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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Subject to Change Last Update: 04/10/2012

Course Description

Fall Semester 2012

ENG 320(2): Intro. English Studies

instructor:  Candace Fujikane
time:  MWF 10:30-11:20
description:  In this course, we will all be examining our roles as critics who read, think, and write about literary and cultural texts.  As literary critics, we will begin by engaging in close textual analyses of the ways that stories are told and the narrative strategies writers use to challenge or transform the material conditions of their lives.  We will discuss basic literary terminology, concepts, methods, and practices that illustrate the connections among people who read and write texts and the larger conditions of production and systems of power in which their texts are produced and read.  We will be analyzing different genres of writing (poetry, short stories, novels, films, autobiographies, personal essays, inscriptions of mo‘olelo) and how these forms are used in ways that respond to material conditions, including political events and movements.

We will be focusing in particular on definitions and discussions of ideology and the social relations of power that underpin the ideological functions of literature.  With this in mind, we will compare different points of entry into analyzing a range of texts assigned for the course, approaches that that foreground issues of class, gender, sexuality, race/ethnicity, indigeneity, and location, and then we will examine how these multiple and interlocking critical frameworks cannot be separated from each other even as they are often made (problematically) to compete with each other.  Some approaches, like literary mapping techniques, go beyond an emplotment of geographical spaces to mapping the social relations between people, their relationship to land, and epistemological underpinnings of these relationships.  We will also map out our own positionality as readers as we engage in a careful examination of the processes by which we “make meaning.”

Required Texts (available at Revolution Books, between Puck’s Alley and 7-Eleven):

Julie Rivkin and Michael Ryan, eds., Literary Theory: An Anthology (1998); R. Zamora Linmark, Rolling the R’s (1997); Toni Morrison, Beloved (1987); Haunani-Kay Trask, Light in the Crevice Never Seen (1994).  Required course reader will include texts by Herman Melville, ku‘ualoha ho‘omanawanui, Claude McKay, Louis Althusser, Ho‘oulumāhiehie, John Dominis Holt, Shakespeare, Gizelle Gajelonia, Judith Butler, Monique Wittig, Brandy Nālani McDougall, Puanani Burgess, Gwendolyn Brooks, Noenoe Silva, Lois-Ann Yamanaka, Franco Moretti, Jose Munoz, and others. The course reader will be available during the second week of school.

Requirements: One two-page paper, two four-page papers, peer-editing, short assignments, a final exam, attendance and participation.