Course Info: CSI-0285
Course | CSI-0285 Narratives of (Im)migration |
Long Title | Narratives of (Im)migration |
Term | 2016S |
Note(s) |
Satisfies Distribution Textbook information |
Meeting Info | Franklin Patterson Hall WLH on T from 12:30-3:20 |
Faculty | Lili Kim |
Capacity | 25 |
Available | 11 |
Waitlist | 0 |
Distribution(s) |
Power, Community and Social Justice |
Cumulative Skill(s) | Independent Work Multiple Cultural Perspectives Writing and Research |
Additional Info | Students are expected to spend at least six to eight hours a week of preparation and work outside of class time. |
Description | This history and writing seminar will explore different forms of personal narratives - historical memoirs, fiction, films, and oral histories - interpreting American immigrant and migrant lives to examine critical historiographical issues in U.S. immigration history. Through reading seminal historical narratives along with award-winning novels and memoirs, we will investigate on-going construction of major issues in U.S. immigration history such as imperialism, acculturation, language, citizenship, biculturalism, displacement, belonging, family, cultural inheritance, community and empowerment, agency and resistance, as well as memory and identity formation. We will pay close attention to gender, race, class, nation, and sexuality as categories of analysis and lenses through which we examine the history and narrative of U.S. immigration. The second half of the semester will be devoted to students producing their own creative non-fictional work (memoirs, films, oral histories) of immigrant/migrant narratives. |