English 240 - Early American Narratives and Counternarratives

Early American Narratives

Spring
2026
01
4.00
Alex Moskowitz

MW 11:30AM-12:45PM

Mount Holyoke College
129896
amoskowitz@mtholyoke.edu
This course frames early American literary and cultural history as a series of hegemonic narratives and counternarratives. Starting with the violence of settler colonialism and Indigenous resistance, this course considers how US literary and national traditions have always been contested by oppressed and dispossessed peoples, who have offered alternatives to predominant American mythologies such as individualism and freedom. We will also track how African American antislavery writers established rhetorical and literary forms in opposition to slavery that influenced the protest and reform ethos of the first half of the nineteenth century. By focusing on the development of various literary forms such as the essay, oratory, the slave narrative, and poetry, this course will consider how Black writers, Indigenous figures, women, and social reform movements reconsidered questions surrounding race, gender, and class from sixteenth-century contact and colonization up until the end of the Civil War.

Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

Meets the department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.