Fall 2023 Comparative Literature BC3204 section 001

Literary Worldmaking: Two Case Studies

Literary Worldmaking

Call Number 00149
Day & Time
Location
W 4:10pm-6:00pm
214 Milbank Hall (Barnard)
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructors Emily Sun
Rachel Eisendrath
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

This seminar engages students in the immersive and intensive reading of two masterworks of modern prose fiction: Middlemarch, published by George Eliot (the pseudonym of Mary Ann Evans) in 1871-2 in England, and The Story of the Stone, or the Dream of the Red Chamber, composed by Cao Xueqin (and continued by Gao E) in the late 18th-century moment of Qing-dynasty China.  While using devices and conventions from different narrative traditions, these novels operate in the mode of realism and do so at a monumental and panoramic scale, creating literary worlds that reflect the realia of historical lifeworlds.  Beyond representing aspects of empirically recognizable worlds, these novels also incorporate philosophical reflection on their own means of representation, on their very status as fiction, on the power and limits of imaginative worldmaking.

By studying these novels as cases of literary worldmaking, we will take the opportunity also to reflect critically in this class on the world that emerges–and the process of worldmaking that gets activated–in our very experience of studying these texts together.  We will consider how cosmopolitanism, as a guiding ideal of the Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment university, may be renewed by literary study to help us inhabit a world of common humanity that is richer and more complex than is evident in particularist localisms or a satellite-view, techno-economic globalism.

Middlemarch we will read in its entirety.  For the sake of time, we will read, in David Hawkes’ translation, the 80-chapter version of The Story of the Stone, or the Dream of the Red Chamber, attributed to Cao Xueqin, instead of the 120-chapter version, with the last 40 chapters attributed to Gao E.  If you can and wish to read the text in Chinese, please speak to Professor Sun about the option of scheduling extra discussion sessions.

Web Site Vergil
Department Comparative Literature and Society @Barnard
Enrollment 10 students (16 max) as of 9:06PM Tuesday, December 17, 2024
Subject Comparative Literature
Number BC3204
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Note Pref to Eng & CPL majors, but open others; Sophomores&above
Section key 20233CPLT3204X001