Fall 2018 | CL 8910 Section 001: Advanced Topics in Comparative Literature -- Socialist Realism and Peripheral Modernism (32161)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Lecture
- Credits:
- 3 Credits
- Grading Basis:
- Student Option
- Instructor Consent:
- No Special Consent Required
- Instruction Mode:
- In Person Term Based
- Class Attributes:
- Topics Course
- Meets With:
- CSDS 8910 Section 001ENGL 8090 Section 001
- Times and Locations:
- Regular Academic Session09/04/2018 - 12/12/2018Wed 01:00PM - 04:00PMUMTC, East BankLind Hall 216
- Enrollment Status:
- Closed (3 of 3 seats filled)
- Course Catalog Description:
- Practical applications of specific methodologies and theories to a determined area. Topics vary by instructor and semester.
- Class Description:
This course will be addressed particularly to students of world literature, postcolonial studies, and European modernism.
We are not especially interested in the specific Soviet or Chinese policies on the arts that came to be known as "socialist realism." Instead, our intention is to ask whether there is something like a peripheral aesthetic - which is to say, a set of formal properties that seem to recur in non-Western settings because they capture the experience of dependency, uneven development, the clash of alien cultural values, economic disenfranchisement, and decolonization. We wonder whether such an aesthetic - if it exists - is not drawn to or reassembled out of the fragments of a "realism" that is at times socialist, at others merely socially critical, but no less modernist (in the sense of fresh, inventive, current). And we seek to expand significantly the definition of socialist realism to explore whether it is a genuinely popular sensibility and not only a bureaucratically imposed policy of the arts.
These sorts of questions take place within a frame that we should foreground. The theory within which we have all been trained - the theory that defines the entire post-war period, in fact -- is itself profoundly modernist, and takes its philosophical gestures from the very figures of modernist literary texts. For that reason, high canonical modernism (1850-1940) is uniquely defined in most of our minds with positive "newness": with avant-garde practices, formal experimentation, cultural transgressions, and a linguistic depth-model. This is the very definition of "modernist" for most scholars, in fact, and it deeply colors and in some ways distorts earlier attempts to speak of a peripheral aesthetic. We are questioning the part of this assumption that considers this ensemble to be unique, and are skeptical about whether the differences among these variouys modes have to do with degrees of experimentation or linguistic sophistication.
- Who Should Take This Class?:
- Anyone interested in the forms of art and culture in the non-Western world, the legacies of socialism, and the colonial experience.
- Learning Objectives:
- To grasp working definitions of social realism in the arts, its distinction from socialist realism (seen broadly as the art form of the global periphery), and an introduction to specific works of literature and film.
- Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/32161/1189
- Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
- 21 March 2018
Fall 2018 | CL 8910 Section 002: Advanced Topics in Comparative Literature -- Mysticisms of the Avant-Garde (32165)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Lecture
- Credits:
- 3 Credits
- Grading Basis:
- Student Option
- Instructor Consent:
- No Special Consent Required
- Instruction Mode:
- In Person Term Based
- Class Attributes:
- Topics Course
- Meets With:
- CSDS 8910 Section 002
- Times and Locations:
- Regular Academic Session09/04/2018 - 12/12/2018Tue 05:30PM - 08:30PMUMTC, East BankNicholson Hall 201
- Enrollment Status:
- Open (5 of 8 seats filled)
- Course Catalog Description:
- Practical applications of specific methodologies and theories to a determined area. Topics vary by instructor and semester.
- Class Description:
CL/CSDS 8910: Mysticisms of the Avant-Garde
Prof. Michael Gallope
T 5:30 - 8:30
Nicholson Hall 135
This seminar will focus on artistic uses of the occult, the mystical, and the esoteric among figures of the Western avant-garde. Topics to be discussed include twentieth-century Neoplatonism, the metaphysics of vitalism, negative theology, alchemy, theosophy, mysticism and feminism, mutations of Christian mysticism, perennialism, the Western reception of Taoism, Hinduism and Buddhism, esoteric formalisms, the formation of new age spirituality, the meaning of hipsterism, the significance of bad or inscrutable attitudes, the exploitation of atmospheres and hypnosis, and late modern Pythaogreanism. Readings by Meister Eckhart, Aldous Huxley, Georges Bataille, Ananda Commaraswamy, Hazrat Inayat Kahn, D. T. Suzuki, Sri Ramakrishna, Carl Popper, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Stanley Cavell, Carl Jung, Antonin Artaud, Vladimir Jankélévitch, Susanne Langer, Edward Said, Julian Baldick, Luce Irigaray, Livia Kohn, Amy Hollywood, Taraka Larson and Fred Moten. Students will present and write a term paper on an artist of their choosing (literature, film/video, music/sound, theater, intermedia, etc.); we will also discuss works by David Tudor, Ornette Coleman, the Velvet Underground, Alice Coltrane, Patti Smith, and Paul Laffoley.
- Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/32165/1189
- Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
- 8 April 2018
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