AFRO3598W
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AFRO 3598W - African American Literature & Culture: Harlem Renaissance-Present (3 Cr.) Race, Power, and Justice US, Literature, Writing Intensive
African-Amer & African Studies (10947)TCLA - College of Liberal Arts
Course description
African Americans are "America’s metaphor," Richard Wright declared, posing both a riddle and a riff at odds with conventional perspectives. Wright intimated that we might discover in the shadows of American literary life our brightest mirrors and thereby see ourselves – and the paradoxes and potentialities of our national experience – through the world of words and images conjured up over the past two centuries by African American writers. In this course, we employ a cornucopia of literary texts, audiovisual materials, and internet resources to bring the figures of Black literary tradition out of the shadows and under an extended exploratory gaze. This course focuses exclusively on the twentieth century and opens with the Depression Era 1930s radical literary insurgency of Richard Wright and his literary allies, and then moves forward to the Second Black Renaissance, or Black Arts Movement, of the 1960s and '70s and beyond – paralleling the civil rights decades and the rising Black Power insurgencies of SNCC, CORE, and the Black Panthers and their literary counterparts.
Minimum credits
3
Maximum credits
3
Is this course repeatable?
No
Grading basis
OPT - Student Option
Lecture
Credit will not be granted if credit has been received for:
01910
This course fulfills the following Liberal Education requirement(s)
Literature, Race, Power, and Justice in the United States
Fulfills the writing intensive requirement?
Yes
Typically offered term(s)
Every Spring