Fall 2023 Comparative Literature: English GU4741 section 001

CULTURAL APPROPRIATION AND WORLD LITERAT

CULTURAL APPROPRIATION AN

Call Number 15986
Day & Time
Location
M 4:10pm-6:00pm
424 Pupin Laboratories
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Joseph R Slaughter
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description What does it mean to treat culture, literature, and identity as forms of property? This course will look at the current debates around cultural appropriation in relation to the expanding field of world literature. In many ways, the two discourses seem at odds: the ethno-proprietary claims that underpin most arguments against cultural appropriation seem to conflict with the more cosmopolitan pretenses of world literature. Nonetheless, both discourses rely on some basic premises that treat culture and cultural productions as forms of property and expressions of identity (itself often treated as a form of property). “Appropriation” is a particularly rich lens for looking at processes and conceptions of worlding and globalization, because some version of the idea is central to historical theories of labor, economic production, land claims, colonialism, authorship, literary translation, and language acquisition. This is not a course in “world literature” as such; we will examine a half dozen case studies of literary/cultural texts that have been chosen for the ways in which they open up different aspects of the problematics of reducing culture to an econometric logic of property relations in the world today.
Web Site Vergil
Department English and Comparative Literature
Enrollment 11 students (18 max) as of 3:06PM Thursday, December 19, 2024
Subject Comparative Literature: English
Number GU4741
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Note Application required.
Section key 20233CLEN4741W001