Spring 2024 Asian Civilization: Middle East BC3000 section 001

Outlaws & Tricksters of Arabic Literatur

TRICKSTERS IN ARABIC LIT

Call Number 00279
Day & Time
Location
T 4:10pm-6:00pm
111 MILSTEIN CEN
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Matthew L Keegan
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

What is so fascinating about outlaws and tricksters? They can be alluring and terrifying, creative and destructive. They wear disguises, upend the plans of their fellow humans, and bend societies to their will. They are unsettled and unsettling. But this course suggests that there is no single figure of the trickster. Rather, the significance of writing about tricksters and outlaws varies from text to text and from place to place. In this course, we will explore texts, mostly from the pre-modern period, written in Arabic (and sometimes Persian and Sanskrit) that depict outlaws and tricksters. We will ask after what texts are doing in the world when they tell stories that seem to celebrate and delight in the subversive, the strange, and the sinister. To help us think through these questions, we will also read divergent theories about outlaws, tricksters, and other subversives. At the end of the course, we will read the award-winning Iraqi novel Frankenstein in Baghdad.

Web Site Vergil
Department Asian and Middle East @Barnard
Enrollment 5 students (20 max) as of 9:05PM Thursday, January 30, 2025
Subject Asian Civilization: Middle East
Number BC3000
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Section key 20241ASCM3000X001