Courses:

Race and Identity in American Literature: Keepin' it Real Fake >> Content Detail



Syllabus



Syllabus

Please see readings for a complete list of texts used in this course.



Course Description


This course explores the ways in which various American artists view race and class as performed or performable identities. Discussions will focus on some of the following questions: What does it mean to act black, white, privileged, or underprivileged? What do these artists suggest are the implications of performing (indeed playing at or with) racial identity, ethnicity, gender, and class status? How and why are race and class status often conflated in these performances?

This course counts toward CI-H (Communication Intensive) credit, which means that 21L.504 fulfills the communication requirement to "plan, organize, draft, and revise a series of assignments based on course material," leading to a total of at least 20 pages of writing. A minimum of 1 hour a week (out of 3) will be dedicated to class discussion. This course also counts toward fulfillment of the Black Studies concentration requirement.



The Skills You'll Learn


  • How to discuss issues of race, class, and gender in the context of American literary and cultural studies
  • How to argue a case about a literary text
  • How to preserve the memory of your reading experiences
  • How to find pleasure and critical thinking skills in the process of reading and analyzing texts
  • How to proselytize effectively to your friends about the joys (and pains) of reading Literature


How You'll Learn Those Skills




Participation


Regular attendance and active participation in class is required. Participation includes responding to questions or points raised in discussion and generating discussion. You may miss 2 classes without penalty, for any reason. Each miss beyond 2 will count for 2/3 of a letter grade taken off of your final grade (i.e. B to C+). More than 6 misses may mean no credit for the course (missed classes due to college athletics, religious holy days, or serious illness must be cleared with me). Two late arrivals to class will count as one absence, so please do and do try to be on time.



Assigned Readings


All readings (books) for the class are available at the bookstore. These readings must be completed by the date they appear on the syllabus. Other readings are listed in the readings section.



Assigned Writings


Your assignments for class are recorded on the syllabus and available in the assignments section. Unless otherwise directed, assignments must be submitted by 5 pm in my mailbox on the due date. Written assignments include two 5-page papers, a complete revision of any one of the two papers, and a 10-paged research paper due on the last day of class. All papers should follow the MLA format (see Documenting Sources: MLA Style: English and Other Humanities). These papers should be typed, double-spaced, paginated, titled (no title page necessary), and in 12-point font (Times New Roman) with 1-inch margins on all sides.



Oral Presentations


Each student will choose a line or passage from the text assigned for the day's reading, and the designated student will discuss what he or she thinks is the significance of the passage within the context of the book (or short story) itself. Then the student will also share his or her response/reaction to the passage and devise one question to pose to the class in an effort to generate class discussion. The presentation can run from 5-15 minutes long. I will, however, cut you off at exactly 15 minutes.



Grading



REQUIREMENTSPERCENTAGES
Essay 110%
Essay 210%
Revision20%
Essay 330%
Participation15%
Oral presentation15%



Recommended Citation


For any use or distribution of these materials, please cite as follows:

Sandy Alexandre, course materials for 21L.504 Race and Identity in American Literature: Keepin' it Real Fake, Spring 2007. MIT OpenCourseWare (http://ocw.mit.edu/), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Downloaded on [DD Month YYYY].



Calendar



SES #TOPICSKEY DATES
1

Introductions

In-class TV clip: "When Keeping it Real Goes Wrong"

2Herman Melville
3-4Mark Twain
5Suzan-Lori Parks
6-7Charles Chesnutt
8

Interracial identity

In-class film: Cross-Over King

9

Toni Morrison

In-class film: Mr. White

Essay 1 due
10-11James Weldon Johnson
12Nella Larsen
13Being Indian
14-15Philip Roth
16-17John Howard GriffinEssay 2 due in Ses #17
18

Gender

In-class film: Paris is Burning

19

LeRoi Jones

Whiteness

20Library instruction
21-22Toi DerricotteRevision due in Ses #22
23-24George Schuyler
25In-class film: Six Degrees of Separation
26Student presentationsEssay 3 due

 








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