Fall 2005


ENL 2990 Benjamin Franklin's World
Dr. Curtis
(MWF 1-1.50 CRN 10999)

With a malevolence which is without parallel in history, he would work all day, and then sit up nights, and let on to be studying algebra by the light of a smoldering fire, so that all other boys might have to do that also, or else have Benjamin Franklin thrown up to them. Not satisfied with these proceedings, he had a fashion of living wholly on bread and water, and studying astronomy at meal time--a thing which has brought affliction to millions of boys since, whose fathers had read Franklin's pernicious biography.
Mark Twain, The Late Benjamin Franklin

Nearly everyone knows some version of Benjamin Franklin, and like Twain's, most of these versions are reactions to Franklin's status as a cultural icon rather than to direct experience with Franklin's own writings. This course will take a closer look at those writings as we follow Franklin's enormous curiosity through realms of journalism, literature, economics, politics, travel, science, and ethics. We'll examine and evaluate his contemporary impact on all these fields of study and writing, along with his cultural legacy in various representations of Franklin from his portraiture through biographical and literary/pop culture depictions the man who has been called everything from the essential founder to the eternal shopkeeper. Participants in this course should expect to learn a great deal about Benjamin Franklin, the status and production of knowledge and transatlantic culture in the 18th century, and Franklin's evolving status as an American icon; to be graded on journals, an exam, and an extensive project on some representation of Franklin; and to have the course enhanced by the speakers and events of this Fall's Belmont Humanities Symposium, which shares its subject matter with this course.

ENL/W 3500 History of the English Language
Dr. Monteverde
(TR 2-3.15 CRN 11001 for ENL; 11108 for ENW)

Recognizing that any description of this course is destined to be off-putting, let me begin by stating that ideally this course should make your own language come alive for you as a living entity whose current form is the result of all its childhood experiences and whose future shape, though predictable to some extent, is also yet to be determined. We will study the growth of our language from its origin as a descendant of the Indo-European language family in distant prehistory to its current position as the 2nd most widely spoken language in the modern world. Though required for all students seeking teacher certification in English, this course also is of value to students interested in the study of literature and the development of a personal voice in writing, because it will make the primary tool of writing, the language itself, more visible to you. Tests will be augmented with a variety of assignments, such as a personal language history, designed to help you appreciate the on-going and individual process of change that can be experienced in the study of English. An optional service learning unit can also be taken as part of the course. While class content is the same for undergraduates and graduates, out of class assignments differ, with undergraduate students, for example, producing a brief essay reflecting on how use of language shapes a particular work of their own choosing�past students have considered books ranging from Dr. Seuss, to a play by Shakespeare, to a novel by Faulkner, to a current movie.

ENL 3620
Shakespeare: Representative Plays
Dr. Wells
(TR 9.30-10.45 - CRN 11002 GS credit available)

This course will introduce students to the unsurpassed and inexhaustible pleasures of Shakespeare's plays. We will begin with a study of Shakespeare's language, with the goal of helping students become competent readers of his plays, and move to practicing a more accomplished literacy whereby we study how Shakespeare's plays yield dizzyingly pleasurable experiences through beauty, poignancy, irony, paradox and wit--the qualities that make Shakespeare pre-eminent among dramatists in our language. To these ends we will study plays from all four traditional Shakespearean genres: comedies, tragedies, histories, and romances.

ENL 3660
Satire Then and Now
Dr. Murray
(MWF 11-11.50 CRN 11004)

This course will examine parallels and continuities between 'texts' (including films and images) in two great ages of satire, the 18th Century and the present. We will examine (in addition to the predictable but necessary discussion of the techniques of satire) the social functions of the satirist, the social responsibilities of the satirist, the political allegiances of satire, the dangers of satire, and other issues as they arise. When possible, we will pair satirical texts: Swift's Gulliver's Travels (The Book) and Jon Stewart's America (The Book); Austen's Emma with Clueless and Pride and Prejudice with Bollywood's Bride and Prejudice. Other 18th-century writers to be examined include Alexander Pope, John Dryden and John Gay (Beggar's Opera). We will examine the visual satire of William Hogarth and Erika Rothenberg and political cartoonists. We will also pay attention to new forms and genres of satire in each era, such as the hoax in the 18th century and web satire (Tim Bedore and Co.) of today. Everyone will produce intelligent, enlightening, and entertaining reports and write comparative analyses of satires. The more adventurous and creative among us will write our own satires.

ENL 3800
India in Film and Literature
Dr. Dale
(W 2-5 CRN 11003 - GS credit available)

We will explore the culture of India, including the traditions of Buddhism, Hinduism, and Islam by reading classical and contemporary literature and by viewing key films that dramatize historical events and contemporary Indian life.

ENL 3900
Introduction to Literary Criticism
Dr. Paine
(TR 11-11.50 CRN 11005)


This course is intended to deepen students' knowledge of both the history and the practice of literary criticism. In considering texts from Plato to the present day, we will study how the critical examination of literature has evolved in the Western tradition. During the latter weeks of the course, we will look closely at a number of approaches to a particular work or works, as a way of further developing students' familiarity will the ways in which literature can be read today. This course can be taken most profitably in a student's junior or senior year. Prerequisite: ENL 2000 or permission of instructor.

ENW 2420
Intermediate Creative Writing
Dr. Alexander
(TR 12.30-1.45 CRN 11007)

Creative writing can be many different things--sometimes exhilarating and challenging, sometimes just hard work. However, it is always 'stretching,' and teaches you much about both the craft of writing and what you feel it is important to say to the world. This writing class will be a small and temporary community meant both to challenge you and to support you in your best creative writing efforts. In it we�ll expand our knowledge of the formal aspects of creative writing and encourage each other to engage in the kind of courageous play that renders writing vital and unique. We'll work in a variety of genres--fiction, poetry, and forms that are a hybrid of the two, and at the end of the term, we'll compose a class anthology of your best work. The heart of the course is the workshops: what you bring to them as a writer, how you respond to others' work. Grades for stories and poems are based as much on your sincere effort as they are on the ultimate success of the piece. In fact, as your ideas become more complex and interesting, your writing may actually seem to become less skillful, because you are exploring new territory. You should expect this and even seek it out. Be aware, though, that sloppiness is a different matter. You should always be working at the top of your capacity in technical terms. In other words, a poorly written sentence is still a poorly written sentence, and your instructor will not be easily convinced that carelessness is the equivalent of originality. The primary goal of this course is to help you develop both your creative vision and the tools you need to communicate your vision through your work. You�ll also develop critical vocabulary needed to talk about creative work in a workshop setting, and examine the techniques established writers have developed. All creative work requires diligence and courage and, in the end, is a solitary pursuit. However, all writers need honest, sympathetic readers, and a community of creators in which to work. We'll try to create such a community here.

ENW 2510.01
Intermediate Composition
Dr. Cox
(MWF 9-9.50 CRN 11008)

In ENW 2510, we will explore how and why people are moved to write about their experiences and seek to articulate their points of view as we respond to a series of essays from 'alternative' presses and interpret a pair of novels whose protagonists find themselves outside their comfort zones. We will then go on to write and revise several essays of our own; indeed, our efforts at articulating our own viewpoints and experiences comprise the main activity of the course: the bulk of our class time will be devoted to workshops that center on our papers-in-progress. We will help one another 'shape' our essays in these workshops; we will also review the rules of English grammar and mechanics as necessary.
Readings will include short stories and creative nonfiction: 'The Littlest Hitler,' 'Things We Knew When the House Caught Fire,' 'The Guide to Being a Groupie,' and 'How Susie Bayer's T-Shirt Ended Up on Yusuf Mama's Back,' to name a few selections. We will also read Dai Sijie's Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress and Mark Haddon's The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.

ENW 3550
The Journal: Reading, Writing, and Revelation
Dr. Pinter
(TR 11-12.15 CRN 11009)


This course asks you to read and write reflectively in order to study the experience of journal writing. We will be studying the genre of journal writing, while at the same time, we will be actively engaging in the genre via our own journal writing. Primarily, we will address the question that Frederick Buechner poses when he admonishes listen to your life. All moments are key moments (Now and Then 2). The texts we'll read are by authors from different time periods and cultures; possible authors include Etty Hilesum, Henri Nouwen, and Sei Shonagon. These texts will be studied for the writer's experiences and used as springboards for our own writing. In addition to keeping a journal, assignments include analyses of journal writers. We'll meet from 11-12:15, Tuesdays and Thursdays.

ENW 3990
Everyday Rhetoric
Dr. Smith
(TR 9.30-10.45 CRN 11011)

What is 'rhetoric'? While Plato attacked rhetoric as 'mere cookery,' others have speculated that rhetoric is at the heart of an ethical life. In short, rhetoric is one of the thorniest, most contested --and most endlessly fascinating--terms in writing theory. During rhetoric's long history, it has been used to describe everything from the arcane (e.g., stylistic devices) to the holistic (e.g., ways of understanding meaning). Some of the debates about rhetoric we'll consider in this course include: Is rhetoric an innate skill? Can rhetoric be taught? Is rhetoric at the heart of ethics? What can we learn from rhetoric as we navigate our everyday lives?

Everyday Rhetoric will be a seminar-based course, which means most of the class time will be spent discussing the readings, taking them apart, playing them the ideas from the course, and placing them in the context of our own everyday lives. So, along with regular writing assignments, exams, and one major paper, active, engaged course participation is an absolute essential. We will consider a rich, diverse body of sources: Gorgias, Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Christine de Pizan, Erasmus, Frederick Douglass, Friedrich Nietzsche, Virginia Woolf, Michel Foucault, Adrienne Rich will be among the rhetoricians we engage. But we will also look at 'everyday' rhetorical practices by focusing on contemporary gang culture in Chicago and considering a compelling argument that silence itself is a powerful rhetorical tool. Through our reading, writing, and discussion, we will learn about this tricky thing called 'rhetoric' as we develop a heightened awareness of how writing and rhetoric infuse our everyday lives.

If you'd like to talk more about this course, feel free to email Dr. Smith at smithbk@mail.belmont.edu