2018-2019 Catalog

CSP 55 “In the process of shattering their chains": Modern Literatures of Resistance in the U.S. and Middle East

The title of this course comes from Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth (1961) in a hopeful overture for the decolonizing world. He says, "The peoples of the Third World are in the process of shattering their chains, and what is extraordinary is that they succeed" (34). During Fanon's lifetime, there may have been some positive results from decolonization, but was liberation achieved? Fanon also focuses on the fact that "decolonization is truly the creation of new men" (2), but what does all of this mean? Who was the "new man"? the "new woman"? What does emancipation signify to this emerging agent? What happened and happens in the process of global decolonization? Using Fanon's concepts as the theoretical basis of our class, we will examine the representation of the emerging "new man" in novels and short stories by Native American, African American, Chican@, and Asian American writers as well as in works from Palestine, Egypt, and Iran. We will begin in the mid-twentieth century and work through the present day to understand how literatures of resistance have offered challenges and critiques to the notion of emancipation and to Fanon's concept of the "new man" while expanding upon and complicating his idea.

Credits

4 units

Prerequisite

Open only to first year frosh