ENGL 115
The Literature of Sports
Last Offered Fall 2020
Division I Writing Skills Difference, Power, and Equity
Cross-listed AFR 115
This course is not offered in the current catalog

Class Details

The ubiquity of the sporting event, the athlete as hero, the athlete as failure, the crowd, the fan, the stadium, and all of the complex conflicts therein have long been the subjects of some of the finest writing in America and throughout the world. Writers have used sport as a context through which to explore and examine ideas such as beauty, the sublime, tragedy, politics, race, class, sexuality, and gender. This course will focus on poetry, fiction, and non-fiction invested in the public spectacles and private revelations of sport ranging from the poetics of praise to issues of urbanism, colonialism, globalization with readings by Pindar, Rankine, CLR James, Baldwin, Hemingway, Oates, DeLillo, and many others. This course will be taught online in a synchronous format.
The Class: Format: seminar
Limit: 14
Expected: 14
Class#: 2265
Grading: yes pass/fail option, yes fifth course option
Requirements/Evaluation: Students will be expected to complete a number of short (5 pages or less) papers during the semester and one longer paper (8-10 pages) at the end of the semester.
Prerequisites: None.
Enrollment Preferences: first-year students who have not taken or placed out of a 100-level ENGL course.
Distributions: Division I Writing Skills Difference, Power, and Equity
Notes: This course is cross-listed and the prefixes carry the following divisional credit:
AFR 115 Division II ENGL 115 Division I
WS Notes: Students will receive from the instructor timely comments on their writing skills, with suggestions for improvement.
DPE Notes: This course will focus on literature about sports that addresses, among other topics, civil rights activism, gentrification, race dynamics and race relations both inside and outside of the USA, American exceptionalism, sociocultural construction of emotional displays, mental health, religious conflict, and anti-blackness.

Class Grid

Updated 11:09 am

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