|
|
Oct 05, 2024
|
|
2010-2011 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
|
COMM 272 - Ethnic America: Literary and Theoretical PerspectivesType of Course: Seminar This seminar investigates the ways in which the “American” and the “ethnic” continue to be perceived as mutually exclusive identity categories in contemporary U.S. fiction. Despite the nation’s longstanding history as a nation of immigrants and its forecasted future as the most multiethnic and multilingual country in the world, the U.S. continues to resist the incorporation of its ethnic populations through overt and covert means of division, estrangement, and discrimination. Students will read a wide range of texts by “ethnic” and “nonethnic” writers and theorists to explore the ways in which the nation’s ethnic constituents are continually changing the definitions of its national identity, and to consider whether the American/ethnic dichotomy is real or imagined. For undergraduate English majors this course satisfies the Period (C-3) requirement.
Cross Listed: ENG 276 , ENG 376 , RER 276
Instructor: Ms. Huang
When Offered: Offered 2009-2010
Faculty: Betsy P. Huang, Ph.D. - Assistant Professor of English
|
|
|