Skip to main content

Summer Courses 2017

Summer Courses 2017

Summer I:

UKC 380-010 (Formerly listed as HON 301-010)
THIS COURSE WILL SATISFY YOUR UK CORE CITIZENSHIP REQUIREMENTS AND COUNT TOWARDS UPPER-LEVEL HONORS COURSE REQUIREMENTS
It can also be counted as an ENG elective with permission from the DUS.
The Life and Writings of Wendell Berry
Richard Bailey, Visiting Faculty, Canesius College
MTR 12:30 pm – 3:50 pm
JSB 139
 
Focusing on the life and writings of the Kentucky author, farmer, and activist Wendell Berry, this course considers the history and place of Kentucky and its people in society and culture of the last century both in America and abroad. Through a selective reading of Berry's poems, fiction, and essays, accompanied by readings on his life and his place in American life of the last eighty years, students will focus on issues such as war, industrialization, the place and significance of rural economies, organic and small farming ventures, technologies, and sexuality and feminism. In each of these cases, and the others they will explore, students will engage the logical cases Berry makes for fostering communities, if not a nation, of responsible and concerned citizens whose imagination about and engagement of the world around them is informed intimately by the affection they develop for their place.

 

SUMMER II:

ENG 107: INTRODUCTION TO CREATIVE WRITING, 3.0 CREDIT HOURS.

Course start date 06/22/2017; course end date 08/03/2017.  Part of Distance Learning Programs, (859) 257-3377

ENG 440G: STUDIES IN BRITISH LIT:  SHAKESPEARE ALOUD,  3.0 CREDIT HOURS  

Prereq: ENG 330 Text and Context or consent of the instructor

Fulfills ENG Major 400-level course requirement. Provides ENG major elective credit and ENG minor credit.

MTWRF 9:10 AM - 11:20 AM, CB 217

Professor: Walt Foreman

NOTE: Course start date 6/8/17; course end date 7/6/17

Though Shakespeare designed his plays to be spoken aloud and understood aloud, John Heminges and Henry Condell, two of his longtime partners in the theater business, thought they were also valuable texts for private reading so they published a collected edition several years after their friend's death.  This course is founded on the notion that these forms of encounter with the plays—private reading (whether silent or—as would have been far more common in Shakespeare's day than in ours—aloud) and communal reading and speaking aloud (and thus listening)—are mutually illuminating and provide a way into a capacious understanding and appreciation of the interacting emotions and arguments of the characters, their ideas and doubts, their desires and needs, their griefs and joys.  To read a Shakespearean role as if you knew what it meant is a great start toward finding out what in fact it does mean, or rather what it can mean, as is hearing other people read other characters' parts as if they too knew what they meant by what they said.  We will look at how different oral performances find different meanings in the same works.  We will use two plays, one a tragedy and one a comedy: probably King Lear and Twelfth Night.  We will read lots of Shakespeare's words in class, tinkering with rhythm, stress, and silence, and we will look at video and listen to audio versions of our plays to get a sense of how other people think they should sound.  The aim of the course is not to produce actors for public consumption but to provide readers with a more vital connection to Shakespeare's words—a performance for oneself. 
NOTE:  ENG 330 is NOT a required prerequisite for this section of ENG 440G.  Anyone interested in the topic is welcome to enroll (i.e., has the "consent of the instructor").  Email the English Dept. in order to get an override if you need one.