SCHEDULE (subject to change - see Moodle for most updated information):
HONORS STUDENTS WILL HAVE ONE ADDITIONAL ASSIGNMENT TO BE DETERMINED WITH PROFESSOR IN THE FIRST WEEK OF CLASS. Students are responsible for setting up a time to meet and discuss.
Week 1: Introduction to the course; general historical background on Russian literature and major writers in comparison with the Western European literary tradition; selected readings from Gogol. Introduction to relevant databases for performing academic research on Russian literature
Week 2: Background on The Petersburg Text. Gogol’s “Nevsky Prospect,” “The Nose,” and “The Overcoat.” Selected readings from Kat Scollins, Acts of Logos in Pushkin and Gogol. In-class close reading module.
Week 3: Finish Gogol. Begin reading Dostoevsky’s Brothers Karamazov. Quiz on Gogol’s stories. information workshop at the Frohring Library, arranged with a librarian, on how to conduct academic research.
Week 4: Introduction to Dostoevsky’s Brothers Karamazov; historical background and philosophical context; Selected readings from Berdiaev. Students will be assigned an article to read on BK, on which they will do a 5-7 minute presentation in class
Week 5 2/18-2/20: Dostoevsky Brothers Karamazov; in-class close reading written exercise on BK.
Week 6 2/25-2/27: Dostoevsky Brothers Karamazov; student presentations on BK; How can we summarize Dostoevsky’s moral philosophy in BK? Focus on “The Grand Inquisitor”; Quiz on Brother Karamazov; outline of short paper due.
Week 7: Dostoevsky Brothers Karamazov; How can we summarize Dostoevsky’s moral philosophy in BK? Focus on “The Grand Inquisitor” continued.
Week 8: Background for Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina; Tolstoy’s “What is Art?”; Amy Mandelker “Beyond the Motivations of Realism: Tolstoy, the Victorian Novel, and Iconic Aesthetics” (1993) handout provided; Students will be assigned an article to read on AK, on which they will do a 5-7 minute presentation in class; short paper due.
Week 9: Tolstoy Anna Karenina; How is AK working within and deviating from the Victorian novel tradition? What moral paradigm is presented in the novel? Student presentations on article on AK
Week 10: Tolstoy Anna Karenina.
Week 11: Tolstoy Anna Karenina; we will view parts of the recent film production of AK and compare and contrast it with the novel; Quiz on Anna Karenina
Week 12: Background for Bulgakov’s Master and Margarita: The Soviet Period — how did literature change? what was Stalinist Terror? Students will be assigned an article to read from The Master and Margarita: A Critical Companion edited by Laura D. Weeks, on which they will do a 5-7 minute presentation in class. Bulgakov Master and Margarita; explore Kevin Moss’s companion website
http://cr.middlebury.edu/bulgakov/public_html/timeline1.html
Week 13: Bulgakov Master and Margarita; Student presentations on Master and Margarita article; outline of long paper due.
Week 14: Student presentations on Master and Margarita articles. Bulgakov Master and Margarita; We will conclude the course with selected readings from recent Nobel Prize winner Svetlana Alexievich, who affirms her work — although very different in form — is in close dialogue with the polyphonic novels of Dostoevsky and Tolstoy and some other contemporary authors. Final draft of long paper due.