ENGL 3060 Modern and Contemporary Literature for Nonmajors

Instructor Contact:

Matt Tettleton

Email: matthew.tettleton@colorado.edu

About the Course:

This section of Modern & Contemporary Literature for Nonmajors examines 20th and 21st century literature through the lens of critical sports studies. Please note: prior knowledge of sports is not necessary to succeed in and enjoy the class. We will be reading novels, short stories, poetry, and drama that have some connection with the world of sport in an effort to answer the following questions: in what ways do sports construct, reflect, or subvert the norms, beliefs, practices, and expressions of the cultures in which they arise? In what ways can we use literary expressions of sport, competition, and spectatorship to better understand those cultures? Where do texts about sport fit in with the larger traditions of modern and contemporary literature?

Course Prerequisites: Restricted to students with 27-180 credits (Sophomores, Juniors or Seniors).

Objectives:

Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:

·       Identify the conventions, themes, tropes, trends, and styles of sport-centric literatures of various nations, communities, cultures, and genres.

·       Describe the ways in which sport and its literatures reflect, affect, and critique the cultures from which they arise.

·       Use close reading and critical thinking skills to produce incisive interpretations of literary texts.

·       Communicate ideas in polished and coherent scholarly prose

·       Analyze relationships between sports, cultures, and literatures.

·       Make critical assessments, through a variety of writing genres, of the relationships between sporting and literary traditions.

·       Synthesize interpretations, analysis, and critical assessments to create new understandings of the place of sports in literary and cultural studies.

Required Texts:

Readings may include works from authors such as Angie Abdou, Don DeLillo, Eduardo Galeano, Nick Hornby, LeAnne Howe, David Foster Wallace, August Wilson, and others.

Grading (out of 1000 points):

This course will be graded on a 1000-point scale. The point value of assignments is:

Syllabus Quiz 20 points 2 Close Reading Essays 200 points
Introduction Post 10 points Literary Analysis Essay 200 points
Lesson Worksheets 100 points Creative Adaptation Project 120 points
Reading Discussion Posts 100 points Lecture Quizzes 100 points
Perusall Annotation Assignments 150 points Total 1000 points

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Hours

Monday – Friday
8:00am to 5:00pm

Location

We are located at the corner of University Avenue and 15th Street in a white brick building.

Map

1505 University Avenue
University of Colorado Boulder
178 UCB
Boulder, Colorado
80309-0178