Courses of Instruction
Comparative Literature (COLT)
The terms indicated are expected but are not guaranteed. For the courses offered during any given term, consult the Schedule of Classes.
COLT 101g Masterpieces and Masterminds: Literature and Thought of the West (4, Fa) A broad introduction to the great works of Western culture from antiquity to 1800. (Duplicates credit in former COLT 150xg.)
COLT 102g On Location: The Place of Literature in Global Cultures (4, Sp) Comparative study of works from a broad range of cultural traditions that originate from, and provide insight into, vital global locations outside the Western sphere.
COLT 250g Cultures of Latin America (4) Comparative study of Latin American cultures, especially vis-a-vis those of Europe and the U.S. Materials drawn from literature, but also film, opera, history, cultural theory.
COLT 251g Modern Literature and Thought of the West Since 1800 (4) Survey of literary and other cultural texts from the 19th to the 21st centuries, with emphasis on the individual and social change. (Duplicates credit in former COLT 151xg.)
COLT 264g Asian Aesthetic and Literary Traditions (4) A comparative study of the Asian aesthetic heritage of poetry, painting, music, and drama; of literary themes, trends, and myths.
COLT 302 Introduction to Literary Theory (4) Introduction to general forms of reflection on literary discourse.
COLT 303 Globalization: Culture, Change, Resistance (4) Cultural dimensions of issues in globalization: migration, diaspora, terrorism, communications, climate change, collectives, production and technology, money and exchange.
COLT 311 Epic (4) Formation and development of epic poetry from Near Eastern and Greco-Roman antiquity through the Renaissance to the present. Emphasis on relation to political and cultural change.
COLT 312 Heroes, Myths and Legends in Literature and the Arts (4) Study of transformations of characters and themes from myth, legend or fairytale (Oedipus, Antigone, Faust, Don Juan, Cinderella, Comic and Tragic Twins, Hero and Monster).
COLT 324 Women in Medieval and Renaissance Europe (4) Study of literary, social and cultural lives of women during the European Middle Ages and Renaissance. Reading and analysis of texts written by and about women.
COLT 335 Decadence and Modernity (4) Study of the notion of "decadence" and its impact on modern and contemporary literary/cultural production, with a comparatist focus on different linguistic traditions.
COLT 345 Realist Fiction (4) Study of the ways literature presents the "real" (social and/or individual) through readings of selected novels and short stories in the realist and naturalist traditions.
COLT 346 Fictions of the First Person (4) Study of prose fiction in the first person as a model of fiction in general and as a reflection of the fictional structure of selfhood.
COLT 348 Modernist Fiction (4) Study of the Modernist aesthetic in narrative texts by Gide, Joyce, Kafka, Woolf and others; possible focus on related trends in other literary traditions.
COLT 351 Modern and Contemporary Drama (4) Comparative study of major modern dramatic trends, subgenres, and techniques, through representative works from Strindberg to the Theatre of the Grotesque and the Absurd. (Duplicates credit in former COLT 305.)
COLT 354 Revolutions in Theater (4) Comparative study of groundbreaking contributions to modern theories of theater and performance in the context of other 20th century revolutions — aesthetic, cultural, and social.
COLT 357 The Avant-Garde (4, max 8) Study of the relationship between literary modes and other arts since 1900, focusing on particular avant-garde movements.
COLT 360 Classical Arabic Literature in Translation (4, Irregular) (Enroll in CLAS 360)
COLT 365 Literature and Popular Culture (4) Study of mass-reproduced verbal and visual art forms, such as graphic novels, comics, animation, popular music, video, graffiti, advertising.
COLT 370 Leaders and Communities: Classical Models (4, FaSp) (Enroll in CLAS 370)
COLT 373 Literature and Film (4) Examines literature and film as distinct modes of representation, narration, and structuring of time, language, memory, and visuality.
COLT 374gm Women Writers in Europe and America (4) Introduction to works of major women writers from the Middle Ages to the 20th century in their literary, social, and cultural contexts.
COLT 375 Latin American Cultural and Literary Theory (4) Survey of cultural critique focused on Latin America as a cultural region and on Latin Americanism as a transnational academic practice.
COLT 377 Literature, Theory, Gender (4) Literary representations and theories of gender difference. Examines questions of gendered voice in writing and the cultural construction of gender in various periods and cultures.
COLT 379 Nationalism and Postcolonialism in Southeast Asian Cinema (4) Cinema from Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam in local and global cultural contexts.
COLT 381 Psychoanalysis and the Arts (4) Introduction to psychoanalytic literature on the arts, including classic texts by Freud, Jones, Lacan, Derrida, and others. Readings of theoretical and fictional works.
COLT 382g Zen and Taoism in Asian Literature (4) Studies of the presence and influence of Zen Buddhism and Taoism in Asian literature, with a focus on China and Japan.
COLT 385 Literature and Justice (4) Examination of literary and autobiographical texts that raise questions of justice in multicultural societies; links to theories of justice in historical, political, or philosophical contexts.
COLT 390 Special Problems (1-4) Supervised, individual studies. No more than one registration permitted. Enrollment by petition only.
COLT 391 Literary Criticism from Plato to Postmodernism (4) Survey of major texts in the literary criticism of the West from the Greeks to postmodern theories.
COLT 420 The Fantastic (4) Representative works from the "fantastic" and related currents within the European, U.S., and Spanish American traditions; reading of texts by authors such as Borges, Cortazar, Kafka, and Poe. Discussion of relevant theoretical concepts and critical works.
COLT 426 Utopias (4) Examination of selected utopias in their historical context as "no places" whose projections of alternate cultures always comment on their own.
COLT 435 Poetry and Poetics of the Everyday (4) Relations between poetry of the dominant tradition in various languages and vernacular forms of poetry, such as riddles, nursery rhymes, ballads, and poems in dialect or slang.
COLT 445m Europe and the Writing of Others (4) Analysis of European texts -- literary, musical, philosophical, visual -- that focus on other cultures, as well as of non-European texts dealing with Europe or European cultural forms.
COLT 448 Multilingual Encounters (4) Exploration of multilingual encounters in literary works, films, and theoretical texts. Topics may include immigrant languages, dialects, jargons, imaginary or hybrid languages, theories of translation.
COLT 451 Opera and Cultural Theory (4) Study of the words and plots of operas from the viewpoint of gender, postcolonial, and psychoanalytical theory. Special attention to contemporary stagings and film versions.
COLT 452 Representation and Cognition in Photography (4) Analysis of documentary photo-representation in its historical context through study of the work of selected 20th century documentary photographers and of pertinent critical writings.
COLT 453 Bildungsroman in Modern East Asia (4, Sp) (Enroll in EALC 454)
COLT 454 Aesthetic Philosophy and Theory (4) Introduction to philosophical and critical writings on the nature of art and aesthetic experience. Special attention to technology's impact on art.
COLT 460 Love, Self and Gender in Japanese Literature (4) (Enroll in EALC 460)
COLT 462 Soundtracks of Our Lives (4) The reciprocal, ideological relations between modes of listening, sounds, music; and literature, film, culture. Examines a range of issues in auditory culture across a broad historical span.
COLT 470 Literature and Media in Latin America (4) Study of the relations between Latin American literature and different mass-media genres.
COLT 471 Literature, Theory, History (4) Examines the relation between historical and theoretical approaches to literary works.
COLT 472 Los Angeles Crime Fiction (4) The noir tradition in books and films set in Los Angeles. Emphasis on generic conventions, representations of the city, and discourses of class, gender, race.
COLT 474 Desire, Literature, Technology (4) Relations between technology, desire, power and literature through contemporary philosophers, theorists and literary critics. Examines literature and philosophy in relation to global technological planning.
COLT 475 Politics and the Novel (4) Examination of the modern realist novel with special focus on the representation of social change (revolution, class conflict, sexual politics).
COLT 478 Family in Theory and Literature (4) Representations of the family in literary works and films across different cultures and historical periods. Readings in anthropology, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and feminist and gender theory.
COLT 480 Dada and Surrealism (4) A comparative study of Dada and Surrealism in literature in relation to painting, sculpture, photography and cinema.
COLT 485 The Shoah (Holocaust) in Literature and the Arts (4) A critical analysis, in their historical contexts, of representative literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works created by or about the victims of the Shoah (Holocaust).
COLT 486 Deconstructive Thought (4) Deconstructive analysis of theories of language, representation, selfhood, the human, art and technology, politics and ethics. Study of works by Derrida and others.
COLT 487 Critical Image (4) Introduction to critical reflection on the image. Analysis of criticism, fiction, film, and visual artifacts.
COLT 490x Directed Research (2-8, max 8) Individual research and readings. Not available for graduate credit. Prerequisite: departmental approval.
COLT 495 Senior Honors Thesis (4) Writing of an honors thesis under individual faculty supervision.
COLT 499 Special Topics (2-4, max 8) Intensive study of selected author or authors in the context of a major literary tradition.
COLT 502 Introduction to Literary Theory (4) Major developments in 20th-century literary criticism, with special attention to theoretical work of the past three decades.
COLT 524 Topics in Classical to Early Modern Literature (4, max 12) Literary currents from classical antiquity through to the 17th century. Varying focus on specific genres, periods, movements, or problematics.
COLT 526 Topics in Modern Literature (4, max 12) Literary currents from the 19th century to the present. Varying focus on specific genres, periods, movements, or problematics. Views of the modern in different cultural contexts.
COLT 541 Seminar in Drama (4, max 12) Problems in dramatic theory, in the history of the drama, and in comparative analysis of dramatic forms, techniques, and themes.
COLT 542 Seminar in Poetry (4, max 12) History and theory of poetic genres, communicative contexts, periods and movements. Possible focus on epic, lyric, orality, literacy, visual media, modernism, postmodernism translation.
COLT 543 Seminar in Prose (4, max 12) Readings of prose texts from various genres. Possible focus on narrative fiction, the essay, travel writing, chronicles, autobiography, or testimonial literature.
COLT 555 Studies in Literatures of the Americas (4, max 8) Comparative study of literary currents in the U.S., Canada, Latin America, and the Caribbean.
COLT 565 Studies in Literatures of East Asia (4) Advanced study of major cultural paradigms and their divergent influences in East Asian literature.
COLT 575 Studies in Literature and Ethnicity (4, max 8) Study of literary expression in different cultural, racial, or religious communities. Possible focus on African, Asian, Hispanic, or Jewish themes across several national traditions.
COLT 585 Studies in Literature and Gender (4, max 8) Emphasis on gender difference and sexual difference as signifying categories for literary works, criticism, or theory.
COLT 590 Directed Research (1-12) Research leading to the master's degree. Maximum units which may be applied to the degree to be determined by the department. Graded CR/NC.
COLT 600 Topics in Comparative Literary Analysis (4, max 12) Intensive study of fictional or poetic language, with emphasis on techniques of literary analysis.
COLT 601 Professional Development I: Applying for Positions (2, Fa) Familiarizes students with the process of seeking an academic position, from assembling a dossier to interviews and on-campus visits. Open to graduate students only. Graded CR/NC. Prerequisite: admission to candidacy.
COLT 602 Topics in Literary Criticism and Theory (4, max 12) Intensive study of a theoretical tradition or critical movement, or of an individual topic or thinker, in literary criticism or theory. May be repeated for credit.
COLT 603 Professional Development II: Publication (2, Sp) Preparation of book and article manuscripts for publication and placement in presses and journals; revising dissertations for publication; preparing papers for conferences. Students produce an article manuscript ready for submission to a journal. Open to graduate students only. Graded CR/NC. Major Field Exam must be passed prior to taking this course.
COLT 620 Seminar in Literature and Social Thought (4, max 12) Inquiry into relationships among literature, social and political ideologies, principles of political systems, and social or intellectual theory.
COLT 640 Seminar in Literature and Visual Culture (4, max 12) Topics in reciprocal relation of visual arts and theory to narratology, semiotics, psychoanalysis, and other areas.
COLT 660 Seminar in Literature and Psychoanalysis (4, max 12) Problems in the psychoanalytic study of literature and culture, or in the literature and culture of psychoanalysis.
COLT 680 Seminar in Literature and Philosophy (4, max 12) Emphasis on questions raised when literature confronts philosophical discourses: aesthetics, philosophy of law, ethics, philosophy of language, political philosophy, and others.
COLT 790 Research (1-12) Research leading to the doctorate. Maximum units which may be applied to the degree to be determined by the department. Graded CR/NC.
COLT 794abcdz Doctoral Dissertation (2-2-2-2-0) Credit on acceptance of dissertation. Graded IP/CR/NC.