Lecture 1: Introductions

Lecture Details

In this first lecture Professor Hungerford introduces the courses academic requirements and some of its central concerns. She uses a magazine advertisement for James Joyces Ulysses and an essay by Vladimir Nabokov (author of Lolita, a novel on the syllabus) to establish opposing points of view about what is required to be a competent reader of literature. The contrast between popular emotional appeal and detached artistic judgment frames literary debates from the modernist, and into the post-45 period. In the second half of lecture, Hungerford shows how the controversies surrounding the publication of Richard Wrights Black Boy highlight the questions of truth, memory, and autobiography that will continue to resurface throughout the course.