COML100 - Intro. To Literary Study: Global Novel

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Intro. To Literary Study: Global Novel
Term
2021A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML100401
Course number integer
100
Registration notes
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Meeting times
TR 03:00 PM-04:30 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Rita Barnard
Description
(This course will be both synchronous and asynchronous)

This course has three broad aims: first, it will introduce students to a selection of compelling contemporary narratives; second, it will provide prospective students of literature and film, as well as interested students headed for other majors, with fundamental skills in literary, visual, and cultural analysis; and, third, it will encourage a meditation on the function of literature and culture in our world, where commodities, people, and ideas have been constantly in motion. Questions for discussion will therefore include: the meaning of terms like “globalization,” “translation,” and “world literature”; the transnational reach and circulation of texts; migration and engagement with “others”; violence, trauma, and memory; terrorism and the state; and the ethic of cosmopolitanism. Our collective endeavor will be to think about narrative forms as modes of mediating and engaging with the vast and complex world we inhabit today.

In the course of the semester we will study about eight works of fiction and four films, as well as a selection of pertinent critical essays that will provide the terminology and theoretical framework for our conversations. The following works of fiction are likely to be included (though note that the list might change a bit and possibly be cut: Salman Rushdie, East, West; Ivan Vladislavic, selected stories and The Exploded View; Dinaw Mengestu, The Beautiful Things that Heaven Bears; Junot Diaz, The Short Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao; Juan Gabriel Vasquez, The Sound of Things Falling; Moshin Hamid, The Reluctant Fundamentalist; Aminatta Forna, The Hired Man, David Mitchell, Ghostwritten. Films: Babel, Dirty Pretty Things, Even the Rain, and Syriana. Written requirements: a 7 to 9-page mid-term and an 8 to 10-page final paper (topics will be provided). Note that this course will count as one of the core requirements for the Comparative Literature major.
INSTRUCTOR: RITA BARNARD




Course number only
100
Cross listings
ENGL100401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Use local description
Yes