Section | Semester | Instructor | Time | Location | Course Areas |
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3 | Fall 2018 | JanMohamed, Abdul R.
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MW 5-6:30 | 122 Wheeler |
Within the context of slavery, the Jim Crow version of slavery, and the continuing racism in the U.S., African American literature bears witness to centuries of oppression, coercion, and exploitation; at the same time it documents great tenacity and resistance and the capacity to overcome these forms of subjugation. This course will examine the relation between the socio-political structures of historical domination and the literary manifestations of the effects of oppression and modes of resistance. Along with historical texts, we will read literary texts ranging from Jacobs' and Douglass' autobiographies to novels by Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, and Jesmyn Ward. The course will focus primarliy on forms of resistance and overcoming. Course requirements: one oral report and one 18-20 page research paper.
Please read the paragraph about English 190 on page 2 of the instructions area of this Announcement of Classes for more details about enrolling in or wait-listing for this course.
Please click here for more information about enrollment in English 190.
fall, 2022 |
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Research Seminar: Crisis and Culture: The 1930s, 1970s, and post-2008 in Comparative Perspective |
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spring, 2022 |
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Research Seminar: Race and Travel: Relative Alterity in Medieval Times and Places |
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fall, 2021 |
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Research Seminar: Literature on Trial: Romanticism, Law, Justice |
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spring, 2021 |
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Research Seminar: Literary Collaboration: Samuel Coleridge and William and Dorothy Wordsworth |
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Research Seminar: Black Postcolonial Cultures: Real and Imagined Spaces |
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