ENG 407G LIT. NATURALISM (3) Griffith, 444 PLC MEETS: 2:30-5:00 W FORMAT: Seminar AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 15 WEEKLY REAEIKG: Book a week PREREQUISITES: Open, by permission, to graduate students and seniors, majoring in Literature. DESCRIPTION: The concern is withthe theory and practice of the Naturalistic Novel. Novelists are Zola (in English translation); Frank Norris; Theodore Dreiser; John Steinbeck; Richard Wright. ENG 41OG FOLK NARRATIVE (3) Schrager, 465 PLC MEETS: 9:30-10:50 UH, 134 GIL FORMAT: Lectui e/Discu&sion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: Licit 40 WEEKLY READING: 125 Paget EVALUATION: 105-Attendance; 705-3 Papers; 205-Final READINGS: Lord, THE SINGER OF TALES; Dundes, CINDERELLA: A CASEBOOK; Shlomith and Rimtuon-kenan, NARRATIVE FICTION: CONTEMPORARY POETICS; Packet DESCRIPTION: The course is an introduction to the study of oral narrative, focusing on folktale and epic. The class will explore the role of storytellers in traditional societies, the functions of stories in comc.unlty life, the actual performing of stories, and the invented worlds the stories protray. Ue will examine past and present folklore scholarship on the subject, as well as perspectives from recent marrative theory. We will also trace the continuing power of l'olktale-like plots to represent human aspirations, and the utilization of these plots in film, politics, and other arenas of contemporary society. ENG 446G FILM AID FOLKLORE (3) Sherman, 457 PLC MEWS: 12:30-13:50 UH FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 40 WEEKLY READING: 50-100 Pages EVALUATION: 60S-2 Papers; 40% Project READINGS: Keider, ETHNOGRAPHIC FILM; Jacobs, 1 HE DOCUMENTARY TRADITION; Sherman, HUMAN DOCUMENTS: FOLKLORE AND TEE FILMS OF JORGE PRELORAN, SOUTHWEST FOLKLORE DESCRIPTION: English 466G, Film and Folklore, is a survey course which oeals with the development of film use by folklorists and folkloric filmmakers. Several levels of analysis will be used in examining folkloric films. Folklore genres, theories about folkloric data, and methoos of fieldwork implicit in films will be related tc the techniques used by filmmakers. One or more films will be screened and discussed during each class session. The precursors of folkloric films (documentaries and ethnodocumentaries or "ethnographic" films) will be analyzed in addition to folklore films, per se. COMMENTS: Students will write two fiveā€”page film critiques ana an in depth film proposal. ENG 447G AMERICA! POPULAR LITERATURE (3) Sherman, 457 PLC MEETS: 9:30-10:50 UH FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 40 WEEKLY READING: 1 Novel per week PREREQUISITES: Jr. standing EVALUATION: 30S-Paper; 30*-Kidterm; 40$-Final READINGS: Alger, RAGGED DICK; Cooper, THE DEERSLAYER; Ellis, SETH JONES; lias nett, THE MALTESE FALCON; Mitchell, GONE WITH THE WIND; Wolfe, THE ELECTRIC KOOL-AID ACID TEST; and a "modern romance." DESCRIPTION: This course surveys the main currents of American popular and cultural aesthetics reflected in America's popular literature. Students will be exposed to novels which had widespread and popular circulation from pioneer times to the present and that were written and published in America. These novels will be examined as a means of viewing speciic genres of pop. literature (such as cetective fiction, Western stories, dime novels, historical romances, and new journalism) and their relationship to other types of popular culture, and to mass culture, folk culture, and the American experience. BIG 170 VICTORIA* LITERATURE AID CULTURE (3) Stein, 472 PLC KELTS: 11:00-12:20 UH FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 22 EVALUATION: 755-3 Papers; 255-Final READINGS: Carlyle, PAST ALD PRESENT; Darwin, VOYAGE OF TP.E BEAGLE; Dickens, DAVID COPPERF1ELD; Gaskell, MARY BARTON; Bronte, WBTHERING HEIGHTS; Barrett, AURORA LEIGH; browning ana Tennyson, Selected Poems. DESCRIPTION: A survey of attitudes towards seif ana society amen*, major writers of the early Victorian period, with some consideration of the wider cultural context in which they worked. Fiction, poetry, and ncn-fictlonsl prose aaonfc the rescinds. Sone visual materials induced as well. BUG *790 AMERICA! LITERATURE BEFORE 1900 (3) Griffith, AAA PLC MEETS: 11:30 MbF FORK AT: Lecture AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: AO WEEKLY READING: Book a week PREREQUISITES: Open to graduates and upper-class undergraduates. Sot. e prior work in American Literature (sophomore survey, e.g.) will be helpful. READINGS: Twain, OLD TIKES OK THE MISSISSIPPI, CONNECTICUT YANKEE IK KING ARTHUR'S COAST; Howell, RISE OF SILAS LAP11AM; James, PORTRAIT OF A LADY; Belxaby, LOOKING EACKWARD; Jewett, COUNTRY OF FOINTED FIRS. DESCRIPTION: Concern is with the theory of literary realists and the practice of it in American realistic literature (1870-1900). UR 531 GRAD. CHEAT. WRIT. (3) Lyons, 356 PLC MEETS: 19:00-21:50 U, 232 PLC FORMAT: Discussion/Seminar /Workshop AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 15 WEEKLY READING: 4 Short stories by students in class. PREREQUISITES: Peruission of instructor based cn writing sample. DESCRIPTION: Course is designed to help individual student writers develop their individual talents and styles; to help them improve their own critical abilities as reaaers of their own, as well as others', work. COMMENTS: Though this class may enroll KFA students in creative writing, it is hoped that atuaents in other disciplines will be attractea to it. Folk and Ethnic Studies ES 102 I NT HO TO ETBB1C COMMUNITIES (3) Ross, 461 PLC MEETS: 11:00-12:20 UH, 176 ED FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 60 WEEKLY READING: 20 Pates EVALUATION': 5G*-Kioterm; 50>-Final READINGS: Welch, THE DEATH OF JIM LONEY; Packet DESCRIPTION: This course is aesigned to acquaint the student with the American Indian reservation. This course will explore how past and present feoeral policies affect the American Indian, how the reservation system was formed, its importance today and current issues affecting reservation Incian people. ES 410 G EYES ON THE PNIZE (TELECOURSE) (3) harris, 461 PLC MEETS: Telecourae offeree Vinter Tern only (6 weeks) FORMAT: Telecourse AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 20-25 WEEKLY READING: 50 Pages PREREQUISITES: Open enrollment EVALUATION: lOOJ-Final READINGS: Aptheker, UNFOLDING DRAMA: STUDIES IN U.S. HISTORY; Carson, EYES ON THE PRIZE - STUDY GUIDE; WillIans, EYES OK THE PRIZE - AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT. DESCRIPTION: Tbis teleccurse will focus on the history of the U.S. Civil Rights movement-focusing on such issues as : 1) What role should governmentand political leaoers play in the process of social change? 2) How does the Unitea States ensure that its democratic values are translated into reality? 3) How oo upheavals in the social order affect the daily lives of individuals? COMMENTS: There will be one final exam which will cover class lectures anc assigned reading. For further details contact the Ethnic Studies Program 686-3539 or the Division of Continuing Education 686-3537. ES 410 ETHNICITY, PROPAGANDA, AND PERSUASION (3) Harris, 461 PLC MEETS: 11:3C KVF FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 1C-15 WEEKLY READING: 50-75 Pages