Interdisciplinary Arts 0236 - "A Change is Gonna Come": Music of Protest in African American Literature

"A Change is Gonna Come"

Spring
2021
1
4.00
Nathan McClain
01:00PM-02:20PM W;01:00PM-02:20PM F
Hampshire College
333271
R.W. Kern Center 202;R.W. Kern Center 202
nmIA@hampshire.edu
Fredrick Douglass famously writes, "If there is no struggle, there is no progress." That struggle, for African Americans, has often been managed or mitigated through the solace of music, of song, from spirituals to rhythm and blues. In this course, we will approach this topic by reading and discussing a selection of songs, poetry, prose, drama, and film to determine the targets of African American dissatisfaction, and to understand how assumptions about race can tear the social fabric among and within groups. Related themes include religion, assimilation, gender, and art; and notice how many of our literary readings use or are about music. Students should expect readings to be organized historically by song genre, taking us from the antebellum period to the contemporary period. But we will also move around within periods to see how later authors have written about the past that, in part, defined them. Students should expect to draft essays and reading responses exploring the relationship between music and texts and may read and consider work by Audre Lorde, Sam Cooke, Phyllis Wheatley, Spike Lee, and W.E.B. DuBois, among others. (keywords: African American literature, creative writing, music)
In/Justice This course includes both in-person and remote elements, and can accommodate fully remote students. Students in this course can expect to spend 6 to 8 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.