| Choose
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| Z |
Allen, James
"Ancient
Greek and Roman Philosophy" (University
of Pittsburgh, Philosophy): course description forthcoming. [top]
Beranek, Bernard
"Introduction
to Old English Language and Literature" (Bernard
Beranek, English): course description forthcoming.
[top]
Birnbaum, David
"Literature
of Medieval Russia" (University
of Pittsburgh, Slavic Languages and Literatures):course description
forthcoming. [top]
Brannen,
Anne
"Paleography
and Colicology" (Duquesne
University, Department of English): course description forthcoming.
[top]
Breight,
Curt
"Shakespeare
on Film" (University
of Pittsburgh, English): course description forthcoming. [top]
Briscoe,
Mary
"Medieval
Imagination" (University
of Pittsburgh, English): course description forthcoming. [top]
Bruckner,
Lynn Dickson
"Lanyer"
(Chatham
College, English): course description forthcoming.[top]
Brumble,
David
"The
Bible as Literature" (University
of Pittsburgh, English): course description forthcoming. [top]
Butler, Michelle
"The
Arthurian Legend and Cultural Change" (University
of Pittsburgh, English): This course is a literary and historical
study of the origin and development of the Arthurian legend, one
of the most influential and long-lasting myths of western civilization.
We will begin in sixth-century Britain and go forward, tracing
the ways in which the Arthurian legend emerges, manifests, and
changes as it is retold over the centuries. We will follow its
path through Europe, back into England, and finally to the United
States, where the legend continues to retold in both popular literature
and film. The emphasis of this course is upon exploring the origins
of the Arthurian legend and its development, observing how the
cultures in which it was retold have affected it, and beginning
to consider through this exploration the process of cultural myth-making
itself. (Undergraduate elective) [top]
Brylowe, Thora
"Shakespeare:
Tragedies and Histories" (Carnegie
Mellon University, English): This course looks at eight of Shakespeare's
tragedies and English histories. These are plays fraught with
bloody political violence, desperate soul searching, and the unyielding
weight of human suffering. We will draw some conclusions about
the ways in which Shakespeare used and manipulated the conventions
of genre. The course builds a narrative about the shaping of modern
subjectivity, as influenced by Protestantism, literacy and early
modern English politics. We will supplement careful textual analysis
with diverse secondary readings. (Undergraduate elective) [top]
Churchill, Derek
"Northern
Renaissance Art" (University
of Pittsburgh, Department of History of Art and Architecture):
course description forthcoming. [top]
Conner,
Pat
"Medieval
English Literture" (West
Virginia University, Department of English): course description
forthcoming. [top]
[D]
Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top]
Edwards,
Tony
"Hermeneutics
and Historicism" (University
of Pittsburgh, Religious Studies): course description forthcoming.
[top]
Farina,
Lara
"Textual
Communities: Reading and Reception Before Modernity"
(West Virginia University, English): While not primarily a course
on the history of criticism, this seminar traces the development
of emergent subject of literary study: the "textual community,"
or social group united by the ownership or circulation of particular
texts. This course explores the theorization, uses, and limits
of "textual community" as a focus for literary analysis
and historiography, using pre-modern England as an example. It
showcases materialist, interdisciplinary research methods by situating
medieval works in relation to their circumstances of production,
manuscript context, circulation, and ideological use. In the process,
it pays special attention to gendered communities, particularly
to issues facing female audiences and patrons, and to relations
between literacy and social deviance. Readings include 1) medieval
texts such as devotional aids, romances, letter collections, preaching
manuals, and plays, 2) theoretical essays relating to anthropology,
discourse studies, textual reception, and cultural materialism,
and 3) histories of reading, gender, and patronage. (Graduate
seminar)
[top]
Favorini, Attilio
(Buck)
"Theater
and Memory" (University of Pittsburgh, Theater
Arts): course description forthcoming. [top]
Franklin, Don
"Baroque
Passion and Oratorio" (University of Pittsburgh,
Music): course description forthcoming. [top]
Galpern,
Neal
"Renaissance
and Reformation Europe" (History,
University of Pittsburgh): course description forthcoming. [top]
George, Kathleen
"Shakespeare
and Playwriting" (Theater
Arts, University of Pittsburgh): course description forthcoming.
[top]
Greenberg,
Janelle
"Medieval
Law and Government" (History,
University of Pittsburgh): course description forthcoming. [top]
Harris,
Ann
"Italian
Renaissance Painting and Sculpture" (History
of Art and Architecture, University of Pittsburgh):course description
forthcoming. [top]
Hearn, Fil
"Introduction
to Architecture" (History
of Art and Architecture, University of Pittsburgh):course description
forthcoming. [top]
[I] Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top]
Johnson,
Mary Catharine
"History
of Books and Printing" (Carnegie
Mellon Univeristy, Special collections): This seminar examines
rare books in the Library's collection to illustrate book design,
type styles, printing and publishing practices and bindings from
1360 to 1960, featuring a Gutenberg Bible page (ca. 1455), Ratdolt's
Euclid (1482), the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili
(1499), Aldine press books, an Erasmus book printed by Froben
in Basel (1530), Copernicus, Fuchs and Vesalius (1543), first
folio of Shakespeare (1623), Robert Hooke's Micrographia (1665)
and a book by Locke (1690). (Undergraduate/graduate seminar) [top]
King, Sigrid
"Classical
Background of English Literature" (Carlow
College, Department of English): course descirption forthcoming.
[top]
Knapp, James
"The
Medieval Imagination" (University
of Pittsburgh, Department of English): course descirption forthcoming.
[top]
Knapp, Peggy
"Chaucer"
(Carnegie Mellon
University, English): Geoffrey
Chaucer is sometimes thought of as the author of universal, timeless
fictions containing "God's Plenty" (in Dryden's famous
phrase). This course, however, will stress the ways in which Chaucer's
fictions are situated within the specific, but complex and fluid
14th century political, social and religious controversies. We
will read The Canterbury Tales and Troilus and Criseyde
in Middle English (which is not hard to learn, but fun to know),
and look at other representations of medieval English culture
as it saw itself and as we see it from a 20th-century vantage
point. Regular attendance, participation in classroom discussion
and brief oral presentations from time to time are required. Each
student will be asked to take a special interest in one of the
Canterbury pilgrims and try to see the unfolding saga from that
character's point of view. (Undergraduate-Graduate Seminar) [top]
"Renaissance
Drama" (Carnegie Mellon University, English): The
London Stage during the reigns of Queen Elizabeth and King James
is well known fir its burst of creativity and public culture--and
not just because of Shakespeare. This course will examine the
early history of English theater, both the social conditions that
enable the theaters to be built and the plays written for it.
Reformation doctrine and politics, power struggles between the
royal court and the town, the rise of shareholding companies,
increasing rates of literacy and periodic visits of the Black
Plague all figure in this story. The emphasis, though, will fall
on the plays themselves and how contemporary literary theory can
reanimate them for us. The playwrights will include Christopher
Marlowe, Ben Jonson, John Webster, Thomas Middleton, and others.
(Undergraduate-Graduate Seminar) [top]
Kurland, Stuart
"Shakespeare
and Alienation" (Stuart
Kurland, Department of English): course description forthcoming.
[top]
Labriola,
Al
"Shakespeare:
Text & Film" (Duquesne
University, English): This course comparatively studies six plays
by Shakespeare (two comedies, two histories, two tragedies) and
cinematic adaptations by major directors, such as Franco Zeffirelli,
Kenneth Branagh, Laurence Olivier, Oliver Parker, Akira Kurosawa,
and the like. The goal of the course is to highlight the role
of the director as an interpreter of Shakespeare's works and to
recognize that cinematic adaptations and film criticism comprise
a third major tradition (after literary criticism and stage productions)
of understanding the plays. (Undergraduate) [top]
Latta, Kimberly
"Enlightenment
to Revolution" (University
of Pittsburgh, English): course description forthcoming. [top]
Lennox, James
"The
Philosophy of Biology" (University
of Pittsburgh, History and the Philosophy of Science): course
description forthcoming. [top]
Lewis, Mary
"Music
in Medieval Institutions" (University
of Pittsburgh, Music):
course description forthcoming. [top]
Looney, Dennis
"Renaissance
Humanism" (University
of Pittsburgh, Italian and Classics):
course description forthcoming. [top]
Machamer,
Peter
"Early
Modern Philosophy" (University
of Pittsburgh, History and Philosophy of Science): course descritpion
forthcoming. [top]
Massey,
Gerald J.
"Medieval
Philosophy " (University
of Pittsburgh, Philosophy): course descritpion forthcoming. [top]
Miller,
Andrew
"Intermediate
Latin Prose" (University
of Pittsburgh, Classics): course descritpion forthcoming. [top]
Nichols,
John
"Seminar
in Medieval Europe" (Slippery
Rock University, History): This course in the Seminar in Medieval
Europe at Slippery Rock University will introduce the student
to some of the great books of the Middle Ages. In addition a survey
textbook will be read to establish the chronological setting in
which the author wrote his book. Except for the textbook, the
books are listed above are more or less in chronological order
which allows for an evolution of ideas. Because the books present
different subjects, the student will become familiar with such
topics as monasticism, theology, chivalry, politics, society,
and warfare to mention but a few areas found in these works. My
idea of a student reading the great books of the past rather than
a modern author's summary is a practice which has a long tradition
in higher education and is appropriate for students in a graduate
seminar program. (Graduate seminar) [top]
Novy, Marianne
"Renaissance
Discourses of Gender" (University
of Pittsburgh, English): course descritpion forthcoming. [top]
[O]
Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top]
Palmieri,
Paolo
"Man
and the Cosmos in the European Renaissance" (University
of Pittsburgh, History and Philosophy of Science): course description
forthcoming. [top]
Possanza, D.
Mark
"Latin
Reading: Orators" (D.
Mark Possanza, University of Pittsburgh, also Department of Classics):
course description forthcoming. [top]
[Q]
Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top]
Robertson,
Kellie.
"The
Medieval Imagination" (University of Pittsburgh,
English): This course surveys medieval literary culture from the
Anglo-Saxons to the beginning of the sixteenth century. It is
intended not only to give a sense of chronology but also to stimulate
discussion about texts as social acts situated in history. It
is also designed to get us to think about how the ideas and institutions
that structure our everday lives (memory, time, gender, love,
marriage, the body) are not transhistorical imperatives but rather
cultual constructs and therefore will vary not only from the medieval
to the modern but across the span of the Middle Ages as well.
From time to time we will look at how the modern imagination has
represented the medieval one (in film and other media) in order
to think about how such representations function simultaneously
as commentary on our contemporary desires and anxieties as well
as those of the period they claim to represent.
Russell, Daniel
Course
description forthcoming. [top]
Scott, Jonathan
"Stuart
England " (University of Pittsburgh, History): course
description forthcoming. [top]
Selcer, Daniel
"Early
Modern Philosophy" (Duquesne University, Philosophy):
This course is a survey of early modern philosophy, from the late
Renaissance to the early Enlightenment. We will deal with issues
such as: emergence of the concept of the human; methods for defining
the powers and limits of the self; dynamic shifts in experimental
approaches to theoretical and practical knowledge; the formation
of new literary styles in philosophical writing; the emergence
of new theories of the body and matter; theories of the state
in relation to individuals; the debate between thinkers focused
on rational certainty and those insisting on the primacy of experience;
competing accounts of the philosophical significance of human
emotions; etc. We will approach these philosophers not only as
isolated investigators asking particular questions, taking positions
and articulating theories, but also as thinkers who strategically
(or sometimes not so strategically) respond to one another's texts,
methods, and concepts. Readings will include Francis Bacon, Pierre
Bayle, Margaret Cavendish, Anne Conway, René Descartes,
Galileo Galilei, Thomas Hobbes, David Hume, G. W. Leibniz, John
Locke, Pico della Mirandola, Michel de Montaigne, Isaac Newton,
Blaise Pascal, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Baruch Spinoza, and Voltaire.
(Undergraduate seminar) [top]
"Postmodern
Readings/Early Modern Texts" (Duquesne University,
Philosophy): This course will examine examples of the roles that
confrontations with texts from the history of early modern philosophy
and literature have played in the formulation of key theoretical
orientations in postmodern thought and its foundations in 20th
century continental philosophy. To that end, we will examine a
series of conjunctions between texts by theorists who can be located
in or ground the philosophical discourse of poststructuralism
together with the early modern texts they read. Pairings may include:
Heidegger's Metaphysical Foundations of Logic with Leibniz's "Monadology";
Benjamin's Origin of German Tragic Drama with Grimmelshausen's
Simplicius Simplicissimus; Althusser's "The Only Materialist
Tradition" with Spinoza's Theological-Political Treatise;
Foucault's The Order of Things with Arnauld's Port-Royal Logic
(with Nicole) and Grammar (with Lancelot), as well as Wilkins'
Essay Toward a Real Character; Derrida's "Cogito and the
History of Madness" (and the relevant Foucault texts) with
Descartes' Meditations; De Man's "Pascal's Allegory of Persuasion"
with Pascal's "Reflections on Geometry in General" and
"On the Spirit of Geometry and the Art of Persuasion";
Deleuze's Empiricism and Subjectivity with Hume's Treatise on
Human Nature; etc. (Graduate seminar) [top]
Shear, Adam
"Jewish-Christian
Relations" (University
of Pittsburgh, Religious Studies): This course surveys the relationships
between Jews and Christians from the time of Jesus through the
early modern era, as viewed by both Jews and Christians. Topics
include the position of Jews in the Roman Empire, before and after
the rise of the early Church; Rabbinic views of Christianity and
Church Fathers' views of Judaism; Jews and Jewish communities
in early medieval Europe; the Crusades; accusations of ritual
murder and host desecration; Papal-Jewish relations; moneylending
and usury debates; Jewish-Christian scholarly interchange; late
medieval disputations and polemics; expulsions; the impact of
the Reformation; early modern Christian Hebraism; and the beginnings
of toleration and early Enlightenment views. (Undergraduate elective)
[top]
Stones, Alison
"Medieval
Iconography: What is the Grail?" (University
of Pittsburgh, History of Art and Architecture): course description
forthicoming. [top]
Toker,
Franklin
"Urban
History" (University
of Pittsburgh, History of Art and Architecture):course description
forthcoming. [top]
Twyning, John
"The
Social and Literary History of London" (English,
University of Pittsburgh): course description forthcoming. [top]
[U]
Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top]
Venarde,
Bruce
"Abelard
and Heloise in Medieval History and Modern Memory"
(University of Pittsburgh, History): This undergraduate seminar
explores medieval records and modern interpretations of the lives
and writings of the twelfth-century French lovers and intellectuals
Peter Abelard and Heloise. We will read and write about the sexual,
intellectual, and spiritual relationship of these two extraordinary
people, whose lives and opinions have been controversial for centuries.
What, we will ask, was the relationship between bodies and minds
in medieval European culture, and how might that differ from our
own perspective on the subject? How did people understand identity,
individuality, or even personality in the twelfth century? How
were the categories of "private" and "public"
different in the past? Is there, or can there be, a history of
emotions? Readings will include the correspondence of Abelard
and Heloise, their philosophical writings, and modern interpretations
on them and their world by academic scholars, novelists, and filmmakers.
(Undergraduate seminar) [top]
West,
Michael
"Advanced
Honors Shakespeare" (University of Pittsburgh, English):
This seminar seeks to extend students’ knowledge of Shakespeare
by focusing on works less commonly taught at the introductory
level. Our first meeting will be devoted to finding out
what works class members are already familiar with, so that our
syllabus can minimize repeated exposure to works already studied.
Whatever our readings, we will integrate them to some extent
with available film resources and representative critical commentary
on Shakespeare. We will probably survey about fifteen plays
together with most of the poems, so students should leave this
course with a working knowledge of more than half of Shakespeare’s
canon of nearly forty plays. No prerequisites beyond familiarity
with most staples of high school and introductory college courses–i.e.,
Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello, King Lear, Romeo and Juliet, Midsummer
Night’s Dream, Much Ado About Nothing, and Merchant
of Venice--which advanced students of Shakespeare probably
ought to know but which are unlikely to figure on our syllabus.
(Undergraduate seminar) [top]
Witmore, Michael
"Literary
and Cultural Studies II: On the Uses and Abuses of History for
Criticism" (Carnegie Mellon University, English):
The title of this class is adopted from Nietzsche's famous early
essay, "On the Uses and Abuses of History for Life,"
which describes the ways in which descriptions of the past are
put to use in the present. Using several Shakespeare plays as
case studies, we will be examining how recent interpretations
of these plays have turned into 'history' and 'historical materials'
(ie- non-literary texts) as a way of making sense of their meaning
and significance. The emphasis, then, will be on the ways in which
readings of these plays have been produced, rather than on the
plays themselves. Major topics of interest include: the historical
origins of the 'deep subject' in early modernity (The Tragedy
of Othello, The Moor of Venice); the consumption of print
and the history of the new world (The Tempest); the transition
from feudalism to early capitalism (The History of King Lear);
the use of chronicle history in the creation of English national
identity (The Life of Henry the Fifth). (Graduate Seminar)
[top]
Wilkins, David
"Art
of Late Medieval and Early Renaissance Italy"
(University
of Pittsburgh, History of Art and Architecture):course description
forthcoming. [top]
Williams, John
"Manuscript
Illumination" (University of Pittsburgh, History
of Art and Architecture): course description forthcoming. [top]
[X]
Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top]
[Y]
Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top]
[Z]
Instructor
"Title"
(Institution.,
Department): Description. (Level) [top] |