Black Studies 461 - The Creole Imagination

Spring
2018
01
4.00
C. Rhonda Cobham-Sander
MW 08:30AM-09:50AM
Amherst College
BLST-461-01-1718S
CONV 209
ccobhamsande@amherst.edu
ENGL-491-01,BLST-461-01

(Offered as ENGL 491 and BLST 461 [CLA])  What would it mean to write in the language in which we dream?  A language that we can hear, but cannot (yet) see?  Is it possible to conceive a language outside the socio-symbolic order?  And can one language subvert the codes and values of another?  Questions like these have animated the creolité/nation language debate among Caribbean intellectuals since the mid-1970s, producing some of the most significant francophone and anglophone writing of the twentieth century.  This course reads across philosophy, cultural theory, politics, and literature in order to consider the claims such works make for the Creole imagination.  We will engage the theoretical and creative work of Édouard Glissant, Maryse Condé, Wilson Harris, Derek Walcott, Kamau Brathwaite, Patrick Chamoiseau, Jamaica Kincaid, and Edwidge Danticat.  We also will consider how these writers transform some of the fundamental ideas of psychoanalysis, poststructuralism, and critical historiography.  At stake in our readings will be the various aesthetic and political aspects of postcolonial struggle–how to think outside the colonial architecture of language; how to contest and subvert what remains from history’s violence; and how to evaluate the claims to authenticity of creolized New World cultural forms.


Open to juniors and seniors.  Limited to 20 students.  Spring semester.  Professor Cobham-Sander.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.