Humanities Arts Cultural Stu 0250 - Settler Mythologies, Imperial Ideologies: Colonialism & Popular Culture

Settler Mythologies

Spring
2021
1
4.00
Professor Loza
06:00PM-07:20PM M;06:00PM-07:20PM W
Hampshire College
333250
;
slHA@hampshire.edu
Historically, settler states and imperial regimes have disenfranchised and dispossessed racialized Others by constructing ideological frameworks that justify and obscure the ongoing violence of the colonial process. Through a close examination of film, television, music, and digital media, this course will explore how contemporary US popular culture fabricates and disseminates imperialist fantasies and settler mythologies. It will interrogate the political meanings embedded in popular culture and ask: What do imperial productions and settler creations reveal about the tangled relationships between race, history, and desire? How do colonial and imperial settings propagate racism, sexism and ableism; anxieties about class, gender, and sexuality; and concerns about the white (settler) colonial state's ability to digest and domesticate non-normative Others? What are the material consequences of romanticizing imperialism and settler colonialism? Can cultural industries rooted in racial and sexual conquest be decolonized? How does one disrupt and subvert the white (settler) colonial gaze? (keywords: film and media studies, cultural studies, ethnic studies, popular culture, critical race theory)
Time and Narrative This course is fully remote. Students in this course can expect to spend 8 to 10 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.