Schedule


 

English 25,"Literature and the Information, Media, and Communication Revolutions" (Spring 2017)

 

Print book = required print book    Course Reader = required course reader
All other readings are online on Web sites or as downloadable PDFs PDF 
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Please read all assigned readings in advance of the relevant lecture.
TAs may flag specific assigned readings to be sure to get to before each week's section discussion.

 Week 1

Class 1 (M., Apr. 3) — Introduction

Class 1 Notes

 

1. Overture: Literature Across Media Ages

 

Class 2 (W., Apr. 5) — The Idea of Media

Class 2 Notes

 

Class 3 (F. Apr. 7 ) — From Oral to Writing Media

Class 3 Notes

 

 Week 2

Assignment due in section this week: "Create your system for working with online readings" 

Class 4 (M. Apr. 10) — (Continued)

Class 4 Notes

 

Class 5 (W., Apr. 12) — "Close Reading" (Past and Present)

Class 5 Notes

 

Class 6 (F., Apr. 14) — "Distracted Reading" and "Distant Reading" in the Information Age

Class 6 Notes

 

 Week 3

Class 7 (M., Apr. 17) — (Continued)

Class 7 Notes

 

 

2. The Communication/Information Age

      Information's Impact on What We Mean by "Meaning"

 

Class 8 (W., Apr. 19) — The Communications Revolution & the Digital Principle

Class 8 Notes

 

Class 9 (F., Apr. 21) — The Computer Revolution (1): History of the Computer

Class 9 Notes

 

 Week 4

 

Class 10 (M., Apr. 24) — The Computer Revolution (2): Rise of the Network

Class 10 Notes

 

Class 11 (W., Apr. 26) — The Computer Revolution (3): The Emergence of Digital "New Media"

Class 11 Notes
 

 

Fiction Unit

 

Class 12 (F., Apr. 28) — Fiction in the Age of Media, Communication, & Information

Class 12 Notes

Assignment due in lecture in Class 12: Essay 1 on the Future of Computing

 

 Week 5

Class 13 (M,. May 1) — (Continued)

Class 13 Notes

 

Class 14 (W., May 3) — (Continued)

Class 14 Notes
 

 

Class 15 (F., May 5) — [Midterm Exam]

Class 15 Notes

 

3. The Postindustrial & Neoliberal Age

      Information's Impact on Work and Power

 

 Week 6

Class 16 (M., May 8) — Postindustrial "Knowledge Work"

Class 16 Notes
  • "Scientific Management" (The Original "Smart Work")
  • "Knowledge Work" (Today's Smart Work)
    • Joseph A. Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy (1942), pp. 82-84 (on "creative destruction")
    • Shoshana Zuboff, In the Age of the Smart Machine: The Future of Work and Power (1988), pp., 3-12 Course Reader  Also read these online excerpts.
    • Joseph H. Boyett and Henry P. Conn, Workplace 2000 (1992), pp. 1-46 Course Reader
    • Peter Senge, The Fifth Discipline (1990), pp. 3-14 Course Reader

 

Class 17 (W,. May 10) — Neoliberal "Networked Society"

Class 17 Notes
  • William H. Davidow and Michael S. Malone, The Virtual Corporation (1992), pp. 1-19, 50-66, 184-205, 214-16 Course Reader 
  • Wendy Brown interviewed by Timothy Shenck, "What Exactly is Neoliberalism?" (2015)
  • Manuel Castells, "Materials for an Exploratory Theory of the Network Society" (2000) PDF (read only the abstract and the two sections titled "The Network Society: An Overview" and "Social Structure and Social Morphology: From Networks to Information Networks" on the pages numbered 9-17)

Assignment due in lecture in Class 17: Essay 2 on Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49

 

Class 18 (F., May 12) — Against All the Above

 

 Week 7

Class 19 (M., May 15) — (Continued)

  • Continuation of above lectures, plus discussion with the professor.

 

 

 

Fiction Unit

 

Class 20 (W., May 17) — Fiction About Postindustrial/Neoliberal Work & Power

  • William Gibson, Neuromancer (1984), read half the novel by this class (Print book; available at UCEN Bookstore and elsewhere) Print book

 

Class 21 (F., May 19) — (Continued)

  • William Gibson, Neuromancer (1984), finish the novel. (Print book) Print book

Assignment due in lecture in class 21: Spreadsheet on Being Human in the Age of Knowledge Work

 

 Week 8

Class 22 (M., May 22) — (Continued)

  • William Gibson, Neuromancer (1984), finish the novel. (Print book) Print book

 

Class 23 (W., May 24) — (Continued)

  • William Gibson, Neuromancer (1984), finish the novel. (Print book) Print book -- Conclusion of professor's lecture on the novel.
 

 

4. Processing Literature

      Information's Impact on the Way We Study Literature

 

Class 24 (F., May 26) — What is Text in the Digital Age? (The Logic of Text Encoding)

Assignment due in lecture in Class 24: Essay 3 on Being Human in the Age of Knowledge Work

 

 Week 9

Assignment due in section this week: Text Analysis Exercise & Short Commentary

 

[M., May 29 — No Class (Campus Holiday)] 

 

Class 25 (W., May 31) — Text Analysis and Literature

 

Class 26 F., June 2) — Topic Modeling and Literature

 

 Week 10

 

Class 27 (M, June 5) — Social Network Analysis and Literature

 

Class 28 (W., June 7) — Spatial Analysis (Mapping) and Literature

 

Class 29 (F., June 9) — Conclusion: What Is Literature For in the Information Age? /
     What Is Information For in Literature?

  • Discussion with the professor. This "Colloquium Class" will use as a thought-prompt the ideas of "deformance" and "glitch" in the literary/artistic use of information technology.

 


 

(W., June 14, 4-4:50 pm) — Final Exam