Reading & Composition

Reading & Composition

Elements of Island Literatures
Course Number: 
R1B.002
Course Catalog Number: 
21951
Course Type or Level: 
Instructor: 
Pedro Rolon
Days: 
MWF
Time: 
11-12
Semester: 
Location: 
225 Dwinelle

The island is a territory of the imagination that cuts across linguistic and cultural boundaries: at once a fantasy land of conquest, domination, and punishment, and the site of new beginnings outside all that we know. In this course we will think together about what makes the island such a rich territory and a site of multiple (and often times contradictory!) imaginations. Through a selection (by no means exhaustive, by no means complete) of fiction, poetry, and film from the Hispanic, Anglophone, and Francophone Caribbean, making necessary detours in early modern European texts, we will hone our analytical writing and research skills by focusing on how and why islands are productive spaces from which to think about our relationship to nature, class, race, gender, knowledge, and power.  As an R and C course,  this is a writing-intensive class that fulfills a University requirement. Expect to spend a considerable amount and time writing, rewriting, and writing some more! With consistent work and dedication, you will be surprised at how your writing evolves The island is a territory of the imagination that cuts across linguistic and cultural boundaries: at once a fantasy land of conquest, domination, and punishment, and the site of new beginnings outside all that we know. In this course we will think together about what makes the island such a rich territory and a site of multiple (and often times contradictory!) imaginations. Through a selection (by no means exhaustive, by no means complete) of fiction, poetry, and film from the Hispanic, Anglophone, and Francophone Caribbean, making necessary detours in early modern European texts, we will hone our analytical writing and research skills by focusing on how and why islands are productive spaces from which to think about our relationship to nature, class, race, gender, knowledge, and power.  As an R and C course,  this is a writing-intensive class that fulfills a University requirement. Expect to spend a considerable amount and time writing, rewriting, and writing some more! With consistent work and dedication, you will be surprised at how your writing evolves from the first day to the last.  There is no final examination for this class.from the first day to the last.  There is no final examination for this class.