Course Syllabus

  Course Syllabus & Information

 

In this course we will read several landmark novels and examples of short fiction. We will begin at a time in which many writers left for Europe to leave behind a country they considered provincial while others immigrated to the United States as a refuge. We will examine how these continued exchanges across the Atlantic and the experiences of the World Wars and the Holocaust affected and reshaped the rich American novelistic traditions.

 

Proceeding largely in chronological order, the sequence of readings is divided thematically. The readings cluster around the way in which traditional American settings and literary forms interact with and adapt to national and transatlantic historical change. These changes are readily reflected in the novels of immigration, the Lost Generation, and the World Wars, but they also make themselves felt subtly in the way American writers think about the suburb, a direct result of World War II, negotiate the relationship between individualism and the shaping influence of family legacies, and try to grapple with the lasting effects of slavery.

 

Syllabus:

English E-166 - Syllabus Spring 2017 DRAFT.docx 

 

English 166/W (CRN 24239)

Spring 2017
Peter Becker PhD, Preceptor in Expository Writing, Harvard University
Location: 1 Story Street 307
Meeting Time: Thursday 7:40-9:40pm



 

Course Summary:

Date Details Due