Humanities Arts Cultural Stu 0269 - Endangered Sustained Narrative
Spring
2019
1
4.00
Polina Barskova;Daniel Altshuler
02:30PM-03:50PM TU;02:30PM-03:50PM TH
Hampshire College
328494
Franklin Patterson Hall 108;Franklin Patterson Hall 108
pbHA@hampshire.edu;dgaCS@hampshire.edu
328494,328457
This course will explore how narratives live and die; how society can endanger them and bring them to fruition; how various environments, social and natural, influence production of language and narrative. Among these environments, we will look at writing in and about prison, concentration camps and environmental disaster, with special attention dedicated to the topics of censorship and language death, which we will treat as political and social environments of their own kind. We will ask questions like: (1) Why are narratives censored and why are so many languages dying? Who has a say in the matter and what can be done? (2) How does a censored narrative/dead language become uncensored/revitalized? Why is it often labeled "classic"/"exotic" by virtue of being found/revitalized? (3) Can and should we find extinct narratives/languages? (4) How and why does a human create narratives while knowing it will likely be censored and extinct?
Independent Work Multiple Cultural Perspectives Writing and Research In this course, students are expected to spend at least 6-8 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time. This time includes reading, writing, research.