Fall 2014 Undergraduate Courses

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.F colemanb Comparative Literature 195 College Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 Telephone: (732) 932-7606; Fax (732) 932-2041; email: marilyn.tankiewicz@rutgers.edu Fall 2014 Undergraduate Courses FOR INTERNET COURSES SELECT: TERM: Fall 2014 LOCATION: New Brunswick LEVEL: Undergraduate SUBJECT: Comparative Literature (195) COURSE TYPE: Online Introduction to World Literature 195:101:02; Index 04572; T2 (9:50AM-11:10) VH-105; CAC H4 MU-208; CAC Fulfills Core Learning Goal AHP 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. Introduction to World Literature 195:101:03; Index 08117; T2 (9:50AM-11:10) VH-105; CAC H2 TBD; CAC Fulfills Core Learning Goal AHP 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.

Introduction to World Literature 195:101:04; Index 08116; T2 (9:50AM 11:10) VH-105; CAC H2 (9:50AM 11:10) ED-025A; CAC Fulfills Core Learning Goal AHp 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. Introduction to World Literature- THIS IS AN INTERNET COURSE 195:101:91; Index 18814 $100 Online Course Support Fee Fulfills Core Learning Goal AHp 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. Introduction to Short Fiction 195:135:01; Index 03735; MW5 (2:50PM 4:10) SC-101; CAC Fulfills Core Learning Goal AHp 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. Introduction to Short Fiction 195:135:05; Index 13156; M7 (6:40PM 8:00) TIL-204; LIV W7 (6:40PM 8:00) TIL-125; LIV Fulfills core learning goal AHP 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.

Introduction to Short Fiction- THIS IS AN INTERNET COURSE 195:135:90; Index 18817 $100 Online Course Support Fee Fulfills core learning goal AHP 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. 195:150:01; Index 04251; MW7 (6:10PM 7:30) CA-A5; CAC 195:150:02, Index 00204; MTh1 (9:15AM 10:35) RAB-109B; D/C 195:150:03; Index 04175; T4 (2:15PM 3:35) RAB-209B; D/C H4 (2:15PM-3:35) HSB-201; D/C 195:150:04; Index 02882; MTh2 (10:20AM 11:40) BE-213; LIV

195:150:05; Index 04077; MW5 (3:55PM-5:15) FS-101; C/D 195:150:06; Index 04666; TTh4 (1:10PM-2:30) SC-119; CAC 195:150:07; Index 10439; TTh7 (6:10PM-7:30) SC-103; CAC THIS IS AN INTERNET COURSE 195:150:90; Index 12843 $100 Online Course Support Fee

THIS IS AN INTERNET COURSE 195:150:91; Index 13153 $100 Online Course Support Fee Literature Across Borders - Love 195:201:01; Index 18714; T4 (2:15 PM-3:35) HCK-205; D/C H4 (2:15PM-3:35) RAB-209B; D/C 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. Fulfills Core Learning Goals AHO, AHP Literature Across Borders - Love 195:201:02; Index 18715; T4 (2:15PM-3:35) HCK-205; D/C H4 (2:15PM-3:35) RAB-209A; D/C 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. Fulfills Core Learning Goals AHO, AHP Masterworks of Western Literature 195:203:01; Index 08227; TTh4 (1:10PM-2:30) SC-214; CAC Comparative study of selected classical texts from the Western literary tradition. Introduction to the Literatures of South Asia 195:243:01; Index 12476; MW4 (1:40PM 3:00) BE-252; LIV

Instructor: Mani Cross-Listed with 01:013:231:01 Fulfills Core Learning Goals AHO, AHP Credit not given for both this course and 01:013:231 Literatures of South Asia from their origins to the present. Introduction to Mythology 195:244:01; Index 06832; MTh3 (TBD) TBD; CAC Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:244 Myths of various cultures; their structures and functions in social and especially literary contexts. Introduction to Mythology 195:244:02; Index 08115; MW6 (4:30PM 5:50) FH-B5; CAC Instructor: Walker, S. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:244. Myths of various cultures; their structures and functions in social and especially literary contexts. Introduction to Mythology THIS IS AN INTERNET COURSE 195:244:90; Index 12844 $100 Online Course Support Fee. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:244 Myths of various cultures; their structures and functions in social and especially literary contexts. Introduction to Mythology THIS IS AN INTERNET COURSE 195:244:91; Index 13154 $100 Online Course Support Fee. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:244

Myths of various cultures; their structures and functions in social and especially literary contexts. Introduction to Mythology-THIS IS AN INTERNET COURSE 195:244:92; 18944 $100 Online Course Support Fee. Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:244 Myths of various cultures; their structures and functions in social and especially literary contexts. Modern Literatures of South Asia 195:249:01; Index 10127; TTh6 (5:00PM-6:20) LSH-B123; LIV Instructor: Nerlekar Cross-listed with 01:013:331:01 Fulfills Core Learning Goals AHO, AHP Credit not given for both this course and 01:013:331 Literary works from modern South Asia. All works studied in translation. Major French Writers in Translation 195:251:01; Index 18577; MW4 (1:10PM-2:30) SC-114; CAC Instructor: Eisenzweig Cross- listed with 01:420:242:01 Fulfills core learning goals AHP, WCD Credit not given for both this course and 01:420:241 or 242 Landmarks of French literature from the Renaissance to the present. Plays, novels, and essays of such authors as Moliere, Voltaire, Rousseau, Balzac, Flaubert, Sartre, and Camus. Postcolonial City 195:257:01; Index 18816; MW4 (1:10PM-2:30) CA-A2; CAC Instructor: Martinez-San-Miguel Cross-listed with: 01:595:212:02, 01:050:301:03 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.

Textual Transformations: Disability, Race, and the Monstrous in Literature and Film 195:280:01; Index 19118 ; MTh2 CML-101; CAC Instructor: Urena It s time to face your fears. From Mary Shelly s Frankenstein (1818) to David Cronenberg s The Fly (1986) and beyond, monsters have captured the imagination of readers and moviegoers for as long as we can remember. Part of the attraction of monsters lies in the fact that they are strangely familiar while remaining dangerously different, forcing us to ask how we draw the line between us and them. In this course we will be rethinking the monster through discourses of difference, including illness, disability, and race to ponder the questions: What makes a monster? What does it mean to be human? We will begin by retracing the history of the freak show in American culture and explore the ways that disability theorists have reframed the freak as indicative of mainstream society s discomfort with non-normative bodies. Next, we will read monster narratives in literature and film through the lens of disability to uncover new ways of understanding them. Finally, we will turn to narratives that align illness and disability with race to consider how these identities complicate one another. Assignments & Assessment: Participation: 10% Close Reading Blog Reflections (5): 25% Rhetorical Analysis Group Project: 25% Peer Editing: 10% Final Paper (6-8 pages): 30% Required Texts: Ana Castillo, Peel My Love Like an Onion Gabriel Garcia-Marquez, Of Love and Other Demons Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis Toni Morison, Beloved Mary Shelley, Frankenstein Bram Stoker, Dracula Graff, Gerald, and Cathy Birkenstein. They Say/I Say: The Moves that Matter in Academic Writing. New York: Norton, 2006. [ISBN: 978-0-393-93361-1] Additional Readings will be posted on Sakai; Films will be available for viewing at the Rutgers Media Center on Douglass

Literature and Cultural Conquest 195:306:01; Index 19061; MH2 (9:50AM-11:10) MU-211; CAC Instructor: Walker, J. 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. Dissemination and reception of hegemonic literatures: the function of travel literature; the transformation and appropriation of popular cultures. Politics, Literature, and the Arts: Art and Power 195:316:01 Index 15739; TTh5 (2:50PM-4:10) ZAM-EDR; CAC Instructor: Rosenfeld Cross-listed with: 01:860:320:01, 01:082:292:01 Course will meet at Zimmerli Museum in Greenwall Room, College Ave Credit not given for both this course and 01:790:316 Discussion and analysis of political elements in selected aesthetic works that vary with the instructor. Mestizaje and Mulataje 195:319:01; Index;19117; MW6 (5:00PM-6:20) LSH-A256; LIV Instructor: Martinez-San-Miguel Cross-listed with: 595:319:01, 050:301:03 Credit not given for both this course and 01:595:319:01 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. Modern Japanese Novel and the West 01:195:329:01; Index 18531; TTh5 (2:50PM-4:10) SC-102; CAC Instructor: Walker, J. Cross-listed with 01:565:395:01 In this course we will read several Japanese novels and short stories written from the late nineteenth century to the present that represent the West in the form of topics such as individualism, the Western woman, political and social freedom, mystery, and decadence, but also in the form of places and material objects. Our goal in the course is to examine how the literary gaze on the Western Other, including both European nations and America, leads to questions not only about how Japanese viewed the West but also about what it meant to be Japanese at particular points in modern Japanese history. All texts will be read in translation.

Requirements are: attendance (10%), participation and individual oral presentation (15%), two 3-4-page papers (20% each=40%), and a final 6-8-page paper (35%). The following are required books to purchase: Natsume Sōseki Kokoro. Trans. by Edwin McClellan. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. 2011. ISBN#978-1466402645; Jun ichiro Tanizaki Some Prefer Nettles. Vintage International. ISBN#13:978-0679752691 (also available in Kindle);Yasunari Kawabata--The Sound of the Mountain. Vintage. ISBN#13:978-0679762647 (also available in Kindle). Several short stories and two short theoretical essays on the crosscultural gaze will be available on Alexander Online Reserve. This course fulfills the SAS Global Awareness and Humanities requirements. Classical Backgrounds of Literature 195:346:01; Index 19261; MW6 (4:30PM-5:50) SC-205; CAC Instructor: Walker, S. Cross-listed with: 01:351:317:01 Credit not given for both this course and 01:351:317 Influence on literature of classical Greek and Roman epic, tragedy, comedy, and other literary forms. Literature of the Fantastic Animals, Aliens, and Machines 195:359:01; TTh4 CML-204, CAC Instructor: DiMauro Cross-listed with: 01:860:320:02 What does it mean to imagine the world from a non-human perspective, such as that of a bug, a horse, a robot, or a plant-like alien masquerading as a human? To what extent is this even possible? Is there a hierarchy of more or less human? And what do such perspectives reveal about ourselves and our societies? The course will explore these questions in works of Russian and East European literature. Authors include Tolstoy, Kafka, Schulz, Olesha, Mayakovsky, Čapek, Lem, Bulgakov, and Pelevin. All readings and discussion in English. Holocaust Media 195:371:01; Index 18612; TTh6 (4:30PM-5:50) CJS-107; CAC Instructor: Shandler Cross-listed with: 01:563:366:01 Credit not given for both this course and 01:563:366. 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.

Issues in Comparative Literature: Jewish Graphic Novel 01:195:396:01; Index 08504; MW5 (2:50PM-4:10) CJS-107; CAC Instructor: Portnoy Cross-listed with: 01:563:338:01, 01:082:293:01 May be taken more than once. Content will differ each semester 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. Independent Study 195:493:1R; Index 00205 Prerequisite: Permission of the department. Independent reading under supervision of a member of the department. Honors in Comparative Literature 195:495:1R; Index 05963 Prerequisite: Permission of the department Independent Research on their Honors Thesis. Capstone Senior Workshop 195:497:01; Index 18813; H3 (11:30 AM- 12:50) CML-101; CAC Instructor: Marcone 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.