C LIT 251 A: Introduction to Comparative Literature: Themes

Winter 2023
Meeting:
TTh 12:30pm - 2:20pm / ART 003
SLN:
11942
Section Type:
Lecture
Joint Sections:
SLAVIC 320 A , GLITS 313 A
Instructors:
Piotr Florczyk
MIGRANT WRITERS SAME AS SLAVIC 320 AND GLITS 313
Syllabus Description (from Canvas):

W23 Migrant Writers syllabus-2.docx 1600863644478.jpg

Every year millions of people leave their homelands hoping to start their lives somewhere else. For some of them, it is a life-and-death decision, because they are fleeing murderous regimes, economic precarity, or climate change, while for others it is about career advancement or personal enrichment. Many migrants write about their experience, documenting the heartache of leaving home and the challenges of starting over in another place. Still others write about the feeling of being perpetually unmoored, belonging neither here nor there and thus searching for some mythical elsewhere where their minds and bodies might find a measure of equanimity. In this class, which entails a global and multi-genre approach to migrant literature, we will closely examine short stories, autobiographical prose, poems, and movies that depict the forced or voluntary relocating to a new place; our goal will be to gain a strong understanding of concepts such as community, language, identity, and belonging. All readings are in English. No prerequisites.

Catalog Description:
Reading and analyzing literature based upon rotating themes such as love, sex, and murder, haunted houses, and dreams and memory. Selections drawn from European, English, and American literature, not limited to period and genre.
Department Requirements Met:
Pre-req to Declare Literature Major
GE Requirements Met:
Arts and Humanities (A&H)
Credits:
5.0
Status:
Active
Last updated:
November 7, 2024 - 8:34 am