Summer 2026 English UN3050 section 001

Law and Literature

Call Number 10589
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

In contemporary American culture, legal practice and literary studies share a commitment to careful use of language, rigorous interpretation, and a deep and imaginative engagement with meaning. Scholars and practitioners have been debating for decades how the two practices can reinforce each other, improve each other, critique each other, and refute each other. (As this debate shows, both communities also love to argue.) In this course, we will read and discuss a classic set of literary texts that speak to certain preoccupations within the legal tradition. We will also look at certain debates and controversies within legal discourse to see how the tools and insights of literary and cultural analysis can change our perspective. We won’t be focusing on literary history nor legal doctrine – no previous knowledge of either is required. Instead, we will look at texts where shared concerns – about interpretation, about evidence, about empathy, and about justice and fairness – allow us to use both literary and legal thinking to advance our own understanding of these ongoing debates.

Web Site Vergil
Subterm 05/26-07/03 (A)
Department Summer Session (SUMM)
Enrollment 0 students (30 max) as of 9:07PM Monday, December 15, 2025
Subject English
Number UN3050
Section 001
Division Summer Session
Section key 20262ENGL3050W001