L202 2033 SALERNO
Literary Interpretation
1:25p-2:15p MWF (25) 3 CR.
This course has three main objectives: to introduce students to
major literary genres, to investigate approaches to interpretation,
and to develop and refine those interpretations through discussion
and writing. We will therefore be exploring a wide range of texts--
poetry, short fiction, drama, and the novel--in order to discern
their formal features as well as their historical, cultural, and
artistic preoccupations. Our overarching focus for the term will be
on the idea of "transformation": What kinds of transformations are
represented, literally and thematically, in texts? How does the
inclusion of illustrations, or the fact that a text is meant for
performance, change the way we read? How do authors adapt and shift
the conventions of a given genre? In addition to a number of
shorter works, our readings will include: Blake's Songs of
Innocence and of Experience; Nilo Cruz's Anna in the
Tropics; Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale; Brontė's
Jane Eyre; and Barbara Vine's A Dark-Adapted Eye.
What these texts say, how they say it, and what we make of this will
be our key questions, and they will allow us both to emphasize close
reading and to survey various critical approaches common to literary
studies. This section of L202 carries an intensive writing
component, so be prepared to write and revise regularly as you
sharpen your interpretive skills.