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Introductory Approaches to Cultural Studies

This lecture course introduces students to some of the major critical approaches associated with the interdisciplinary field of “cultural studies,” with a particular emphasis on how that field has reshaped our understanding of popular fiction. Cultural studies draws on a variety of disciplines, such as sociology, anthropology, film and media studies, but the primary focus here will be on the ways in which it intersects with literary studies and helps us better understand (for example) distinctions between “high” and “low” or “middlebrow” literary production, and the often disavowed relations between literature and the marketplace. The course proceeds chronologically, charting changing conceptions of popular fiction—and, more broadly, popular culture—in (for the most part) Britain and North America from the nineteenth century to the present. The course will be organized into seven sub-units, each focused on a particular sub-genre of popular fiction (e.g., mystery, horror, romance). 

Readings

  • Most of the readings, both theoretical and fictional, will be available on the course onQ site
  • Stephen King’s Carrie (1974) (available for purchase at the Campus Bookstore) 

Assessment

  •  mixture of in-class and take-home quizzes
  • Short written and oral assignments (including OnQ posts)
  • Attendance (very important that students have excellent attendance)

**Subject to change**

Prerequisites

Level 2 or above or 6.0 units of ENGL

Department of English Literature and Creative Writing, ˴Ƭ University

Watson Hall
49 Bader Lane
Kingston ON K7L 3N6
Canada

Telephone (613) 533-2153

Undergraduate

Graduate

˴Ƭ is situated on traditional Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe territory.