CRITICAL PRACTICE ( Cultural Studies of the Novel: Formalism and Historicism) | Harkins | TTh 11:30-1:20 | 12831 |
This course provides a follow up to English 202, the Introduction to the English major. It is a practicum of critical methods. This particular 302 will provide in-depth practice in “cultural studies” approaches to the novel. Our focus on cultural studies will include attention to the following methodological questions: what is the “form” in formalist approaches to the novel? What is “historicism” and why would you use it to read novels? What kinds of critical practices – close reading, archive development, historical research – are important to cultural studies methodologies? Does narratology (the study of narrative form) have a role? What about ethnography or other research methods from anthropology, sociology, or the empirical human sciences? By the end of the course, students should have a grasp of various approaches to the study of culture and narrative forms. Students will also have been exposed to a range of social and political questions related to cultural studies methodologies, including theories of race, gender, sexuality, and class. In addition to materials collected in a course reader we will read the following novels: Henry James, Daisy Miller; Jeanette Winterson, The Passion; and Caryl Philips, Crossing the River.