Fall 2023 English UN3520 section 001

INTRO TO ASIAN AMERICAN LIT & CULTURE

INTRO TO ASIAN AMERICAN L

Call Number 11910
Day & Time
Location
TR 1:10pm-2:25pm
614 Schermerhorn Hall [SCH]
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Denise Cruz
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description This course is a survey of Asian North American literature and its contexts. To focus our discussion, the course centers on examining recurring cycles of love and fear in Asian North American relations from the late nineteenth to the twenty-first centuries. We will first turn to what became known as “yellow peril,” one effect of exclusion laws that monitored the entrance of Asians into the United States and Canada during the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and the corresponding phenomenon of Orientalism, the fascination with a binary of Asia and the West. The second section of the course will focus on how Asian North American authors respond to later cycles of love and fear, ranging from the forgetting of Japanese internment in North America and the occupation of the Philippines; to the development of the model minority mythology during the Cold War. The final section will examine intimacies and exclusions in contemporary forms of migration, diaspora, and community communities.
Web Site Vergil
Department English and Comparative Literature
Enrollment 106 students (120 max) as of 6:07PM Wednesday, May 1, 2024
Subject English
Number UN3520
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Campus Morningside
Section key 20233ENGL3520W001