FRS 002 — Sec. 002 —
(2 unit) — CRN 26009 — R 3:10-5:00pm — 25 Wellman
The California Mystery Novel
Instructor: Jerold Last, UC Toxic Substances Research & Teaching
Program, College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences
Description: This course will examine Twentieth Century California's
social and economic environment as seen through the eyes of the authors of some
of the most successful mystery stories (series) that have chosen California for
their setting. Students will be expected to have read selected novels or short
stories from this genre (or seen the movie versions) prior to each class. The
readings will serve as the basis for a discussion of the broader society in which
the stories are set. We will examine almost an entire century, from Dashiell Hammett's
San Francisco of the 1920s and Marcia Muller’s and John Lescroart’s
contemporary view of The City through Raymond Chandler's, the husband and wife
Kellerman team, and William Mosley's 20th Century Los Angeles. We will also visit
Ross MacDonald's Santa Barbara. Sue Grafton’s Santa Barbara and Karen Kijewski's
contemporary Sacramento are available alternatives. Students will be encouraged
to develop and defend their opinions, distinguish between factual background and
fictional license, and to interpret the significance of the emergence of the modern,
far more flawed and less noble, often feminine, private detective as protagonist.
A substantial written journal component, based upon the assigned readings, will
be required, and extensive use of e-mail as a communication medium for written
reports will be stressed. Comparison (and contrast) of movie and book versions
of Hammett, Chandler, MacDonald, and Mosley is also encouraged. This class should
encourage students to enhance their skills in critical thinking, in creative writing,
and in learning to defend their point of view in an informal oral discussion setting.
The basic reading assignments, though extensive, should be fun, and non-technical
enough that all participants start as equals. The topic is a lifelong interest
of the instructor's, and a pleasure he enjoys sharing with the students. The extensive,
but relatively informal, written work will help prepare the students for subsequent
classes with more formal writing assignments.
Format: The seminar will meet for two hours each week. Students
will be expected to have done weekly reading assignments prior to each class,
to actively participate in class discussions in a small group format, to critique
the presentations of classmates, and to maintain a weekly e-mail journal that
summarizes their own individual interpretation of the reading. The class as a
whole will have read a wide variety of books by each author, so discussions will
range over an assortment of novels and short stories. We will experiment with
different styles of supervision and guidance of discussions being made the responsibility
of small subgroups of the class, to facilitate getting to know each other by the
end of the course. To assist those who wish to keep costs down, several different
books by each of these authors will be on 3-day reserve at Shield’s Library,
so most of the reading assignments can be done using just the campus library as
a source. Alternatively, Borders Books has inexpensive paperback editions of books
by most of the contemporary authors unless their books are out of print, and the
Yolo County Public Library (14th and B Street) also has copies of many of these
books in hardcover. Substitution of other series from the author list is OK, or
you can try Amazon.com to find books that are out of print (Plan Ahead!). Grading:
Students will be graded based upon their participation in class (1/3), their timely
submission of journals (1/3), and journal quality (both content and writing style
[spelling, grammar]) (1/3).
About the Instructor: Dr. Last is a Professor of Pulmonary and
Critical Care Medicine in the Medical School’s Department of Internal Medicine.
His research interests are in lung disease (pulmonary fibrosis and asthma) and
in the potential long-term health effects of exposure to air pollution. He has
been active in developing programs in environmental toxicology in South America,
and directs a Fogarty International Center at UC Davis. Reading mystery novels
is a life-long hobby for him, and totally unrelated to his professional career.
He and his wife Elaine have lived in Davis since 1976, breed and show German Shorthaired
Pointers, and have two sons who had their undergraduate training at UC San Diego
(but also took classes at UC Davis prior to college) and graduate training at
UC Berkeley and UC Davis.