English 118 - COLLOQUIA IN WRITING
Fall
2016
11
4.00
Patrick Gaughan
TTh 01:10-02:30
Smith College
20687-F16
SEELYE B4
pgaughan@smith.edu
In sections limited to 15 students each, this course primarily provides systematic instruction and practice in reading and writing academic prose, with emphasis on argumentation. The course also provides instruction and practice in conducting research and in public speaking. Bilingual students and nonnative speakers are encouraged to register for sections taught by Ethan Myers and Morgan Sheehan-Bubla. Priority is given to incoming students in the fall-semester sections. Course may be repeated for credit with another instructor. George Santayana famously wrote, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," but can anyone remember all the past? Which past should I remember? Whose past? Maybe history isn't one memorizable narrative, but billions of individual stories and perspectives. Even if you told your own life story, which events would you include or leave out? Would you tell it as a tragedy? Comedy? Coming-of-age story? In this class, we consider the distance between history and myth, story and storyteller, the event and how it's remembered. We uncover histories, doubt histories, and write our own.(E)
Topic: Bad History.