Spring 2026 English UN1100 section 001

Introduction to Latinx Literature and Cu

Intro to Latinx Lit & Cul

Call Number 16653
Day & Time
Location
TR 10:10am-11:25am
To be announced
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Carlos Nugent
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

In the US, Latinxs are often treated in quantitative terms—as checkmarks on census forms, or as data points in demographic surveys. However, Latinxs have always been more than mere numbers: while some have stayed rooted in traditional homelands, and while others have migrated through far-flung diasporas, all have drawn on and developed distinctive ways of imagining and inhabiting the Americas. In this course, we will explore the resulting range of literature and culture: to understand how Latinxs have resisted and/or reinforced settler colonialism and racial capitalism, we will survey two centuries of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, performance, music, visual art, and more. With our interdisciplinary and intersectional approach, we will consider why Latinidad has manifested differently in colonial territories (especially Puerto Rico), regional communities (especially the US–Mexico borderlands), and transnational diasporas (of Cubans, of Dominicans, and of a variety of Central Americans). At the same time, we will learn how Latinxs have struggled with shared issues, such as (anti-) Blackness and
(anti-)Indigeneity, gender and sexuality, citizenship and (il)legality, and economic and environmental (in)justice. During the semester, we will practice Latinx studies both collectively and individually: to enrich the professor’s lectures, the teaching assistants’ engagements, and our in-person discussions, each student will complete a reading journal, a five-page paper, a creative project, and a final exam.  

Web Site Vergil
Department English and Comparative Literature
Enrollment 90 students (90 max) as of 11:12PM Thursday, November 27, 2025
Status Full
Subject English
Number UN1100
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Open To Columbia College, Engineering:Undergraduate, Global Programs, General Studies
Note Dist req: 1900-present, ethnicity/race, comp/global
Section key 20261ENGL1100W001