English
631-501, Spring 2011 |
Dr.
Michael Filas |
American
Postmodernism |
Office: Bates 07 |
6:30-9:15, Tuesday,
Bates 123 www.wsc.ma.edu/mfilas |
Hours: Before and after
class; TR 9:45-11:00, T 5:00-6:00, and by appointment on Wednesdays
and at other times. |
Course Description:
We will read examples of
theory and American literature that investigate the political and consumeristic
alienation of our times. In the late twentieth century, in the decades
following Vietnam and Watergate, theory got mighty paranoid about the
first-world capitalist models of representation and what they might do to the
individual's sense of identity. Postmodern theory argues that we're all
hopelessly fragmented and cowed by corporate-controlled media saturation and a
politics of inscription. Our identities and memories run no deeper than the
flat surface of a TV or computer screen, or so the theory proposes. Our
study of American postmodernism will be based in theory, mostly French theory,
and fiction and cultural fare from American writers and artists.
Required Fiction:
Don
Delillo. White Noise. Viking Critical Library.
Philip
K. Dick. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
Joan
Didion. Democracy. Vintage International.
Art
Spiegelman. Maus: A Survivors Tale--My Father Bleeds History V1.
Pantheon.
Kurt
Vonnegut, Jr. Breakfast of Champions.
Required
Theory:
Jim
Powell. Derrida for Beginners. Writers and Readers Publishing.
Jean-Franois
Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, University of
Minessotta Press.
Jean
Baudrillard. Simulations. Foreign Agents.
Additional
Theory Provided in Course Reader:
Jameson, Fredric. The
Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism.
McHale, Brian. Chinese
Box Worlds.
Althusser,
Louis. Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses.
Derrida,
Jacques. Structure, Sign and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences.
Rimmon-Kenan, Shlomith. Narrative Fiction: Contemporary Poetics
(excerpts).
De Man, Paul. Semiology
and Rhetoric.
Waugh, Patricia.
Introduction to Postmodernism.
Barthes, Roland. Mythologies (excerpts).
Tentative Schedule of Readings and Coursework:
|
Course
Requirements & Grading:
20% One
theory prcis & presentation (500 words, 10 minute presentation)
20% Two literature
analyses (500 words each, 10% per analysis)
10% One creative
reflection (500 words)
30% Final paper (15
pages)
20%
Participation (includes attendance, theses [which are brief written talking
points from the reading], oral presentations of final paper ideas &
creative reflections, contributions to seminar discussions)
ENGL
631 AMERICAN POSTMODERNISM
COURSE
READINGS
FILAS
1. Course
Syllabus
2. Course
Assignments (not including final paper)
3. McHale,
Brian. Chinese Box Worlds.
4. Waugh,
Patricia. Introduction to Postmodernism.
5.
Barthes, Roland. Mythologies (excerpts).
6. Jameson,
Fredric. The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism.
7. Ulmer,
Gregory L. The Object of Post-Criticism.
8. Hassan,
Ihab. POST-ModernISM: A Paracritical Bibliography.
9. Baudrillard,
Jean. The Ecstasy of Communication.
10. Derrida,
Jacques. Structure, Sign and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences.
11. Althusser,
Louis. Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses.
12. Derrida,
Jacques. Structure, Sign and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences.