Humanities Arts Cultural Stu 0194 - Lit. of Baldwin & Morrison

Fall
2014
1
4.00
Alicia Ellis
12:30PM-01:50PM T,TH
Hampshire College
315326
Emily Dickinson Hall 4
aeeHA@hampshire.edu
This seminar serves as an introduction to the works of two of the most influential and prolific African American thinkers of the post-civil rights era: James Baldwin and Toni Morrison. We will explore their fiction and non-fiction as frames in which to think through representation and presentation. As social critics and novelists, both engage concepts such as structural racism, religion, trauma, sexuality, politics and history in a way that calls attention to the state of writing and narrativity as an endlessly creative act. This class will actively consider selected novels, essays and short prose of Baldwin and Morrison in order to formulate a set of intellectual problems around ethics and aesthetics, the relation between literature and politics, and the theorization of race, gender, class, sexual difference and nation in postwar American culture and in the twenty-first century. This class is intended to prepare students for advanced work in literature and literary studies and thus emphasis on form and genre, rhetorical devices and figurative language through close readings will be part of the work of the course.
Culture, Humanities, and Languages Writing and Research Multiple Cultural Perspectives In this course students are expected to spend 8 hours weekly of preparation and work outside of class time.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.