L371 9962 CRITICAL PRACTICES
Joan Pong Linton
11:15a-12:30p TR (30 students) 3 cr., A&H. Open to English majors
only.
PREREQUISITE: L202 with grade of C- or better. NOTE: The English
Department will strictly enforce this prerequisite. Students who
have not completed L202 with a grade of C- or better will have their
registration administratively cancelled.
This course introduces students to some of the critical practices
that have shaped the field of English Studies, and aims to help each
student develop the knowledge and skills necessary to become a
critically responsible reader of literature and culture. While most
English courses focus primarily on literary works, this course
explores questions fundamental to all critical practice. What roles
do literary texts and writers have in society? What have we come to
expect about literature and why? What can literary texts tell us
about ourselves, our world, our history, our received ideas
about “the way things are,” or about other subjects and other
worlds? How do we situate ourselves as critically responsive
readers? What does it mean to “interpret” a work? What critical
choices are in play and what assumptions come with these choices?
How do literary texts relate to non-literary texts, including
theoretical writings? What critical, theoretical, and historical
freight do terms like author, writing, representation,
structuralism, deconstruction, ideology, tradition,
imperialism/nationalism, the unconscious, ethics, performance, etc.
carry? How do we create conversations between literature and
theory? In what ways might literary texts theorize the world and
address us as agents in history? These questions provide starting
points for examining a number of critical and theoretical
perspectives for their strengths and limitations. Through assigned
readings, discussions, and presentations, we will learn how to
engage with critical and theoretical writings, challenging the ideas
presented and allowing them to challenge our thinking, and bringing
these ideas into conversation with literary texts and cultural
issues. In written assignments students will developing their own
critical practice in applying, building on, and even refining the
critical/theoretical approaches.
Texts may include Hans Bertens’ Literary Theory: The Basics,
David Henry Hwang’s M. Butterfly, Stanley Kubrick’s Doctor
Strangelove, William Shakespeare’s King Lear, Leslie
Marmon Silko’s Ceremony, and a number of literary texts and
theoretical essays available on Electronic Reserves. In addition to
active participation in discussion, students will participate in a
group presentation, turn in several focused writings and write two
papers (5 and 7 pages long).