581 V SEMINAR LITERARY THEORY, Rothberg. W 5-6:50
TOPIC: Modern Critical Theory: An Advanced Introduction
This class meets on TU 7:30-8:50 at IPRH
This course will provide a historical survey of the foundational thinkers, texts, and schools that orient contemporary work in the humanities, from Kant and Hegel to Cultural Studies and Postcolonial Theory. As an “advanced introduction,” the course is intended primarily for first-year graduate students and for those who feel they have not covered the development of critical theory in a systematic way. The course will include significant discussion of figures such as: Kant, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, Weber, Adorno, Barthes, Levi-Strauss, Lacan, Derrida, Foucault, Kristeva, Irigaray, Williams, Hall, Said, Spivak, Bhabha, Zizek, and Butler . Among the topics we will certainly address are: history, the subject, value, power, language, ideology, materiality, gender, sexuality, race, and colonialism. The purpose of this course is to ensure that graduate students receive a rigorous introduction to critical theories and methodologies central to a variety of fields in the humanities and to provide the basis for interdisciplinary conversation and intellectual community among graduate students and faculty members from across the university.
Modern Critical Theory will have an unusual format. The course will meet twice a week, once a week in a public session that will include graduate students from Robert Rushing’s Comparative Literature 501 course and once a week in a closed session limited to registered students. Drawing on the resources of the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory, we will invite to class “guest experts” from around campus (and occasionally from off campus); these guests will visit the public sessions of the seminar and lecture on particular topics throughout the semester. Those Tuesday night sessions will meet at the IPRH Building (805 W. Pennsylvania , Urbana ).
Requirements: Attendance at all public and closed sessions; active participation; 10-pages of analytical writing during the semester; a timed, 72 hour take-home essay exam of approximately 10 pages at the end of the semester.
We will meet for an unscheduled introductory session in the English Building on Wednesday, August 24, from 5:00-6:30 pm . For that session, please read: Jonathan Culler, “What is Theory?” from Literary Theory: A Very Short Introduction (pp. 1-17) and Barbara Christian, “The Race for Theory,” in the Norton (pp. 2255-66). The Culler text will be available shortly before the semester begins on electronic reserves. More information about the course will be available by late summer on the Unit for Criticism website: http://criticism.english.uiuc.edu. Please contact me if you have any questions about the course: mpr@uiuc.edu.
TEXTS: The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism, Vincent Leitch, et al, ed.; Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals (tr. Kaufmann); Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality: An Introduction. The Norton will provide the base readings for many of our sessions, but will be supplemented by many xeroxed readings. William Schroeder’s Continental Philosophy: A Critical Approach will be a recommended secondary text.