Humanities Arts Cultural Stu 0149 - Masculinity and Am. Novel
Spring
2014
1
4.00
Scott Branson
10:30AM-11:50AM M,W
Hampshire College
313688
Emily Dickinson Hall 5
sjbHA@hampshire.edu
The history of the novel in America has always been intertwined with the production of an image of the American man. From Hawthorne's attempt to best the "mobs of scribbling women" to the idealized loner cowboy, from the hard-boiled journalistic prose of Hemingway to the maximalist and misogynist rantings of Roth, we might say that the epitome of the American self-made man is the novelistic protagonist. In this course, we will combine literary study and gender theory to begin to examine the myth of the American man, considering both how it is constructed and undermined in American literature. We will pay particular attention to the function of sexual and racial difference - and its erasure - in the idealization of the male protagonist (and author). Readings will draw from a range of texts from the 19th-century to the present, including short stories and novels by Melville, Hemingway, Chandler, Wright, O'Connor, Baldwin, Roth, Diaz and Wallace.
Culture, Humanities, and Languages Writing and Research Multiple Cultural Perspectives Independent Work In this course, students are expected to spend 6-8 hours a week of preparation and work outside of class time.