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Nov 26, 2024
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ENGL 423 - Ethnic American Women’s Literature After 1900 Units: 4 ;Breadth Area GE-UD-C; Diversity Selected authors and topics in ethnic American women’s fiction, autobiography, drama, and/or poetry by African-American, Latina, American Indian, and Asian-American writers.
Strongly Recommended Preparation: Upper division status (greater than 60 earned semester units) and completion of lower division Area C requirements. Prerequisites: Completion of GE Areas A1, A2, A3, and B4 with grade C- (CR) or better. Possible Instructional Methods: On-ground. Grading: A-F or CR/NC (student choice). Breadth Area(s) Satisfied: GE-UD-C - Upper Division Arts or Humanities, Overlay - Diversity Course Typically Offered: Variable Intermittently
Student Learning Outcomes - Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
- Demonstrate (a) an ability to analyze selected passages from literary texts and (b) an ability to use such analyses both to illuminate and complicate a reading of the texts in which these passages occur.
- Take various critical approaches to fiction, literary nonfiction, drama, and/or poetry by ethnic American women writers.
- Understand the historical and social contexts affecting cultural production of American literature, and the relationships between gender, class, race, and ethnicity within and between ethnic groups and dominant society.
- Achieve a working knowledge of the histories, traditions, heterogeneity, and intersections of various ethnic groups in the U.S. as they are manifested in literature by women.
- Express their interpretations in cogent, well-organized prose (which may involve drafting, revision, finding library resources, compiling bibliographies, applying research).
UD-C. Upper-division Arts or Humanities Learning Outcomes
- demonstrate an understanding of and ability to apply the principles, methodologies, value systems, and thought processes employed in the arts and humanities;
- analyze cultural production as an expression of, or reflection upon, what it means to be human; and
- demonstrate how the perspectives of the arts and humanities are used by informed, engaged, and reflective citizens to benefit local and global communities.
Diversity Overlay Learning Outcomes
- describe the histories and/or experiences of one or more U. S. cultural groups and the resilience and agency of group members;
- identify structures of oppression and the diverse efforts and strategies used by groups to combat the effects of oppressive structures;
- analyze the intersection of the categories of race and gender as they affect cultural group members’ lived realities and/or as they are embodied in personal and collective identities;
- recognize the way that multiple differences (including, for example, gender, class, sexuality, religion, disability, immigration status, gender expression, color/phenotype, racial mixture, linguistic expression, and/or age) within cultural groups complicate individual and group identities.
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