Spring 2001

Anuradha Dingwaney Needham

English 265
MW, 12:00-1:15
King 235

Rice 109 / (440) 775-8653
Office hours: MW, 1:30-2:30 & by appt
E-mail: Anuradha.Needham@oberlin.edu

Anglophone Literature of the Third World

 

This course, which introduces you to some of the anglophone literatures of the Third World, will examine the problems of definition, analysis, and evaluation that attend our reading and understanding of texts from the Third World. Through a variety of theoretical essays and fictional works, our discussions will address, though not be limited to: a) whether or not terms like "third world" or "post-colonial" are appropriate designations for this work; b) whether or not notions of "marginality," "difference," or "alterity," so often deployed to characterize these works, are effective for understanding them; c) whether or not these works can be valuably studied as enactments of resistance against dominant ideologies and/or cultural formations.

Since these works were written not only at different historical moments, but also emerge from, and address, different rhetorical exigencies, and social, political, and cultural formations, our discussions will proceed through an awareness of these ideologically determined "constraints."

Texts
 
Ama Ata Aidoo, No Sweetness Here
Michelle Cliff, No Telephone to Heaven
J.M. Coetzee, Waiting for the Barbarians
Tsi Tsi Dangarembga, Nervous Conditions
Bessie Head, A Question of Power
Hanif Kureishi, The Buddha of Suburbia
Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things
Salman Rushdie, The Moor's Last Sigh

In addition, you will need to purchase a package of xeroxed materials from the English Department Secretary in Rice 130, during office hours of 8:30-12:30, 1:00-4:30. The cost of the package is $9.00. Please bring in exact amount of purchase.

Tentative Class Schedule

Feb. 5:

Introduction: Details about course, readings and papers.

Feb. 7, 12, 14:

Essays by Jameson, Ahmad, Spivak ("Burden" and opening pages of
"Marginality"), and selections from Frantz Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks

Feb. 19, 21:

Selections from No Sweetness Here

Feb. 26, 28:

Nervous Conditions

Mar. 5:

Essays by Robbins and Brennan

Mar. 7, 12:

A Question of Power

Mar. 14, 19:

Waiting for the Barbarians

Mar. 20, 21, 22:

Conferences for Paper I

Mar. 23:

Paper 1 due

Mar. 24- Apr. 1:

SPRING BREAK

Apr. 2:

Essays by Guha and Spivak ("In a Word")

Apr. 4, 9:

God of Small Things

Apr. 11, 16, 18:

The Moor's Last Sigh

Apr. 23:

Essays by Bhabha and Papastergiadis

Apr. 25, 30:

No Telephone to Heaven

May 2, 7:

The Buddha of Suburbia

May 9:

Wrap-up: Evaluations

May 10, 11:

Conferences for Paper 2

May 15:

Paper 2 due

Requirements and Procedures

You will write two papers (10-12 pages each) in which you will present a sustained, well-developed argument organized around a central, coherently stated thesis. You should make your critical assumptions explicit and, as far as possible, reflect on those assumptions in the course of your essay. You are encouraged (though not required) to show me early drafts of your papers for comments. You may revise final drafts as well for a better grade. You will also keep a journal where you will jot down your "responses" to every text we will read in class. During class discussion, I will call upon various students arbitrarily to read from journal entries. This way, hopefully, I will ensure that everyone comes prepared, and everyone is called upon to participate in class discussion. At the end of a two- or three-week period, I will look through the entries. The journal will not be graded.

Due dates for papers
Paper 1 due: March 23
Paper 2 due: May 15

Papers must be submitted on the dates they are due. You will be penalized a grade per day (e.g., lowered from B to B-) for unexcused late submissions. You can ask for extensions, but only by contacting me before the date the paper is due.

Method of Instruction

Lectures will be kept to a minimum and class will proceed mainly through discussions to which every student must contribute. This will require you to do your reading on time, to assiduously jot ideas and responses down in your journals, and come prepared to participate intelligently and provocatively in class discussions.

Grades

Papers 1 and 2 will count for 70% of the grade (35% each); your participation in class discussion will count for the remaining 30%. You cannot pass the course unless you have completed all your written work.