Fall 2024 Comparative Literature: English UN2742 section 001

World Fiction Since 1965

Call Number 14809
Day & Time
Location
TR 10:10am-11:25am
To be announced
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Bruce Robbins
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

In the period since 1965, fiction has become global in a new sense and with a new intensity. Writers from different national traditions have been avidly reading each other, wherever they happen to come from, and they often resist national and regional labels altogether. If you ask the Somali writer Nuruddin Farah whether the precocious child of Maps was inspired by Salman Rushdie´s Midnight´s Children, he will answer (at least he did when I asked him) that he and Rushdie both were inspired by Sterne´s Tristram Shandy and Grass´s The Tin Drum. At the same time, the human experiences around which novelists organize their fiction are often themselves global, explicitly and powerfully but also mysteriously. Our critical language is in some ways just trying to catch up with innovative modes of storytelling that attempt to be responsible to the global scale of interconnectedness on which, as we only rarely manage to realize, we all live. Authors will include some of the following: Gabriel Garcia Márquez, Jamaica Kincaid, W.G. Sebald, Elena Ferrante, and Zadie Smith.

Web Site Vergil
Department English and Comparative Literature
Enrollment 41 students (54 max) as of 9:05PM Monday, May 20, 2024
Subject Comparative Literature: English
Number UN2742
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Campus Morningside
Section key 20243CLEN2742W001