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21L.501 The American Novel, Fall 2002

Author(s)
Kelley, Wyn
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Download21l-501-fall-2002/contents/index.htm (27.70Kb)
Alternative title
The American Novel
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Abstract
The theme for this class is "American Revolution." We will read authors who record, on the one hand, the failures of the American revolution, with its dream of democracy and freedom for all, and on the other hand the potential for narrative to reenact that revolution successfully. In different ways, these authors overturn traditional or unethical authority through their literary innovations. Although certain classic American historical, political, and cultural issues will be at the center of our study--democracy, slavery, gender equity, social reform--we will concern ourselves primarily with literary strategies, with language and its uses. Essays will pursue close readings of the texts and develop students' abilities to think creatively and critically about fictional works.
Date issued
2002-12
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/80321
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Literature Section; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Foreign Languages and Linguistics
Other identifiers
21L.501-Fall2002
local: 21L.501
local: IMSCP-MD5-90b548adaa80e50fd199b3b6c0836f2b
Keywords
American novel, democracy, slavery, democracy, slavery, gender equity, social reform, literary strategies, William Blake, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe, William Wells Brown, Sarah Orne Jewett, William Faulkner, Toni Morrison, American fiction

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