ENGL 211

Fall 2019 All Classes

All Classes
Introduction to Modern African Literature

Credit: 3 hours.

Same as AFST 210 and CWL 210. See AFST 210.

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

Humanities – Lit & Arts
Cultural Studies - Non-West
ENGL 211 class schedule data for fall 2019
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
47892
Lecture-Discussion
M
9:30AM -10:45AM
TR
Armory
Basu, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/26/19-12/11/19
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
Section Info:
Modern African literature is the literature of a continent that includes many nation-states, languages, and ethnicities. It is therefore by no means a homogenous entity, and in many ways our course attempts to express this very diversity through a reading of texts from Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Uganda, South Africa, and Sudan. At the same time however, “Introduction to Modern African Literature” also endeavors to highlight the connections and links between representative writings from different regions of the continent. Indeed, the term modern calls for precisely such an inter-connected understanding. After all the regions we somewhat loosely group together as ‘modern Africa’ are also congruous in so far as they were almost all irredeemably transformed by the experience of colonialism. The term ‘modern’ has in fact since then come to be inextricably tied to the distinct twists and turns of the colonial encounter. To follow these twists and turns, we will read through a wide array of literary material ranging from novels and plays to short stories, poems, and critical essays. You will notice right away that we are not following a necessarily chronological approach in our reading of this literature, but rather one that allows us to foreground the above thematic connections. That is, summarizing the plot of the texts will not be the work of this class. Our texts will resist this kind of reading in favor of an investigation that asks how the mechanics and structures of language weave an intricate tapestry in which texts refer to each other, dialogue with each other and speak back to each other. At the end of this course, students should not only be familiar with symptomatic texts of African literature, but also should be able to read, write, and, think about these texts in an insightful manner, concentrating on developing abilities such as close-reading, comparative analysis, and argumentative logic. Finally, students should also be able to move outwards and to broaden the horizons of interpretation by allowing the close reading of an individual text to be informed by readings of social structures and political-cultural events.
COURSE EXPLORER
Email: Course Explorer Feedback

OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR | 901 W. Illinois Street, Urbana, Illinois 61801

Site developed by: Technology Services at Illinois | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS URBANA-CHAMPAIGN
1102 Digital Computer Laboratory | MC-256 | Urbana, IL 61801 | phone 217-244-7000