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Academic Year 2002/2003
19th-Century American Literature: Hybrid Narratives
ENGL 266 SP
In this course, we will be exploring the mid- through late-nineteenth-century authorial concern with the split, divided, or hybrid self. We will explore this idea by beginning with the externalization of a gendered
other
in Henry James' "The Beast in the Jungle" (1901) and Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" (1892) and by tracing the internalization of this other in the poetry of Emily Dickinson and the prose of Henry David
Thoreau. Next, we will examine questions of racial hybridity and its relation to self and national authoring in the works of Edgar Allen Poe, Walt Whitman, and Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton. We will also be exploring the
role of the split self and its relation to miscegenation, racial science and Reconstruction in literature by Charles Chesnutt, Pauline Hopkins, and Mark Twain.
MAJOR READINGS
Charles Chesnutt, THE MARROW OF TRADITION (1901)
Charlotte Perkin's Gilman, THE YELLOW WALLPAPER (1892)
Pauline Hopkins, OF ONE BLOOD, OR, THE HIDDEN SELF (1902-03)
Edgar Allen Poe, THE NARRATIVE OF ARTHUR
GORDON PYM (1838)
Maria Amparo Ruiz
de Burton, WHO WOULD HAVE THOUGHT IT? (1872)
Mark Twain, PUDD'NHEAD WILSON (1894)
EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
Five very short reaction papers (1 pp.); two papers (6-7 pp.; and 10-13 pp.); class participation.
COURSE FORMAT:
Lecture/Discussion
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Level:
UGRD
Credit:
1
Gen Ed Area Dept:
HA ENGL
Grading Mode:
Graded
Prerequisites:
NONE
SECTION 01
- Instructor(s): Ruiz,Julie
- Times: .M.W... 11:00AM-12:20PM; Location: BTFDA413
- Reserved Seats: (Total Limit: 35)
- SR. major: 10 Jr. major: 10
- SR. non-major: 6 Jr. non-major: 6 SO: 3 FR: X
Special Attributes:
- Curricular Renewal: Writing
Links to Web Resources For This Course.
Last Updated on MAR-18-2003
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Copyright Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 06459