[This week marks
the final classes of the Spring 2016 semester, so this week on the blog I’ll
offer some semester reflections, focusing on new texts or ideas I tried in my
courses. I’d love to hear your spring reflections and any other pedagogical or
personal perspectives you’d share!]
On the value of adding
two kinds of multimedia texts to a familiar and favorite course.
I’ve almost
certainly written more, both in
this space and in other
published writing, about my redesigned
Ethnic American Literature course than about all the other classes I teach
put together. It’s a class that reflects some of my own most central ideas of
cross-cultural American identity, that allows me to teach perhaps the widest
range of texts in any one course of mine (from Frederick Douglass to Michael
Patrick MacDonald, Black Boy to The House on Mango Street, and Amy Tan
to Martín Espada, among others), and that features, in the student
family history projects, an assignment that has been consistently both
meaningful to each individual student and incredibly compelling and moving for
me to read. All those aspects of the course have been present and exciting in
every section I’ve taught since the first (2007) redesign, including this
semester’s. Yet I believe it’s important not to let even our favorite courses
stagnate (maybe especially not them), and I’ve found that adding supplemental
multimedia texts has helped me keep Ethnic American Lit fresh.
I first did so
during the final class of my prior (Spring 2013) section of the course, using
two Macklemore
songs (“Irish Celebration”
and “White Privilege”)
to help us talk one last time about both heritage and identity and
cross-cultural conversations in American society. This time I used “Irish Celebration”
as a supplemental text in our Irish American unit (during which we read
MacDonald’s All Souls and Mary
Doyle Curran’s The
Parish and the Hill), bringing such contemporary musical works into
more direct conversation with our ongoing readings and discussions. I still
used two final class musical texts as well, but tried to integrate them more
fully into the semester’s work, featuring one song that extended our first unit’s
readings of Douglass’ narrative and Black
Boy (J. Cole’s “A
Tale of 2 Cities”) and one that added contemporary issues of and debates
over refugee and migrant communities into our discussions (M.I.A.’s “Borders”). There’s
no doubt in my mind that songs (and, in M.I.A.’s case, groundbreaking music videos
as well) offer complementary but distinct analytical opportunities from those
provided by written literary texts, and I will continue to figure out ways to
make songs part of classes like Ethnic in the semesters ahead.
This semester,
for the first time in any literature class, I also decided to use the
occasional online humor video as a way to present our themes in a different
light: Key & Peele’s “Negrotown”
sketch and SNL’s “The Day
Beyoncé Turned Black” video for the African American unit, Seth Meyers’ “Boston Accent”
faux-trailer for the Irish American one, and BuzzFeed’s “If Latinos Said the Stuff
White People Say” video for the Hispanic American one. I’m not quite as
sure of how to use these kinds of videos in class discussions, and indeed wasn’t
expecting to do so much at all; I was planning for them to be brief, fun
interludes before getting back to our reading discussions. Yet in each case,
students had a great deal to say, with many folks who were more generally
hesitant to jump into those reading discussions adding their voices and
perspectives in these conversations. Which only reinforces my goal of using
these kinds of multimedia texts in future classes, but also reminds me that I
should treat them and our use of them just as critically and analytically as we
do any of our other texts.
Last reflection
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Responses to this idea or others you’d share?
PPS. On the next to last day of this class, I decided to use this video:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWynJkN5HbQ
to help us talk about what role ethnic/cultural heritage does and doesn't play in all American lives. Seemed to work pretty well!