2018 Fall
ENGLISH 165 003 - SEM 003
Special Topics
Literature and Media Theory
Current Enrollment
Total Open Seats:
0
Enrolled: 16
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 16
Waitlist Max: 0
Open Reserved Seats:
1 reserved for English Majors with 5 or more Terms in Attendance
Hours & Workload
3 hours of student-instructor coverage of course materials per week, and 9 hours of outside work hours per week.
Other classes by Celeste G Langan
Course Catalog Description
Designed primarily for English majors. Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.
Class Description
This course will consider literature in relation to media theory. Is literature made obsolete by new media? What happens when we consider print literature in relation to other “distressed” media, from black-and-white photography to silent film to analog recording? What happens to the concept of authenticity in the digital age? How does print differ from “code” as a “general medium” of sensory forms—sight, sound, touch? What do we value about “virtual” reality? Using Marshall McLuhan’s claim that “the content of one medium is always another medium” as a guiding concept, we will try to assess the impact of other media, especially photography, film, and recorded sound, on literature’s function and value. Our particular interest will be in the status of the “document”—an historical or fictional piece of evidence that is somehow presented, represented, or mediated by the art form (or “platform”) in question. We’ll compare “documents” (including reported and recorded speech) as they are mediated in both 19th- and late 20th-century literary forms. One question that may emerge, as we consider the history of mediation from Dracula to Danielewski’s House of Leaves, is why mediation is so often registered an occult or gothic phenomenon. Students will be responsible for weekly discussion posts on the reading and two critical projects (one of which needs to be in print form!).
See also https://english.berkeley.edu/courses/5802
Class Notes
Texts will include: Beckett, S.: Krapp's Last Tape; Danielewski, M., House of Leaves; Johnson, R.: RADI OS; Mann, E., Four Plays; Stoker, B.: Dracula; Williams, W.C.: Paterson; Wordsworth and Coleridge, Lyrical Ballads. Secondary reading: Bolter and Grusin: Remediations; Hansen, M., ed., Critical T..
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Texts will include: Beckett, S.: Krapp's Last Tape; Danielewski, M., House of Leaves; Johnson, R.: RADI OS; Mann, E., Four Plays; Stoker, B.: Dracula; Williams, W.C.: Paterson; Wordsworth and Coleridge, Lyrical Ballads. Secondary reading: Bolter and Grusin: Remediations; Hansen, M., ed., Critical Terms for Media Studies Kittler, F.: Gramophone Film Typewriter; McLuhan, M.: Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man.
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Rules & Requirements
Repeat Rules
Reserved Seats
Current Enrollment
Open Reserved Seats:
Textbooks & Materials
Associated Sections
None