Spring 2024 English BC3194 section 001

LITERARY THEORY

Call Number 00698
Day & Time
Location
R 9:00am-10:50am
406 Barnard Hall
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Ross T Hamilton
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

In this course, we will trace the complex category of imitation from its ancient roots to some of its modern theoretical and literary manifestations. Interpreted differently by different thinkers, imitation can refer to the problem of art’s imitation of things in the world (e.g., your portrait looks like you), art’s imitation of other artistic works (e.g., your portrait looks like a Rembrandt), people’s imitation or even mimicry of one another (who does she think she is?). The latter form of imitation raises the most overtly socio-political questions, whether by replicating social power structures in order to “pass” in a potentially hostile environment or by subverting these same structures through mimicking, outwitting, critiquing, or mocking them. At its core, the category of imitation focuses our attention on what is so central to artmaking that it almost eludes our notice: the question of resemblance. Put in its simplest form: What are we doing (philosophically, artistically, socially) when we make one thing resemble another?

Web Site Vergil
Department English @Barnard
Enrollment 3 students (18 max) as of 10:06AM Thursday, November 21, 2024
Subject English
Number BC3194
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Section key 20241ENGL3194X001