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CS92PROD
Literature as a Form of Knowledge
FIST 124
Fall 2015 not offered

Fiction and literature (poiesis) overlap but are not the same. While all literature may be said to be fiction, not all fiction is literature (consider legal fictions and medical cases). What is literature? And can we regard literature as a specific domain of knowledge? We explore the origins, meanings, uses, and logic of our modern conception of literature by looking closely at one of its foundational moments--the notion of literature that emerged in the 16th and 17th centuries as part of a broader early modern revolution that challenged tradition through personal experience. The Spanish encounter with the New World and the political tensions of the period went hand-in-hand with highly innovative, problematic, and productive historical, religious, and fictional genres such as the New World Chronicle (the crónica de Indias), mystical poetry (Saint Theresa, Saint John of the Cross), picaresque novels, and commercial theater (Lope de Vega, Calderón). This course will examine how different literary genres and fictional modes promote the idea that literature offers its own kinds of knowledge. Some of the topics studied will include (a) the uses of fiction as an instrument of knowledge in such Renaissance and Baroque genres as utopian narratives, the dialogue, and religious and political satire; and (b) the interplay of science, mythology, love poetry, pastoral, and adventure novels. Since Cervantes worked in all major literary genres of the period and remains a hugely influential writer to this day, we will use his works in the second half of the course as a test case for how fiction's place in society was radically reimagined in this period. All the texts will be read in English translations ranging from 16th century to today.
Credit: 1 Gen Ed Area Dept: HA RLAN
Course Format: Lecture / DiscussionGrading Mode: Credit/Unsatisfactory
Level: UGRD Prerequisites: None
Fulfills a Major Requirement for: None

Last Updated on APR-25-2024
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