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Topics in Gender and Sexuality Studies (490-0-20)

Topic

Toni Morrison

Instructors

Tracy Vaughn
8474913725
1860 Campus Dr Crowe 5-103

Meeting Info

Kresge Centennial Hall 3-410: Tues 2:00PM - 4:50PM

Overview of class

This course will be an intensive examination of the significant contributions made to American and global arts and letters by Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison. We will consider her contributions through her roles as editor, author, and public scholar. As an editor, Morrison single-handedly ensured the publication of trailblazing Black American writers. Morrison the author created a canon that centers on and celebrates the complexities of Black American life—particularly the lives of Black women. As a public scholar Morrison scrutinized the ways in which the American/Western literary canon often fails to acknowledge and include the important cultural contributions of African-descended literary artists.

We will utilize Morrison's fiction, critical theory, lectures, and interviews to survey how she grappled with the constitution of blackness as it relates to the modern conception of humanity. One of the primary questions we will consider throughout the quarter is: How does Morrison's work generate a sense of individual and collective identity that extends beyond the scope of race, gender, class, and culture?

Registration Requirements

Attendance at first class is mandatory

Learning Objectives

Students will learn how to: Introduce assigned materials to the rest of the class via weekly blog posts; Facilitate a class discussion; Develop a larger written analysis for possible publication

Teaching Method

Class participation, discussion, films/videos, online work, presentations, readings, seminar, writing assignments

Evaluation Method

Attendance, class participation, online work, final paper, presentations, readings, writing assignments

Class Materials (Suggested)

The Bluest Eye (1970) The Black Book (1974) Song of Solomon (1977) Beloved (1987) Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination (1992) Home (2012) The Origin of Others (2017)