[Next week
brings a new semester, the last of my 11th year at Fitchburg State
University. So this week brings a series of spring 2016 preview posts, this
time focused on the texts we’ll be reading in my spring courses. I’d love to
hear about your spring syllabi, and other spring plans, in comments!]
In my Ethnic
American Literature course, I use readings in a different way than in any other
class I teach: pairing two long readings and working with them simultaneously
for three weeks (rather than the usual two for a longer work). Here’s
an article in which I explain why I made that choice and how it works in
practice! The pairings have evolved a bit with each iteration of the course,
and here are the four units for Spring 2016:
1)
Frederick Douglass’ Narrative (1845) and Richard
Wright’s Black Boy (1945): My Ethnic Lit students produce for
their individual work in the course not conventional papers but a multigenerational
family timeline and history, and so we start our readings with two
autobiographical works, as well as two that can help us analyze African
American identities, histories, and writings across a century.
2)
Mary
Doyle Curran’s The Parish and the Hill
(1948) and Michael
Patrick MacDonald’s All Souls (1999):
Another central goal of my Ethnic course is to remind my students that we’re
all “ethnic”—when I came to FSU the course was unfortunately titled “Other
Voices,” and there remains a sense (among scholars as well as students) that “ethnic
literature” means literature by writers of color. This pairing of two Irish
American works helps push beyond that concept, and toward conversations about
ethnicity and race—among many other topics—as part of all identities.
3)
Poems
by MartÃn Espada and Excerpts from Sandra
Cisneros’ The House on Mango Street
(1984): By the end of Unit 2 the students have done a ton of reading, and so both
to change things up and to allow for more close reading practice we spend the
next unit working with much shorter texts: a dozen or so Espada poems and the
first twenty or so of the short short stories that constitute Cisneros’ great
book. The two authors also help us think about Latino American and immigrant identities
and communities, among many other subjects.
4)
Amy
Tan’s The Joy Luck Club (1989) and Louise
Erdrich’s Love Medicine (1984/1993): By the last unit we’re
ready for more comparative analyses, as well as to model more overtly the
project’s histories, and these multigenerational family novels (one of four
Chinese American immigrant women and their daughters, and one of three
generations in a pair of Chippewa Native American families) allow us to do both
those things—and to enjoy two of the most talented American writers (“ethnic”
or otherwise) of the last half-century.
Next spring
preview tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What are you
teaching/reading this spring? Other spring plans you’d share?
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