Literature
Literature at Sarah Lawrence College is a disciplined and cross-disciplinary study founded on the belief that reflective attention to a variety of fictions can lead to deeper insight into the truths of self and society. Among the goals of the discipline: to strengthen critical skills; widen cultural literacy; refine writing, discussion, speaking, and research skills; and open students to engagement with the concerns of other disciplines—including history, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, and anthropology—as they emerge within literature’s rich discourse.
Curricular offerings include core American and European texts but range widely through world literature—African, Asian, and Latin American. Courses may be broadly organized around a historical period (for example, the Middle Ages or the 17th century) or around a genre (comedy, autobiography, the novel), or they may combine historical and generic concerns (ancient Greek theatre, 20th-century American poetry). Some courses are devoted to the study of a single author, such as Chaucer or Virginia Woolf, or to a particular thematic or critical goal: examining ideas of culture since the Enlightenment, exploring postcolonial revisions to classics of the Western canon, or developing an inclusive approach to American literature that includes African American and Native American texts along with more traditional works. Throughout the Literature curriculum, meeting with faculty members in regularly scheduled conferences allows students to individualize their course work, to combine it with other disciplines, where appropriate, and to write with the deep understanding that can only result from intense, guided study.
Literature courses
- American Stages: The Evolution of Theatre in the United States
- An Introduction to Shakespeare
- Culture Wars: Literature and the Politics of Culture Since the Late-19th Century
- Declarations of Independence: American Literary Masterworks
- Defiant Acts: Hispanic Theatre in Translation
- Dream Books: Irrationality in British Literature, 1790-1900
- East-West: Asian American Literature in a Transnational Context
- Elective Affinities in American Poetry
- First-Year Studies: 20th-Century Italian Literature
- First-Year Studies: Contemporary Africa Literatures: Against the Single Story of Things Fall Apart
- First-Year Studies: Mythology in Literature
- First-Year Studies: Romantic Poetry and Its Legacies
- First-Year Studies: Fops, Coquettes, and the Masquerade: Fashioning Gender and Courtship from Shakespeare to Austen
- Gloriana: Elizabeth I in Literature and the Arts
- Hispanic Literature in Translation: A Course on Spanish and Latin American Theatre
- History Plays
- How Stories Define Us: Greek Myths and the Invention of Democracy
- Issues in Comparative Literary Studies
- Memory, Memorialization, and Writing
- Milton, Blake, and the Bible
- Modernism and Fiction
- Odyssey/Hamlet/Ulysses
- Politics of Affect: Postcolonial and Feminist Literature and Film
- Reason and Revolution, Satire and the City: Literature and Social Change in the Age of Swift
- Shakespeare and Company
- Spirits and the Supernatural in Japanese Literature
- Studies in the 19th-Century Novel
- The Greco-Roman World: Its Origins, Crises, Turning Points, and Final Transformations
- The Music of What Happens: Alternate Histories and Counterfactuals
- The New Life: Poetry of Transformation
- The Nonfiction Essay: Writing the Literature of Fact, Journalism, and Beyond
- 20th-Century British Literature
- Writing Warrior (Wo)men: Mothering, Movements and Migration in Black Literature