• Course Number: ENGL 25
  • Prerequisites:

    Check on GOLD.

  • Quarter: Spring 2023

Literature and the Information, Media, and Communication Revolutions
How have language, reading, and literature responded to revolutions in media, communication, and information technology? This course introduces the history and theory of the major changes in human discourse that have led up to our current information age. Readings in literary and artistic works exemplify the creative artist’s response to these changes.

(See also the 1-credit honors course English 25S, which may be taken by Honors Students also enrolled in English 25. Add codes available from Prof. Liu, ayliu@english.ucsb.edu).


Syllabus and Course Website for 2023

Highlights of the course include:

  • Course units:
    • Literature Across Media Ages
    • The Communication/Information Age — Information’s impact on what we mean by “meaning”
    • The Postindustrial & Neoliberal Age — Information’s impact on work and power
    • Processing Literature — Information’s impact on the way we study literature
  • Key readings:
    • Novelists: Thomas Pynchon (The Crying of Lot 49), William Gibson (Neuromancer)
    • Media theorists: Marshall McLuhan, Walter Ong, N. Katherine, Lev Manovitch, etc.
    • Historians and theorists of communication/computing: Claude Shannon, Warren Weaver, Vannevar Bush, etc.
    • Business historians & theorists on the information age: Joseph Schumpeter, Shoshana Zuboff, Peter Senge, Manuel Castells, etc.
    • Critics, cyberlibertarians, and hackers of the information age: John Perry Barlow, Critical Art Ensemble, Donna Haraway, Jodi, etc.
    • Theorists and practitioners of the new “digital humanities”: Franco Moretti, The Stanford Literary lab, Ted Underwood, etc.
    • Theorists of digital “deformance” and “glitch”: Lisa Samuels, Jerome McGann, Mark Sample, Rosa Menkman, etc.
  • Key assignments:
    • Short essay in which you imagine what media, communication, and information will be like in the year 2050.
    • Short essay on Thomas Pynchon’s novel.
    • Short essay on Being Human in the Digital Age.
  • Ungraded but required assignments:
    • Spreadsheet & Short Essay: spreadsheet comparing work life of a student and your imagined life in your desired future career, accompanied by short essay on “Being Human in the Age of Information Knowledge Work”
    • Text-analysis exercise on a work of literature accompanied by short commentary.
  • Exams: (mostly “factual” in nature)
    • Mid-term exam
    • Final exam

Instructor:

  • Schedule & Location
  • Day(s): mon wed fri
  • Time: 1:00 pm–1:50 pm
  • Location: LSB 1001