American Studies
CAS AM 502 Topics in American Studies: Four American Masters
of the Short Story An in-depth analysis of four twentieth-century
American masters of the short story form: Eudora Welty, John Cheever,
Stanley Elkin, and Joyce Carol Oates. Each offers a distinctively
different vision of the expressive possibilities of short fiction.
We will explore what each can tell us about our culture and ourselves.
Carney TR 12:30-2:00 HIS 110
GRS AM 735 Studies in American Culture Stamped
Approval. Prereq: AM 736 or consent of instructor. Introduction
to the handling of primary materials from a number of disciplines
in order to develop an American Studies perspective. Required for
all first year Ph.D. American Studies students. Sewell
W 2:30-5:30 HIS 110
GRS AM 747 Building Conservation Prereq: Consent
of Instructor. A research seminar to explore, in depth, changing
themes or current issues in historic preservation. Dempsey
W 5-8:00 HIS B06
GRS AM 753 Documenting Historic
Buildings Prereq: Consent of instructor. Designed to train
students in architectural research techniques through supervised
reading, fieldwork, and writing. Dempsey
R 1:30-4:30 HIS B06
African American Studies
GRS AA 885 Atlantic History.
Examines the various interactions that shaped the Atlantic
World, connecting Europe, Africa, and the Americas between 1400
and 1800. Begins by defining the political interaction, then emphasizes
cultural exchange, religious conversion, and the revolutionary era.
Also offered as GRS HI 885. T, R 11-12:30. Thornton
Meets w/HI885A1 & CAS AA/HI385.
Archaeology
GRS AR570 Studies in Colonial Archaeology Topics
Vary. Intensive coverage of particular aspects of American archaeology
as selected by instructor. Beaudry M
2:00-5:00
GRS AR805 Archaeological Heritage Management
Introduction to the practice of public archaeology in the U.S. Historical
and legal background; state and federal programs; conducting archaeological
investigations; archaeology as a business; the public interest;
controversies, problems, and prospects in archaeological heritage
management. Elia R 2:00-5:00
Art History
CAS AH 521 Curatorship: Exhibition and Development Prerequisite:
Permission of the instructor. This seminar will be held
on-site at the DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, a regional museum
of contemporary American art, and will be led by the museum's curators.
Students will be introduced to curatorial practice as it
pertains to collections and exhibitions. DeCordova exhibitions
on display during the Spring 2005 semester, and the Sculpture Park,
will be used as case studies for collections management and policy,
exhibition theory and design, funding, marketing, interface with
museum educators, and audience response. Students will assist
with the planning of the 2006 group exhibition Animals in Contemporary
Art , and in some aspects of The 2005 DeCordova Annual
Exhibitio. Assignments will include writing catalogue text
and press releases, exhibition critiques, and a tern paper/oral
presentation on a participating artist. Capasso/Lafo
M 2-5
GRS AH 733 Colloquium: Greek Greek architecture,
painting, sculpture, and minor arts. Emphasis on developments in
Athens and on the creation of the classical style in art and architecture. Westervelt
T 9-11
CAS AH 404/GRS AH 804 A1 Semester at MFA. The Materials
and Techniques of Works of Art. Issues in Contemporary Art. This
seminar will examine a variety of critical issues, both practical
and theoretical, surrounding the art of our time. In addition, we
will explore the various approaches to exhibition- making at a museum
as well as at other venues such as commercial galleries and not-for-profit
spaces. The class will include in-depth examination of contemporary
works of art in the MFA's collection, many of which are rarely on
view. Students will consider these works with an eye toward
the organization of an exhibition. There will be structured visits
to local galleries and not-for-profit spaces, reading and writing
assignments, and presentations; participation in discussions is
essential. Enrollment limited to twelve. Some familiarity with contemporary
art and artists and knowledge of modern art history recommended.
Admission to Museum Seminars is by permission of the instructors.
Staff of the department of Conservation and Collections Management.
Cheryl Brutvan, Beal Curator of Contemporary Art
William Stover, Assistant Curator of Contemporary
Art History Department (617-369-3313)
CAS AH 404/GRS AH 804 B1 Semester at MFA. This
course provides an introduction to the materials used in a wide
variety of works of art (stone, ceramic, metal, glass, paint, wood,
paper, textiles, manmade materials including plastics), where the
materials conform, and how they are utilized to make works of art.
Most course meeting will focus on a specific material and will include
an introductory lecture and visits to the museum's conservation
laboratories and/or galleries to examine closely and discuss individual
works of art made from that material. How materials deteriorate
over time, and how such changes can dramatically affect the appearance
over time, will also be discussed. Overview lectures will discuss
the nature of materials from a scientific point of view, defining
basic concepts that are necessary to understand the materials used
in works of art. One lecture will describe how knowledge of materials
and technique can be applied to authentication problems. Readings
are drawn from a wide range of books, articles, and conference publications.
Grading will be based on seven to eight short assignments; each
will require students to examine artifacts on display at the Museum
of Fine Arts. Enrollment limited to twenty. Admission to Museum
Seminars is by permission of the instructor. Coordinator:
Richard Newman, Head of Scientific Research (617-369-3466)
GRS AH 887 Seminar: AH 887 Visual Culture of the Civil
War Era. The seminar focuses on American visual culture
of the Civil War era: Slavery, Sectionalism, Civil War, Emancipation,
Reconstruction (1850 to 1870), including paintings, sculpture, book
illustration, graphics in the illustrated weeklies, photography,
exhibitions, and organized urbanspectacles. Topics will include
but not be limited to: images of slavery in sculpture and
paintings; illustrations for such books as Uncle Tom's Cabin; images
from the presidential campaigns of 1860 and 1864; the visual record
of the Civil War in the illustrated press; the carnage of battle
in the photographs of Matthew Brady and others; images of notorious
prisons, such as Andersonville; picturing wartime activities of
women including nurses, women soldiers, and women on the home front;
the "Emancipation Proclamation" in popular imagery; images
of the death and mourning of Lincoln; John Brown in graphics and
text; visual conceptions of the Freedmen's Bureau; and the rise
of the Ku Klux Klan in popular imagery. Theories of representation
and narrative will be examined for their relevance and/or applicability
to the visual culture of this era. Class is limited to 15; graduate
students in art history, history, literature, and American Studies
are welcome. Permission of instructor required. Hills
T 2-4
GRS AH 888 Seminar: Twentieth Century American Painting.
Stebbins W 3-5
GRS AH 893 Seminar: At Home with the Future: Studies in
the Modern House. This graduate seminar will explore
the central role of domestic architecture in the discourse of modernism.
Questions of functionalism, structure, materials, and planning will
be considered in relation to politics, economics, technology, gender
roles, social organization, and the other arts. Attention will be
paid to the documentation and preservation of modernist resources.
Seminar participants will discuss common readings, visit
a range of representative buildings, and conduct independent research
which they will present to the seminar and submit as a final paper.
Morgan W 10-12
GRS AH 895 Seminar: Feminism: Art, Theory and Practice.
This seminar will focus on the positions taken by several
generations of feminist theory and theoretically driven art criticism
from the 70s to the present. Readings to include British, American
and French schools of thought, recent postcolonial critiques, psychoanalytic
approaches, queer theory, arguments for the revival of beauty and
the problem of postfeminism. Coughlin
T 4-6
English
CAS EN 534 American Literature: 1855 to 1918 Idealism
and realism in American literature. Poetry of Whitman and Dickinson.
Autobiographies of Frederick Douglass, Mark Twain, and Henry Adams.
Theory and practice of fiction in Twain, Henry James, and Stephen
Crane. Otten MWF 3:00-4:00
CAS EN 536 Twentieth-Century American Poetry
Study of five or six poets from the following: Pound, Eliot, Stevens,
Williams, Moore, Frost, Lowell, Bishop, Berryman, Ammons, Ashbery,
Plath, Ginsberg, or Merrill. Fogel TR
12:30-2:00
CAS EN 545 The Nineteenth-Century American Novel
From its beginnings through the nineteenth century. Works by Brown,
Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Twain, James, Howells, and others.
Van Anglen TR 12:30-2:00
CAS EN 546 The Modern American Novel From 1900
to 1950. Works by Dreiser, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner, and
others. Mizruchi TR 9:30-11:00
CAS EN 547 Contemporary American Fiction Study
of major American novels from the 1960s to the present by DeLillo,
Mailer, Malamud, Morrison, Oates, Pinckney, and others. Mizruchi
(what day?) 12:30-2:00
CAS EN 578 Fiction of the Migrant Primary focus
on the experiences of immigration and exile, with reading also of
fiction on other kinds of human migrations. Works by Willa Cather,
O.E. Rölvaag, Nabokov, V.S. Naipaul, Shusaku Endo, and contemporary
authors. Ha Jin R 2:00-5:00
CAS EN 584 The Postwar Epic Novel A study of
experimental epic novels by postwar American writers such as Ellison,
Gaddis, Pynchon, DeLillo, and Silko, focusing on genre, character,
and the fate of ethics, politics, religion, and history in an age
suspicious of grand narratives. Chodat TR
9:30-11:00
CAS EN 595 Early Modern History Play Historical
and quasi-historical drama of the Tudor-Stuart periods. Attention
to contemporary history and historiography, to problems of hierarchy,
social distinction, gender, urbanization, religious division, and
nation-building. Plays by Anonymous, Marlowe, Peele, Jonson, Shakespeare,
Heywood, Ford, others. Siemon TR 11:00-12:30
GRS EN 788 Transnational Modernism This course
examines the transnational literary relations surrounding the rise
of American modernism, focusing first on transatlantic connections,
and turning to the hemispheric study of modernism in the Americas.
Readings by James, Stein, Eliot, DuBois, Hughes, Stuart Hall, and
others. Patterson R 4:00-6:30
GRS EN791 Film Theories Weekly films studied
in conjunction with various film theories, including psychoanalytic,
feminist, queer, materialist, and postmodern. Topics include: seeing
through gender, cinematic narrative, the technologies of image production.
There will be evening screenings of the assigned films. Monk
W 4:00-6:30
GRS EN 796 U.S. Imperialism and Literary Culture Interplay
between U.S. imperialism and modern literature, 1880-1940. Relations
between national reunification, foreign expansion, emergent empire,
the fiction of region and race. Includes Twain, Chesnutt, Pauline
Hopkins, Du Bois, Toomer, Glasgow, Faulkner, Peterkin. Matthews
W 12:00-2:30
History
GRS HI 752. Readings in American Political History [in
approval process] . Introduces students
to the field of U.S. political history. Readings are divided into
four primary areas of scholarship: government institutions, public
policy, social movements, and political culture. Zelizer
T 9:30-12:30.
GRS HI 755. American Immigration History. The
experience of immigrants to the United States during the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries. Topics include premigration cultures, theories
of adaptation, perspectives on race ethnicity, sojourner migrants,
and the persistence of ethnic enclaves in the urban environment.
Halter T 3:30-6:30.
GRS HI 757. Topics in American Cultural History. Readings
seminar focusing on American culture, broadly defined, in various
periods of American history. Readings consist of both primary documents
and secondary sources relevant to the specific topic. Topic for
spring 2005: Race and American Culture, 1880-1940. The course will
draw on monographs, historical documents, and literature of the
period to explore the changing ways in which Americans thought about
race and race relations. Silber R 2-5.
GRS HI 865. United States Since
1968. Recent political, economic, social, and cultural
history. Includes Nixon, Carter, and Reagan presidencies; stagflation;
Watergate; "Me Decade"; end of the Cold War. Schulman
TR 12:30-2.
GRS HI 874. History of American Thought, 1865 to the Present.
The reconstruction of American thought following the Civil
War. Victorian realism; liberal Protestantism and Darwinian science;
evolutionary thought and progressive reform; pragmatism and cultural
pluralism; literary modernism and modernization theory; 1960s and
post-1960s discourses on race, gender, neoconservatism, and postmodernism.
Capper TR 9:30-11.
GRS HI 875. A History of Women in the United States. This
course examines the ideas and experiences of women in the United
States from the 1600s through the late twentieth century. The course
considers the common factors that shaped women's lives as well as
women's diverse class, ethnic, and regional experiences. Silber
TR 11-12:30.
GRS HI 885. History of the Atlantic World, 1500-1825. Examines
the various interactions that shaped the Atlantic World, connecting
Europe, Africa, and the Americas between 1500 and 1800. After defining
the political interaction, there is special emphasis on cultural
exchange, religious conversion, and the revolutionary era. Thornton
MWF 11-12.
Metropolitan College
MET AM747 A1. Historic Building
Conservation. Dempsey
W 6:00-9:00. Meets with GRS AM 747 A1.
MET AM753 A1. Documenting Historic Buildings.
Dempsey R 6-9. Meets w/GRS AM753.
MET AR 750. Financial Management for Nonprofits. Grad
Prereq: MET AC 630 or accounting equivalent.Analyzes issues of accounting,
finance, and economics in the context of the not-for-profit organization.
Stresses understanding financial statements, budget planning and
control, cash flow analysis, and long term planning. Johnson
M 6-9.MET ML 622. History of Food II. This
is the second semester of a yearlong course treating culinary history
in a global perspective. It is a core course in the gastronomy concentration
of the Master of Liberal Arts. The course is a continuation of MET
ML 621, but MET ML 621 is not a prerequisite to registration. Addresses
the Middle Ages to the present. Staff
M 6-9.
MET UA 503. Housing and Community Development.
Surveys the factors affecting supply and price of urban housing.
Examines federal, state, and municipal programs, as well as future
policy options, from the standpoint of housing quality and community
development goals. Analysis of selected international comparative
experience. Staff T 6-9.
MET UA 505. Urban Management.
Examination of selected cases in municipal and public management.
Organization, financial management, personnel relations, program
planning and budgeting, and issues of public and private sector
relations. The administration of municipal functions, including
health, police, schools, and housing. Leary
M 6-9.
MET UA 510. Race and Urban Affairs. Prereq: MET
UA 301, UA 701, or consent of instructor. Grad Prereq: (METUA301
& METUA701) or consent of instructor.This course examines Dubois'
classic The Philadelphia Negro and its legacy for urban affairs,
especially in terms of race, ethnicity, and cities. Dubois combined
ethnographic research, social history, and social statistics to
investigate the life of African Americans living in Philadelphia
at the turn of the 20th century. Using that study as a jumping off
point, this class will first assess changes in race, ethnicity,
and cities with a focus on Philadelphia, and then extend that examination
to other American cities, especially Boston. Specific topics to
be covered include jobs, and labor markets, urban education, juvenile
violence and crime, housing, and inequality. Carroll
R 6-9.
MET UA 703. Urban Research Methods. Examines
research techniques useful for urban policy research. Emphasis on
survey research techniques, including sampling, survey organization,
questionnaire development, and interviewing. Participant observation
techniques. Field data collection and analysis. Steffens
W 6-9.
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