Spring 2024
ENGLISH 90 008 - SEM 008
Practices of Literary Study
A Literary and Political History of Writing in College
Kara Elizabeth Wittman
Class #:33117
Units: 4
Instruction Mode:
In-Person Instruction
Offered through
English
Current Enrollment
Total Open Seats:
0
Enrolled: 18
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 18
Waitlist Max: 10
Open Reserved Seats:
1 reserved for College of Letters & Sciences Undeclared Students with 3-4 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 Kara Elizabeth Wittman
- ENGLISH 180J 001 001LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 001 001LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 002 002LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 003 003LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 004 004LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 005 005LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 006 006LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 007 007LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 009 009LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 012 012LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 013 013LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 014 014LEC
- ENGLISH R1A 015 015LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 002 002LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 003 003LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 004 004LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 005 005LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 008 008LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 009 009LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 010 010LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 014 014LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 015 015LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 017 017LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 018 018LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 019 019LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 020 020LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 022 022LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 023 023LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 024 024LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 026 026LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 027 027LEC
- ENGLISH R1B 029 029LEC
Course Catalog Description
This course is a small, faculty-led seminar on the practice and discipline of literary analysis. It is meant for all students who seek an introductory literature course and would like to improve their ability to read and write critically, including those who may wish to major in English. Focusing on the close study of a few works, rather than a survey of many, the seminar will help students develop college-level skills for interpreting literature, while gaining awareness of different strategies and approaches for making sense of literary language, genres, forms, and contexts. The seminar also will develop students’ ability to write about literature and to communicate meaningfully the stakes of their analysis to an audience.
Class Description
We write in college: that has always been true. But why do we write the way we do? This seminar will survey, historicize, and challenge some of the most cherished norms of college writing from the perspective of certain “flashpoints” and critical issues: originality and plagiarism; reading and “close” reading; linguistic hegemony and language justice; style and poetics; grading and grammar; translation and collaboration. We’ll focus on college writing in U.S. departments of English in the twentieth century, as these hosted some of the most active, sometimes contentious, and in many cases ongoing debates about language, literature, and composition. But we’ll also reach back into history, looking at the relationship between Montaigne’s Essais and the college application essay; the eighteenth-century copyright laws that helped shape how we think about originality and academic dishonesty; the emergence of close reading practices in the 1920s and 30s that changed how we write literary arguments; and the history of still-unsettled ideas about access, exclusion, value, and collaboration that influence our grading practices. Over the semester, seminar participants will create their own critical projects designed to help us imagine how these issues might play out over our own century.
Class Notes
All readings will be available on bCourses or provided in class.
Rules & Requirements
Repeat Rules
Course is not repeatable for credit.
Requirements class fulfills
Meets Arts & Literature, L&S Breadth
Reserved Seats
Current Enrollment
Open Reserved Seats:
1 reserved for College of Letters & Sciences Undeclared Students with 3-4 Terms in Attendance
Textbooks & Materials
See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.
Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials
Associated Sections
None