| AM POL CLTR FR 1865 (American Exits: Abolition and Exodus) | 19375 |
(Evening Degree Program)
While the national narrative of the United States as a "nation of
immigrants" has routinely turned to the biblical figure of the "Promised
Land" to explain its exceptional qualities, it has persistently run
aground when faced with the centrality of racial slavery to its history.
The figure of "Exodus," with its allusions to enslavement and escape,
freedom and fugitivity, diaspora and nation formation, has framed some of
the nation's most powerful counter-narratives. This reading-intensive
undergraduate course will turn to recent scholarship in African American
studies to help us understand the Exodus figure as central to post-1865
black culture. In particular, we will consider the various ways Exodus
has animated abolitionist thought from the wake of racial slavery in the
1860s to the wake of the civil rights movement in the 1970s. Such
thought, we will see, registers shifting understandings of race, nation,
and empire, geography and history, tradition and modernity. Our path will
follow Exodus where it takes us, to Haiti and Jamaica and Cuba, to
Monrovia, Addis Ababa, and Cairo, to the plantations, prisons, and cities
of the United States, to sites and spaces unmoored from the
nation-state's powerful gravity.
Our task, then, is three-fold: to develop critical tools to read
literary, visual, musical, theoretical, and social texts at the
intersection of narrative form and historical analysis; to survey the
cultural history and some of the major texts of Pan-Africanism, black
nationalism, and black internationalism from Reconstruction through the
end of the civil rights movement; and to develop a working knowledge of
some key texts in contemporary literary and cultural theory that help us
think through the bounds and binds of American political culture. Writers
may include: Amiri Baraka, Edward Wilmot Blyden, Octavia Butler,
Frederick Douglass, David Graham Du Bois, Shirley Graham Du Bois, WEB Du
Bois, Brent Hayes Edwards, Marcus Garvey, Paul Gilroy, Eddie Glaude,
Stuart Hall, Pauline Hopkins, Zora Neal Hurston, CLR James, Martin Luther
King, Jr., Malcolm X, Bob Marley, Toni Morrison, Sun Ra, Ishmael Reed,
Cedric Robinson, David Scott, Michelle Stephens, Scott Trafton, and
Cynthia Young.