7 classes matched your search criteria.

Fall 2019  |  ENGL 1501W Section 001: Literature and Public Life (18261)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
A-F only
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Community Engaged Learning
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/03/2019 - 12/11/2019
Mon, Wed 10:10AM - 12:05PM
UMTC, East Bank
Amundson Hall 162
Enrollment Status:
Closed (24 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service-­learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.
Class Description:

Telling stories is a fundamental part of human existence; we all do it, all the time, whether we are conscious of it or not. We are drawn to stories, and we use them to make sense of the world around us and our experiences. Thus they are a central component of the ways we negotiate, continuously, between our private selves and the many public roles we play (and, indeed, sometimes the line between public and private is not easy to spot). I am interested in moments when a person's life intersects with something much bigger than themselves: a massive social change, a historical event, another person's very public experiences. How does that affect us, as private citizens?

In our three central readings, we will encounter these issues in a variety of ways. In Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich tells her own story of experiencing, temporarily, a life of low-wage labor, but she also tells the stories of her co-workers for whom low-wage labor is an ongoing fact of life. Susan Collins' dystopic novel The Hunger Games tells a story of one possible future for us all, but also shows her protagonists struggling against the public story that is being built around them. Lin-Manuel Miranda's ground-breaking musical Hamilton uses modern storytelling techniques to retell the story of the founding of our nation, and shows the figures at the center of those events struggling to find their own stories within that larger narrative.

To be successful in all of the aspects of this course, you will need to display active, empathetic engagement;
independent, critical thinking; organization and motivation.

A few logistical requirements:

1. You must have hard copy editions of the Ehrenreich and Collins texts. Electronic texts are not acceptable.

2. We will also be listening to and reading the annotated lyrics of Lin-Manuel Miranda's musical Hamilton; the annotated lyrics are available online, and I will provide links to a number of ways to listen to the songs. Thus, while I will encourage you to buy the Original Broadway Cast Recording of the musical, I am not requiring it.


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Grading:
Grading will be based on both informal and formal writing, participation in small groups and whole-class discussions, and other short assignments. If you choose to take this class "S/N" please note that in order for your performance to be considered "Satisfactory" you must complete all of the major assignments. You cannot decide that you have enough points and just not submit one.
Workload:
This course has a service-learning component; you will need to commit to 24 hours of volunteer work for successful completion. You will have plenty of help arranging this.
Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/18261/1199
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
25 September 2018

Fall 2019  |  ENGL 1501W Section 002: Literature and Public Life (19281)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
A-F only
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Community Engaged Learning
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/03/2019 - 12/11/2019
Mon, Wed 12:20PM - 02:15PM
UMTC, East Bank
Lind Hall 203
Enrollment Status:
Closed (25 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service-­learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.
Class Description:

Meaning/practice of citizenship. Historical themes, contemporary issues in American public life: access of citizenship, tensions between social duties and individual freedoms, role of moral values in public life. Diverse literary materials. Optional service-learning component.

Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/19281/1199
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
5 April 2017

Fall 2019  |  ENGL 1501W Section 003: Literature and Public Life (19282)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
A-F only
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Community Engaged Learning
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/03/2019 - 12/11/2019
Mon, Wed 02:30PM - 04:25PM
UMTC, East Bank
Blegen Hall 105
Enrollment Status:
Open (20 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service-­learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.
Class Description:

Meaning/practice of citizenship. Historical themes, contemporary issues in American public life: access of citizenship, tensions between social duties and individual freedoms, role of moral values in public life. Diverse literary materials. Optional service-learning component.

Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/19282/1199
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
5 April 2017

Fall 2019  |  ENGL 1501W Section 004: Literature and Public Life (19283)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
A-F only
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Community Engaged Learning
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/03/2019 - 09/09/2019
Tue, Thu 08:00AM - 09:55AM
UMTC, East Bank
Kolthoff Hall 139
 
09/10/2019 - 12/11/2019
Tue, Thu 08:00AM - 09:55AM
UMTC, East Bank
Peik Hall 155
Enrollment Status:
Open (22 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service-­learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.
Class Description:

This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service­-learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.

Grading:
55% Special Projects
30% Reflection Papers
15% Class Participation
Class Format:
20% Lecture
60% Discussion
20% Small Group Activities This course has a service-learning option that requests 20-25 hours over the semester. Non-service learning students will develop independent projects that request a similar time investment.
Workload:
20-100 Pages Reading Per Week
20 Pages Writing Per Term Other Workload: Written work for this class takes the form of short informal essays and an oral history project.
Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/19283/1199
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
1 September 2017

Fall 2019  |  ENGL 1501W Section 005: Literature and Public Life (19284)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
A-F only
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Community Engaged Learning
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/03/2019 - 12/11/2019
Tue, Thu 11:15AM - 01:10PM
UMTC, East Bank
Appleby Hall 102
Enrollment Status:
Open (24 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service-­learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.
Class Notes:
Indigenous Art, Literature, and Activism in the Mississippi Watershed: This course, which grows out of a multi-university (UMN, Northwestern University, and University of Mississippi) Mellon grant, explores Dakota, Anishinaabe, and settlers' historical and contemporary relationships with the Mississippi River as they appear in literature, art, and activism. In addition to reading literary texts that address the Mississippi and water more broadly as both a source of life and a site of political contestation, we will visit key water locales in the Twin Cities area, including Mní Ówe Sní (Coldwater Spring), the Bdóte (confluence of Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers), and WakháK Thípi (Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary). We will also work with Twin Cities Indigenous community members and organizations, including The Healing Place artists' collective, the Water Bar, and All My Relations art gallery, among others. Both inside and outside of the classroom we will engage the river as a sentient being with multiple origins, states of being, and destinations in a living community of other sentient water beings with whom Indigenous peoples have maintained deep and mutually beneficial reciprocal relations.
Class Description:

Meaning/practice of citizenship. Historical themes, contemporary issues in American public life: access of citizenship, tensions between social duties and individual freedoms, role of moral values in public life. Diverse literary materials. Optional service-learning component.

Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/19284/1199
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
5 April 2017

Fall 2019  |  ENGL 1501W Section 006: Literature and Public Life (20092)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
A-F only
Instructor Consent:
Instructor Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Community Engaged Learning
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/03/2019 - 12/11/2019
Tue, Thu 01:25PM - 03:20PM
UMTC, East Bank
Amundson Hall 104
Enrollment Status:
Open (23 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service-­learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.
Class Notes:
The Poetics of Social Change: Community, Place and Literary Form Writers are often asked what responsibility literature has to address political issues. In this class, we start with the assumption that writing is necessarily political, both in form and content, and instead ask, in what ways can creative writing be politically useful, and for whom? Are a creative work's political and aesthetic goals separable, and should they be? We will address these questions by reading critically, by producing creative works that engage with social issues, and by active community participation. This class will be divided into two sections: one day per week, we'll examine creative work across genres with an eye to its political and aesthetic effects, and ask how these two components inform each other. On the other day, we'll embark on a semester-long project with a Twin-Cities-based nonprofit, to investigate how the politics and aesthetics of creative writing can be used in practice, within and for our own communities. Possible projects include working with community groups to create a zine, teach creative writing, record stories, or co-write poems. Readings will feature Twin Cities writers, and may include Danez Smith, David Mura, Louise Erdrich, and Sun Yung Shin. Service learning is a required component of this course, which will be conducted with the assistance of the Center for Community-Engaged Learning. To register for this section, you must request a permission number. Please email instructor Eleanor Garran for assistance.
Class Description:

Meaning/practice of citizenship. Historical themes, contemporary issues in American public life: access of citizenship, tensions between social duties and individual freedoms, role of moral values in public life. Diverse literary materials. Optional service-learning component.

Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/20092/1199
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
5 April 2017

Fall 2019  |  ENGL 1501W Section 007: Literature and Public Life (20439)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
A-F only
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Community Engaged Learning
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
09/03/2019 - 12/11/2019
Tue, Thu 04:40PM - 06:35PM
UMTC, East Bank
Tate Laboratory of Physics B55
Enrollment Status:
Open (15 of 25 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
This course explores how literary language builds the collective knowledge, shared reality, and civic relationships that make up public life. Literature's power in the public sphere goes far beyond the quiet, solitary experience of reading. We will investigate how telling stories, documenting events, imagining possibilities, communicating ideals, representing conflict, and even creating fictional characters contribute to public life. Through a wide variety of texts, we will reflect on the nature of public life and on how reading and writing build civic relationships and democratic potential. This course will also offer you two tracks for actively engaging in public life. A service-­learning option will give you the experience of building literacy, developing skills in communication and public media, and strengthening roles in work and family. This recommended learning framework can engage your role as a citizen, broaden the impact of your education, and help you explore potential professional interests. Alternatively, an individually designed public project will prompt you to consider the links between literary/media culture, personal action, and public life, and to make your own intervention in these fields. To succeed in all areas of this class you must display active engagement, independent thinking and motivation, and organization.
Class Description:

Meaning/practice of citizenship. Historical themes, contemporary issues in American public life: access of citizenship, tensions between social duties and individual freedoms, role of moral values in public life. Diverse literary materials. Optional service-learning component.

Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/20439/1199
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
5 April 2017

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