01:195:101Introduction to World Literature (3) Classics of Western and Eastern literature. Readings may include the
Odyssey, the Tao Te Ching, Roman poetry, Beowulf, Shakuntala, The Tale
of Genji, troubadour poetry, and Dante's Inferno.
01:195:135Introduction to Short Fiction (3) The novella, short story, and short novel in Western and non-Western literary traditions. Authors: Boccaccio, Kleist, Hoffmann, Gogol, Dostoevsky, Mann, Kafka, Gide, and Akutagawa.
01:195:150World Mythology (3) Story, structure, and meaning in myths of many cultures. Myth as a primary literary phenomenon, with some attention to anthropological and psychological perspectives.
01:195:160Topics in Comparative Study (2) Designed to introduce students to the discipline of comparative literature by exposing them to six major literary texts within the context of critical and theoretical texts both of the period in which they originated and of later periods.
01:195:201Literature across Borders (3) The concept and practice of comparative literature across historical periods, cultures, and genres. Team-taught by the core faculty, and each year considers a different theme or critical problem.
01:195:203Masterworks of Western Literature (3) Comparative study of selected classical texts from the Western literary tradition.
01:195:216Introduction to World Literatures in English (3) Survey of English language literatures, including Asian, African, and Caribbean, in a global context. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:216.
01:195:237Arabic Classical Literatures (3) Survey of a wide selection of Arabic literary texts in translation, dating from the sixth to the 12th centuries, including poetry and prose in both classical and colloquial Arabic. Credit not given for both this course and 01:013:343. All works studied in translation.
01:195:241Masterpieces of Modern Greek Literature in Translation (3) Reading and discussion of great works of modern
Greek literature including short stories, poetry, and a novel. Course will include selected parallel films for additional insight and analysis.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:489:241.
01:195:242The Portuguese-Speaking World: A Literary Introduction for English Speakers (3)Introduction to literary texts from the
Portuguese-speaking world(Portugal, Brazil, and Lusophone Africa).Credit not given for both this course and 01:810:242.
01:195:243Introduction to the Literatures of South Asia (3) Literatures of South Asia
from their origins to the present.
01:195:244Introduction to Myth (3) Myths of various cultures; their structures and functions in social and especially literary contexts. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:244.
01:195:245Introduction to Folklore (3) Major genres of folklore, including folktale, folk song, and legend, with attention to the methods of collecting and analyzing these materials. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:245.
01:195:249Modern Literatures of South Asia (3) Literary works from modern South
Asia.Credit not given for both this course and 01:013:331. All works studied in translation.
01:195:250Comparative Approaches to African Literatures (3)Reading and discussion of literature in translation from different geographic, linguistic, and cultural areas of Africa.
01:195:251Major French Writers in Translation (3)Landmarks
of French literature from the Renaissance to the present. Plays, novels, and
essays of such authors as Moličre, Voltaire, Rousseau, Balzac, Flaubert,
Sartre, and Camus.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:420:241 or 242.
01:195:255The City and Literature (3)Reading and discussion of
different forms of representation of major cities in the United States, South America, Europe,
and East Asia. Analysis of poetry, short stories, novels, film, and critical
essays with emphasis on the similarities and differences between discourses about
urban centers such as Paris, New York, London, Mexico City, Săo
Paulo, Moscow, Tokyo, and Shanghai.
01:195:256Introducing Italy, City by City (3)A sequence of courses, each concentrating on one Italian
city. Initial semester, Naples, to be followed by other semester courses taught
by different members of the Italian department. Language of instruction, English. Credit not given for this course and 01:560:256.
01:195:257The Postcolonial City (3)Study of literary and cultural
representations of cities around the postcolonial world. Discussions regarding
issues of community, violence, migration, displacement, homelessness, mass
communication, and mass transportation.
01:195:261Introduction to Theater (3)Survey of various genres of
theater across multiple cultures; its function in social and literary contexts.
01:195:267Latino Literature (3)Latino experiences in the United States through literary
voices drawn from the Mexican, Puerto Rican, Dominican, Central American, and
Cuban diasporas and native cultures. Topics include: cultural identity,
hybridity, mestizaje, border writing, transnationalism, transculturation, language
appropriation, subversion and negotiation, and gender issues.Credit not given for both this course and 01:595:267.
01:195:268Cuban Literature (3)Study of the development of
Cuban literature from the Spanish colonial period to the present.Emphasis on major writers such as
Plácido, Manzano, Martí, Guillén, Fernando Ortiz, Arenas, Casal, Achy Obejas,
and Rivera-Valdés. Credit not given for both this course and 01:595:268 or 01:940:331, 332.
01:195:269Dominican Literature (3)Study of the development of
Dominican literature from the Spanish colonial period to the present. Emphasis
on major writers such as Columbus, Pané, Galván, Bosch, Alvarez, Danticat,
Andújar, Rita Indiana, and Junot Díaz. Credit not given for both this course and 01:595:269 or 01:940:331,332. Reading knowledge of Spanish recommended.
01:195:270Past Today (3)Analysis of
21st-century conflicts through historical context, using literature, film, and
other visual arts, music, architecture, and other forms of cultural production.
01:195:280Textual Transformations (3)
Introduction to a broad
range of possible textual transformations such as literary translation, film
adaptation, transcription, ekphrasis, and dramatization. Discussion regarding notions of
originality and derivation and examination of the ways artists use form to
domesticate, subvert, celebrate, or modernize other artists' works. Writing-intensive course.
01:195:295Latino and Caribbean Cultural Studies (3)Comparative study of Latino and
Caribbean culture by reviewing aesthetic, historical, sociological, and
scientific definitions of culture.
Reading knowledge of Spanish recommended. Credit not given for both this course and 01:595:295 or 01:050:295. Not open to first-year students.
01:195:301Introduction to Literary Theory (3) An examination of theoretical concepts and contexts that constitute and frame contemporary views of literature. Critical analysis of formalist, psychoanalytic, structuralist, poststructuralist, Marxist, and feminist approaches to theory and literature. Structured to familiarize students with recent debates in critical and cultural theory.
01:195:302Writing in the Discipline: Literary and Cultural Studies (3) Advanced writing course for students of literature and humanities. Introduction to research methods,
library resources, and scholarly writing in general. Assignments include the writing of abstracts, book reviews, research papers, and preparation for longer writing projects such as honors theses and sample writings for admission to graduate school.
Prerequisite: One second-level writing course or permission of the department.
01:195:303Genre in Cultural Context (3) Analysis of exemplary generic formations in their cultural contexts; genres considered cross-culturally. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:385. 01:353:385 may be counted for major core or minor core requirement with permission of undergraduate director.
01:195:304Fiction and Ideology (3) Fictional narratives as statements about the social order. Texts by major thinkers such as Marx, Lukács, Goldmann, Benjamin, and Williams.
01:195:306Literature and Cultural Conquest (3) Dissemination and reception of hegemonic literatures: the function of travel literature; the transformation and appropriation of popular cultures. Credit not given for both this course and 01:353:326. 01:353:326 may be counted for major core requirement with permission of undergraduate director.
01:195:307Introduction to Postcolonial Literatures and Theories (3) Study of novels, poetry, essays, and films from regions of the world deemed postcolonial, which may include Africa, Latin America, South and Southeast Asia, and the Caribbean. Discussion of major issues in postcolonial theory and criticism.
01:195:308Gender, Race, and Textual Imagination (3) Literature as the privileged representation of the other. The connection between the form(s) of creative writing and the evolution of the very notion of sexual and/or racial differences.
01:195:309Major Literary Trends (3) Survey of the major literary periods or movements such as classical, medieval, Renaissance, romanticism, realism, and naturalism.
01:195:310Literary Institutions (3) Literature as a socially determined phenomenon. The historical evolution of the status of the writer, of the work, of the critic, as well as of the means of, and the obstacles to, the dissemination of literary writing in various societies.
01:195:312Literature and Psychoanalytical Theory (3) Texts by Freud, Lacan, and Jung. Introduction to the various literary questions raised by modern theories in psychology, particularly psychoanalysis.
01:195:315Dante and Medieval Culture (3) Dante's work in historical perspective: the theological antecedents,
memory of the classical writers, and new profane literary experience.Credit not given for both this course and 01:560:315.
01:195:316Politics, Literature, and the Arts (3) Discussion and analysis of political elements in selected aesthetic works that vary with the instructor. Credit not given for both this course and 01:790:316.
01:195:318Literary Approaches to Sacred Texts (3) Literary analysis of the formation and structure of the major texts of several world religions. Attention to style, genre, and cross-cultural interpretation. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:322.
01:195:319Mestizaje and Mulataje in Latin American and Latino Cultural Studies (3)Study of the history and cultural
representation of race and ethnicity in Latin American and Latino Studies from
the colonial period to the present. Emphasis on major writers working with
race, miscegenation, and racialization. Reading knowledge of Spanish recommended.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:595:319.
01:195:320World Cinema I (3)Major developments in global filmmaking
from the 1950s to the present, with an emphasis on specific national and
transnational cultures and their industrial and artistic practices. Credit not given for both this course and 01:354:320 or 01:175:320.
01:195:321World Cinema II (3)Major developments in
global filmmaking from the 1950s to the present, with an emphasis on specific
national and transnational cultures and their industrial and artistic
practices.Credit not given for both this course and 01:354:321 or 01:175:321.
01:195:324Twentieth-Century Literature in a Global Context (3)Twentieth-century writing in English other than British and American. Credit not given for both this course and 01:350:378.
01:195:326Sexuality and Literary Studies (3)Survey of how sexual identities (gay, lesbian, transgender,
queer, and others) relate to narrative and cultural theory.Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:315.
01:195:327Women's Traditions in Literature (3)Fiction and poetry by women in three periods: Heian Japan (800-1200),
the continental European Renaissance, and 19th-century England. Focus
on the social context of a feminine literary tradition and the
relationship between gender and genre. Prerequisite: One course in women writers or permission of instructor.
01:195:329Modern Japanese Novel and the West (3) Introduction to Japanese literature in translation from 1885 to the present, focusing on the influence of Western cultural ideals and literary forms. Special emphasis on the development of the novel form. Authors: Sőseki, Tőson, Akutagawa, Tanizaki, Kawabata, and Mishima.
01:195:330Literature and Culture of Brazil (3)Reading and discussion of selected
works of fiction and nonfiction with emphasis on their place in the development
of Brazilian literature and their relationship to Brazilian culture.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:810:330.
01:195:331The Novel, East and West (3) The novel of the last one hundred years as a cross-cultural form. Comparison of novels from America, Europe, Asia, India, and Africa.
01:195:332The Samurai Tradition in Japanese Literature and Film (3)The samurai warrior as a
focus of cultural and political expression in Japanese literature and cinema.
Supplementary readings of secondary sources on samurai culture and
thought. Credit not given for both this course and 01:565:320.
01:195:333Modern Writers and East Asia (3) Influence of Asian literature and philosophy on the development of Western poetry, drama, and fiction of the 20th century. Works include poems of Pound, Brecht, and Gary Snyder; plays of Yeats and Brecht; novels of Forster, Conrad, and Hesse.
01:195:334Empire in Russian Culture (3)Study of empire in 19th-21st-century Russian literature,
visual arts, and film.Credit not given for both this course and 01:860:334.
01:195:335Minority Literatures (3) Cross-national and comparative studies of literature of one or more ethnic, racial, or cultural groups. Topics vary; consult department announcement. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:369.
01:195:336Literatures of Migration, Immigration, and Diaspora (3) Writings, mainly in English, that foreground representations of place, community, and identity in relation to national and international movement and displacement. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:366.
01:195:340Renaissance and Baroque (3) Intellectual currents and representative works, including epic, lyric, prose fiction, and drama of the European Renaissance. Readings from Marlowe, Rabelais, Montaigne, Erasmus, More, and others.
01:195:341European Neoclassicism (3) European literature in the 17th and early 18th centuries and its connections with political, philosophical, and scientific thought of the time. Authors: Galileo, Descartes, Corneille, Moličre, Milton, Dryden, Pope, and Grimmelshausen.
01:195:342The Romantic Movement (3) Intellectual currents and representative works, including lyric, prose fiction, and drama of the European romantic movement. Major romantic texts of France, Germany, and Russia.
01:195:345Literary Modernism (3) Exploration of the concept of "modernism" through major literary works written in English and other languages.
01:195:346Classical Backgrounds of Literature (3) Influence on literature of classical Greek and Roman epic, tragedy, comedy, and other literary forms. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:317.
01:195:347The Life and Works of Odysseus Elytis (3) Examination of the works of Odysseus Elytis; the writers and artists who influenced his work. Credit not given for both this course and 01:489:347.
01:195:349The Bible and Western Literature (3) Influence of the King James and other versions of the Bible on literature in English. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:319.
01:195:350Theory of Narrative (3) Logic of narrative and its implications in modern culture. Theoretical texts by Jakobson, Foucault, Genette, and Propp. Modern fiction (Poe, Borges, Robbe-Grillet), newspaper articles, and advertisements. Prerequisite: One course in literature or permission of instructor.
01:195:352The European Novel (3) Comparative study of the emergence of forms, themes, and techniques of the novel from the Renaissance to the 20th century.
01:195:354The 19th-Century Novel (3) Major works of fiction in their historical and social context. Authors may include Balzac, Stendhal, Dickens, Turgenev, Dostoevsky, Eliot, and Mann.
01:195:356Modern Fiction (3) Major works of fiction from 1900 to 1945 in their historical and political context. Works by such authors as Lawrence, Gide, Woolf, Mann, Malraux, Kafka, Proust, Sőseki, and Lu Xun.
01:195:357Contemporary Novel (3) Major novels written since 1945. Authors may include Camus, Solzhenitsyn, Kundera, Böll, Tanizaki, Kawabata, Lessing, and Pavese.
01:195:358Odysseus: From Homer to Kazantzakis (3) Explores the Homeric figure Odysseus in
literature from Homer and Vergil, through Dante and modern masterpieces by
Nikos Kazantzakis, James Joyce, and Derek Walcott. Additional explorations in poetry, as well as
selected modern films.
Taught in English.
01:195:359Literature of the Fantastic (3) Short stories of the 19th and 20th centuries, with some consideration of longer forms and parallel literary developments in ancient and Eastern cultures. Structuralist and psychological approaches to genre.
01:195:360Autobiography (3) Major works with special focus on theory and poetics. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:341.
01:195:361Brazil and the United States: Comparative Approaches (3)Comparative and interdisciplinary study
of Brazilian literature and culture as it relates to contemporary issues of
race relations, diversity, cultural dependency, and globalization. Course taught in English. Credit not given for both this course and 01:810:361.
01:195:362Contemporary Caribbean Writers (3)Reading and discussion of recent writings by women from the anglophone, fracophone, and Spanish-speaking Caribbean.
01:195:363Women Writers of Africa (3)Survey of recent writings
by women from a variety of cultural, linguistic, and regional areas of
Africa.Credit not given for both this course and 01:013:311.
01:195:370Germany Confronts the Holocaust (3) Analysis of the shifting role of the Holocaust in postwar German public life--in art, literature, museums and other memorials, film, television, and political discourse. Some attention will also be given to Austria and Switzerland; contrasts will be drawn to the place of the Holocaust in postwar and contemporary America. Credit not given for this course and 01:470:370 or 01:563:370.
01:195:371Holocaust Media (3)Examines the wide array of
uses of media to represent the Holocaust, from during World War II to the
present. Examples range from
wartime radio broadcasts and newsreels to documentaries, television dramas,
videotaping of Holocaust testimonies, art photography, as well as the use of
media in museum displays and tourist practices.Credit not given for both this course and 01:563:366.
01:195:375The Devil in the Text (3) An investigation of the devil's image in literature across cultures and
centuries. Departing from the biblical text, a study of the
personalization of evil as reproduced in literary works.
01:195:377Topics in World Cinema (3)Study of a particular
region, time period, movement, or theme in world cinema. Specific topic announced at
preregistration time.Credit not given for both this course and 01:175:377. May be taken more than once, if content is different.
01:195:380German-Jewish Literature and Culture from the Enlightenment to the Present (3) Survey of German-Jewish culture, 18th century to the present. Literature in political-historical context, with some attention to music, philosophy, and film. Credit not given for both this course and 01:470:380.
01:195:383The Life and Works of Nikos Kazantzakis (1885-1957) (3) Works of Nikos Kazantzakis (1885-1957) and the Eastern and Western ideas that influenced him: Homer, Henri Bergson, Nietzsche, Freud, and Buddhist philosophy. Pre- or corequisite: 01:489:241 or permission of instructor. Credit not given for both this course and 01:489:383.
01:195:384Poetry (3) Poetry from the ancient Greeks to the 20th century, including Western and Asian poetry.
01:195:385Modern Poetry (3) Comparative survey of poetry in languages other than English from 1850 to the present. Poets include Baudelaire, Mallarmé, Rimbaud, Rilke, Brecht, Neruda, Vallejo, Mandelstam, Akhmatova, Pessoa, Apollinaire, and Artaud.
01:195:386Twentieth-Century Greek Poetry (3)Modern Greek poetry from
1900 to 2000. Credit not given for both this course and 01:489:386.
01:195:387Hybrid Western Modernity in Literature and the Arts (3) The formation of European modernity in literature and the arts from the 1880s-1930 under the impact of Japanese and other non-Western aesthetics.
01:195:388The Cultures of the Middle Ages (3) Detailed introduction to a particular aspect of the rich cultural diversity of the European Middle Ages. Topics vary. Credit not given for both this course and 01:350:388 or 01:667:388.
01:195:389Love and Power in the Italian Renaissance (3)Interdisciplinary
investigation of early modern Italian culture, seen through the perspective of
power structures. Credit not given for both this course and 01:560:358.
01:195:390Comedy (3) Study of the major comic traditions, especially the Menandrian (Menander, Plautus, Terence, Moličre) and its modern descendant, the comedy of social criticism (Beaumarchais, Gogol, Chekhov, Shaw).
01:195:391Tragedy (3) Study of the literature and theory of tragedy from the Greeks to the 20th century. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:326.
01:195:392The Realistic Theater (3) History of the realistic presentation of theatrical spectacles in Europe from the 18th to the 20th century. Equal emphasis on staging and playwriting. Includes Ibsen, Chekhov, Shaw, and Becque.
01:195:395,396,397,398Issues in Comparative Literature (3,3,3,3) Separate sections focusing on comparative, interdisciplinary topics. Specific titles announced at the time of registration. May be taken more than once. Content will differ each semester.
01:195:399Service Learning Internship (1) One-credit community service placement in comparative literature. Must be taken in conjunction with a designated CESEP (Civic Engagement and Service Education Partnerships) course offered in comparative literature.
01:195:419History of Criticism (3) History of criticism from Plato and Aristotle to the 20th century.
01:195:420History of Criticism (3) Major criticism of the 20th century.
01:195:437Twentieth-Century Arabic Literature (3) Survey of representative works of Arabic literature in translation, including poetry, the novel, the short story, and plays. Emphasis on how new literary trends reflect sociocultural change in the Arab world, including debates over tradition, gender relations, and cultural pluralism. Prerequisite: At least one prior course in literature (English or world) or one course in Middle Eastern studies. Credit not given for both this course and 01:013:437 or 01:685:437.
01:195:440Seminar: Topics in Genre (3) Intensive study, in a discussion-oriented format, of a particular genre (e.g., pastoral, epic, comedy, lyric) or relationship among genres. Topics vary; consult department. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:440.
01:195:477Advanced Topics in World Cinema (3)Intensive study of a
particular issue in world cinema, with special attention paid to theoretical
approaches. Specific topic
announced at preregistration time.Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. May be taken more than once, if content is different. Credit not given for both this course and 01:175:477.
01:195:480Special Topics in Comparative Literature (3) Variable content. Special studies in particular ideas, themes, forms, and historic units in literature. Designed by individual instructor. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
01:195:489Tolstoy's War and Peace (3)Detailed study of Leo Tolstoy's monumental novel War and
Peace (1869) in its historical, cultural, and critical context. All readings and discussion in English.Credit not given for both this course and 01:860:489.
01:195:493,494Independent Study (BA,BA) Independent reading under supervision of a member of the department. Prerequisites: Permission of instructor and department.
01:195:495,496Honors in Comparative Literature (3,3) Independent research on the honors thesis. Prerequisite: Permission of the department.
01:195:497Capstone Seminar Workshop (1)Assessment of the undergraduate
experience as a major in comparative literature. Debate around the present
state of the discipline. Series of workshops intended to explore professional
and academic careers, including preparation for graduate school and grant
writing.Open to comparative literature seniors only.