The class is Murder, Madness, and Mayhem:
As with any class, my first step was to decide what to give up. For a while, I was thinking of including both Titus Andronicus and King Lear,
but then I realized that, much as I might find the comparison
scintillating, it was likely to be quite difficult to drag the students
through two Shakespeare plays in one term -- I taught Shakespeare every
year for 10 years in high school, sometimes with success and sometimes
not, but it seemed like too much of a risk for this particular class,
partly because I just don't know how to teach Shakespeare when the
class doesn't meet every day, and the time and effort it would eat up
could be used more productively, I thought, with other texts.
Next, I gave up on trying to represent the world. For a while, I kept things like Bolaño's By Night in Chile, Tanizaki's Seven Japanese Tales
, and Zoe Wicomb's Playing in the Light
on the possibles list, but they came off one by one for different
reasons (Tanizaki because I wanted novels rather than more stories,
Wicomb because I find the shifting viewpoints of the novel annoying and
didn't really look forward to rereading it [and though I adore her You Can't Get Lost in Cape Town
,
I once included it in a class and it was just too subtle for the
students to appreciate], the Bolaño because it requires a certain kind
of readerly sophistication that I just don't know how to teach to kids
who've just come from high school and, more often than not, don't like
reading). I also wanted to include some plays by Euripedes and maybe John Webster, but then had to remind myself that it's not a course in dramatic lit.