Afro-American Studies 590D - Poetry&Proph/Phillis Wheatley

Fall
2024
01
4.00
Britt Rusert

TH 11:30AM 2:00PM

UMass Amherst
36477
New Africa House room 302
brusert@afroam.umass.edu
This course emerges from a recent renaissance of scholarship and creative work about the enslaved poet and freedom dreamer, Phillis Wheatley (Peters). Above all else, the course will take shape through deep and careful readings of the poet?s body of work. We will also place Wheatley within a rich tradition of black feminist poetics and read a number of poems that have been dedicated to or otherwise inspired by her across the centuries. We will read the best of recent scholarship on Wheatley, with particular attention to work that: deepens our understanding of her relationship not to her enslavers, but to her kin, community, and to other black artists; reads her in the context of West African and diasporic traditions; attends to the politics of power and pleasure in her poems; examines the circulation of her poetry within local, regional, and transatlantic networks of both print and manuscript cultures in the late eighteenth century; and traces the history of her memorialization by writers, readers, and other communities and groups. The course will include some poetry writing in and outside class, but no prior creative writing experience is required or expected. Poets, researchers, curious students, and Wheatley enthusiasts are all encouraged to enroll.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.