Utopias Gone Awry: CHID CHID 250 A. Conflict and Paradise in the Black Sea Region. Mary Childs CHID 250 A TTh 10:30-12:20 I&S, VLPA WINTER 2019

Similar documents
English (ENGL) English (ENGL) 1

English English ENG 221. Literature/Culture/Ideas. ENG 222. Genre(s). ENG 235. Survey of English Literature: From Beowulf to the Eighteenth Century.

Classical Studies Minor. Film Studies Minor

UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017

Program General Structure

Interdepartmental Learning Outcomes

Block C1. (re) Arts Comparative and transnational studies of Asian and Asian American cultures with a focus on literature, film, and visual arts.

Course Numbering System

Deconstruction is a way of understanding how something was created and breaking something down into smaller parts.

SPRING 2019 SCHEDULE OF COURSES

Spring 2015 Course List and Description. Spring Honors Courses With Descriptions

FRENCH 111-3: FRENCH 121-3: FRENCH 125-1

ENG English. Department of English College of Arts and Letters

Classical Studies Courses-1

205 Topics in British Literatures Fall, Spring. 3(3-0) P: Completion of Tier I

Lower-Division Requirements

Goals and Rationales

Images of America Syllabus--1/28/08--Page 1 1

Communication Office: Phone: Fax: Associate Professors Assistant Professors MAJOR COMM 105 Introduction to Personal Communication (3)

Texas A&M Commerce ACCOUNTING. Business/Computer Science/Communication ANTHROPOLOGY ART BUSINESS BIOLOGY

Film and Media Studies (FLM&MDA)

FRENCH LANGUAGE COURSES

Social Sciences (Active Courses/11 May 2018)

Thinking Broadly COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Concepts. Sources Activities Origins Influences Issues. Roles Form Function Experiences Voice

Course MCW 600 Pedagogy of Creative Writing MCW 610 Textual Strategies MCW 630 Seminar in Fiction MCW 645 Seminar in Poetry

Discourse analysis is an umbrella term for a range of methodological approaches that

FRENCH (FREN) French (FREN) 1. FREN-203 Advanced Intermediate French

English Courses 2017

PHILOSOPHY 2018/2019 SEMESTER 1/FALL

Emerging Questions: Fernando F. Segovia and the Challenges of Cultural Interpretation

SPRING 2015 Graduate Courses. ENGL7010 American Literature, Print Culture & Material Texts (Spring:3.0)

FRENCH LANGUAGE FRENCH FRENCH FRENCH FRENCH 125-3

English (ENGLSH) English (ENGLSH) 1. ENGLSH 1107: Reading Literature, 1603 to See ENGLSH 1100 course for description.

FILM 104/3.0 Film Form and Modern Culture to 1970

New Prereq # Old # Old Course Title Old Descrption Cross- listed? NEW. Engl 221 Engl 222 Engl 223 Engl 224 Engl 225 Engl 226. Engl 299.

University of Bristol - Explore Bristol Research. Peer reviewed version License (if available): Unspecified

New Prereq # New Cross- list Old # NEW. Engl 221 Engl 222 Engl 223 Engl 224 Engl 225 Engl 226. Engl 299. Engl 302. Engl 317 Engl 311 ENG 300 ENG 300

English 461: Studies in Film Culture Fall 2014 Re-Visioning Colonialism in Film. Meetings: Tu, Th 2-3:40 (L & L 307) + Tu 3:45-6:00 (L & L 422)

Action, Criticism & Theory for Music Education

CAS Exploratory Sets

TEACHING A GROWING POPULATION OF NON-NATIVE ENGLISH SPEAKING STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES: CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC CHALLENGES

ENGL S092 Improving Writing Skills ENGL S110 Introduction to College Writing ENGL S111 Methods of Written Communication

Editor s Introduction

Lecture (0) Introduction

kk Un-packing the Visual: Youth Narratives on HIV/AIDS

Texts: The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd, Hamlet, by William Shakespeare,

Politics of Translation

The Influence of Chinese and Western Culture on English-Chinese Translation

Kitap Tanıtımı / Book Review

HUMANITIES (HUM) Humanities (HUM) San Francisco State University Bulletin

Creation, Imagination and Metapoetry in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Paradigmatic Poem "Kubla Khan"

Georgia Performance/QCC Standards for: LA CUCARACHITA MARTINA

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA, MORRIS Multiple Course Revisions

resist academic inquiry that is, what about it makes it difficult to discuss or describe in an intellectual way or in a college class?

NORCO COLLEGE SLO to PLO MATRIX

Upper School Summer Required Assignments Books & Topics

Mass Communication Theory

Upper Iowa University-Academic Extension and Lakeshore Technical College (WI) Course-to-Course Articulation. October 2009

FRENCH IMMERSION LANGUAGE ARTS (FILA) French-Language Film and Literary Studies 12 (4 credits)

REVIEW: KOBENA MERCER, TRAVEL & SEE: BLACK DIASPORA ART PRACTICES SINCE THE 1980s

Loggerhead Sea Turtle

Significant Differences An Interview with Elizabeth Grosz

philippine studies Ateneo de Manila University Loyola Heights, Quezon City 1108 Philippines

Humanities Distribution Courses offered FALL 2016

English (ENGL) Courses. Stetson University 1

DEGREE IN ENGLISH STUDIES. SUBJECT CONTENTS.

Foucault: Discourse, Power, and Cares of the Self

CHAPTER 2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY PROGRAM (Ph.D.) IN ENGLISH AND LANGUAGE ARTS (INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM) (À Ÿμ À à æ.». 2547)

Critical Spatial Practice Jane Rendell

Performing Arts in ART

Master List of Approved Courses for Philosophy and Values Effective Spring 2017_v6

Curriculum Map: Comprehensive I English Cochranton Junior-Senior High School English

TRAGIC THOUGHTS AT THE END OF PHILOSOPHY

Emory College Spring 2014 Class Visit Program

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION

Capstone Courses

Martin Puryear, Desire

Regionalism & Local Color

Post Structuralism, Deconstruction and Post Modernism

Decolonizing Development Colonial Power and the Maya Edited by Joel Wainwright Copyright by Joel Wainwright. Conclusion

Simona Bertacco (ed.), Language and Translation in Postcolonial Literature

ENGLISH (ENG) Vous consultez la version du catalogue.

Objectivity and Diversity: Another Logic of Scientific Research Sandra Harding University of Chicago Press, pp.

ENGLISH 483: THEORY OF LITERARY CRITICISM USC UPSTATE :: SPRING Dr. Williams 213 HPAC IM (AOL/MSN): ghwchats

An Academic Odyssey: A Teacher s Search for The Artistic Impact of the Vietnam. Conflict on the Music of Jazz and Motown. Ben T.

Poetic Statements. Four. by Bennett Neiman. Poetic Statement One. Texas Tech University Lubbock, Texas

CRITICAL THEORY BEYOND NEGATIVITY

Translation's Forgotten History: Russian Literature, Japanese Mediation, and the Formation of Modern Korean Literature by Heekyoung Cho (review)

GERMAN AND GERMAN STUDIES (BI-CO)

Aristotle on the Human Good

John Barrell, The Infection of Thomas de Quincey: A Psychopathology of Imperialism. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1991.

Acceptable General Education Courses Spring 2015

Theory and Criticism 9500A

Engl 794 / Spch 794: Contemporary Rhetorical Theory Syllabus and Schedule, Fall 2012

Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing

Introduction to American Literature 358: :227 AHp Major Topics and Authors in American Literature 358: :228 AHp

New Course MUSIC AND MADNESS

Curriculum Map: Challenge II English Cochranton Junior-Senior High School English

LiFT-2 Literary Framework for European Teachers in Secondary Education /

Transcription:

250 A Utopias Gone Awry: Conflict and Paradise in the Black Sea Region This course introduces students to the history and political dynamics of the Black Sea Region through contemporary literature, art, film, music and food. We will look at the multicultural makeup of the countries surrounding the Black Sea Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine, Russia, Georgia, and Turkey and investigate why conflicts persist in this border area between East and West, Europe and Asia. Identifying patterns of turbulence, gender politics, and environmental degradation, we will also explore positive cultural continuities in the region. In this seminar style course, students will contribute through reports, discussions, and creative projects. Mary Childs 250 A TTh 10:30-12:20 I&S, VLPA WINTER 2019

250 B Race, Criminalization, and Biopower Caleb Knapp 250 B MW 8:30-10:20 AM I&S, VLPA WINTER 2019 This course introduces students to theories of power over life itself what contemporary thinkers often call biopower. It pays special attention to criminalization as a form of biopower and explores how discourses of the criminal produce and pathologize racial and sexual difference, marking some people as deviant and therefore subject to premature death. The course traces a genealogy of the theory of biopower in conjunction with readings of literary and cultural texts. Emphasis will be placed on developing theoretical understanding in and through the examination of particular historical moments across a range of periods and geographies. Assignments include several short papers and a final project.

250 C Underworld Poetics: WRITING FROM OTHER DIMENSIONS July Hazard 250 C TTh 10:30-12:20 WINTER 2019 VLPA, NW, I&S, W credit Visionary poets can stand in strange relation to the world. Some come from or speak from another world. Others inhabit worlds that are illuminated, haunted, or transparent. Some recount travel between layers of reality, or report enhanced encounters with nonhuman beings. This class explores ways some writers cross into and write out of other dimensions including punk clubs, gay underworlds, subway tunnels, fleabag hotels, outer space, undersea civilizations, angelic and demonic realms. Class writings will probe poetic relations to natural and social environments, via automatic writing, somatic composition, text collage, and other experiments. Students will keep illustrated journals of their otherworldly engagements, and construct or improvise underworlds.

250 D Literatures from Ghana Join us for an exploration of Ghanaian literature across the decades from the 1960s to our contemporary moment. From short stories to novels, comics to films, weʼll engage it all to better understand how histories of colonialism, anti-colonial struggles, feminism, postcolonial realities, and a complicated economy have influenced a rich tradition of storytelling, literary dissent, and representational politics in West Africa. Weʼll focus on how issues of power, privilege, gender, race, sexuality, wealth, and poverty play out in different contexts and make connections to our own lives in Seattle and beyond. Art by Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze, 2015 Anu Taranath 250 D TTh 8:30-10:20 AM I&S, VLPA WINTER 2019

250 E The Politics of Weirdness in Contemporary Comics In this course, we ll tackle a number of recent comics (or graphic novels, as publishers are fond of calling them) that are decidedly weird in their approach to visual storytelling. While weirdness in comics is nothing new recall Krazy Kat and Little Nemo in Slumberland, to name the most obvious early examples these works are distinguished by their explicit exploration of a relationship between formal experimentation and political or cultural resistance. Put another way, theirs is a championing of weirdness in the look, line, coloring and page layout of visual narratives as a means of thinking through social difference and its many phenomena that cannot be had in quite the same way in written texts. Our time will be balanced between critical reading and debate and more creative experiments inspired by our discussions. Works will include, among other things: My Favorite Thing is Monsters; Ant Colony; Black Hole; Bitch Planet; The System; and What It Is. Caroline Simpson 250 E TTh 2:30-4:20 WINTER 2019 I&S, VLPA, W credit

Mobility, Visibility, and the Other: Rendering 2D Animation 250 F This cross-disciplinary, practicum course focuses on contemporary forms of documentation to analyze representations of stillness and movement as it affects Indigenous populations and marginalized communities in the West. Beginning with a close analysis of indigenous mark-making, Mobility, Visibility, and the Other: Rendering 2D Animation will explore analog and digital forms of sequencing through slow animation. Through material exploration, students will be introduced to cultural and creative practices that parse out indigeneity, the global south, race, gender, and ethnic lineage to make thaumatropes, gestural animations, continuous/stop-motion videos, and 2D animations that reflect upon their own relationships to embodied history. Dan Paz 250 F TTh 11:30-2:20 I&S, VLPA WINTER 2019 Documentation of installation, The Big Four, by artist, Kent Monkman.

390 A BAD ART As a word, art is often taken to be synonymous with a culture s highest aesthetic, and often even ethical values. Institutions devote an enormous amount of time and money to identifying the best art, to preserving or cataloguing it, all in order to educate the masses about how best to appreciate it. But what happens when so-called bad art begins to influence or challenge that process or value system? What do we make of the emergence of everyday or amateur aesthetic practices that explicitly defy the priorities associated with artistic value: formal skill or training, rarity or quality of materials, originality of technique? In this course, we ll have a go at answering these and other questions about bad art. Among other things, we will consider: the forces that produced and, much later, re-defined outsider or folk art, including the works of figures like Clementine Hunter and Martin Ramirez; the pleasures of cult films, like The Room and Show Girls; the growing influence of the poor image that characterizes many forms of visual production in the last fifty years. We will pay particular attention to the political and cultural questions that seem to be at work when art seems to go bad. Caroline Simpson 390 A TTh 12:30-2:20 WINTER 2019 I&S, VLPA, W credit

480 A Colonial Carceral Logics in the Americas This course analyzes the emergence of the carceral state through a comparative and historical framework. It links carceral logics to colonial processes across the English, French, and Spanish Americas. Taking up Foucauldian theories of expulsion and confinement, students will read primary texts by Cristobal Colón, Hernán Cortés, Jacques Cartier, and Samuel de Champlain among others to examine how colonial maps and legislation mediate emergent carceral ways of thinking. We will pay specific attention to the role(s) of gender, (sex)uality, class, and race. Students will identify the limits of nationalist rubrics while developing comparative frames for thinking variations and continuities in carceral histories and practices. AM Weatherford 480 A MW 2:30-4:20 I&S, VLPA WINTER 2019

480 B Power/Language: Philosophical Grammar for a Binarized World According to Ludwig Wittgenstein, a whole mythology is deposited in our language. Against this mythology, we will collectively explore philosophical grammar as a fight against the fascination which forms of expression exert upon us. Weaving together Wittgenstein s philosophical provocations, Jhumpa Lahiri s poignant autobiographical meditations on linguistic displacement, and other theoretical and creative writings, this course considers some of the many ways our language speaks systems of power into being. And it asks what it might take to speak something else into being instead. Jonathan Rey Lee 480 B MW 9:30-11:20 I&S WINTER 2019

Neither Here Nor There: Narrating Your Experience Abroad 498 A HOW WAS YOUR TRIP? Students returning from study abroad often find it difficult to answer this question. How can one explain in just a few short words an experience that was complicated, transformative, difficult, and euphoric often all at once? This class will provide students with a space to revisit, rethink, and share stories about their travels. Students will reflect upon their study abroad experiences and collaboratively create a volume of s online student publication about travel, Neither Here Nor There. *In order to enroll, you must have studied abroad. Email nickbarr@uw.edu for an add code and mention your study abroad program. Nicolaas P. Barr 498 A Tu 2:30-5:20 I&S, VLPA WINTER 2019