Reading Literature: The Mystery
Reading Literature: The Mystery
With a spotlight on mysteries, this course will deepen your understanding of British and American literature. We will begin with classic mystery writers like Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie, then move onto some of today’s most popular practitioners of the genre, including local writers Gillian Flynn (Gone Girl) and Laura McHugh (The Weight of Blood) and writers of color like Walter Moseley (Devil in a Blue Dress) and Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Untamed Shore).Although this is a lecture course where you will learn a lot of literary and cultural history, we will spend a good portion of our time talking with each other about these books and the issues they raise. We will also spend a lot of time talking about how to read literature and develop your skills in analyzing voice, tone, structure, style, and other components of written texts. Key to this course is the question of why mysteries are so popular: What pleasures do they give us? Why are so many mystery writers women? What do mysteries reveal about the enjoyments and challenges of reading itself? And what do they tell us about the tensions and anxieties of different historical moments, including our own?
Assignments include weekly postings on Canvas about the readings and lectures; a midterm; and a final exam.