English 509
Sociolinguistics--The Teaching of Writing
Professor Donald McCrary
Sociolinguistics--The Teaching of Writing
Professor Donald McCrary
This course examines the social foundation of language and the
linguistic foundation of social life. More specifically, the course explores
how language and society intersect to construct and, in many ways, control both
individual and group identity. The relationship between language and society
has relevance to the teaching of writing in that both teachers and students
possess socially constructed knowledge of language that undergirds their
understanding of writing competence. The course explores how sociolinguistic
constructions such as class, race, gender, academic discourse, and education
might impact upon writing performance. The course analyzes sociolinguistic
theory and practice, including the work of Pierre Bourdieu, Shirley Brice
Heath, Lisa Delpit, David Bartholomae, Claude Steele, and Sandra Lipsitz Bem.
English 522
Academic Writing Workshop
Professor Deborah Mutnick
Academic Writing Workshop
Professor Deborah Mutnick
A new offering in the English Master's Program, this course is an
intensive, advanced writing workshop for graduate students (across the
disciplines) who wish to develop professional writing skills. Students will
write critical essays in response to common course readings as well as
professional articles from the disciplines. Conducted as a workshop, the course
will be rooted in peer and teacher response to writing projects. Each week, two
or three students will submit writing to be workshopped, using critical
feedback from the class and the instructor to revise and edit their work.
Students will be required to complete five 6-page essays or the equivalent, and
will be invited to bring assignments into the workshop from their other
classes. Required texts may include Writing in the Disciplines: A
Reader for Writers, edited by Kennedy. Kennedy, and Smith, Writing
Without Teachers, by Peter Elbow, and On Writing Well, by
William Zinsser.
English 523
Fiction Writing Workshop
Professor Lewis Warsh
Fiction Writing Workshop
Professor Lewis Warsh
This workshop explores both the art and the craft of fiction
writing. Frequent writing assignments and exercises will concentrate on the
conventions of fiction—description, dialogue, and characterization—as well as
more experimental possibilities such as fragmentation and shifting point of
view. Focus will be on the ways autobiography overlaps with fiction and how the
past is fictionalized as a way of keeping it alive. Among the models we will
look at are stories and novels by Marguerite Duras, Don DeLillo, Lydia Davis, and
James Ellroy. Much of the workshop time will be spent reading and discussing
student work.
English 529
Topics in Creative Writing (Series of three one-credit courses)
Section One
Brainlingo: Writing The Voice Of the Body
1/23 to 2/20
Topics in Creative Writing (Series of three one-credit courses)
Section One
Brainlingo: Writing The Voice Of the Body
1/23 to 2/20
Edwin Torres
As artists we create our own communication. How we listen
affects how we speak, and how we see our language affects how our voice is
heard. Where the senses meet each other is where poetry can begin. This
workshop will be an active creative laboratory that will explore how we
communicate by exercising the languages inside us. Exercises will be balanced
by critiques. This is an active writing workshop for open minds.
Edwin Torres’s introduction to poetry was through The Nuyorican
Poets Café and The St. Marks Poetry Project, where he has worked as a workshop
leader and curator. His CD Holy Kidcombines poetry with music,
sounds and homemade tapes, and was included in the exhibition “The American
Century Pt. II” at the Whitney Museum Of American Art. From l993-99, he was a
member of the poetry collective, Real Live Poetry (formerly Nuyorican Poets
Café Live) with whom he performed and conducted workshops across the United
States and overseas. He’s the recipient of a one-year fellowship from The
Foundation For Contemporary Performance Art, as well as The Nuyorican Poets
Café Fresh Prize For Poetry. Finally, his media assault has transpired on MTV’s Spoken
Word Unplugged and The Charlie Rose Show and in Newsweek, Rolling
Stone, New York Magazine, High Times, and others.
In NYC, Torres has performed at many venues like the Nuyorican Poets Café,
Dixon Place, The Guggenheim Museum, CBGB’s, Tonic, P.S. 122, WFMU Radio,
Lincoln Center, and The Museum Of Modern Art. His books include I Hear
Things People Haven’t Really Said, Fractured Humorous (Subpress),
The All-Union Day Of The Shock Worker (Roof Books), and
most recently, Please (CD-Rom from Faux Press). Edwin is
currently co-editing POeP! an eJournal, and Cities Of
Chance: An Anthology of New Poetry from The United States and Brazil, both
from Rattapallax Press. His website is wwsw.brainlingo.com.
Section Two
Twins & Matching Sets
2/27 to 4/3
Barbara Coultas
Twins & Matching Sets
2/27 to 4/3
Barbara Coultas
In this class we will focus on writing works that have companions.
By that I mean we will write poetry or prose that splinters off or inspires
other projects. We will read work by writers from the early days of The Poetry
Project as well as innovative work by younger writers who are following in the
same linage. Reading texts include handouts from Bernadette Mayer, Ted
Berrigan, Joe Brainard, Lydia Davis, Marcella Durand, Kristin Prevallet, John
Yau, Dodie Bellamy, and others.
Brenda Coultas is originally from Southern Indiana. She’s lived in
NYC since l995 and is the author of A Handmade Museum (Coffee
House Press), A Summer Newsreel, Boyeye, and Early
Films, a collection of prose and poetry. Her poems have been
anthologized in Heights of the Marvelous from St. Martin’s
Press and The (New) American Poets, published by Talisman. Her
journal publications include works in, among others, Epoch,
Conjunctions: State of the Art, Fence, The World, American Poetry Review,
Indian Review. She has read at the Poetics Program at SUNY Buffalo,
the Boston Poetry Conference, among many others. She has taught at The Poetry
Project, Naropa University, and is presently on the faculty at Touro College in
Manhattan. She co-edited The Poetry Project Newsletter (1997-98),
and has received grants from the Fund for Poetry and the Ted Berrigan Award.
Bradford Morrow describes her work as follows: “Equally at ease in the city and
the country, Brenda Coultas is a spiritual archeologist of dumpsters and farm
fields, an observer of the derelict and everyday folks. Her vivid voice is like
no other I have encountered, and the originality of her work is matched by the
genuine wisdom of its perceptions.”
Section Three
4/10 to 5/1
Erica Hunt
4/10 to 5/1
Erica Hunt
We will gallop through the gamut of 20th/21st century
experimental poetics, pausing to gaze at some of the landmarks: jazz poetry,
language poetries, process poetry, and the new sentence(s). The class will read
selected contemporary writing by Jayne Cortez, Nathaniel Mackey, Ron Silliman,
Lyn Hejinian, Harryette Mullen, Leslie Scalapino, and Charles Bernstein.
Writing in the moment, writing in the extreme, at home and in class, the
indispensable laboratory of praxis.
Erica Hunt is the author of Local History (Roof
Books, l993) and Arcade (Kelsey St. Press, l996). Born in New
York in l955, Hunt has worked as a poetry teacher, housing organizer, labor
news writer, and radio producer. She currently works as a program officer for a
social justice funder in New York City. Her poetry and essays on poetry’s connection
to politics, race, gender, and history have appeared in small magazines and
anthologies, including Poetry Society of America, Talisman, American
Book Review, Bomb, and Iowa Poetry Review. She has
read and lectured at Naropa, The New School for Social Research, St. Mark's
Poetry Project, Mills College, Stanford, Brandeis, New College of San
Francisco, etc. She is a theorist and the author of the famous essay, “Notes
for an Oppositional Poetics,” which first appeared in the anthology The
Politics of Poetic Form (ed. Charles Bernstein, l990). Harryette
Mullen writes that “Erica Hunt’s Local History blows the
public and the personal inside out, estranging familiar forms of writing,
letter and diary, while snatching moments of intimacy and insight in disembodied
prose that anatomizes artifacts of mass culture, such as screenplay and cartoon
strip.” Recent publications include, “Roots of the Black Avant Garde,” “Reading
for the Conference on Modernism” and “Poetry and Politics.”
English 635
Seminar in Ibsen
Professor Joan Templeton
Seminar in Ibsen
Professor Joan Templeton
The course examines the major prose plays of Henrik Ibsen, the
inventor of modern drama. Ibsen’s dramas are the second most performed plays in
the world after Shakespeare. We will read Ibsen’s twelve major prose plays from Pillars
of Society to When the Dead Awaken, including A
Doll House, Ghosts, An Enemy of the People, The Wild Duck, The Lady from the
Sea, Hedda Gabler, The Master Builder, and John Gabriel
Borkman. The plays will be studied as dramas to be performed on stage
as well as literary texts. If a decent Ibsen production is available in New
York City, we will attend it as a class. Students in the seminar will be
permitted to attend the 10th International Ibsen Conference,
hosted by The Ibsen Society of America and Long Island University, which will
be held on campus from June 1-7; scholars and directors from around the world
will participate.
Text: Ibsen: The Major Prose Plays, trans. Rolf
Fjelde. New York: Penguin, l978. Paperback edition.
English 650
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
Professor Sealy Gilles
Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
Professor Sealy Gilles
Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, is a
ramshackle, indecorous, unfinished poem patched together out of various
translations and adaptations. Its final form was probably unknowable even to
its creator. Chaucer died in 1400, before he could finish the Tales, but
he left us with a vibrant and extraordinary varied collection of
stories—sermons, fabliaux, romances, tragedies, and fairy
tales—told by travelers of wildly diverse social backgrounds, including a
knight, a nun, a weaver, a miller, and a clergyman. We will read the tales both
in Middle English (with a lot of help) and in translation. As we work on the
stories and their tellers, we will also explore the chaotic and vibrant world
of fourteenth-century England.
English 646
Individual & Small Group Writing Instruction
Professor Patricia Stephen
Individual & Small Group Writing Instruction
Professor Patricia Stephen
Advanced undergraduate students may enroll for this course with
permission of the instructor.
In this class, we will examine the theory and practice of
individual and small group writing instruction, locating writing center work
within its broader historical and institutional contexts. The course will begin
with an overview of writing center history, theory, and pedagogy and will then
examine some of the most common tutoring concerns: structuring sessions
and setting goals; assessing, diagnosing and responding to student writing;
learning strategies to teach planning, drafting, revising, proofreading and
editing; learning strategies to work on specific grammatical concerns; helping
students with reading comprehension; working with ESL concerns; noticing
interpersonal dynamics and maintaining boundaries; respecting and responding to
cultural and ethnic differences; working as an online tutor, and facilitating
small group sessions. Students interested in pursuing a specific topic not
included in the general readings—such as writing center administration—may do
so with permission from the instructor.
Possible texts: Landmark Essays on Writing Centers,
Writing Center Research: Extending the Conversation, Noise from the Writing
Center, Rhetorical Grammar, The Place of Grammar in Writing Instruction, The
Practical Tutor, Taking Flight With OWLS: Examining Electronic Writing Center
Work.
Students who enroll in the course will be required to tutor for
one hour per week during the semester at the Writing Center and to audio-
and/or videotape one session with a student. The taped session will be
transcribed and analyzed by the students for use in a self-study. Classes will
be conducted as seminars/workshops so that all students have the opportunity to
participate in class presentations, mock tutorials, etc. Each student will
generate her/his own idea/s for a final written (and/or action) project, based
on topics of interest during the semester.
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