Studies in Fiction (313-0-21)
Topic
Love Triangles, Gender, and Desire
Instructors
Jennifer Comerford
Meeting Info
Parkes Hall 223: Tues, Thurs 3:30PM - 4:50PM
Overview of class
Fierce rivalries. Raging jealousies. Misplaced desires. Unequal affections. Love triangles have long been one of the most popular tropes in fiction. In this course, we will explore how triangulated love affairs mediate channels of desire. While love triangles may seem immediately legible as a conventional structure of the heterosexual marriage plot, things are not necessarily what they seem. From cases of mistaken identity to specters of missed opportunities, what happens when desire gets oriented, misdirected, or redirected in different ways? If love triangles seem to position the third person as antagonist, then what happens when the third person instead becomes a vector through which the other two characters may express their mutual desire? We will consider the queer undertones (or, in some cases, overtones) of triangulated relations and the ways in which love triangles often open up alternative narrative trajectories that make us consider what might have been or what could be. By attending to love triangles (and the occasional rectangle or pentagon), we will consider the dynamics of gender, sexuality, and race.
Class Materials (Required)
Possible texts include Fantomina, Sense and Sensibility, and Passing, as well as short stories by Jhumpa Lahiri, Kali Fajardo-Anstine, and Kathleen Collins. Possible films include Challengers, Past Lives, and Twilight.
Class Attributes
Advanced Expression
Literature and Arts Foundational Discipline
Literature & Fine Arts Distro Area
Enrollment Requirements
Enrollment Requirements: Pre-registration -- Reserved for English students.