ENGL 285

Fall 2012 Part of Term 1

Part of Term 1
Aug 27-Dec 12

Credit: 3 hours.

Examination of selected postcolonial literature, theory, and film as texts that "write back" to dominant European representations of power, identity, gender and the Other. Postcolonial writers, critics and filmmakers studied may include Franz Fanon, Edward Said, Aime Cesaire, Ousmane Sembene, Chinua Achebe, Michelle Cliff, Mahesweta Devi, Buchi Emecheta, Derek Walcott and Marlene Nourbese-Philip.

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition I requirement.

This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in Fall 2022 for:

Cultural Studies - Non-West
Humanities – Lit & Arts
ENGL 285 class schedule data for fall 2012
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
32218
Lecture-Discussion
P
11:00AM -12:15PM
TR
English Building
Basu, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/27/12-12/12/12
Degree Notes:
Literature and the Arts, and Non-Western Cultures course.
Section Info:
As one critic has recently put it, ?Although there is considerable debate about the exact parameters of the field and even the definition of the term ?postcolonial,? in a very general sense, it refers to the interactions between European nations and the societies they colonized in the modern period.? These interactions were violent, sometimes grotesquely funny, always shifting, and above all, transformative for both sides ? colonizer and colonized. This is why we begin our course with a text that despite having been authored by perhaps the most representative literary figure of the Western world expresses a distinctly uneasy relationship with the colonial encounter. This text will function as our entry point into a host of other writings composed in the wake of mid-twentieth century liberation struggles across the globe. At this time, many writers from what used to be called ?the third-world? began to give expression to their cultural experiences in the language of the former colonial power. Given that it is called Postcolonial Literature in English, it is the language of the former colonial power that will be significant for our readings in this course. We will strive to understand what forms such a language takes as it attempts to carry the weight of diverse realities, as it negotiates the taut relations between class, gender, racial and religious identities, and as it shapes and reshapes itself in the midst of changing social institutions, lifestyles, and habits.
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