LITT3122

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THE CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN-AMERICAN NOVEL

LiteratureArts and Humanities

Subject Code

LITT

Course Number

3122

Department(s)

Course Title

THE CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN-AMERICAN NOVEL

Course Description

(Cross-listed ANTH 3122.) 1900-present Course, Africana Studies course, American Literature Course, US Ethnic/Postcolonial Course and 20th-Century Contemporary Literature Course. This course will focus on the African American novel from the middle of the 20th century to the current period. Students will explore some culturally constructed themes such as the importance of communal connections, the destabilization of received notions of good and evil, beautiful and ugly. The examination of cultural images constructed out of vernacular traditions such as the blues motif and language performance stylistics, i.e., call and response and signification, will also enhance the students' understanding of the authors' intentions. In addition to the novels represented, students will read at least one collection of critical essays, which explore black aesthetic traditions, and the ways in which postmodern theoretical analyses have helped to articulate their direction. The assigned readings will likely include the following authors: Toni Morrison, James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison, Ntozake Shange, and Octavia Butler.

Course Attributes

International/Multicultural -I, Africana Studies

Units

4