Spring 2024 English UN3757 section 001

The Lost Generation

Call Number 12352
Day & Time
Location
M 10:10am-12:00pm
707 Hamilton Hall
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Austin Graham
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

In this course we’ll study literature by “The Lost Generation,” the celebrated cohort of U.S. writers who came of age during the First World War and went on to publish their major works during the heady days of The Jazz Age and the doldrums of The Great Depression. The authors we’ll read will include Barnes, Dos Passos, Eliot, Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Hughes, Hurston, Larsen, Loos, McKay, and Toomer, and we’ll talk about their relations to the major aesthetic movements of the 1920s and 1930s: Modernism, The Harlem Renaissance, and The Literary Left. Our primary focus, however, will be on how these writers depicted and expressed the alienation of the young during this period. We’ll be learning about a rising generation of Americans who felt out of step with their times and ill-suited to their places, and we’ll be reading books about rootlessness and expatriation, masking and passing, apathy and radicalism, loneliness and misanthropy, repression and derangement, and several other preoccupations of these drifting, wandering, “lost” artists.

Web Site Vergil
Department English and Comparative Literature
Enrollment 13 students (18 max) as of 9:05PM Thursday, January 2, 2025
Subject English
Number UN3757
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Section key 20241ENGL3757W001