Interdisciplinary Arts 0252 - Tech in Fict: Child Narrator
Fall
2013
1
4.00
Uzma Khan
12:30PM-03:20PM T
Hampshire College
312192
Emily Dickinson Hall 4
uakIA@hampshire.edu
This course explores why and how writers choose to tell stories through a child's eyes. If successful, their narratives inevitably evince more emotional appeal than if told through adult eyes. Yet the works -- often about war, family break-up, mental or physical disability, murder, and abuse -- are deadly serious. They are for adults. The child is often an innocent observer; the child is also the cunning survivor. In this space between guilelessness and guile lies his or her 'victory' for us, the grown-ups, as we find ourselves rooting for those who can be wronged but not outdone. If the pattern is predictable, it is also endlessly varied. Or is it? We will look at works from around the world and from different time periods that have used the child's voice with varying degrees of success. NOTE: Students must attend the first day of class in order to be considered for enrollment.
Arts, Design, and Media Independent Work Writing and Research
Multiple required components--lab and/or discussion section. To register, submit requests for all components simultaneously.
This course has unspecified prerequisite(s) - please see the instructor.