UGA Bulletin Logo

American Modernism


Course Description

The fiction, poetry, drama, and non-fiction prose that expresses the literary experimentation and social transformations of the period from 1918 to 1960. Writers may include Eliot, Pound, Stein, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Faulkner, Toomer, Miller, O'Neill, Williams, Larsen, Steinbeck, Salinger, and O'Connor.


Athena Title

American Modernism


Prerequisite

Two 2000-level ENGL courses or (one 2000-level ENGL course and one 3000-level ENGL course) or (one 2000-level ENGL course and one 2000-level CMLT course)


Semester Course Offered

Offered every year.


Grading System

A - F (Traditional)


Course Objectives

At the end of the course, students, having read a substantial body of literature, will be able to discuss the assigned works (orally and in writing) with a considerable degree of critical sophistication, to read them with pleasure, to read and enjoy other works from the period, and to converse with fellow students about texts and issues related to the subject matter of the course.


Topical Outline

The choice and sequence of topics will vary from instructor to instructor and semester to semester. The topics will consist of selected works by various authors to be read outside of class and discussed in class and to be examined individually and comparatively in the context of the times and the circumstances of their composition. Periodically during the semester, students will perform a number of graded tasks, including some combination of tests and out-of-class papers. A possible series of topics and assignments might resemble this: Eliot, The Waste Land Pound, Cantos Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury Dos Passos, Mid-Century Toomer, Cane Stein, Three Lives Miller, Death of a Salesman Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye