Classes » ENGL 417, Winter 2020
- Name
Contemporary Canadian Aboriginal Literature
- Description
In this class, students will be introduced to the scholarly study of Canadian Aboriginal literature, dram, non-fiction and poetry as a means to discussing the ways that Canadian Aboriginal writers use, and subvert, genre. To best understand the pleasures and paradoxes of Canadian Aboriginal literature, a central goal of this class is placing each text into its historical and cultural context. The texts that this class addresses will speak to colonialism, poverty, tragedy, and trauma, but they also speak to hope, pleasure, and a desire for change. This class will assume that students will have little to no background in Canadian Aboriginal literature, and will focus on the legal, historical, and ethical dimension of colonialism in Canada. This class will revolve around three questions: Do Canadian Aboriginal texts engage in a resistance to colonialism? Can a poem, for example, or a play be a tool that one uses to deconstruct colonialism or heal fraught relationships between Aboriginal peoples and settlers? How do Canadian Aboriginal texts address questions of resistance, reconciliation, and recognition? What is the relationship between the medium and the message of Canadian Aboriginal literature? Do different forms--poems, plays, non-fiction, fiction, and sculpture-allow for different kinds of resistance?
- Credits
3.0
- Semester
- Instructor
- Schedules
- Mondays, 10:30 to 11:50, West Campus Rm 301
- Wednesdays, 10:30 to 11:50, West Campus Rm 301
- Tuition
$664.00
This tuition applies to domestic full-time students. Tuitions for international, senior, and auditing students may vary.- Fees
(None)
Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday |
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ENGL 417 | ENGL 417 |