AMERICAN LITERATURE TO 1800
BC 3179x  Fall 2007
MW 11:00-12:15
Milbank 202

Professor Lisa Gordis
Office: Barnard Hall 408D
Office phone: 854-2114
Mailbox: Barnard Hall 417

lgordis@barnard.edu
http://www.columbia.edu/~lmg21
Office hours: Mondays 4 to 5:30 and by appointment.
I will not hold regular office hours on 9/10, 10/1, 10/29 and 12/3.
Office hours during those weeks will be rescheduled.

BC 3179x surveys American literature written before 1800. While we will devote some attention to the literary traditions that preceded British colonization, most of our readings will be of texts written in English between 1620 and 1800. These texts--histories, autobiographies, poems, plays, and novels--illuminate the complexity of this period of American culture. They tell stories of pilgrimage, colonization, and genocide; private piety and public life; the growth of national identity (political, cultural, and literary); Puritanism, Quakerism, and Deism; race and gender; slavery and the beginnings of a movement towards its abolition. We will consider, as we read, the ways that these stories overlap and interconnect, and the ways that they shape texts of different periods and genres.