ENGL 110 - Multicultural Lit Non-Mjrs

Description

Hours: Three hours lecture per week Description: Introduction to critical approaches to the study of Black, Chicana/o, Asian American and Pacific Islander, and Native American and Indigenous literary, cultural, and intellectual traditions. Examines how texts interrogate concepts of race, power, access, systemic inequality, and structural violence within the United States. Emphasizes histories of artistic, social, and political movements; racialized lived experiences; citizenship, belonging, resistance, and resilience; and access to education and economic and social mobility.

Meeting Information

Info current as 5/11/2024
Days Times Room Meeting Dates Instructor
TH  6:00 PM  -  8:50 PM  Bell Tower 1688 8/23/2014 - 12/15/2014 Bob Mayberry

Status: Closed
Class Number: 3762
Session: Regular Academic Session
Units: 3.00
Class Components: Lecture
Career: Undergraduate
Dates: 8/23/2014 - 12/15/2014
Grading: Letter Grade

Class Availability

Information below is 24 hours old.
Enrollment Total: 30
Available Seats: 0
Wait List Capacity: 10
Wait List Total: 0

Textbook / Other Materials

Status: Required
ISBN: 978-1451673319
Title: Fahrenheit 451
Publisher: Simon&Schuster
Author: Bradbury, Ray

Status: Required
ISBN: 978-0385333481
Title: Cat's Cradle
Publisher: Dell
Author: Vonnegut, Kurt

Status: Required
ISBN: 978-1590513132
Title: The Unit
Publisher: Other Press
Author: Holmqvist, Ninni

Status: Required
ISBN: 978-0385490818
Title: Handmaid's Tale
Publisher: Anchor
Author: Atwood, Margaret

Status: Required
ISBN: 978-0385474542
Title: Things Fall Apart
Publisher: Anchor
Author: Achebe, Chinua

Status: Required
ISBN: 978-1-62652-760-7
Title: Isolation
Publisher: Mill City Press
Author: Stephenson, Denise

Status: Required
ISBN: 978-1566890649
Title: Tropic of Orange
Publisher: Coffee House Press
Author: Karen Yamashita

More textbook information including prices

Enrollment Information

  • Lower Division
  • Repeat 2 times up to 6 units.
  • Repeatable by topic.
  • C2: Literature Courses
  • C3B: Multicultural

Notes

TOPIC: Distopian Fiction