Difference between revisions of "S Whispers from the Closet: Representing the "Unspeakable" in Literature and Film"

From Angl-Am
Jump to: navigation, search
(Session 01, April 12: Introduction)
(Session 11, June 21: Analysing Calamity Jane II - Camp Attacks on the Western Genre)
 
(264 intermediate revisions by one user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''!!! UNDER CONSTRUCTION !!!'''
 
 
 
 
'''COURSE OUTLINE'''
 
'''COURSE OUTLINE'''
  
Line 16: Line 13:
 
* [Room] A01 0-009
 
* [Room] A01 0-009
  
* [Description] TBA
+
* [Description] Inquiries into mainstream culture's representations of otherness are of key relevance for an academic field like literary and cultural studies, whose principal claims are based on the idea that culture has an all-encompassing influence on identity formation, both collective and individual, and that, consequently, our identities and our sense of self do not come from inside ourselves so much as from a pre-existing culture that determines intelligible ways of living, while it disciplines allegedly unintelligible ones. In other words, it is through cultural representations – and thus largely through novels, plays, and movies, etc. - that we learn what it means to be different in a normative culture. And paradoxical as it may sound, when it comes to sexual difference, this learning process was, up until the end of the twentieth century, largely informed by misrepresentation, or even non-representation, as the vigilant influence of censorship and anti-gay legislation banned examples of queer life and queer role models to a space of virtual invisibility: the closet. While the Lord Chamberlain's Office and the BBFC (British Board of Film Censors) monitored Britain's theatres and her film industry closely, the Motion Picture Production Code, or Hays Code, meticulously classified a number of violations, including "sex perversion" and other allegedly undesirable contents, deemed inappropriate or even offensive in classical Hollywood cinema. Unsurprisingly, these institutions took ample liberties to rewrite, distort, or even delete material in order to render queer life, or at least positive images of queer life, invisible. As a result, any kind of (positive self-) identification with queer cultural role models was obliterated. And yet, writing under the influence of censorship and anti-gay legislation allowed many nineteenth- and twentieth-century novelists, playwrights, and filmmakers to develop and explore the numerous subtle ways by which "unspeakable" lesbian and gay subtexts could be communicated and placed in a text. Bargaining on the deep gulf between queer knowledge and heteronormative incomprehension (and thus on the truism that 'it takes one to know one'), these artists made use of various genres (Victorian gothic; horror; film noir; seafaring tales; westerns; musicals; boarding school dramas; etc.), various stock characters (the double; the 'handsome sailor'; the 'apparitional' lesbian; the femme fatale; the tomboy; the 'artistic' teenager; etc.), and various modes of performativity (camp; parody; pastiche; intertextuality; etc.) to undermine the regimes of censorship and to render queer characters visible – at least between the lines. In order to analyse the management of (non-) knowledge and compulsory (in-)comprehension that govern the open-secret structures of the closet, we are going to take a closer look at the contexts and the specific formal and function designs of R.L. Stevenson's Victorian gothic novel ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde'', Herman Melville's seafaring tale ''Billy Budd, Sailor'', Alfred Hitchcock's film noir classic ''Rebecca'' (based on the eponymous novel by Daphne du Maurier); David Butler's western musical ''Calamity Jane'' (starring Doris Day); and Peter Weir's boarding school film ''Dead Poets Society''. In addition, the documentary film ''The Celluloid Closet'' (based on Vito Russo's pioneering study of the same title) will provide as with a historical overview of the representation of homosexuality in the movies.
  
 
* [Office Hours] Tuesday, 11.00 am - 12.00 am
 
* [Office Hours] Tuesday, 11.00 am - 12.00 am
Line 29: Line 26:
 
* Melville, Herman. 1924 [1891]. ''Billy Budd, Sailor and Selected Tales.'' Oxford: OUP, 2009. Print.
 
* Melville, Herman. 1924 [1891]. ''Billy Budd, Sailor and Selected Tales.'' Oxford: OUP, 2009. Print.
  
Movies:
+
Documentary Features:
  
* ''Rebecca.'' Dir. Alfred Hitchcock. Perf. Joan Fontaine, Laurence Olivier, Judith Anderson. 1940. Alfred Hitchcock Collection. Great Movies, 2015. DVD.
+
* ''The Celluloid Closet.'' [dt. ''Gefangen in der Traumfabrik.''] Dir. Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. HBO, 1995. Pro Fun Media, 2004.
  
* ''Calamity Jane.'' [dt. ''Schwere Colts in Zarter Hand.''] Dir. David Butler. Perf. Doris Day and Howard Keel. 1953. Warner Home Video, 2020. DVD.
+
Movies:
  
* ''Dead Poets Society.'' [dt. ''Der Club der toten Dichter.''] Dir. Peter Weir. Perf. ‎ Robin Williams, Robert Sean Leonard, Ethan Hawke. 1989. Touchstone, 2002. DVD.
+
* ''Rebecca.'' Dir. Alfred Hitchcock. Perf. Joan Fontaine, Laurence Olivier, Judith Anderson. United Artists, 1940. Alfred Hitchcock Collection. Great Movies, 2015. DVD.
  
Documentary Features:
+
* ''Calamity Jane.'' [dt. ''Schwere Colts in Zarter Hand.''] Dir. David Butler. Perf. Doris Day and Howard Keel. Warner Bros., 1953. Warner Home Video, 2020. DVD.
  
* ''The Celluloid Closet.'' [dt. ''Gefangen in der Traumfabrik.''] Dir. Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. 1995. Pro Fun Media, 2004.
+
* ''Dead Poets Society.'' [dt. ''Der Club der toten Dichter.''] Dir. Peter Weir. Perf. ‎ Robin Williams, Robert Sean Leonard, Ethan Hawke. Touchstone, 1989. Disney Home Entertainment, 2002. DVD.
  
  
 
'''ASSIGNMENTS'''
 
'''ASSIGNMENTS'''
  
* [Prüfungsleistung] asynchrones (Gruppen-)Referat (max. 5 Personen; ca. 20 Folien) mit Schriftlicher Ausarbeitung (10 Seiten) [oder in Ausnahmefällen: Hausarbeit (15 Seiten)]
+
* [Prüfungsleistung] asynchrones (Gruppen-)Referat ('''max. 3 Personen'''; ca. 20 Folien) mit Schriftlicher Ausarbeitung (10 Seiten) [oder in Ausnahmefällen: Hausarbeit (15 Seiten)]
  
 
* [Aktive Teilnahme] Regular Attendance (cf. Richtlinien der Fakultät III, Studiendekanat), Course Preparation (i.e. watching the asynchronous presentations), 4 Abstracts
 
* [Aktive Teilnahme] Regular Attendance (cf. Richtlinien der Fakultät III, Studiendekanat), Course Preparation (i.e. watching the asynchronous presentations), 4 Abstracts
Line 84: Line 81:
 
     Summary: Presentations
 
     Summary: Presentations
  
1. Pick a presentation topic and contact me via e-mail (starting April 03). Check below for available places. Presentation groups may consist of a maximum of 5 people.
+
1. Pick a presentation topic and contact me via e-mail (starting April 03). Check below for available places. Presentation groups may consist of a maximum of 3 people.
  
 
2. Contact the other members of your group and prepare your presentation, i.e. power-point presentation with audio commentary.
 
2. Contact the other members of your group and prepare your presentation, i.e. power-point presentation with audio commentary.
Line 96: Line 93:
 
6. Be ready to answer questions on the day of your presentation.
 
6. Be ready to answer questions on the day of your presentation.
  
==Session 02, April 19: Historiographic Metafiction I: History as Narrative and Narration==
+
'''Introductory Lecture: Sexual Identity in Cultural Studies'''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Lassen_Writing_Sexual_Identity_Vorlesung_gesichert.pdf VL Writing Sexual Identity: Key Concepts in Cultural Studies (Lassen)]
  
'''Theory Texts'''
+
In preparation for the seminar, please work thorough the slides of the lecture above in order to familiarise yourself with the history of the term ''sexual identity'', starting with the discursive production of the cultural concept of ''sexuality'' in the late nineteenth century.
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/White__Hayden._The_Fictions_of_Factual_Representation_gesichert.pdf White, Hayden. "The Fictions of Factual Representation." ''Tropics of Discourse: Essays in Cultural Criticism''. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins UP, 1978. 121-34. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/White__Hayden._The_Value_of_Narrativity_gesichert.pdf White, Hayden. "The Value of Narrativity in the Representation of Reality." ''Critical Inquiry'' 7.1 (Autumn 1980): 5-27. Print.]
+
  
'''Guiding Questions'''
+
==Session 02, April 19: Theory Session I - Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's ''Epistemology of the Closet''==
* In "The Fictions of Factual Representation," Hayden White claims that "history is no less a form of fiction than the novel is a form of historical representation" (122). What is it that writing history and writing fiction have in common, according to White? How do both relate to standards of ''coherence'' and ''correspondence'', respectively? How is the relationship between ''reality'' and ''representation'' conceptualised?
+
* As White rightly suspects, the statement above has certainly not been embraced by either historians, or writers of fiction/ literary critics, at least not initially: With regard to ''history'' and ''literature'', how has the historical relationship between both academic fields been construed over time? When and where were they drifting apart? And for what reasons?
+
* The notion of ''representation'' suggests that any text is a construction of ''reality'', albeit with different intended effects. What are the different effects produced by ''history'' and ''fiction'', respectively? How can a self-conscious and reflected use of language expose the constructedness of said effects? What are some of the literary techniques or tropes that bring about specific constructions?
+
* What questions would you ask when it comes to disentanling the processes that turn ''facts'' and ''real events'' into ''his-story'' - read emphasis on both ''his'' and ''story''?
+
* Moving on to White's "The Value of Narrativity," how does the distinction between ''narrating real events'' and ''narrativising real events'' reflect on subjective and objective forms of (re-)presenting said events?
+
* What, according to White's critique of historiography, are the criteria that produce "proper" historical accounts (9)? And how come that, paradoxically, non-narrative representations of history (annals, chronicles) seem to be less convincing when it comes to producing textual effects like '''objectivity'', ''closure'', or even ''authenticity''?
+
 
+
==Session 03, April 26: Historiographic Metafiction II: Deconstructing History's 'Grand Narratives'==
+
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Hutcheon_PoeticsPostmodernism_Excerpts_gesichert.pdf Hutcheon, Linda. ''A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction''. London and New York: Routledge, 1988. Print. (Excerpts)]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Sedgwick_Closet_IntroAxiomatic_gesichert.pdf?v=1679986498 Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. "Introduction: Axiomatic." ''Epistemology of the Closet.'' Berkeley and Los Angeles: U of California P, 1990. 1-63. Print.] (esp. 1-27; 40-48)
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Sedgwick_Closet_ChapterEpistemologyCloset_gesichert.pdf?v=1679986498 Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. "Chapter One: Epistemology of the Closet." ''Epistemology of the Closet.'' Berkeley and Los Angeles: U of California P, 1990. 65-90. Print.]
  
'''FurtherMaterial'''
+
'''Introductory Lecture: Sexual Identity in Cultural Studies'''
*Handout: [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/BM7/materials/2022_09_09_HO_littheory_movements_timeline.pdf Brief Overview of Theoretical Approaches and Movements]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Lassen_Writing_Sexual_Identity_Vorlesung_gesichert.pdf VL Writing Sexual Identity: Key Concepts in Cultural Studies (Lassen)]
  
 
'''Guiding Questions'''
 
'''Guiding Questions'''
* Comment on the following statement:
 
"What postmodern writing of both history and literature has taught us is that both history and fiction are discourses, that both constitute systems of signification by which we make sense of the past […]. In other words, the meaning and shape are not ''in the events'', but ''in the systems'' which make those past "events" into present historical "facts." This is […] an acknowledgement of the meaning-making function of human constructs." (Hutcheon 89)
 
* In what ways does ''historiographic metafiction'' (and the approaches of ''New Historicism'' more generally) differ/ depart from its immediate predecessors, i.e. exclusively structuralist approaches to literary analysis (see handout)? Why does context matter? How is context reconstructed in ''historiographic metafiction''?
 
* While the traditional historical novel tends to focus on the universal, the central, the coherent, the norm, postmodern genres (including historiographic metafiction), informed by Foucault, tend to focus on the particular, the marginal, the dispersed, the 'other'. With regard to this (simplified) juxtaposition: What topics, themes, and perspectives are now granted representation? How do these postmodern representations affect dominant discursive formations of Western culture? And how do they reassess/redistribute/revise the hierarchies included in traditional binary views of gender (masculine/feminine); sex (male/female); sexuality (heterosexuality/homosexuality); space (urban/rural; global/local); race (white/black); class; disability; etc.
 
* How are these revisionist representations designed? In what ways does the change of content show in/ correspond with a change of form? Have a closer look at the following aspect (and, where possible, substantiate your findings with proof from our primary texts):
 
  
- the narrative design of a text
+
* Historical Context:
  
- the figure of the narrator
+
Sedgwick begins her monograph by claiming that "many of the major nodes of thought and knowledge in twentieth-century Western culture as a whole are structured - indeed, fractured - by a chronic, now endemic crisis of homo/heterosexual definition, indicatively male, dating from the end of the nineteenth century" (1). Likewise, the introductory lecture "Writing Sexual Identity" chooses to begin its discussion of modernity's conception of desire, and specifically same-sex desire, in the late nineteenth century.
  
- the figure of the protagonist
+
Why is this point in time, historically speaking, so siginificant for the discursive development of concepts surrounding same-sex desire?
 +
 +
What are the major discourses that begin to shape and cement new knowledges about same-sex desire?
  
- the use and function of historical details/ characters
+
What knowledges are being produced?
  
- the use of different genres
+
How do these new knowledges become so dominant, culturally speaking, that their conceptions of (same-sex) desire, their terminology, their classifications and categorisations continue to define the ways 'we' speak, think and talk about desire in the 21st century?
  
- the use of intertextuality
+
With regard to identity formation, what does Foucault mean when he points out - quoted in Sedgwick - that afetr this discursive development "the homosexual was now a species" (9)?
  
==Session 04, May 03: ''Waterland'' in Context - Regional Perspectives==
+
* Identity Formation:
  
'''Primary Material'''
+
With "the homosexual" emerging as a "species", the question of visibility arises with all its ambivalent aspects. On the one hand, gay visibility has allowed for communitiy formation and concerted political action in times of crisis - e.g. Gay Liberation (after the Stonewall Riots) or ACT-UP (during the AIDS epidemic). On the other hand, however, visibility has come and continues to come at a price, as the identity of "the homosexual" has suffered (and continues to suffer) the effects of pathologisation, criminalisation (cf. Labouchère Amendment; Section 28), and other forms of institutionalised discrimination.  
* Swift, Graham. ''Waterland''.
+
  
'''Theory Texts'''
+
What makes things even more precarious is that, according to Sedgwick, in a homophobic culture such as ours, the continuum between homosocial, i.e. patriarchal, desire ("men promoting the interests of men") and homosexual desire ("men loving men") is "radically disrupted" (Sedgwick, ''Between Men'' 3) so that homosocial and homosexual desire have come to exclude each other. That is to say, such a patriarchal culture strongly invites the entertainment of homosocial bonds between men, while it ostracises the entertainment of homosexual bonds between them - and it does so, knowing that expressions of both forms of desire can be so similar as to be virtually indistinguishable. According to Sedgwick, the effect is clear: a social mechanism of policing male-male desire that makes it unable for the individual to - publicly or privately - ascertain that their bonds are exclusively homosocial.As a result of this "new" visibility, the individual becomes increasingly vulnerable to external assaults (e.g. "blackmailability") and internal crises (e.g. the return of the repressed), which, according to Sedgwick, frequently lead them into the psychological state of "homosexual panic".
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Boyce_ImperialMud_TheFens_Excerpts_gesichert.pdf Boyce, James. ''Imperial Mud: The Fight for the Fens''. London: Icon, 2020. Print. (Excerpts)]
+
  
'''Further Reading'''
+
What does the term "homosexual panic" mean? And how can an allegedly individual state of panic, anxiety, or fear be of social consequence?
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Giblett_PostmodernWetlands_Intro_gesichert.pdf Giblett, Rodney James. "Introduction: Where Land and Water Meet." ''Postmodern Wetlands: Culture, History, Ecology''. Edinburgh, Edinburgh UP, 1996. Print.]
+
  
'''Guiding Questions'''
+
How can this act of "(self-) disciplining" through homosexual panic be used as a policing mechanism organising male-male bonds in a specific culture/society?
  
Historical Context: James Boyce, ''Imperial Mud: The Fight for the Fens''.
+
What are the characteristics of a social, cultural, political regime that - according to Sedgwick - actively exploits the anxieties and fears of its subjects? Who benefits from this exploitation - and how?
  
* Sketch the events that are central to the historical development of the Fens.
+
Or is it "just" a coincident that the crisis of "homo/heterosexual definition" has become such a powerful organising mechanism in our culture? (Note Sedgwick's observation that other forms of sexual difference ( i.e. "masturbator (9)) have completely lost their siginficance to transport social or cultural meaning.)
- How are these events turned into 'meaningful' facts that establish a dominant historical narrative of the Fens? Does Boyce agree with this dominant account?
+
  
- If not, how does he problematise it? Whose perspectives does he include? What are the opposing narratives that he identifies?
+
* The Closet:
  
*Identity:
+
In light of the above, it is no wonder that the crisis of "homo/heterosexual definition" has resulted in a phenomenon that structures sexual (non-)knowledge and (in-)comprehension along the dynamic lines of secrecy and disclosure: the closet. Sedgwick impressively demonstrates, quoting much discussed legal cases, that the relationship between secrecy/disclosure is never simply a progressive or even a liberating one, allegedly expressed in the move "out of the closet", i.e., from the state of "being in the closet" to the state of "coming out of the closet" - although "coming out" can, of course, have precisely this liberating effect. Still, rather than viewing the closet as either a protective shield or a cage to leave behind, it would do better justice to this phenomenon, if we conceptualised the closet itself as a dynamic queer tool in a homophobic society/culture whose anti-gay objective operates thorough the paradoxical, yet intentional catch-22 that "disclosure [be] at once compulsory and forbidden" (71).
- How is the identity of the landscape of the Fens and its people construed according to dominant representations?
+
  
- Does Boyce affirm or contradict these identity constructions? How?
+
Considering the anti-gay paradoxes of a homophobic culture, how do other allegedly binary argumentative structures - minoritising views/universalising views; essentialism/constructivism; censorship/freedom of speech - operate in order to pre-empt any gay-affirmative position from the beginning? And how can a gay-affirmative response seek to disempower these deliberately paradoxical anti-gay positions?  
* Discourse Analysis:
+
- What positions regarding the historical development of the Fens are being represented in the text?
+
  
- Where does Boyce position himself with regard to this discourse? Does he make his position/his subjective point of view clear/transparent?
+
Could you conceive of strategic gay-affirmative speech acts that are able to forestall the heteronormative catch-22 that "disclosure [be] at once compulsory and forbidden" (71)?  
  
- What discourses are central to Boyce's argument?
+
What purpose could any of the following speech acts/representations serve: silence(s); sociolects; double entendres; indirection; camp performativity; irony; parody; metaphors; metonymies; intertextuality; etc?  
  
Literary Context: Rodney James Giblett, ''Postmodern Wetlands: Culture, History, Ecology''.
+
What purpose could any of the following literary or cinematic motifs serve - think of our primary material: the double; doppelgänger; the handsome sailor; the ghost/the apparition; the tomboy; the "artistic" teenager; or simply staged/meaningful absence?
  
* Nature/ Landscape:
+
'''Preparatory Session'''
- In what ways are wetlands, and the Fens in particular, a 'man-made' landscape?
+
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Annemieke Müller, Fiona Stack, Tanja Jaworski
  
- How do we need to reassess our idea of 'nature' with regard to culture's impact on its formation?
+
==Session 03, April 26: Analysing ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde'' I - Victorian Gothic Fiction and the Queer Double==
  
* Cultural Construction of Wetlands:
+
'''Primary Material'''
- According to Giblett, how does our culture construct wetlands, i.e. dominantly sppeaking? What 'meaning' is attributed wetlands?
+
* Stevenson, Robert Louis. ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde''.
  
- What other discourses are related to wetlands in our culture?
+
'''Theory Texts'''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Showalter_DrJekyllsCloset_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880144 Showalter, Elaine. "Dr. Jekyll's Closet." ''Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at the Fin de Siècle''. London: Bloomsbury, 1991. 105-26. Print.]
  
- Does Giblett discover counter-discursive voices, i.e. representations that contradict the dominant construction/ dominant representations?
+
'''Further Reading'''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Halberstam_SkinShows_StevensonWilde_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880139 Halberstam, Judith. "Gothic Surface, Gothic Depth: The Subject of Secrecy in Stevenson and Wilde." ''Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monsters''. Durham and London: Duke UP, 1995. 53-85. Print.]
  
- What literary example does he use in order to prove that wetlands have been construed differently in different cultural contexts, e.g. genre, time, etc.?
+
'''Presentation'''
 +
* "The thorough and primitive duality of man," or: Sexual Identities, Homosexual Panic, the ''Double'', and the Externalisation of Same-Sex Desire in ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde''
  
First Contact: Graham Swift, ''Waterland''
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Annemieke Müller, Fiona Stack, Tanja Jaworski
* Comment on how Graham Swift's novel ''Waterland'' relates to some of the aspects above. What are your initial observations? Please substantiate your findings with textual proof.
+
  
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Lenara Bias, Joscha Koering, Tobias Huhle
+
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Viktoriya Tuparova, Deya Zaharieva
  
==Session 05, May 10: Local History - Tom Crick's History of the Fens==
+
==Session 04, May 03: Analysing ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde'' II - Metonymies and Topographies of Same-Sex Desire==
  
 
'''Primary Material'''
 
'''Primary Material'''
* Swift, Graham. ''Waterland''.
+
* Stevenson, Robert Louis. ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.''
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Berlatsky_SwampHistoriographyNarrativitaHereNowWaterland_gesichert.pdf Berlatsky, Eric. "'The Swamps of Myth. . . and Empirical Fishing Lines': Historiography, Narrativity, and the 'Here and Now' in Graham Swift's ''Waterland''." ''Journal of Narrative Theory'' 36.2 (Summer 2006): 254-92. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Seed_ClosedDoorsDJAMH_gesichert.pdf?v=1677486695 Seed, David. "Behind Closed Doors: The Management of Mystery in ''The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde''." ''Gothick Origins and Innovations''. Eds. Allan Lloyd Smith and Victor Sage. Amsterdam and Atlanta: Rodopi, 1994. 180-89. Print.]
  
 
'''Further Reading'''
 
'''Further Reading'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Cooper_ImperialTopographiesHistoryWaterland_gesichert.pdf Cooper, Pamela. "Imperial Topographies: The Spaces of History in ''Waterland''." ''MFS: Modern Fiction Studies'' 42.2 (1996): 371-96. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Dryden_GothicDoubles_SC_London_gesichert.pdf?v=1676883247 Dryden, Linda and Laurence Davies. "'City of Dreadful Night': Stevenson's Gothic London." ''The Modern Gothic and Literary Doubles: Stevenson, Wilde and Wells''. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.74-109. Print.]
  
 
'''Presentation'''
 
'''Presentation'''
* Of Water, Phlegm, and Beer: Draining, Drinking, Drowning and the Deconstruction of Progress Narratives in ''Waterland''
+
* "Black Mail House is what I call the place with the door," or: the Body, the House, and the Street as Metonymies of Same-Sex Desire in ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde''
  
* ''Presentation Group'': Lenara Bias, Joscha Koering, Tobias Huhle
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Viktoriya Tuparova, Deya Zaharieva
  
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Jessika Häfker, Rebekka Hänßler, Jonah Pflüger, Jan-Philipp Gomoll, Jannis Michaelis
+
* ''Preparatory Session Group'':
  
==Session 06, May 17: Global History - Tom Crick's Disillusioned History Lessons==
+
==Session 05, May 10: Analysing ''Billy Budd, Sailor'' I - Seafaring Novels and the Handsome Sailor==
  
 
'''Primary Material'''
 
'''Primary Material'''
* Swift, Graham. ''Waterland''.
+
* Melville, Herman, ''Billy Budd, Sailor.''
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Decoste_ApocalypseEndlesssnessWaterland_gesichert.pdf Decoste, Damon Marcel. "Question and Apocalypse: The Endlessness of ''Historia'' in Graham Swift's ''Waterland''." ''Contemporary Literature'' 43.2 (Summer 2002): 377-99. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Cesare_Casarino_Gomorrahs_of_the_Deep_BB_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880134 Casarino, Cesare. "Gomorrahs of the Deep or: Melville, Foucault, and the Question of Heterotopia." ''Arizona Quarterly'' 51.4 (1995): 1-25. Print.]
  
 
'''Further Reading'''
 
'''Further Reading'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Irish_DesireNarrativityWaterland_gesichert.pdf Irish, Robert K. "'Let Me Tell You': About Desire and Narrativity in Graham Swift's ''Waterland''." ''MFS: ModernFiction Studies'' 44.4 (Winter 1998): 917-34. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Foucault-Other_Spaces_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880131 Foucault, Michel. "Of Other Spaces." ''Diacritics'' (1986): 22-7. Print.]
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Landow_HistoryHisStoryStoriesWaterland_gesichert.pdf Landow, George P. "History, His Story, and Stories in Graham Swift’s ''Waterland''". ''Studies in the Literary Imagination'' 23.2 (1990): 197-211. Print.]
+
  
 
'''Presentation'''
 
'''Presentation'''
* Of Guillotines and Great Wars: Exposing History's 'Grand Narratives', their Meaning-Making Processes, and the Fear of the 'Here and Now' in ''Waterland''
+
* "The Deadly Space Between," or: Homosocial Spaces, Homoerotic Desires, and the Ship as Heterotopia ''par excellence''
  
* ''Presentation Group'': Jessika Häfker, Rebekka Hänßler, Jonah Pflüger, Jan-Philipp Gomoll, Jannis Michaelis
+
* ''Presentation Group'':
  
==Session 07, May 24, ''Moon Tiger'' in Context - Feminist Perspectives==
+
'''Preparatory Session'''
 +
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Vanessa Janßen, Lasse Stegat
 +
 
 +
==Session 06, May 17: Analysing ''Billy Budd, Sailor'' II - Narratology and the Management of (Non-)Knowledge==
  
 
'''Primary Material'''
 
'''Primary Material'''
* Lively, Penelope. ''Moon Tiger''.
+
* Melville, Herman. ''Billy Budd, Sailor.''
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Rau_war_in_contemporary_fiction_gesichert.pdf Rau, Petra. "The War in Contemporary Fiction." ''The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of World War II''. Ed. M. MacKay. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2009. 207-19. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Sedgwick_Closet_BB_gesichert.pdf?v=1677063741 Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. "Some Binaries (I): ''Billy Budd'': After the Homosexual." ''Epistemology of the Closet''. Berkeley and Los Angeles: U of California P, 1990. 91-130. Print.]
 
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Chalk_1980s_gesichert.pdf Chalk, Bridget. "The 1980s." ''The Cambridge Companion to British Fiction: 1980–2018''. Ed. P. Boxall. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2019. 17-31. Print.]
+
  
 
'''Further Reading'''
 
'''Further Reading'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Halberstam_Queer_Time_and_Place_Intro_gesichert.pdf Halberstam, Jack. "Queer Temporalities, Postmodern Geographies." ''In a Queer Time and Place: Transgendered Bodies, Subcultural Lives''. New York, NY, and London: New York UP, 2005. 1-34. Print.]
+
* [https://www.colorado.edu/gendersarchive1998-2013/2003/03/01/flesh-word-billy-budd-sailor-compulsory-homosociality-and-uses-queer-desire David, Greven. "Flesh in the Word: ''Billy Budd, Sailor'', Compulsory Homosociality, and the Uses of Queer Desire." ''Genders'' 37 (2003): n.pag. Web.]
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Jolly_BarkerLivelyContemporaryNovelMT_gesichert.pdf Jolly, Margaretta. "After Feminism: Pat Barker, Penelope Lively, and the Contemporary Novel." ''British Culture of the Postwar: An Introduction to Literature and Society 1945-1999''. Eds. Alistair Davies and Alan Sinfield. London and New York: Routledge, 2000. 83-102. Print.]
+
  
'''Preparatory Session'''
+
'''Presentation'''
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Frederik Wülbers-Mindermann, Wiebke Stumpe, Seraphim Remer, Marlene Rabe
+
* "What was the matter with the master-at-arms?", or: Open-Secret Structures, Compulsory (In-)Comprehension, and Terrorising Narrative Designs in ''Billy Budd, Sailor''
  
'''Guiding Questions'''
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Vanessa Janßen, Lasse Stegat
  
Theory/ Background
+
==Session 07, May 24, Theory Session II - Vito Russo's ''The Celluloid Closet''==
* How can postmodern and distinctly feminist and queer concepts of time (e.g. Halberstam's concept of ''queer time'', or Freeman's concept of ''chromonormativity'') expose the ways in which, in our culture, time is organised along normative lines?
+
* How does this normative organisation of time show in our culture? How does it translate into lived experiences?
+
* With specific regard to heteronormativity, how does the said organisation of time affect women's lives in patriarchal culture(s)?
+
* How do these heteronormative structures affect the (formulaic) representation of women's issues in traditional historiographic writing?
+
 
+
''Moon Tiger''
+
* In what ways does Claudia Hampton's narrative intentionally subvert the seemingly natural flow/ organisation of time? What happens to time-honoured conventions like chronology, linearity, and teleology when it comes to representing history, i.e. both her personal history and her publications in the fields of popular history?
+
* How does the novel make use of narration and focalisation in order to subvert the idea of history as monolithic truth?
+
* Discuss the following two scholarly positions and, where possible, substantiate your stance with textual proof:
+
According to Chalk, "[t]he feminist, popular historian protagonist of Penelope Lively's ''Mooon Tiger'' (1987) recollects various phases of her life in England and Egypt throughout the twentieth century, subverting the patriarchal, imperial power complex and normative assumptions surrounding the sexual lives of women" (21-2); according to Jolly, however, "''Moon Tiger'' is an ["elegant"] study in proto-feminism, the professional woman who challenged the rules individually but, precisely because she was so successful of doing so, never made common cause with the others of her sex. [...] [due to its stylistic animation of [...] post-modern sensibilities ...] it represents only the narrowest interpretation of women's needs, one of the escape from private to public." (70-1)
+
 
+
==Session 08, May 31: Political Selves - Claudia Hampton, the Historian and War Correspondent==
+
 
+
'''Primary Material'''
+
* Lively, Penelope. ''Moon Tiger''.
+
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Moran_FeministHistoryWorldMT_gesichert.pdf Moran, Mary Hurley. "Penelope Lively's ''Moon Tiger'': A Feminist 'History of the World." ''Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies'' 11.2/3 (1990): 89-95. Print.]
+
* Epstein, Rob and Jeffrey Friedman, dirs. ''The Celluloid Closet. ''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Benshoff_Griffin_AmericaOnFilm_Homosexuality_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880148 Bensoff, Harry M. and Sean Griffin. "Heterosexuality, Homosexuality, and Classical Hollywood." ''America on Film: Representing Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality at the Movies''. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009. 309-28. Print.]
  
 
'''Further Reading'''
 
'''Further Reading'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Raschke_HistoryMoonTiger_gesichert.pdf Raschke, Debrah. "Penelope Lively's ''Moon Tiger'': Re-envisioning a 'history of the world'." ''ARIEL: A Review of International English Literature'' 26.4 (1995): 115-32. Print.]
+
* Benshoff, Harry M. ''Monsters in the Closet: Homosexuality and the Horror Film.'' Manchester, Manchester UP, 1997. Print.
 +
* Dyer, Richard. ''Now You See It: Studies on Lesbian and Gay Film.'' London and New York: Routledge, 1990. Print.
 +
* Russo, Vito. ''The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality in the Movies.'' Revised Edition. New York et al.: Harper & Row, 1987. Print.
  
'''Presentation'''
+
'''Guiding Questions'''
* Of History and HERstory: Feminist Subversions of Phallo(go)centric and Heteronormative Constructions of Time, History, and Narrative Linearity in ''Moon Tiger''
+
* TBA
 
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Frederik Wülbers-Mindermann, Wiebke Stumpe, Seraphim Remer, Marlene Rabe
+
  
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Imke Hagedorn, Katja Voß, Nora Abrahim, Kasimir Berding, Sven Cordes
+
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Rebekka Hänßler, Jessika Häfker, Elias Isfort
  
==Session 09, June 07: Personal Selves - Claudia Hampton, the Autobiographer==
+
==Session 08, May 31: Analysing ''Rebecca'' I - Film Noir, Gothic Romance, and the Apparitional Lesbian==
  
 
'''Primary Material'''
 
'''Primary Material'''
* Lively, Penelope. ''Moon Tiger''.
+
* Hitchcock, Alfred, dir. ''Rebecca''
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Glendenig_RecollectionRevisionMoonTiger_gesichert.pdf Gelendening, John. "Recollection and Revision: Penelope Lively’s ''Moon Tiger''." ''ESC'' 43.1 (Marsh 2017): 67-81. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Berenstein_MonstersQueersRebecca_gesichert.pdf?v=1677845104 Berenstein, Rhonda J. "'I'm Not the Sort of Person Men Marry': Monsters, Queers, and Hitchcock's ''Rebecca''." ''Out in Culture: Gay, Lesbian, and Queer Essays on Popular Culture''. Eds. Corey Creekmur and Alexander Doty. Durham and London: Duke UP, 1995. 239-261. Print.]
  
 
'''Further Reading'''
 
'''Further Reading'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Jackson_DesiresHistoryMT_gesichert.pdf Jackson, Tony E. "The Desires of History, Old and New." ''Clio'' 28.2 (1999): 169-87. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Berenstein_CensorshipLesbianRebecca_gesichert.pdf?v=1678442215 Berenstein, Rhonda J. "Adaptation, Censorship, and Audiences of Questionable Type: Lesbian Sightings in ''Rebecca'' (1940) and ''The Uninvited'' (1944)." ''Cinema Journal'' 37.3 (Spring 1998): 16-37. Print.]
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Castle_ApparitionalLesbian_Intro_gesichert.pdf?v=1677834125 Castle, Terry. "Introduction." ''The Apparitional Lesbian: Female Homosexuality and Modern Culture''. New York: Columbia UP, 1993. 23-20. Print.]
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/White_UnInvited_FemaleSpectatorLesbianSpecter_gesichert.pdf?v=1677843921 White, Patricia. "Female Spectator, Lesbian Specter." ''UnInvited: Classical Hollywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability''. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana UP, 1999.61-93. Print.]
  
 
'''Presentation'''
 
'''Presentation'''
* Of Recollecting, Remembering, and Resting: Memory, Identity, Death, and the Construction of Self-Narratives in ''Moon Tiger''
+
* "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again,": Lesbian Specters, Haunted Houses and the Discplacement of Female Same-Sex Desire in ''Rebecca''  
  
* ''Presentation Group'': Imke Hagedorn, Katja Voß, Nora Abrahim, Kasimir Berding, Sven Cordes
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Rebekka Hänßler, Jessika Häfker, Elias Isfort
  
==Session 10, June 14: Mid-Term Recap==
+
'''Preparatory Session'''
* Discussions and Interim Results
+
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Marie Becker, Artur Ladilov
  
==Session 11, June 21: ''The Swimming-Pool Library'' in Context - Queer Perspectives==
+
==Session 09, June 07: Analysing ''Rebecca'' II - Narration, Focalisation, and (Performating) Heteronormative (In-)Comprehension==
  
 
'''Primary Material'''
 
'''Primary Material'''
* Hollinghurst, Alan. ''The Swimming-Pool Library''.
+
* Hitchcock, Alfred, dir. ''Rebecca''
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Sinfield_CultureConsensusDifferenceHollinghurst_gesichert.pdf Sinfield, Alan. "Culture, Consensus and Difference: Angus Wilson to Alan Hollinghurst." ''British Culture of the Postwar: An Introduction to Literature and Society 1945-1999''. Eds. Alistair Davies and Alan Sinfield. London and New York: Routledge, 2000. 83-102. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Corber_ColdWarFemme_MarnieRebecca_gesichert.pdf?v=1678445590 Corber, Robert J. "Recuperating Femme Femininity: ''Marnie''." ''Cold War Femme: Lesbianism, National Identity, and Hollywood Cinema''. Durham and London: Duke UP, 2011. 72-94. Print.] [on ''Rebecca'', 75-83]
  
 
'''Further Reading'''
 
'''Further Reading'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Cook_GayHistoryBritain_gesichert.pdf Cook, Matt et al., eds. ''A Gay History of Britain: Love and Sex Between Men Since the Middle Ages''. Oxford and Westpoint, CT: Greenwood, 2007. Print. (Excerpts)]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Greven_CC_HitchcockQueerSexuality_gesichert.pdf?v=1677833150 Greven, David. "Hitchcock and Queer Sexuality." ''The Cambridge Companion to Alfred Hitchcock''. Cambridge: CUP, 2015. 127-42. Print.]
  
'''Further Material'''
+
'''Presentation'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Lassen_Writing_Sexual_Identity_Vorlesung_gesichert.pdf VL Writing Sexual Identity: Key Concepts in Cultural Studies (Lassen)]
+
* "I'll play the part of a devoted wife," or: Lesbian Desire, Lesbian Panic, and Performing Heteronormative Incomprehension in ''Rebecca''
  
'''Guiding Questions'''
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Marie Becker, Artur Ladilov
* How has the law/ the legal discourse construed and shaped the identity of gay men since the discursive classification of sexual identities in the late nineteenth century? Sketch the influence and impact of the following key developments.
+
- Labouchère Amendment (1885)
+
  
- Wolfenden Committee and Wolfenden Report (1957)
+
'''Preparatory Session'''
 +
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Verena Liebl
  
- Sexual Offences Act (1967)
+
==Session 10, June 14: Analysing ''Calamity Jane'' I - Westerns, Musicals, and the Tomboy==
  
- Section 28 (1988)
+
'''Primary Material'''
 +
* Butler, David, dir. ''Calamity Jane''
  
* What other discourses have exercised a significant influence in the shaping of this identity? How does ''The Swimming-Pool Library'' represent the influence of the following discourses?
+
'''Theory Texts'''
- politics: colonial service, cold-war prosecution, Eurocentrism, tc.
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Savoy_Doris_Day_CalamityJane_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880146 Savoy, Eric. "'That Ain't All She Ain't': Doris Day and Queer Performativity." ''Out Takes: Essays on Queer Performativity and Film''. Ed. Ellis Hanson. Durham and London: Duke UP, 1999. 151-82. Print.]
  
- econonmy: consumerism, self-fashioning, etc.
+
'''Further Reading'''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Farmer_GayHollywoodMusical_SpectacularPassions_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880145 Farmer, Brett. "Fantasmatic Escapades: Gay Spectatorships and Queer Negotiations of the Hollywood Musical." ''Spectacular Passions: Cinema, Fantasy, and Gay Male Spectatorships''. Durham and London: Duke UP, 2000. 69-110. Print.]
  
- education: public-school education; Oxbridge, etc.
+
'''Presentation'''
 +
* "Once I Had a Secret Love," or: 'Gay' Songs, Lesbian Subtexts, and the Queering of the Western Genre in ''Calamity Jane''
  
- race: Will's "relationship" with Arthur; Charles' "altruism"
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Verena Liebl
  
- class: Will's relationship to Phil, etc.
+
'''Preparatory Session'''
 +
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Lisa Czuma, Ida Witt
  
- art: Roman baths; cultural references (Firbank, Forster, Britten, etc.)
+
==Session 11, June 21: Analysing ''Calamity Jane'' II - Camp Attacks on the Western Genre==
  
- history: Ancient Egypt, Roman baths, etc.
+
'''Primary Material'''
 +
* Butler, David, dir. ''Calamity Jane''
  
- etc.
+
'''Theory Texts'''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/McDonald_GenderMakeove_CalamityJane_gesichert.pdf?v=1676880137 McDonald, Tamar Jeffers. "Carrying Concealed Weapons: Gender Makeover in ''Calamity Jane''." ''JPF&T: Journal of Popular Film and Television'' 34.4 (2007): 179-86. Print.]
  
* What is the difference between homosocial and homosexual desire? Why do they allegedly exclude each other in western culture (today)? In what ways is homosexual desire exploited by dominant homosocial power structures - think of Hollinghurst's representation of the public-school system, the the colonial service, the practices of agent provocateurs, for example? In what ways does the conceptual impossibility to separate homosocial from homosexual desire produce participation, complicity, submission, or (even) homosexual panic (in ''The Swimming-Pool Library).
+
'''Further Reading'''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Babuscio_Cinema-of-Camp_gesichert.pdf?v=1676881804 Babuscio, Jack. "The Cinema of Camp (aka  Camp and the Gay Sensibility)." ''Camp: Queer Aesthetics and the Performing Subject: A Reader''. Ed. Fabio Cleto. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 2002. 117-35.]
  
* How does the novel represent gay history? How does it picture historical differences and historical continuities? How does it stage the generational conflict between Charles Nantwich and Will Beckwith?
+
'''Presentation'''
 
+
* "A Woman's Touch," or: Camp, Theatricality, and the Parodic Subversion of Heteronormative Gender Performmances in ''Calamity Jane''
* How does the novel narrativise historical events? Comment on the novel's narrative design, especially on the use of different narrative levels, different narrators, reliability, etc.!
+
  
 +
* ''Presentation Group'': Lisa Czuma, Ida Witt
  
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Ronja Denkena, Gina Sperling, Jayne Menezes Lisboa, Mariska Straten, Christina Waltl
+
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Franciska Wendel, Jannik Ferdinand, Keno Kienetz
  
==Session 12, June 28: Revising the Past - Charles Nantwich's Diaries==
+
==Session 12, June 28: Analysing ''Dead Poets Society'' I - All-Male Boarding School Films and the "Artistic" Teenager==
  
 
'''Primary Material'''
 
'''Primary Material'''
* Hollinghurst, Alan. ''The Swimming-Pool Library''.
+
* Weir, Peter, dir. ''Dead Poets Society''
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Dellamora_TraditionApocalypseTSPL_gesichert.pdf Dellamora, Richard. "Tradition and Apocalypse in Alan Hollinghurst's ''The Swimming-Pool Library''." ''Apocalyptic Overtures: Sexual Politics and the Sense of an Ending''. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1994. 173-91. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Modleski_FeminismWithoutWomen_DPS_gesichert.pdf?v=1677486696 Modleski, Tania. "Lethal Bodies: Thoughts on Sex, Gender, and Representation from the Mainstream to the Margins." ''Feminism without Womenn: Culture and Criticism in a "Postfeminist" Age''. New York and London: Routledge, 1991.135-63. Print.] [esp. 137-41.]
  
 
'''Further Reading'''
 
'''Further Reading'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Johnson_GayHistoryTSPL_gesichert.pdf Johnson, Allan. "'A Gay Story, a History': Gay Male Liberation and Queer Rumination." ''British Literature in Transition, 1980-2000: Accelerated Times''. Eds. Eileen Pollard and Berthold Schoene. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2018. 244-58. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Robinson_MarkedMen_ElitismDPS_gesichert.pdf?v=1676968359 Robinson, Sally. "Pale Males, Dead Poets, and the Crisis in White Masculinity: Scenes from the Culture Wars." ''Marked Men: White Masculinity in Crisis''. New York: Columbia UP, 2000. 52-86. Print.] [esp.79-86]
  
 
'''Presentation'''
 
'''Presentation'''
* Of Public Schools, Private Clubs, and Empty Closets: (Re-)Claiming the Hidden History of Homosexuality (and Its Ambivalent Heritage) in ''The Swimming-Pool Library''
+
* Disavowing the "Barbaric Yawp"?, or:  Nostalgia, Elitism, and the Exploitative Silencing of Otherness in ''Dead Poets Society''
  
* ''Presentation Group'': Ronja Denkena, Gina Sperling, Jayne Menezes Lisboa, Mariska Straten, Christina Waltl
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Franciska Wendel, Jannik Ferdinand, Keno Kienetz
  
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
 
'''Preparatory Session'''
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Sena Harms, Lea Harter, Stefan Gottschalk, Rebecca Stürzebecher
+
* ''Preparatory Session Group'': Sofie Friedrich, Nick Beckmann
  
==Session 13, July 05: Recontextualising the Present - Will Beckwith's (Unwrittten) Biography==
+
==Session 13, July 05: Analysing ''Dead Poets Society'' - Homosocial Genres and Homoerotic Intertexts==
  
 
'''Primary Material'''
 
'''Primary Material'''
* Hollinghurst, Alan. ''The Swimming-Pool Library''.
+
* Weir, Peter, dir. ''Dead Poets Society''
  
 
'''Theory Texts'''
 
'''Theory Texts'''
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/Chambers_GaynessLoiteratureTSPL_gesichert.pdf Chambers, Ross. "Messing around: gayness and loiterature in Alan Hollinghurst's ''The Swimming-Pool Library''." ''Textuality/Sexuality: Reading Theories and Practices''. Eds. Judith Still and Michael Worton. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1993. 207-17. Print.]
+
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Hammond_MelodramaWarMasculinityDPS_gesichert.pdf?v=1677063740 Hammond, Mike. "The Historical and the Hyterical: Melodrama, War and Masculinity in ''Dead Poets Society''." ''You Tarzan: Masculinity, Movies and Men''. Eds. Pat Kirkham and Janet Thumim. London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1993.52-64. Print.]
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Rewriting_History/McLoed_Alan_Hollinghurst_Race__empire_and_The_Swimming-Pool_Library_gesichert.pdf McLeod, John. "Race, empire and ''The Swimming-Pool Library''." ''Alan Hollinghurst: Writing Under the Influence''. Eds. Michèle Meldelssohn and Denis Flanery. Manchester: Manchester UP, 2016. 60-78. Print.]
+
 
 +
'''Further Reading'''
 +
* [https://uol.de/f/3/inst/anglistik/download/Lehre/Lassen_Lehrmaterialien/AM_Whispers_from_the_Closet/Burt_UnspeakableShakespeare_CinemaDPS.pdf?v=1677832942 Burt, Richard. "The Love That Dare Not Speak Shakespeare’s Name: New Shakesqueer Cinema." ''Unspeakable Shaxxxspeares: Queer Theory and American Kiddie Culture''. New York, St. Martin's, 1998. 29-76. Print.] [esp. 51-58]  
  
 
'''Presentation'''
 
'''Presentation'''
* Of Privilege, Position, and Agent Provocateurs: Exposing Open Secrets, Patriarchal and Postcolonial Power Structures, and the Workings of Homosocial Complicity in ''The Swimming-Pool Library''
+
* Universalising Dead Poets, or: Shakespeare, Whitman, and the Unqueer Representation of Queer Intertexts and Genres in ''Dead Poets Society''
  
* ''Presentation Group'': Sena Harms, Lea Harter, Stefan Gottschalk, Rebecca Stürzebecher
+
* ''Presentation Group'': Sofie Friedrich, Nick Beckmann
  
 
==Session 14, July 12: RPO Session==
 
==Session 14, July 12: RPO Session==
Line 385: Line 361:
 
Your RPO topic needs to be related to at least one of the primary texts
 
Your RPO topic needs to be related to at least one of the primary texts
  
     '''March 15: Term Paper Due'''
+
     '''September 15: Term Paper Due'''
  
 
Please upload your paper to the folder "Ausarbeitungen und Hausarbeiten" on our Stud.IP page and send a printed copy to the address below.
 
Please upload your paper to the folder "Ausarbeitungen und Hausarbeiten" on our Stud.IP page and send a printed copy to the address below.

Latest revision as of 08:57, 7 June 2023

COURSE OUTLINE

3.02.150 S Whispers from the Closet: Representing the "Unspeakable" in Literature and Film

  • [Module] Motifs - Themes - Issues (and their Media)
  • [Credits] 6 KP
  • [Instructor] Dr. Christian Lassen
  • [Time] Wednesday, 08.15 am - 09.45 am, weekly session, consisting of the following two parts: plenary session, discussing the asynchronous presentation (8.15 am - 9.30 am); and prepararory session for presentation groups (9.30 am - 9.45 am); nota bene: presentations will not be given in class but they will be made available on Stud.IP the Friday before they are scheduled, i.e. watching the presentations prior to the relevant sessions constitues a mandatory course requirement.
  • [Room] A01 0-009
  • [Description] Inquiries into mainstream culture's representations of otherness are of key relevance for an academic field like literary and cultural studies, whose principal claims are based on the idea that culture has an all-encompassing influence on identity formation, both collective and individual, and that, consequently, our identities and our sense of self do not come from inside ourselves so much as from a pre-existing culture that determines intelligible ways of living, while it disciplines allegedly unintelligible ones. In other words, it is through cultural representations – and thus largely through novels, plays, and movies, etc. - that we learn what it means to be different in a normative culture. And paradoxical as it may sound, when it comes to sexual difference, this learning process was, up until the end of the twentieth century, largely informed by misrepresentation, or even non-representation, as the vigilant influence of censorship and anti-gay legislation banned examples of queer life and queer role models to a space of virtual invisibility: the closet. While the Lord Chamberlain's Office and the BBFC (British Board of Film Censors) monitored Britain's theatres and her film industry closely, the Motion Picture Production Code, or Hays Code, meticulously classified a number of violations, including "sex perversion" and other allegedly undesirable contents, deemed inappropriate or even offensive in classical Hollywood cinema. Unsurprisingly, these institutions took ample liberties to rewrite, distort, or even delete material in order to render queer life, or at least positive images of queer life, invisible. As a result, any kind of (positive self-) identification with queer cultural role models was obliterated. And yet, writing under the influence of censorship and anti-gay legislation allowed many nineteenth- and twentieth-century novelists, playwrights, and filmmakers to develop and explore the numerous subtle ways by which "unspeakable" lesbian and gay subtexts could be communicated and placed in a text. Bargaining on the deep gulf between queer knowledge and heteronormative incomprehension (and thus on the truism that 'it takes one to know one'), these artists made use of various genres (Victorian gothic; horror; film noir; seafaring tales; westerns; musicals; boarding school dramas; etc.), various stock characters (the double; the 'handsome sailor'; the 'apparitional' lesbian; the femme fatale; the tomboy; the 'artistic' teenager; etc.), and various modes of performativity (camp; parody; pastiche; intertextuality; etc.) to undermine the regimes of censorship and to render queer characters visible – at least between the lines. In order to analyse the management of (non-) knowledge and compulsory (in-)comprehension that govern the open-secret structures of the closet, we are going to take a closer look at the contexts and the specific formal and function designs of R.L. Stevenson's Victorian gothic novel Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Herman Melville's seafaring tale Billy Budd, Sailor, Alfred Hitchcock's film noir classic Rebecca (based on the eponymous novel by Daphne du Maurier); David Butler's western musical Calamity Jane (starring Doris Day); and Peter Weir's boarding school film Dead Poets Society. In addition, the documentary film The Celluloid Closet (based on Vito Russo's pioneering study of the same title) will provide as with a historical overview of the representation of homosexuality in the movies.
  • [Office Hours] Tuesday, 11.00 am - 12.00 am


PRIMARY TEXTS (Mandatory Texts)

Novellas:

  • Stevenson, Robert Louis. 1886. Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Other Tales. Oxford: OUP, 2008. Print.
  • Melville, Herman. 1924 [1891]. Billy Budd, Sailor and Selected Tales. Oxford: OUP, 2009. Print.

Documentary Features:

  • The Celluloid Closet. [dt. Gefangen in der Traumfabrik.] Dir. Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. HBO, 1995. Pro Fun Media, 2004.

Movies:

  • Rebecca. Dir. Alfred Hitchcock. Perf. Joan Fontaine, Laurence Olivier, Judith Anderson. United Artists, 1940. Alfred Hitchcock Collection. Great Movies, 2015. DVD.
  • Calamity Jane. [dt. Schwere Colts in Zarter Hand.] Dir. David Butler. Perf. Doris Day and Howard Keel. Warner Bros., 1953. Warner Home Video, 2020. DVD.
  • Dead Poets Society. [dt. Der Club der toten Dichter.] Dir. Peter Weir. Perf. ‎ Robin Williams, Robert Sean Leonard, Ethan Hawke. Touchstone, 1989. Disney Home Entertainment, 2002. DVD.


ASSIGNMENTS

  • [Prüfungsleistung] asynchrones (Gruppen-)Referat (max. 3 Personen; ca. 20 Folien) mit Schriftlicher Ausarbeitung (10 Seiten) [oder in Ausnahmefällen: Hausarbeit (15 Seiten)]
  • [Aktive Teilnahme] Regular Attendance (cf. Richtlinien der Fakultät III, Studiendekanat), Course Preparation (i.e. watching the asynchronous presentations), 4 Abstracts

Please note that written assignments (abstracts, short term papers, long term papers) need to be composed according to the style sheet ("Leitfaden") of the University of Oldenburg, which can be accessed via the 'Institutswiki'-page of the English department. The style sheet not only provides relevant information on how to write a correct bibliography but it may also help you to structure your work according to academic standards.

Please make sure to sign the "Erklärung zum 'Plagiat'" and to attach it to your research papers.

  • [Abgabefrist] 15. September 2023.





Session 01, April 12: Introduction

Organisational Matters

  • Assignments

Assignments are graded and mandatory. In order to obtain 6 credits (KP), you will have to give an asynchronous (group) presentation (Referat, 20 Folien) on one of the presentation topics specified in the syllabus. In addition to that, you will have to hand in a short term paper (Ausarbeitung, 10 Seiten) by the end of term (15. September). In exceptional cases, you may hand in a long term paper (Hausarbeit, 15 Seiten) instead of the above. However, an exception is only granted upon consultation.

  • Presentation Topics, Presentation Groups

Presentation Topics are specified in your syllabus. In order to prepare your presentations, please pick a topic, get together in groups (see below) and write up a power-point presentation. Add your audio commentary to the presentation, save the file and send it on to me so that we can discuss your presentation during your preparatory session before you upload it. After that, you make your file available on Stud.IP on the Friday before your presentation is due so that all participants can read/ watch the presentation in time, i.e. before the session.

Requests regarding your choice of presentation topics can be send to me via e-mail, starting on Monday, April 03. Please send me three possible presentation topics and prioritise them according to your preferences. I will sign you in in the order of the requests' arrival. Please check this page regularly to see if your requests have been met.

Preparatory Sessions for presentations take place in the second part of the weekly sessions, i.e. Wednesday 9.30 am - 9.45 am. Please make sure that you send me your presentation at least one day prior to your preparatory session and that you attend said session the week before your presentation is due.

  • Active Participation

Active Participation is ungraded but mandatory. In order to fulfil the requirements, you will have to attend class regularly and watch the asynchronous presentations prior to the relevant sessions. Moreover, you will have to write four abstracts, each including a topic, a state of research, a thesis statement, and a brief outline of your argument (approx. 1 page), in the course of the seminar. You can choose your own topic; however: all abstracts have to address different primary texts. In other words, your abstracts will have to cover four out of five primary materials. They are due by the end of the week (i.e. Friday) that marks the ending of the respective sections, i.e. due date Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: May 5; due date Billy Budd, Sailor: May 19; due date Rebecca: June 9; due date Calamity Jane June 23; due date Dead Poets Society July 7)

   Summary: Presentations

1. Pick a presentation topic and contact me via e-mail (starting April 03). Check below for available places. Presentation groups may consist of a maximum of 3 people.

2. Contact the other members of your group and prepare your presentation, i.e. power-point presentation with audio commentary.

3. Send me your presentation 8 days before your presentation is scheduled.

4. Discuss your presentation with me in your preparatory session 7 days, i.e week, before your presentation is scheduled. Preparatory sessions take place during the second part of class, i.e. Wednesday 9.30 am - 9.45 am.

5. Upload your file on the Friday before your presentation is scheduled.

6. Be ready to answer questions on the day of your presentation.

Introductory Lecture: Sexual Identity in Cultural Studies

In preparation for the seminar, please work thorough the slides of the lecture above in order to familiarise yourself with the history of the term sexual identity, starting with the discursive production of the cultural concept of sexuality in the late nineteenth century.

Session 02, April 19: Theory Session I - Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's Epistemology of the Closet

Theory Texts

Introductory Lecture: Sexual Identity in Cultural Studies

Guiding Questions

  • Historical Context:

Sedgwick begins her monograph by claiming that "many of the major nodes of thought and knowledge in twentieth-century Western culture as a whole are structured - indeed, fractured - by a chronic, now endemic crisis of homo/heterosexual definition, indicatively male, dating from the end of the nineteenth century" (1). Likewise, the introductory lecture "Writing Sexual Identity" chooses to begin its discussion of modernity's conception of desire, and specifically same-sex desire, in the late nineteenth century.

Why is this point in time, historically speaking, so siginificant for the discursive development of concepts surrounding same-sex desire?

What are the major discourses that begin to shape and cement new knowledges about same-sex desire?

What knowledges are being produced?

How do these new knowledges become so dominant, culturally speaking, that their conceptions of (same-sex) desire, their terminology, their classifications and categorisations continue to define the ways 'we' speak, think and talk about desire in the 21st century?

With regard to identity formation, what does Foucault mean when he points out - quoted in Sedgwick - that afetr this discursive development "the homosexual was now a species" (9)?

  • Identity Formation:

With "the homosexual" emerging as a "species", the question of visibility arises with all its ambivalent aspects. On the one hand, gay visibility has allowed for communitiy formation and concerted political action in times of crisis - e.g. Gay Liberation (after the Stonewall Riots) or ACT-UP (during the AIDS epidemic). On the other hand, however, visibility has come and continues to come at a price, as the identity of "the homosexual" has suffered (and continues to suffer) the effects of pathologisation, criminalisation (cf. Labouchère Amendment; Section 28), and other forms of institutionalised discrimination.

What makes things even more precarious is that, according to Sedgwick, in a homophobic culture such as ours, the continuum between homosocial, i.e. patriarchal, desire ("men promoting the interests of men") and homosexual desire ("men loving men") is "radically disrupted" (Sedgwick, Between Men 3) so that homosocial and homosexual desire have come to exclude each other. That is to say, such a patriarchal culture strongly invites the entertainment of homosocial bonds between men, while it ostracises the entertainment of homosexual bonds between them - and it does so, knowing that expressions of both forms of desire can be so similar as to be virtually indistinguishable. According to Sedgwick, the effect is clear: a social mechanism of policing male-male desire that makes it unable for the individual to - publicly or privately - ascertain that their bonds are exclusively homosocial.As a result of this "new" visibility, the individual becomes increasingly vulnerable to external assaults (e.g. "blackmailability") and internal crises (e.g. the return of the repressed), which, according to Sedgwick, frequently lead them into the psychological state of "homosexual panic".

What does the term "homosexual panic" mean? And how can an allegedly individual state of panic, anxiety, or fear be of social consequence?

How can this act of "(self-) disciplining" through homosexual panic be used as a policing mechanism organising male-male bonds in a specific culture/society?

What are the characteristics of a social, cultural, political regime that - according to Sedgwick - actively exploits the anxieties and fears of its subjects? Who benefits from this exploitation - and how?

Or is it "just" a coincident that the crisis of "homo/heterosexual definition" has become such a powerful organising mechanism in our culture? (Note Sedgwick's observation that other forms of sexual difference ( i.e. "masturbator (9)) have completely lost their siginficance to transport social or cultural meaning.)

  • The Closet:

In light of the above, it is no wonder that the crisis of "homo/heterosexual definition" has resulted in a phenomenon that structures sexual (non-)knowledge and (in-)comprehension along the dynamic lines of secrecy and disclosure: the closet. Sedgwick impressively demonstrates, quoting much discussed legal cases, that the relationship between secrecy/disclosure is never simply a progressive or even a liberating one, allegedly expressed in the move "out of the closet", i.e., from the state of "being in the closet" to the state of "coming out of the closet" - although "coming out" can, of course, have precisely this liberating effect. Still, rather than viewing the closet as either a protective shield or a cage to leave behind, it would do better justice to this phenomenon, if we conceptualised the closet itself as a dynamic queer tool in a homophobic society/culture whose anti-gay objective operates thorough the paradoxical, yet intentional catch-22 that "disclosure [be] at once compulsory and forbidden" (71).

Considering the anti-gay paradoxes of a homophobic culture, how do other allegedly binary argumentative structures - minoritising views/universalising views; essentialism/constructivism; censorship/freedom of speech - operate in order to pre-empt any gay-affirmative position from the beginning? And how can a gay-affirmative response seek to disempower these deliberately paradoxical anti-gay positions?

Could you conceive of strategic gay-affirmative speech acts that are able to forestall the heteronormative catch-22 that "disclosure [be] at once compulsory and forbidden" (71)?

What purpose could any of the following speech acts/representations serve: silence(s); sociolects; double entendres; indirection; camp performativity; irony; parody; metaphors; metonymies; intertextuality; etc?

What purpose could any of the following literary or cinematic motifs serve - think of our primary material: the double; doppelgänger; the handsome sailor; the ghost/the apparition; the tomboy; the "artistic" teenager; or simply staged/meaningful absence?

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Annemieke Müller, Fiona Stack, Tanja Jaworski

Session 03, April 26: Analysing Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde I - Victorian Gothic Fiction and the Queer Double

Primary Material

  • Stevenson, Robert Louis. Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "The thorough and primitive duality of man," or: Sexual Identities, Homosexual Panic, the Double, and the Externalisation of Same-Sex Desire in Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
  • Presentation Group: Annemieke Müller, Fiona Stack, Tanja Jaworski

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Viktoriya Tuparova, Deya Zaharieva

Session 04, May 03: Analysing Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde II - Metonymies and Topographies of Same-Sex Desire

Primary Material

  • Stevenson, Robert Louis. Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "Black Mail House is what I call the place with the door," or: the Body, the House, and the Street as Metonymies of Same-Sex Desire in Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
  • Presentation Group: Viktoriya Tuparova, Deya Zaharieva

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group:

Session 05, May 10: Analysing Billy Budd, Sailor I - Seafaring Novels and the Handsome Sailor

Primary Material

  • Melville, Herman, Billy Budd, Sailor.

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "The Deadly Space Between," or: Homosocial Spaces, Homoerotic Desires, and the Ship as Heterotopia par excellence
  • Presentation Group:

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Vanessa Janßen, Lasse Stegat

Session 06, May 17: Analysing Billy Budd, Sailor II - Narratology and the Management of (Non-)Knowledge

Primary Material

  • Melville, Herman. Billy Budd, Sailor.

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "What was the matter with the master-at-arms?", or: Open-Secret Structures, Compulsory (In-)Comprehension, and Terrorising Narrative Designs in Billy Budd, Sailor
  • Presentation Group: Vanessa Janßen, Lasse Stegat

Session 07, May 24, Theory Session II - Vito Russo's The Celluloid Closet

Theory Texts

Further Reading

  • Benshoff, Harry M. Monsters in the Closet: Homosexuality and the Horror Film. Manchester, Manchester UP, 1997. Print.
  • Dyer, Richard. Now You See It: Studies on Lesbian and Gay Film. London and New York: Routledge, 1990. Print.
  • Russo, Vito. The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality in the Movies. Revised Edition. New York et al.: Harper & Row, 1987. Print.

Guiding Questions

  • TBA

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Rebekka Hänßler, Jessika Häfker, Elias Isfort

Session 08, May 31: Analysing Rebecca I - Film Noir, Gothic Romance, and the Apparitional Lesbian

Primary Material

  • Hitchcock, Alfred, dir. Rebecca

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again,": Lesbian Specters, Haunted Houses and the Discplacement of Female Same-Sex Desire in Rebecca
  • Presentation Group: Rebekka Hänßler, Jessika Häfker, Elias Isfort

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Marie Becker, Artur Ladilov

Session 09, June 07: Analysing Rebecca II - Narration, Focalisation, and (Performating) Heteronormative (In-)Comprehension

Primary Material

  • Hitchcock, Alfred, dir. Rebecca

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "I'll play the part of a devoted wife," or: Lesbian Desire, Lesbian Panic, and Performing Heteronormative Incomprehension in Rebecca
  • Presentation Group: Marie Becker, Artur Ladilov

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Verena Liebl

Session 10, June 14: Analysing Calamity Jane I - Westerns, Musicals, and the Tomboy

Primary Material

  • Butler, David, dir. Calamity Jane

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "Once I Had a Secret Love," or: 'Gay' Songs, Lesbian Subtexts, and the Queering of the Western Genre in Calamity Jane
  • Presentation Group: Verena Liebl

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Lisa Czuma, Ida Witt

Session 11, June 21: Analysing Calamity Jane II - Camp Attacks on the Western Genre

Primary Material

  • Butler, David, dir. Calamity Jane

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • "A Woman's Touch," or: Camp, Theatricality, and the Parodic Subversion of Heteronormative Gender Performmances in Calamity Jane
  • Presentation Group: Lisa Czuma, Ida Witt

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Franciska Wendel, Jannik Ferdinand, Keno Kienetz

Session 12, June 28: Analysing Dead Poets Society I - All-Male Boarding School Films and the "Artistic" Teenager

Primary Material

  • Weir, Peter, dir. Dead Poets Society

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • Disavowing the "Barbaric Yawp"?, or: Nostalgia, Elitism, and the Exploitative Silencing of Otherness in Dead Poets Society
  • Presentation Group: Franciska Wendel, Jannik Ferdinand, Keno Kienetz

Preparatory Session

  • Preparatory Session Group: Sofie Friedrich, Nick Beckmann

Session 13, July 05: Analysing Dead Poets Society - Homosocial Genres and Homoerotic Intertexts

Primary Material

  • Weir, Peter, dir. Dead Poets Society

Theory Texts

Further Reading

Presentation

  • Universalising Dead Poets, or: Shakespeare, Whitman, and the Unqueer Representation of Queer Intertexts and Genres in Dead Poets Society
  • Presentation Group: Sofie Friedrich, Nick Beckmann

Session 14, July 12: RPO Session

Guidelines for finding your RPO topic:

Your RPO topic needs to be related to at least one of the primary texts

   September 15: Term Paper Due

Please upload your paper to the folder "Ausarbeitungen und Hausarbeiten" on our Stud.IP page and send a printed copy to the address below.

Bitte stellen Sie Ihre Prüfungsleistung in den Ordner "Ausarbeitungen und Hausarbeiten" auf unserer Stud.IP-Seite ein und senden Sie eine gedruckte Fassung an die untenstehende Adresse.

Dr. Christian Lassen

Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik

Fakultät III: Sprach- und Kulturwissenschaften

Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg

Ammerländer Heerstraße 114-118

26129 Oldenburg