Please note the time for Dr. Lubey’s class has changed and is now 2:00 – 4:00 p.m.
ENG 855: Theory of the Novel (75130)
R. 2:00-400 p.m. 
Dr. Kathleen Lubey
This  course will acquaint students with the “long history” of novel theory  and the changing ways in which literary critics have defined the  origins, attributes, and socio-political function of the genre. We will  read a few novels as test cases for our theoretical readings, probably  by Henry Fielding, Virginia Woolf, and J.M. Coetzee. But our discussions  will be rooted in understanding the enduring questions that are  diversely taken up by literary critics of the novel: what formal and  ideological features define the novel? What is the relationship between  the novel form and modernity? What politics are mobilized by the genre’s  unique ways of formulating subjectivity and the objective world? These  and other questions will be pursued as we understand the singularity of  each novel theorist as well as the dialogue each critic sustains with  the larger field. Our theoretical readings will cover “old” and “new”  formalisms (Frye, Booth, Lukacs, Bakhtin; Gallagher, Levine);  post-structural challenges to genre theory (Culler, Derrida); theories  of the novel’s origins and social politics (Watt, McKeon, Moretti,  Jameson, Benjamin); theories of the novel and gender (Sedgwick,  Armstrong, Brown), and of its post-colonial context (Attridge, Appiah).  Evaluation will be based on participation and papers, equaling 20-25  pages.
	
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