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ENG 031 Introduction to African-American Literature and Culture Course Description: The African American experience spans four centuries, from the initial settlement of North America by Europeans and the establishment of the transAtlantic slave trade, to the present day. This interdisciplinary course examines the social thought, cultural mores, religious institutions, intellectual history, political challenges, literary traditions and expressive arts of people of African descent in the Americas. Among the focal points are the centrality of the African American experience to important legal, historical, political, and cultural developments in the formation of the United States, and the acts of self-making or self-fashioning that African Americans performed in response to difficult odds and circumstances. The course surveys AfricanAmerican subjectivities and the social construction of black life from slavery to the present from historical, sociological, political and literary perspectives. This can include, for example, close readings of slave narratives and women’s autobiography, visual analysis of Harlem Renaissance art production, examinations of Blacks Arts poetry and manifestos, unpacking of African-American spirituals and jazz laments, interrogation of the Prison Industrial Complex and its affect on African-American life, discussions on the intersections of hip hop music and philosophy, and study of the American presidency. Course Goals: Students who complete this course should develop advanced problem-solving skills, close reading strategies, and the ability to comparatively analyze, parse, contextualize and synthesize complex texts and ideas from across disciplines. Course Learning Objectives: Recognize and articulate historical realities, periods and movements, master narratives and counter-narratives, and critical debates about the experience and literature of people of African descent in the Americas. Identify essential political, social, legal and cultural developments impacting African-American subjectivity as articulated through a variety of canonical and noncanonical texts across genres, including speeches, slave narratives, poetry, spirituals, short stories, novels, plays, manifestos, music and performance. Develop an understanding and appreciation for the relationship between people of African descent in the Americas, and the African Diaspora and global society. Recognize and explain the ways in which African-American literature culture is synonymous with central to an understanding of American literature and culture. Distinguish among primary, secondary and tertiary literature, and review and evaluate critical reception of authors and their respective texts. Read and Interpret texts using close reading strategies that mind historical, cultural and temporal context, and rely on careful methods of literary and rhetorical analysis. Respond to interpretations of authors and texts with original, learned and thoughtful oral and written work that surpasses mere summarization and repetition of received ideas. Present ideas in a cogent, productive and informed way before audiences of peers and through breakout groups All above CLOs are applicable to the Literature and English Major, and to the General Education program as well. Planned Learning Outcomes (PLOs) for the English Major 1. Interpret texts with due sensitivity to both textual and contextual cues. 2. Articulate an appreciation of the aesthetic qualities of texts by the standards of their times and places. 3. Demonstrate historical, geographic, and cultural empathy by reading texts written in other times, places, and cultures. 4. Apply interpretive strategies developed in literary study to other academic and professional contexts. 5. Write cogently and with sensitivity to audience. General Education Guiding Principles this course addresses: Communication: analyzing authors’ writing, and communicating responses to that writing by addressing the class and instructor. Aesthetic understanding: appreciating the unique qualities of literature, despite or perhaps because of their difficulty compared to other types of writing. Creativity: both appreciating the author’s creativity by reading their many and diverse works, and responding creatively to that work through writing and/or projects. Appreciation of diverse perspectives in both global and community contexts: learning about an author’s historical and geographic context, different as it is from our own, and thinking about how their particular context shaped their writing, while also considering how their writing in turn has effected other world authors in myriad ways.