This course will focus on the intersection of digital culture and literary studies. Students will learn how to use digital tools to study literature. Simultnaeously, they will use literary analysis approaches to study contemporary digital culture.
Grading Options:
Optional; see degree guide or catalog for degree requirements
Process a complete drop (100% refund, no W recorded)
January 11:
Drop this course (100% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
January 11:
Process a complete drop (90% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
January 12:
Process a complete withdrawal (90% refund, W recorded)
January 12:
Withdraw from this course (100% refund, W recorded)
January 13:
Add this course
January 13:
Last day to change to or from audit
January 19:
Process a complete withdrawal (75% refund, W recorded)
January 19:
Withdraw from this course (75% refund, W recorded)
January 26:
Process a complete withdrawal (50% refund, W recorded)
January 26:
Withdraw from this course (50% refund, W recorded)
February 2:
Process a complete withdrawal (25% refund, W recorded)
February 2:
Withdraw from this course (25% refund, W recorded)
February 23:
Withdraw from this course (0% refund, W recorded)
February 23:
Change grading option for this course
You can't drop your last class using the "Add/Drop" menu in DuckWeb. Go to the “Completely Withdraw from Term/University” link to begin the complete withdrawal process. If you need assistance with a complete drop or a complete withdrawal, please contact the Office of Academic Advising, 101 Oregon Hall, 541-346-3211 (8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday). If you are attempting to completely withdraw after business hours, and have difficulty, please contact the Office of Academic Advising the next business day.
Expanded Course Description
What happens when digital tools meet literary studies? What can the digital turn in literary studies help us to understand about literary history, language, aesthetics, form, cultural networks, adaptation, rhetoric, and the transmission of the written word? In this course you’ll learn how to use digital tools to read and analyze literature. At the same time, we will focus on the ways that literary analysis can help us to evaluate the power and limits of reading with digital tools. This course will give you an opportunity to learn how to use digital tools to create word clouds, social networks, maps, and digital publishing platforms used in literary analysis. The course will also emphasize the significance of the historical traditions of knowledge production on which digital practices depend and from which they have emerged. Therefore, this course focuses on both the study of digital culture as an object of analysis and as a methodology for studying literary works in new ways. Designed to satisfy Arts and Letter group requirements.