CoursesCourses for the American Literature & Culture Major

The Department of English offers a wide variety of courses at the general and advanced levels. Courses are divided into the following sections:

0-99 Lower Division Courses (Freshman, Sophomore)
100-199
Upper Division Courses (Junior, Senior)
200 & above
Graduate Courses

Summer 2026

Register for Summer courses at: summer.ucla.edu

 

Lower Division Courses in English (Freshman, Sophomore)

 

Critical Reading and Writing

English 4W / Various Instructors

Introduction to literary analysis, with close reading and carefully written exposition of selections from principal modes of literature: poetry, prose fiction, and drama. Minimum of 15 to 20 pages of revised writing.

 

Fulfills a preparatory requirement for the English or American Literature & Culture major and a lower-division requirement for the Creative Writing minor.

 

Fulfills Writing II requirement.

 

Additional sections of English 4W may open if the waitlist fills.

English 20W / Various Instructors

Designed to introduce fundamentals of creative writing and writing workshop experience. Emphasis on poetry, fiction, drama, or creative nonfiction depending on wishes of instructor(s) during any given term. Readings from assigned texts, weekly writing assignments (multiple drafts and revisions), and final portfolio required.

 

Fulfills a lower-division requirement for the Creative Writing minor.

 

Fulfills Writing II requirement. Unlike the regular academic year, summer offerings of ENGL 20W do not require an application.

 

Additional sections of English 20W may open if the waitlist fills.

Upper Division Courses in English

ORIGINS

 

*No courses available in Summer Sessions 2026. Summer 2026 degree candidates should plan to complete this requirement in Spring 2026.

 

IDENTITIES

The Banned Books List

Literature of Children and Adolescents
English 115C/ Instructor: Hoegberg
Online–synchronous

What constitutes “appropriate” literature for children and adolescents? Who gets to decide? This course focuses on the historically contingent nature of these questions by inviting students to read books that have been removed from or kept off of American school shelves over the course of the last century or so. We will consider what it means to analyze these controversial texts as literary works: What do we–and other students–stand to learn from them? What artistic merit do they have or lack, and how do we even define “artistic merit”? Possible readings include Melissa (Alex Gino), The Hate U Give (Angie Thomas), Lysistrata (Aristophanes), Of Mice and Men (John Steinbeck), Forever (Judy Blume), and Leaves of Grass (Walt Whitman). We will supplement our primary readings with excerpts from relevant legal proceedings and scholarly criticism. Assignments will include weekly discussion posts and a research essay.

(Not) Feeling It: Aura, Vibes, and Affect across Media

Literature and Other Arts
English 118B / Instructor: Kim
In-person

How does the way we perceive the world vary across cultural, historical, and geographic locations? What can the natural world (its structures, milieux, and inhabitants) teach us about perceiving the world differently? How do contemporary media ecologies shape and modulate our perceptions of our broader (social) world? We will explore these questions through literary works by authors such as Charlotte Brontë, Rivers Solomon, Helena Maria Viramontes, Tony Tulathimutte, as well as films and new media works including Network! (1976), K-Pop Demon Hunters (2025), Queers in Love at the End of the World (2013), and Life is Strange: True Colors (2021).‡ These primary readings will be accompanied by theoretical readings by authors such as Lauren Berlant, Sianne Ngai, Xine Yao, Sara Ahmed, Justine Pizzo, Brian Massumi, Jakob von Uexküll, Nicole Seymour, and Ed Yong.

 

‡Accessibility options such as Let’s Play YouTube videos or access to the Text/Tech Lab will be provided for all video games.

Imagining Los Angeles: Myth, Media, Metropolis

Literary Cities
English 119 / Instructor: Ridder
Online–synchronous

“Tip the world over on its side and everything loose will land in Los Angeles.” — Frank Lloyd Wright

 

Los Angeles is a city of myths, erasures, and contested spaces—defined as much by freeways and redlines as by novels, films, and screenplays. This interdisciplinary course explores how Los Angeles has been imagined over the last 150 years and how those representations shape our understanding of urban space, race, class, memory, and belonging. Moving across literature, film, television, music, and visual culture, we will ask: Who gets to tell the story of L.A.? Whose stories are marginalized or erased? And how does the city continually reinvent itself through narrative?

 

Beyond the page and screen, the course emphasizes place-based and digital learning. Using digitized archives and online exhibits from local institutions—including the LA Public Library and the Huntington Library—we will trace the layered histories of Los Angeles neighborhoods and landmarks across time. From the vanished Victorian mansions of Bunker Hill to the streets of South L.A., we will examine how artists and everyday Angelenos have responded to migration and displacement, the rise of Hollywood’s “dream factory,” subcultures and countercultures, racialized violence and inequality, and ongoing environmental crises. We will engage creatively with the “real” and “imagined” city through a digital mapping project, building spatial narratives that connect texts to the geography of Los Angeles. By grounding cultural analysis in actual urban space, the course invites students to rethink how stories and cities shape one another.

 

Los Angeles may be the most photographed, filmed, and written-about city in the world, yet it remains deeply misunderstood. Is it a utopia of sunshine and opportunity or a dystopia of smog and exclusion? This course treats L.A. as a dynamic text to be read, mapped, and reimagined.

 

 

MEDIA

Speculative Fiction and the Other

Science Fiction
English 115E / Instructor: Swanson
Online–synchronous

Consideration of ways in which discourses of otherness circulate and operate in speculative fiction. From Frankenstein’s monster to encounters with alien species in outer space, the genre has a long history of exploring cultural conceptions of alterity, as well as contact zones where divergent ideologies and values collide. Study will explore texts—primarily, though not exclusively, American—that critically evaluate our notions of the Other in its various guises: the foreign, the uncanny, the monstrous, the threatening, the incomprehensible, the alluring. Course objective is to critically evaluate how speculative fiction reflects, informs, reorients, and shifts cultural understandings of difference. Authors may include Octavia Butler, Ted Chiang, N. K. Jemisin, Ursula K. Le Guin, and China Miéville.

(Not) Feeling It: Aura, Vibes, and Affect across Media

Literature and Other Arts
English 118B / Instructor: Kim
In-person

How does the way we perceive the world vary across cultural, historical, and geographic locations? What can the natural world (its structures, milieux, and inhabitants) teach us about perceiving the world differently? How do contemporary media ecologies shape and modulate our perceptions of our broader (social) world? We will explore these questions through literary works by authors such as Charlotte Brontë, Rivers Solomon, Helena Maria Viramontes, Tony Tulathimutte, as well as films and new media works including Network! (1976), K-Pop Demon Hunters (2025), Queers in Love at the End of the World (2013), and Life is Strange: True Colors (2021).‡ These primary readings will be accompanied by theoretical readings by authors such as Lauren Berlant, Sianne Ngai, Xine Yao, Sara Ahmed, Justine Pizzo, Brian Massumi, Jakob von Uexküll, Nicole Seymour, and Ed Yong.

 

‡Accessibility options such as Let’s Play YouTube videos or access to the Text/Tech Lab will be provided for all video games.

Face Card: Beauty in Contemporary Media

Studies in Visual Culture
English 118C / Instructor: Wang
Online–synchronous

In a world increasingly dominated by images, the power of one’s “face card” seems increasingly important. This course explores contemporary manipulations of the face in photography, film, and digital media to understand the significance of the face in current debates over desire, identity, and surveillance. We will examine works in a variety of contemporary media, including Ruth Ozeki’s The Face: A Time Code (2015), Kim Kardashian’s Selfish (2015), YouTube makeup tutorials of the early 2000s, and other works. There will be a creative option for the final project.

Imagining Los Angeles: Myth, Media, Metropolis

Literary Cities
English 119 / Instructor: Ridder
Online–synchronous

“Tip the world over on its side and everything loose will land in Los Angeles.” — Frank Lloyd Wright

 

Los Angeles is a city of myths, erasures, and contested spaces—defined as much by freeways and redlines as by novels, films, and screenplays. This interdisciplinary course explores how Los Angeles has been imagined over the last 150 years and how those representations shape our understanding of urban space, race, class, memory, and belonging. Moving across literature, film, television, music, and visual culture, we will ask: Who gets to tell the story of L.A.? Whose stories are marginalized or erased? And how does the city continually reinvent itself through narrative?

 

Beyond the page and screen, the course emphasizes place-based and digital learning. Using digitized archives and online exhibits from local institutions—including the LA Public Library and the Huntington Library—we will trace the layered histories of Los Angeles neighborhoods and landmarks across time. From the vanished Victorian mansions of Bunker Hill to the streets of South L.A., we will examine how artists and everyday Angelenos have responded to migration and displacement, the rise of Hollywood’s “dream factory,” subcultures and countercultures, racialized violence and inequality, and ongoing environmental crises. We will engage creatively with the “real” and “imagined” city through a digital mapping project, building spatial narratives that connect texts to the geography of Los Angeles. By grounding cultural analysis in actual urban space, the course invites students to rethink how stories and cities shape one another.

 

Los Angeles may be the most photographed, filmed, and written-about city in the world, yet it remains deeply misunderstood. Is it a utopia of sunshine and opportunity or a dystopia of smog and exclusion? This course treats L.A. as a dynamic text to be read, mapped, and reimagined.

 

 

SENIOR SEMINARS

 

Senior seminars are not typically offered during Summer Sessions. Limited seats may be available via  a multiple-listing with Asian American Studies. Summer 2026 degree candidates in need of a seminar should contact the English undergraduate advising office ASAP about seminar credit.