Postcolonial
Theory (Piper)
This graduate-level course provides
an introduction to the main scholars in the field,
including Edward Said, Homi Bhabha, Gayatri Spivak,
Frantz Fanon, Aijaz Ahmad, Anne McClintock, Leela
Ghandi, and Stuart Hall. The course is organized
thematically, beginning with a critical introduction
to the field, then moving through colonial discourse,
anti-colonialism, postcolonialism, and neocolonialism.
We also look at intersections with Marxism, poststructuralism,
and psychoanalysis.
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Bodies That Matter: The Body and Sexuality
in Contemporary Theory and Criticism (Glick)
Long regarded by the Western intellectual tradition
as inferior and threatening to the mind (or thinking
self), the body has made a comeback in contemporary
scholarship in the humanities. In this course,
we will critically examine the sudden efflorescence
of "body criticism" since the 1970s,
focusing in particular on the fields of literary
criticism, cultural history, critical theory, and
cultural studies. As we shall see, this new body
theory has several distinctive characteristics:
it interrogates traditional binaries (such as mind/body,
nature/culture, male/female); it critiques essentialist
and ahistorical notions of bodies as fixed or given;
and it seeks to demonstrate how the body and sexuality
are sites of cultural meaning and social control.
Although we will survey a wide range of representations
and images of the body, this class is not a "tour" of
those diverse representations; instead, we will
investigate the intellectual and political implications
of various approaches to theorizing bodies (or
bodily experience) in time and space. We will explore
questions such as: How are bodies produced as cultural
objects with racialized, gendered and sexual meanings?
What is the relationship between the body itself
and its representation in discourse? How do sexed,
corporeal categories and norms organize modern
configurations of identity, power, and knowledge?
And finally-in a more self-reflexive vein-why is
contemporary criticism so preoccupied with the
materiality of the body? Readings include work
by Gloria Anzaldúa, Susan Bordo, Peter
Brooks, Judith Butler, Michel Foucault, Sander
Gilman, Donna Haraway, Thomas Lacqueur, and Kobena
Mercer.
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