COML2800 - Poetry and Poetics: The Person in the Poem

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Poetry and Poetics: The Person in the Poem
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML2800401
Course number integer
2800
Meeting times
MW 1:45 PM-3:14 PM
Meeting location
BENN 222
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Max C Cavitch
Description

The Person in the Poem:
Through the study of a wide variety of poems from the Renaissance to the present, students in this seminar will expand their familiarity with the sweep of modern English-language poetry and will develop a thorough understanding of fundamental poetic concepts—especially those concepts related to the question of “the person in the poem”: “author,” “voice,” “persona,” “address,” “personification,” “representation,” and “referentiality.” These are all concepts essential to the advanced study of poetry and of literature more comprehensively. We’ll sharpen our understanding of these concepts in our close readings and discussions of major poems by authors including W. H. Auden, Elizabeth Bishop, Emily Brontë, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Emily Dickinson, John Donne, Robert Frost, Langston Hughes, Alexander Pope, Claudia Rankine, Adrienne Rich, William Shakespeare, Walt Whitman, and William Wordsworth. These poetic works will be complemented by our study of some essential works of modern poetic theory. Course requirements will include several short essays and a variety of in-class exercises, including recitation, memorization, and imitation as well as active participation in seminar discussion. (No mid-term or final exams.)


Course number only
2800
Cross listings
ENGL2800401, ENGL2800401
Use local description
Yes

COML1311 - Introduction to Modern Hebrew Literature: Short Story Reinvented

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Introduction to Modern Hebrew Literature: Short Story Reinvented
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML1311401
Course number integer
1311
Meeting times
W 5:15 PM-8:14 PM
Meeting location
WILL 705
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Nili R Gold
Description
Taught in Hebrew. Texts and discussions in Hebrew.
The art of the short story is fertile ground for non-mainstream genres like horror and mystery, and its economy lends itself to the electronic era. For Hebrew writers, the short story has been a favorite since the renaissance of Hebrew literature and the revival of the language at the end of the 19th century; now it is vibrant in Israel, where Hebrew is the dynamic language of everyday life. At the center of this course are contemporary works by both male and female authors, ranging from traditional to post-modernist. Their diction is simple, sometimes colloquial, but they reflect a rich inner world and a tumultuous outer reality. Authors include: S.Y. Agnon, Orly Castel-Bloom, Alex Epstein, Amir Gutfreund, Esty G. Hayim, and Yoel Hoffman.
Course number only
1311
Cross listings
JWST1310401, JWST1310401, NELC1310401, NELC1310401, NELC5400401, NELC5400401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Arts & Letters Sector
Use local description
Yes

COML0015 - Writing the Self: Life-Writing, Fiction, Representation

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Writing the Self: Life-Writing, Fiction, Representation
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML0015401
Course number integer
15
Meeting times
R 10:15 AM-1:14 PM
Meeting location
BENN 112
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Liz Rose
Description
This course investigates how people try to understand who they are by writing about their lives. It will cover a broad range of forms, including memoirs, novels, essay films, and even celebrity autobiographies. The course will be international and in focus and will ask how the notion of self may shift, not only according to the demands of different genres, but in different literary, linguistic, and social contexts. Questions probed will include the following: How does a writer's language--or languages--shape how they think of themselves? To what extent is a sense of self and identity shaped by exclusion and othering? Is self-writing a form of translation and performance, especially in multilingual contexts? What can memoir teach us about the ways writers navigate global literary institutions that shape our knowledge of World Literature? How do various forms of life-writing enable people on the margins, whether sexual, gendered, or racial, to craft narratives that encapsulate their experience? Can telling one's own story bring joy, affirmation, and greater transcultural or even global understanding? In sum, this course proposes to illuminate the many ways in which writing becomes meaningful for those who take it up. The format of the seminar will require students to offer oral presentations on the readings and invite them to craft their own experiences and memories in inventive narrative forms.
Course number only
0015
Cross listings
ENGL1745401, ENGL1745401, GSWS0051401, GSWS0051401
Use local description
No

COML1261 - Radical Arts in the Americas

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Radical Arts in the Americas
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML1261401
Course number integer
1261
Meeting times
MW 3:30 PM-4:59 PM
Meeting location
BENN 231
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Jennifer Lyn Sternad Ponce De Leon
Description
This course examines intersections of artistic production and radical politics in the 20th and 21st centuries. It addresses art from across a wide array of media: street art, film, theater, poetry, performance art, fiction, graphic arts, digital media, and urban interventions. We will examine artistic movements and artists from across the Americas, including revolutionary Latin American theater, film, and literature; the art of Black Liberation in the U.S.; the Chicano art movement and its queer dissidents; street performance and protest produced in the context of dictatorship; anticolonial performance art and alternative reality gaming; and activist art, political theater, and cinema from the 21st century. Through its focus on the relationship between art and politics, this course also introduces students to foundational concepts related to the relationship between culture and power more broadly. As part of the course, students will have the opportunity to develop and present their own artistic project. Weekly discussion posts, midterm paper, final research paper, creative project and artist statement.


Course number only
1261
Cross listings
ARTH2990401, ARTH2990401, CIMS1261401, CIMS1261401, ENGL1261401, ENGL1261401, LALS1261401, LALS1261401, THAR1261401, THAR1261401
Fulfills
Cultural Diviserity in the U.S.
Use local description
Yes

COML1650 - Introduction to Digital Humanities

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Introduction to Digital Humanities
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML1650401
Course number integer
1650
Meeting times
MW 10:15 AM-11:44 AM
Meeting location
BENN 231
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Cassandra Hradil
Whitney A Trettien
Description
Artificial intelligence, big data, and the internet of things are rapidly changing every aspect of our lives. The methods and questions of the humanities are critical to understanding these shifts. Run like a workshop, this course will explore various sites at Penn and around Philadelphia where humanists and artists are collaborating with scientists and engineers to solve the big problems facing our planet and our species. We’ll visit museums and special collections in search of the future of past. We’ll learn how scholars of race and gender are combating algorithmic bias in our search engines. And we’ll meet librarians who are helping climate scientists save their data from politics. Students will gain hands-on experience with writing grants, collaborating across disciplines, and developing research questions in digital humanities. They will also acquire basic facility and literacy with key digital tools like GitHub, XML/HTML, and online publishing platforms like WordPress and Scalar. Together, we will gain a critical, historical framework for understanding technology’s impact on our lives. Absolutely no prior coding experience is required. Coursework will involve regular in-class exercises, short response papers, and one mid-sized digital project.


Course number only
1650
Cross listings
ENGL1650401, ENGL1650401, HIST0870401, HIST0870401
Use local description
Yes

COML0022 - Pirates: Real and Imagined

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Pirates: Real and Imagined
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML0022401
Course number integer
22
Meeting times
MW 12:00 PM-1:29 PM
Meeting location
LRSM 112B
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Suvir Kaul
Description
Pirates: Real and Imagined

This course will examine the vital presence of pirates in maritime, particularly Atlantic, history and in English literature, including the travelogues some of them produced. We will begin with Elizabethan forms of state-sponsored piracy, “adventuring,” and exploration, and then follow pirates into the eighteenth century. We will think about their shifting profiles as they abetted and disrupted colonial and commercial practices and ask how they could be both national heroes and hostis humanis generis (enemies of all mankind). We will examine the history of impressment and of labor, including indenture and slavery, that played a role in the making of pirate lives and the codes of conduct they developed for their operations. We will learn to see pirates as contributors to political theory and practice, trade and commerce, as well as to natural history and sea-borne discovery. We will read about the occasional women pirates who infiltrated and functioned within this very male world. In general, we will also be tracking the reasons why some pirates became legends, and why they continue to fascinate readers and movie-goers. One short essay, one final research paper, bi-weekly discussion posts
Course number only
0022
Cross listings
ENGL0022401, ENGL0022401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
Yes

COML2017 - Modern Iran and the West Through the Lens of Fiction

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Modern Iran and the West Through the Lens of Fiction
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML2017401
Course number integer
2017
Meeting times
M 1:45 PM-4:44 PM
Meeting location
COLL 311A
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Fatemeh Shams Esmaeili
Description
This undergraduate level course explores key tropes and themes of Iranian modernity through a close reading of Persian novel, short story, travelogue, and memoir. Various literary genres from social realism, to surrealism, magic realism, naturalism, and absurd literature will be introduced with specific reference to Iran's literature and in light of literary theory of novel. This course does not require any prior knowledge of Persian language and literature. Throughout the course, we will be particularly concerned with the relationship between Persian fiction and the West. We will investigate this curious relationship through themes of gender, religion, politics, and war.
Course number only
2017
Cross listings
GSWS2130401, GSWS2130401, NELC1710401, NELC1710401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

COML2071 - Modernism Seminar: When was Modernism?

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Modernism Seminar: When was Modernism?
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML2071401
Course number integer
2071
Meeting times
TR 12:00 PM-1:29 PM
Meeting location
BENN 222
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Jean-Michel Rabate
Description
When was Modernism:
This class will provide a survey of international modernism by historicizing it. Most critics agree that 1922 was the main year of modernism, giving birth to masterpieces associated with the concept, those canonical texts by Marcel Proust, Franz Kafka, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Rainer Maria Rilke, Katherine Mansfield, E.E. Cummings, Gertrude Stein and T. S. Eliot. We will read selections from these « monuments » before wondering when modernism began. This will take us back to the pre-war years, and we will examine earlier texts by Joyce, Rilke, T. S. Eliot, and Apollinaire. Finally, we will look for a possible closure by reading passages from texts like Cane (1923), As I Lay Dying (1930), Nausea (1938), The Day of the Locust (1939), and pages from Finnegans Wake (1939). A comparison between those « slices » of global cultural history offers a clear view of important trends and movements in the arts and literature. The years that produced modern masterpieces also saw the emergence of a “modern classicism,” a development ushering in the mixture of the new and tradition that has become the hallmark of modernism, thus turning it into a contemporary classicism. We will study passages from In Search of Lost Time, Ulysses, The Castle, The Enormous Room, The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge, The Duino Elegies, Geography and Plays, Jacob’s Room, The Garden Party, The Waste Land, As I Lay Dying, Nausea, The Day of the Locust and Finnegans Wake. All texts available online. Requirements: one oral presentation and two papers of 8 pages each.




Course number only
2071
Cross listings
ARTH3850401, ARTH3850401, ENGL2071401, ENGL2071401, GRMN1304401, GRMN1304401
Use local description
Yes

COML1080 - German Cinema

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
German Cinema
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML1080401
Course number integer
1080
Meeting times
MW 12:00 PM-1:29 PM
Meeting location
WILL 1
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Ian Fleishman
Description
An introduction to the momentous history of German film, from its beginnings before World War One to developments following the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and German reunification in 1990. With an eye to film's place in its historical and political context, the course will explore the "Golden Age" of German cinema in the Weimar Republic, when Berlin vied with Hollywood; the complex relationship between Nazi ideology and entertainment during the Third Reich; the fate of German film-makers in exile during the Hitler years; post-war film production in both West and East Germany; the call for an alternative to "Papa's Kino" and the rise of New German Cinema in the 1960s.
Course number only
1080
Cross listings
CIMS1080401, CIMS1080401, GRMN1080401, GRMN1080401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Use local description
No

COML2191 - The Dictator Novel as Global Form

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
The Dictator Novel as Global Form
Term
2022C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML2191401
Course number integer
2191
Meeting times
W 3:30 PM-6:29 PM
Meeting location
DRLB 2N36
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Joshua D Esty
Description
In this seminar, we will explore the ways in which twentieth- and twenty-first-century writers across the globe have responded to tyrants and tyrannical regimes. Our focus will be a set of outstanding contemporary novels from Latin America, Europe, the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia. We will begin with the Latin American boom writers of the 1960s and 1970s (represented on the syllabus by Manuel Puig and Gabriel García-Márquez) before moving on to two recent Nobel prize winners, Herta Müller (2009) and Mario Vargas Llosa (2010). In addition to these four writers, we will also consider the works of Graham Greene, V.S. Naipaul, Chinua Achebe, Jessica Hagedorn, Nuruddin Farah, Julia Alvarez, Junot Díaz, and Mohammed Hanif. Primary texts include both Anglophone and translated novels as well as poems, plays, scripted films, and documentaries that represent or describe totalitarian regimes.
Two central questions will guide our readings: 1) What are the connections between oppressive regimes and literary expression -- between violence and aesthetics? 2) What formal strategies do writers in these situations use to manage the complex and sometimes dangerous political content of their works? Graded requirements include several short response papers, a bibliographic project, and a long-form research paper (3000 words).
Course number only
2191
Cross listings
ENGL2191401, ENGL2191401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No