MDA 105yg
Literature and Modernity
Spring 1997
9:00-10:50 TTh THH 121
Arthur Babcock
THH-126F, 740-3170
Office hours: TTh 11-12:00, and by appointment
babcock@mizar.usc.edu
Introduction
The purpose of this course is to enable students (and the professor,
too!) to understand the cultural perspectives underlying many of the most
urgent questions that we in late-twentieth-century America ask ourselves
and each other. Some of these questions are:
- Should the U.S. Constitution be interpreted strictly, or should it
be adapted to serve the values of a particular generation? For example,
can we argue that the death penalty is "cruel and unusual punishment"
when the Constitution makes clear reference to it in other sections? Does
the right to "keep and bear arms" make any sense in today's world?
- Is "moral relativism" a bad thing, or should each age and
each culture have the right to establish its own values? Are absolute
values the only real values?
Any discussion of these and related issues can be improved by an understanding
of the development of modernity in Western civilization. Beginning
in the Renaissance and culminating in the twentieth century, the possibility
that values, truth and reality itself can change over time has led different
thinkers to different conclusions: some have welcomed this process of change;
others have concluded that unchanging values should be sought and upheld.
Now that modernity is perhaps coming to an end (we are now postmodern),
these questions are being asked with increasing urgency.
In this course we will trace the rise of modernity through selected
works of literature, philosophy, science and art from the sixteenth century
to the present day.
Texts
- Beckett, Samuel. Waiting for Godot
- Chopin, Kate. The Awakening
- Conrad, Joseph. Heart
of Darkness
- Descartes, René. Discourse on Method
- Kafka, Franz. The Metamorphosis
- Montaigne, Michel de. Essays
- Pynchon, Thomas. The Crying of Lot 49
- Sartre, Jean-Paul. No Exit and Three Other Plays
- Shakespeare. King
Lear
- Voltaire. Candide,
Zadig & Other Stories
Schedule
Jan. 9 Introduction
Jan. 14-30: The Threshold of Modernity
Jan. 14 King Lear
16 King Lear
21 King Lear
23 Essays
28 Essays
30 Essays; Discourse on Method
- Feb. 4-13: Reason and Enlightenment
- Feb. 4 Discourse on Method; First paper
due
- 6 Discourse on Method
- 11 Candide
- 13 Candide
- Feb. 18-Mar. 20 : The Modernist Self
- 18 Heart of Darkness
- 20 Heart of Darkness (film: Apocalypse Now)
- 25 Heart of Darkness
- 27 Midterm Exam
- Mar. 4 The Awakening
- 6 The Awakening
- March 10-15: Spring Break
- 18 The Metamorphosis
- 20 The Metamorphosis; Second paper due
- Mar. 25-27: New Forms in Painting
- 25 Cubism
- 27 Cubism
- April 1-10: Existentialism & the Absurd
- Apr. 1 No Exit
- 3 No Exit
- 8 Waiting for Godot
- 10 Waiting for Godot
- Apr. 15-22: Postmodernism
- 15 The Crying of Lot 49
- 17 The Crying of Lot 49
- 22 The Crying of Lot 49; Third paper due
- 24 Review
Final Exam: Tuesday, May 6, 11:00-1:00, THH 121
Assignments & Grading:
- Three 5-6-page papers: 45%
- Midterm Exam: 15%
- Final Exam: 25%
- Participation: 15%
Consideration will be given to improvement over the course of the
semester.
LINKS:
CUBISM.IMAGE.BANK
San Narciso Community College
Thomas Pynchon Page
The Illuminati
conspiracy
Postmodern
thought