Alim; Louise Jennings); neuroscience (e.g., Daniel Goleman & Richard
Davidson; Jon Kabat-Zinn; Bessel van der Kolk); and expressive writing (e.g., David Whyte, Mary
Oliver, Herman Hesse, as well as anthologized works, such as, The Poetry of Impermanence,
Mindfulness, and Joy).
What will you do?
- Create a multimodal project informed by archival, biographical, and critical/theoretical research that
traces the lineage of an educator, broadly defined, who consciously uses a mindfulness perspective to
inform their practice - Participate in a book club, where you will read primers on mindfulness published in the popular press,
and then collaboratively create a “mindfulness primer” of your own - Regularly engage in mindfulness practices of your choosing and reflect on your experiences in a
personal blog, where you will document the literacies that enable your participation and the holistic
impact of mindfulness on your experiences in educational and personal contexts - Design a final project of your choosing that synthesizes your learning for the course, such as a
mini-ethnography, treatise on mindfulness, or a collection of mindfulness-based curriculum
E633.001 Special Topics in Writing and Rhetoric – Feeling Things: Critical Emotion Studies and Cultural Materialism | 3 Credits | Lisa Langstraat | 11:00-12:15am TR
“Feeling Things” merges two highly interdisciplinary areas of inquiry: critical emotion studies and material culture studies. These fields of investigation ask questions that challenge popular (and scholarly) notions of feelings and material things: Critical emotion studies asks not, “What are emotions?” but, “What do emotions do as they circulate through affective economies?” (Ahmed). And material culture studies asks not, “How do people make use of things?” but, “How do things make use of people in cultures where the boundaries between object and subject blur?” (Brown). “Feeling Things” will provide graduate students with opportunities to understand contemporary critical emotion studies and material culture theory, as well as to make sense of their own affective identifications with material culture.
“Feeling Things” is divided into several interrelated sections: Section one of the course will focus on providing an overview of major theoretical approaches to critical emotion studies and material culture studies and will examine intersections between these areas of inquiry. Texts in this section will also represent a variety of genres: traditional academic monographs, memoir, film, and performative research (e.g., Walker and Glenn’s “Significant Objects” project on eBay). Section two will focus on particular emotional economies and the “thing-y” practices associated with them, e.g., works that concentrate specifically on taste and curating, obsession and collecting, anxiety/fear and hoarding; and social movements whose political and economic raison d’etre depends on constructing affective identifications with the things associated with each movement, e.g., histories of slavery and the raced artifacts
associated with them.
E635.00 Critical Studies in Literature and Culture – Unruly Audiences: Riots, Resistance, Rotten Tomatoes | 3 Credits | Barb Sebek | 2:00-2:45pm TR
This course will study some theoretical accounts of theatrical audiences (cultural studies, Marxist, performance studies, reception studies) and three case studies in which theater audiences misbehave, resist, or otherwise express discontent in response to theatrical performances. What theoretical, cultural, historical, and aesthetic frameworks and contexts are most fruitful for understanding instances of audience resistance or revolt, whether real or imagined? What class-specific assumptions shape how unruly theatrical events are recounted? We will read both academic and general audience studies of some notable instances of unruly audiences and how these accounts are informed by implicit and explicit aesthetic, critical, and political investments.
Our three central case studies will come from different historical and cultural moments. The first of these will be an early seventeenth-century play, Francis Beaumont’s Knight of the Burning Pestle, in which (scripted) audience members, the grocer George and his wife Nell, step onto the stage and object to the satirical city comedy The London Merchant that the players are starting to perform. George and Nell demand instead a chivalric adventure tale, to star none other than their grocer’s apprentice Rafe as the titular Knight. Our next case study will be the cultural text of the Astor Place Riots in New York City in the mid-nineteenth century, response to rival performances of Macbeth in which hundreds were injured and over twenty killed. Our final case study will be the so-called “Merdre riot” in Paris that purportedly disrupted the 1896 premier of Alfred Jarry’s experimental play Ubu Roi. We’ll study “standard” accounts of the event as well as critical revisions scrutinizing how standard accounts of the
scandal serve particular critical, cultural, and aesthetic interests and investments. For the main project, students will research and write about a case study of their own choosing. This course fulfills the pretwentieth-century requirement.
E636.001 Environmental Literature & Criticism | 3 credits | Lynn Badia | 3:00-5:50pm W
This course is a focused examination of environmental literature, film, and theory from the early
twentieth century to the present day, and it serves as an introduction to the fields of Environmental and
Energy Humanities. We will cover a range of literary genres and learn to think critically about how texts
not only represent the natural world but also narrativize and shape our interactions with it. We will
examine texts utilizing critical frameworks informed by environmental justice, feminism,
(post)colonialism, and Indigenous perspectives. Authors may include Stacy Alaimo, Amitav Gosh,
Helon Habila, Donna Haraway, Kyle Powys Whyte, and Jeff Vandermeer.
E638.001 Assessment of English Language Learners–Assessment in the TEFL/TESL Classroom | 3 credits | Anthony Becker | 11:00-11:50am MWF
This course prepares language teaching professionals with the knowledge and skills they need to design, implement, and utilize language assessments that are reliable, valid, and ethically-based. Specifically, the course familiarizes students with the fundamental concepts and principles involved in the language assessment of second/foreign language learners, and it engages students in the planning and construction of both traditional and alternative language assessments. Furthermore, the course develops students’ ability to analyze and interpret statistical results, for the purposes of guiding instruction and improving language program effectiveness. Finally, the course invites students to investigate the ways in which assessment results can be used to account for and evaluate student performance, as well as improve language teaching practices.