English 247 - RACE/SUBURB&POST-1945 US NOVEL

Spring
2019
01
4.00
Jina Kim
TTh 03:00-04:20
Smith College
30152-S19
SEELYE 311
jbkim@smith.edu
This course aims to identify, analyze, and complicate the dominant narrative of U.S. suburbia vis-à-vis the postwar American novel. While the suburb may evoke a shared sense of tedium, U.S. fiction positions suburbia as "contested terrain," a battleground staging many of the key social, cultural, and political shifts of our contemporary age. Reading novels and short stories by writers like Toni Morrison, Hisaye Yamamoto, John Updike, Chang-Rae Lee and Celeste Ng, we assess the narrative construction of the suburb as a bastion of white domesticity, as well as the disruption of this narrative through struggles for racial integration. Enrollment limit of 20.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.