Back to top

This course familiarizes students with the perspectives, debates, and attitudes that characterize the contemporary field of postcolonial theory, with critical attention to how its interdisciplinary formation contributes to reading literary works. What are the claims made on behalf of literary texts in orienting us to other lives and possibilities, and in registering the experiences of displacement under global capitalism? To better answer these questions, we read recent scholarship that engages the field in conversations around gender, affect, climate change, and democracy, to think about the impulses that animate the field, and to sketch new directions. We survey the trajectories and self-criticisms within the field, looking at canonical critics (Fanon, Said, Bhabha, Spivak), as well as reading a range of literary and cinematic works by writers like Jean Rhys, E.M. Forster, Mahasweta Devi, Derek Walcott, Arundhati Roy, and Salman Rushdie). (20th/21st)

Course Code
HMRT 34520
Semester
Requirements
Context
Transition
Cross List
ENGL 38619, ENGL 28619, GNSE 24520, GNSE 34520, MAPH 34520, CRES 28619
Info

Darrel Chia, English Language and Literature
T/Th: 2:00 - 3:20 PM