Ulu
University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa
Department of English
Kuykendall 402
1733 Donaghho Road
Honolulu, HI 96822
Phone: (808) 956-7619
Fax: (808) 956-3083
 
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Course Description

Spring Semester 2011

ENG 338(1): American Literature since mid 20th Century

instructor:  Ruth Y. Hsu
time:  TTH 1:30-2:45
description: 

Literatures of the United States from the mid-20th century to the present include the work of Nobel Prize winners and writers who have been influential around the world. It has also been an extremely exciting time in terms of innovations to genre, the evolution of ideas about identity, gender, nation, culture, political life, and other social issues. THE HEATH ANTHOLOGY, the text for this class, includes diverse fiction writers, poets, and essayists, writing about watershed moments in United States culture and letters. Lyrical, sometimes polemical, always compelling, these writers depict and critique profound changes in the U. S. of the past 60 years. Our engagement with the literature will be focused on the following thematic clusters: 1) Aesthetics and Politics of the 1960s and 1970s: Black, Brown, Yellow, Red; 2) Landmark Legislation; 3) Nature and Spirituality; 4) America in the World/ The World in America: Globalization and Post-9/11 American Culture.

This class is writing intensive. Be ready to do a substantial amount of formal and informal writing. Class discussions emphasize collaboration; this is a group-directed reading and not primarily a lecture class. You will benefit most from the course if you engage with the wide variety of literature by paying close attention to the ways that authors convey emotions and ideas. We’ll use a common literary vocabulary that is not, however, to be considered the only way to talk about literature. Among your goals in this class should be the development of independent, analytical, interpretative and research skills.

Student Learning Outcomes include 1) The ability to identify the major literary themes, authors and texts of the period; 2) The ability to use, in class discussions and written assignments, literary terms and concepts appropriate to a 300-level course; 3) To begin to acquire strategies for connecting texts to a broader cultural and historical context.

Requirements include: Two essays (minimum of 6 pages, double-spaced, typed, 1-inch margins); four response papers (at least 2, double-spaced pages); an individual class presentation of 5 to 10 minutes, accompanied by a 2-page, double-spaced paper; final take-home, essay exam. 

Required Text: THE HEATH ANTHOLOGY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE: CONTEMPORARY PERIOD (1945 TO THE PRESENT), VOLUM E, 6TH EDITION BY LAUTER, ET AL.

(ONLINE, DOWNLOADABLE EDITION)