Studies in the 19th-Century Novel
This course entails an intensive and close textual encounter with the novelistic worlds of the 19th-century realist tradition. The first fictional tradition to accept social reality as the ultimate horizon for human striving, the 19th-century novels that we will study are all intensely critical of the severe limitations to human wholeness and meaning posed by the new social world they were confronting. At the same time that they accept the world as a setting and boundary for human life, they seek to find grounds for transcending its limitations. We will explore the tensions in these novelists’ works between accepting the world as given and seeking to transcend it. At the same time, we will try to understand why—in spite of a century and a half of great historical and cultural change—these novels continue to speak to the issues posed by the human condition with such beauty, depth, and wisdom. We will read in the works of such novelists as Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Balzac, Stendhal, Eliot, Austen, Dickens, Twain, and Goethe.
Literature courses
- African American Literature Survey (1789-2011)
- Allegories of Love
- American Literature 1830-1929
- Machines: A Critique of New Media
- Borges
- Conscience of the Nations: Classics of African Literature
- Creating New Blackness: The Expressions of the Harlem Renaissance
- Empire of Letters: Mapping the Arts and the World in the Age of Johnson
- English: History of a Language
- Epic: From Gilgamesh to Paradise Lost
- Experiment and Scandal: The 18th-Century British Novel
- First-Year Studies: Declarations of Independence: American Literary Masterworks, American Art
- First-Year Studies: Romanticism and Love
- First-Year Studies: Self/Life/Writing: Studies in Autobiography
- First-Year Studies: Utopia
- Global Intertextualities
- Green Romanticism
- Imagining Modernity: Literature and Society Since Romanticism
- Imagining War
- Literature in Translation: “Because We Know That Language Exists”: Roland Barthes and French Literature and Theory (1945-2011)
- Literature in Translation: Fantastic Gallery: 20th-Century Latin American Short Fiction
- Modernism and Fiction
- First-Year Studies: New Literature From Europe
- Nine American Poets
- Performing Gender and Power in the British 18th Century and Its Cinematic Legacy
- Romanticism to Modernism in Poetry
- Shakespeare and the Semiotics of Performance
- Slavery: A Literary History
- Spoken Wor(l)ds: African American Poetry From Black Arts to Hip Hop (1960-2012)
- Studies in the 19th-Century Novel
- The Age of Caesar
- The Greco-Roman World: Its Origins, Crises, Turning Points, and Final Transformations
- The Nonfiction Essay: Writing the Literature of Fact, Journalism, and Beyond
- The Poetry of Earth: Imagination and Environment in English Renaissance Poetry
- “Untied” Kingdom: British Literature Since 1945
- Who’s Afraid of James Joyce?

