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Academic Year 2004/2005
American Literatures and the Powers of Culture
AMST 341 SP
We will focus on "American" literature, ranging from the fifteenth to twentieth centuries, as a critical force that has reflected on how culture (and cultural producers) can encode the ways in which we read, experience,
and imagine our selves, our world, our possibilities. We will engage some illuminating modern cultural theory, but our emphasis will be on coming to terms with the power of "American" authors as complex, self-reflexive,
daring theorists of the powers of culture. Themes and subjects we will take up include: the power of language, representation, and narrative to help organize against and resist oppression; "ethnographic" literature
(which
is sometimes about internal colonization) that explores cross-cultural differences in the production of value and meaningfulness; literature that concentrates on understanding how and why Americans are complicitous with
larger
social contradictions and often act as if they are not; how literature (from romanticism on) understands itself as a subjectivity production industry.
MAJOR READINGS
Christopher Columbus, JOURNALS
Nathaniel Hawthorne, "Egotism; Or, the Bosom Serpent," "The Artist of the Beautiful"
Herman Melville, "Poor Man's Pudding and Rich Man's Crumbs," "The Paradise of Bachelors and the
Tartarus of Maids"
Susan Glaspell
and George Cram Cook, "Suppressed Desires"
Langston Hughes, THE WAYS OF WHITE FOLKS
Meridel LeSueur, "I Was Marching"
Tillie Olsen, "I Stand Here Ironing"
Workers Theatre Troupes, ART IS A WEAPON,
NEWSBOY
Adrienne Rich, poems
Jimmie
Durham (Cherokee), poems.
EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
Three five-page papers plus some exercises. Each student will take a turn or two at leading class discussions.
ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS and/or COMMENTS
To obtain the 'Permission of Instructor', students must set up an interview with me to discuss the course and their interests.
COURSE FORMAT:
Seminar
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Level:
UGRD
Credit:
1
Gen Ed Area Dept:
HA AMST
Grading Mode:
Graded
Prerequisites:
NONE
SECTION 01
- Instructor(s): Pfister,Joel
- Times: ...W... 07:00PM-09:50PM; Location: CRT271;
- Reserved Seats: (Total Limit: 18)
Special Attributes:
- Curricular Renewal: Speaking, Writing
- Permission: Permission of Instructor Required
Links to Web Resources For This Course.
Last Updated on MAR-21-2005
Contact
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Copyright Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 06459