| Semester and Year | FA 2012 |
| Course Number | FIRST-UG324 |
| Section | 001 |
| Instructor | June Foley |
| Days | Mon,Wed |
| Time | 3:30 PM - 4:45 PM |
| Units | 4.0 |
| Level | U |
| Foundation Requirement |
Open to Gallatin first-year students only.
This course explores the idea of metamorphosis, or transformation, by which humans become—among other things--stones, flowers, and stars; animals, gods, monsters; and members of the opposite sex. We read and write about some of the many varieties of metamorphosis, such as those linked with disguise and dissimulation; madness and dissolution; immigration and exile; sickness and healing; and self-creation that reflects self-knowledge. Students write academic essays that develop their own ideas in their own voices, in stages that progress from freewriting and drafting to workshopping, revising and polishing. Throughout the course, we reflect on writing itself as a transformation of subjective, ephemeral impressions into words fixed on paper (or shimmering in cyberspace) through which we communicate with others. Readings include selections from Ovid’s Metamorphoses (Humphries trans.) and a contemporary play based on it by Mary Zimmerman; fairy tales, folk tales and contemporary revisions (ed. Maria Tatar); Kafka’s The Metamorphosis ; essays on neurological transformation and creative responses to it in Oliver Sacks’s An Anthropologist on Mars ; and essays on immigration and exile in Letters of Transit (ed. Andre Aciman).
First-Year Program: Writing Seminars (FIRST-UG)