FRS 002X —
Sec. 001 —
(2 unit) — CRN 55924 — W 2:10 – 4:00pm — 109
Wellman
Literary Representations of Islam in the English
Enlightenment
Instructor: David Alvarez, Department of English, College of Letters
and Science
Description: This research seminar gives students an
opportunity
to read some neglected texts that frame our understanding of Islam
and to engage
in some literary sleuthing. In the first half of the course students will read
some of the more well-known pieces of orientalist literature in this
period while
learning and applying research skills that will allow them to delve
into libraries
at UC Davis and elsewhere to locate forgotten texts on this topic,
some of which
we will choose to read and evaluate in the second half of the course.
Field Trip: Library class on advanced computer
searches of rare
book libraries and an introduction to the Department of Special
Collections, Shields
Library.
Format: The primary work of the course will be
reading the selected
texts very closely and learning how to perform advanced library
research (a useful
skill for college and the workplace). Students will improve their
reading, writing,
speaking, and computer skills while investigating a topic of some relevance to
contemporary social and political issues. Under the
instructor’s guidance,
students will work in small groups for class presentations of close
readings designed
to jumpstart discussion and analysis. Students will also attend a
specially-tailored
library class that will train them to search rare book libraries
(especially our
own at UC Davis) and locate texts relevant to our research. The results of this
seminar may be published as research on the World Wide Web and may
also contribute
to an anthology of literary representations of Islam and Muslims from
1660-1789.
Grading: Class participation (33%), development of a
bibliography of English oriental texts from a rare-book library of
the student’s
choice (33%), group presentations of close readings of short texts selected by
students for class reading during weeks 8-10 (34%).
About the Instructor: After graduating from UC Davis with a
double major
in Comparative Literature and Philosophy, David Alvarez completed his Ph.D. at
Cornell University. He has taught at Cornell, the University of Rochester, and
Davidson College, and also held a Ford Postdoctoral Fellowship at UC Berkeley
before returning to UC Davis last year. He specializes in
Enlightenment Studies,
and his research seminar continues his work on the relationship
between literature,
religion, and politics from 1660-1720.