Comparative Literature

Clone of German Capstone: Reading Franz Kafka

Subject Code: 
COMPLIT
Course Number: 
111/311C
Crosslisted as: 
GERMAN 190/390
Crosslisted as: 
JEWISHST 147/349
Description: 

This class will address major works by Franz Kafka and consider Kafka as a modernist writer whose work reflects on modernity. We will also examine the role of Kafka's themes and poetics in the work of contemporary writers.

Instructor: 
Amir Eshel
Term: 
Win
Academic Year: 
2012-13
Units: 
3-5
Day/Time: 
TTh 12:50p-2:05p

Nancy Ruttenburg

portrait: DLCL Admin
Contact: 

Building 460, Room 418
Phone: 650 725 1644
ruttenburg@stanford.edu

 

Nancy Ruttenburg is the William Robertson Coe Professor of American Literature in the English Department at Stanford. She also holds courtesy appointments in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures.  She received the PhD in Comparative Literature from Stanford (1988) and taught at Harvard, Berkeley, and most recently at NYU, where she was chair of the Department of Comparative Literature from 2002-2008.  

Her research interests lie at the intersection of political, religious, and literary expression in colonial through antebellum America and nineteenth-century Russia, with a particular focus on the development of liberal and non-liberal forms of democratic subjectivity.  Related interests include history of the novel, novel theory, and the global novel; philosophy of religion and ethics; and problems of comparative method, especially as they pertain to North American literature and history.

Prof. Ruttenburg is the author of Democratic Personality: Popular Voice and the Trial of American Authorship (Stanford UP, 1998) and Dostoevsky's Democracy (Princeton UP, 2008), and she has recently written on the work of J. M. Coetzee and on Melville’s “Bartleby.”  Books in progress include a study of secularization in the postrevolutionary United States arising out of the naturalization of “conscience” as inalienable right, entitled Conscience, Rights, and 'The Delirium of Democracy'; and a comparative work entitled  Dostoevsky And for which the Russian writer serves as a lens on the historical development of a set of intercalated themes in the literature of American modernity.  These encompass self-making and self-loss (beginning with Frederick Douglass's serial autobiographies); sentimentalism and sadism (in abolitionist fiction); crime and masculinity (including Mailer's The Executioner's Song); and the intersection of race, religious fundamentalism, and radical politics (focusing on the works of James Baldwin and Marilynne Robinson).  Her courses will draw from both these projects.  

Prof. Ruttenburg is past president of the Charles Brockden Brown Society and has been the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a National Humanities Center Fellowship, a University of California President's Research Fellowship, as well as fellowships from the Social Science Research Council for Russian and East European Studies, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the American Council for Learned Societies.

Education: 

Ph.D. in Comparative Literature, Stanford University, 1988
B.A., University of California, Santa Cruz, 1980

Rachel Yong

Rachel is currently living in San Francisco and working full time as a product manager at Zoodles.

She is also a member of PlayGround, the Bay Area's leading playwright incubator.

Gerald Gillespie

Office Hours: 
by appointment
Language(s): 
French
Language(s): 
German
Language(s): 
Italian
Language(s): 
Spanish

Haiyan Lee

portrait:
Contact: 

haiyan@stanford.edu

Office Hours: 
by appointment

Sérgio Campos Gonçalves

portrait: Sérgio Campos Gonçalves
Contact: 

scg@stanford.edu

scg@franca.unesp.br

Iberian and Latin American Cultures
Stanford, CA 94305

Office Hours: 
by appointment
Focal Group(s): 
Philosophy and Literature
Curriculum Vitae: 
Education: 

2012-2013   Visiting Researcher, Stanford University

2011-            Cultural and Social History (PhD Candidate), Sao Paulo State University (UNESP-Franca)

2007-2009: Cultural and Social History (MS), Sao Paulo State University (UNESP-Franca)

2003-2006: History (BA), Sao Paulo State University (UNESP-Franca)

2003-2006: Communication/Journalism (BA), University of Ribeirao Preto (UNAERP)

Language(s): 
Portuguese

Elena Dancu

portrait: Elena Dancu
Contact: 

edancu@stanford.edu

Office Hours: 
by appointment
Education: 

2011: MSc (Distinction), University of Edinburgh, Comparative and General Literature

2009: B.A., University of Bucharest, English and German

Language(s): 
German
Language(s): 
Portuguese
Language(s): 
Spanish
Language(s): 
Romanian

Patricia Valderrama

portrait: Patricia Valderrama
Contact: 

pvalderr@stanford.edu

Office Hours: 
by appointment
Education: 

2011: B.A. with honors in Comparative Literature from Princeton University

Language(s): 
Spanish

Alice E.M. Underwood

portrait: Alice Underwood
Contact: 

aeunderw@stanford.edu

Office Hours: 
by appointment

 

Alice entered the Ph.D. program in Comparative Literature in Fall 2012. She is interested in intersections of poetics, sexuality, and political resistance in twentieth-century narrative prose, particularly in Russia and Latin America. Queer theory, postmodernist thought and aesthetics, and the Frankfurt School have influenced her approach to the study of literature. 

Presentations:

"Masks of Opposition: Is Pussy Riot a Drag?" Panel presentation at “Pussy Riot: Performance, Protest, and the Russian State.” Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies, Stanford University, 2012. 

Languages: 

Fluent: Russian, Spanish

Reading: Portuguese, French, Czech

 

 

 

Education: 

 

A.B. from Harvard University, 2011. Magna cum laude with highest honors from the Department of Slavic Literatures and Cultures; secondary field in Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality. 

Undergraduate Thesis: “Rights on Parade: The Russian LGBT Community’s March Toward Equality," 2011. Slavic Department Best Undergraduate Thesis Prize; Eugene Cummings Award for Thesis on LGBT Topics, Honorable Mention. 

Africa Table with Bachir Diagne (Columbia University): “The Writing of Boubacar Boris Diop”

Date: 
Wednesday, 3 October 2012 - 12:00pm - 1:00pm
Location: 
Encina West, Rm 202
Speaker: 
Barchir Diagne (Columbia University)
Focal Group: 
Philosophy and Literature

Barchir Diagne

For more information contact Fatoumata Seck

The event is co-sponsored by The Center for African Studies, The Philosophy
and Literature Focal Group, The Abbasi Program for Islamic Studies, The
Department of French and Italian, the Department of Comparative Literature
and the Humanities Center

Syndicate content