Fall 2025 - ENGL 385 D100
Across Time, Across Space (4)
Class Number: 3090
Delivery Method: In Person
Overview
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Course Times + Location:
Sep 3 – Dec 2, 2025: Tue, Thu, 2:30–4:20 p.m.
Burnaby -
Exam Times + Location:
Dec 10, 2025
Wed, 3:30–6:30 p.m.
Burnaby
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Instructor:
Jon Smith
jon_smith@sfu.ca
1 778 782-4512
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Prerequisites:
30 units or two 200-division English courses.
Description
CALENDAR DESCRIPTION:
Explores influential works of literature with a particular emphasis on how they exist across temporal and/or spatial divides, how they alternately bridge and reinforce differences of time, culture, and place. May be repeated for credit once if different topic is taught.
COURSE DETAILS:
Untrue Norths, Undead Souths
Much of settler-colonial North America, like much of the globe, still defines itself via a peculiar vertical space symbolism, a heavenly or true North associated with reason, morality, progress, and the intellect versus a libidinal southern hellscape associated with passion, injustice, backwardness, and the loins: Carney’s Canada versus Trump’s U.S.; the putatively antiracist U.S. North versus the racist U.S. South; the U.S. South embracing a wall against Mexico. These “Souths,” however, always refuse to accept our fantasies of their temporal and spatial exile, and much great literature has been written about the inevitable return of the North American repressed across borders and generations. This course focuses on that theme in Caribbean, U.S., and Canadian fiction (those divisions may themselves be symptoms of the problem) chiefly as expressed through three overlapping genres: the Gothic, magical realism, and Afro-surrealism. Why, in the 20th and 21st centuries, do the supernatural, the unnatural, and the uncanny still seem a good way to figure these inevitable disruptions of “our” northern complacencies?
COURSE-LEVEL EDUCATIONAL GOALS:
Students will read and write better; students will grow familiar with hemispheric approaches to "New World" literature and their implications for North American literatures.
Grading
- Attendance, Participation and Discussion Questions 16.67%
- First Paper (5-6pp) 16.67%
- Midterm Exam 16.66%
- Final Paper (8pp) 25%
- Final Exam 25%
NOTES:
NOTE: Textbooks have been ordered through the SFU bookstore, but due to their history of unauthorized substitutions, you may wish to purchase the books elsewhere. Sometimes Mama Day and The House on the Lagoon can be difficult to obtain in Canada, so allow some time. With the Faulkner novels, it's important you find ones that use Noel Polk's corrected text; nearly all editions since the 1990s do.
Materials
REQUIRED READING:
William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom!
ISBN: 978-0679732181
Rosario Ferré, The House on the Lagoon
ISBN: 978-0452277076
Toni Morrison, Beloved
ISBN: 978-1400033416
Gloria Naylor, Mama Day
ISBN: 978-0679721819
Jesmyn Ward, Sing, Unburied, Sing
ISBN: 978-1501126079
David Chariandy, Brother
ISBN: 978-0771023330
REQUIRED READING NOTES:
Your personalized Course Material list, including digital and physical textbooks, are available through the SFU Bookstore website by simply entering your Computing ID at: shop.sfu.ca/course-materials/my-personalized-course-materials.
Department Undergraduate Notes:
IMPORTANT NOTE Re 300 and 400 level courses: 75% of spaces in 300 level English courses, and 100% of spaces in 400 level English courses, are reserved for declared English Major, Minor, Extended Minor, Joint Major, and Honours students only, until open enrollment begins.
For all On-Campus Courses, please note the following:
- To receive credit for the course, students must complete all requirements.
- Tutorials/Seminars WILL be held the first week of classes.
- When choosing your schedule, remember to check "Show lab/tutorial sections" to see all Lecture/Seminar/Tutorial times required.
Registrar Notes:
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY: YOUR WORK, YOUR SUCCESS
At SFU, you are expected to act honestly and responsibly in all your academic work. Cheating, plagiarism, or any other form of academic dishonesty harms your own learning, undermines the efforts of your classmates who pursue their studies honestly, and goes against the core values of the university.
To learn more about the academic disciplinary process and relevant academic supports, visit:
- SFU’s Academic Integrity Policy: S10-01 Policy
- SFU’s Academic Integrity website, which includes helpful videos and tips in plain language: Academic Integrity at SFU
RELIGIOUS ACCOMMODATION
Students with a faith background who may need accommodations during the term are encouraged to assess their needs as soon as possible and review the Multifaith religious accommodations website. The page outlines ways they begin working toward an accommodation and ensure solutions can be reached in a timely fashion.