This course will introduce students to contemporary African literature and film. We will focus in particular on a new body of work by African immigrants, and first generation African Americans, that’s changing the American cultural landscape. From Chimamanda Adichie to Dinaw Mengestu, NoViolet Bulawayo to Teju Cole, writers with immediate ties to the African continent are not only revising the figure of Africa in the American imaginary, but also narrating the stories of record number of Africans who have immigrated to the U.S. in the past five decades. Sometimes called the “new” African Americans, or American Africans, or what Adichie calls “non-American blacks,” more Africans have come to the U.S. since 1965 than through the Middle Passage, and their experience is finally gaining the creative and critical attention it merits. This course will explore a series of novels and films that articulate the experience of what it means to be both African and American. In addition to aesthetic questions, we will explore the themes of migration, national identity, and globalization that loom large in our contemporary moment.
Courses > 2018 Fall
Electives
401 | LEC | Dagmawi Woubshet | TR 10:30am-12pm | FBH 244
Electives
CIMS 077 - CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN LITERATURE AND FILM
ENGL 077401 | LEC | Dagmawi Woubshet | TR 10:30am-12pm | FBH 244