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EES85X1
EES85X1
Ap Eng Lang - American Literary History
ENGLISH
Prerequisites
- {'type': 'grade_level', 'allowed_grades': [11]}
Course Description
This course stresses the importance of chronology in the study of American literature. Authors, like us, are directly and indirectly influenced by those who came before them. James Baldwin read Richard Wright, and Jhumpa Lahiri references Nathaniel Hawthorne. Who are the favorite writers of famous writers? If we continue to trace the American lineage back, can we create a map of influence? When we probe the collision and cross-pollination of ideas, the boundaries between the contemporary and the classic, the self and the other, whiteness and blackness begin to blur. Reading challenging texts can provide space for us to think out loud, make mistakes, and discover false dichotomies. We aim to appreciate and interrogate big ideas in American intellectual history, but we also aim to appreciate and interrogate our own ideological boundaries and differences. You will play the devil’s advocate, entertain multiple interpretations, and imagine possible worlds. As a college level writing course, American Literary History will go beyond the basic five-paragraph essay to consider appropriate scope, flow, style, and voice. We will propose ideas, reconsider strategies, develop precision, and revise essays. Genres may include literary, comparative, and rhetorical analysis, as well as the research paper incorporating criticism and theory. Guiding questions:What dominant cultural mythologies, narratives, and ideals are created or challenged?Who feels like an outsider and what commentary can an outsider offer?How is the American experiment and experience still evolving today?How are American writers in conversation with each other across time and space?What literary movements developed throughout American history? How are writers influenced by historical, social, cultural, and political context?Authors may include Jon Krakauer: Into the Wild Henry David Thoreau: Walden Walt Whitman: Leaves of Grass F. Scott Fitzgerald: The Great Gatsby August Wilson: Fences Suzan-Lori Parks: Topdog/Underdog Justin Torres: We the Animals Jhumpa Lahiri: Unaccustomed EarthChimamanda Ngozi Adichie: The Thing Around Your Neck