COML002 - Approaches Literary Std: Zombies

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Approaches Literary Std: Zombies
Term
2019A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML002401
Course number integer
2
Registration notes
Communication Within the Curriculum
Meeting times
MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM
Meeting location
PSYL A30
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Astride Veronique Charles
Description
The zombie has long been an expression of the fear of the other, those at the margins of society, or the fear of the afterlife. Zombies remain as much a fascination in popular media as in art and scholarship, from the ongoing series The Walking Dead to Jean-Michel Basquiat's vodou-inspired zombielike portraits. Using sources from art, anthropology, history, literature and religion, this course will examine the mythologies and iconographies surrounding this ubiquitous figure at the cusp of life and death. In this course, students will approach a series of questions. How have different societies imagined the zombie? How does one become a zombie? Can one escape from that state of (non)existence? Finally, how do these stories and images offer subtle reflections on labor, power, humanity and society writ large? This is a CWiC critical speaking seminar, open to students from all majors. Course evaluations include weekly Canvas posts, oral presentations and creative, individualized final projects.<br />
Course number only
002
Cross listings
ENGL002401, AFRC003401
Use local description
Yes

Ericka Beckman

My research focuses primarily on the relationship between economics and literary form nineteenth- and twentieth-century Latin America.  My first book, Capital Fictions:  The Literature of Latin America's Export Age (Minnesota, 2013), studied how literature imagined the incorporation of the region's economies into world commodity markets at the end of the nineteenth century.