Dec 05, 2025  
Catalogue 2025-2026 
    
Catalogue 2025-2026
Add to Portfolio (opens a new window)

ENGL 170 - Approaches to Literary Studies

Semester Offered: Fall
1 unit(s)
Each section explores a central issue, such as “the idea of a literary period,” “canons and the study of literature,” “nationalism and literary form,” or “gender and genre” (contact the department office for current descriptions). Assignments focus on the development of skills for research and writing in English, including the use of secondary sources and the critical vocabulary of literary study.  Wendy Graham.

Topic for 2025/26a: Sex and Psyche. This course examines the relationship between literary works redefining gender and sexuality through their depiction of androgynous hero/ines, femmes fatales, and outré sexual practices and the ‘invention of the homosexual’ at the close of the nineteenth century. The course details the legal and social constraints on sexual difference that frustrated writers’ efforts to affirm same-sex passion, which Oscar Wilde called “the love that dare not speak its name.” The coded nature of homoerotic themes in texts encourages close reading of works that reward literary scrutiny as well as polemical interpretation. The course employs psychoanalysis and queer theory to address the male aesthete’s quandary: homophobia and misogyny encourage him to align himself with the privileged Victorian male through his vilification of women (as tasteless and insatiable consumers of objects and men); at the same time, he is drawn to the feminine. Theorists consulted: Foucault, Lacan, Butler, Barthes, Deleuze, Sedgwick, Felski.  Authors read: Flaubert, Balzac, Poe, Sacher-Masoch, Wilde, Swinburne, Pater, James, Bataille. Key terms: Art, Aestheticism, Androgyne, Bourgeois/ie, Castration, Cerebral Lechery, Decadence, Energy Conservation, Feminism, Hysteria, Inversion, Male Gaze, Misogyny, Neurasthenia, Opera, Perversion, Psychoanalysis. Wherever possible, we try to draw connections between the nineteenth century and our own embattled times.

Open to first-year students and sophomores, and to others by permission; does not satisfy the college requirement for a First-Year Writing Seminar.

Two 75-minute periods.

Course Format: CLS



Add to Portfolio (opens a new window)