LHCS 01:595:240: Latino Literature and Culture (Course number and name change-this course replaces 01:595:267 Latino Literature)

Similar documents
Introduction to Chicano/Hispano/Mexicano Studies CHMS 201 The Chicano Experience in the United States AMST 251 Course Proposal

ENGL 3347: African American Short Fiction

SYLLABUS FOR HISTORY 4362 FORMERLY HISTORY 4353 THE HISTORY OF MEXICAN CULTURE FALL, 2015

UNITED STATES SOCIAL HISTORY: CULTURAL PLURALISM IN AMERICA El Camino College - History 32 Spring 2009 Dr. Christina Gold

COMMUNICATION AND JOURNALISM Introduction to Communication Spring 2010

Bachelor of Arts in Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies

EDELINA M. BURCIAGA 3151 Social Science Plaza Irvine, CA

Centro Teaching Guide

Language Arts: ( ) Instructional Syllabus. Teachers: T. Beard address

Foreign Languages. Foreign Languages, General

Literature and the Language Arts Experiencing Literature

Course Title: Health and Human Rights: an Interdisciplinary Approach; TSPH272/TPOS272

MANAGERIAL LEADERSHIP

correlated to the Nebraska Reading/Writing Standards Grades 9-12

Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes Gold 2000 Correlated to Nebraska Reading/Writing Standards, (Grade 9)

Mrs. Esther O. Garcia. Course: AP Spanish literature

INTRODUCTION TO CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY ANT 2410 FALL 2015

Popular Music and Youth Culture DBQ

AMLA 600: Second Language and Immersion Methodologies Summer 2015 Concordia College/Concordia Language Villages Dr. Paul J. Hoff

EDUCATING TEACHERS FOR CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY: A MODEL FOR ALL TEACHERS

Course Specification

Psychology 102- Understanding Human Behavior Fall 2011 MWF am 105 Chambliss

Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes, Platinum 2000 Correlated to Nebraska Reading/Writing Standards (Grade 10)

Indigenous Thought in Latin American Philosophy (Phil 607) Graduate Seminar Fall 2016, Prof. Alejandro A. Vallega SC 250C, M-W 16:00-17:50

APPLIED RURAL SOCIOLOGY SOC 474 COURSE SYLLABUS SPRING 2006

HI0163 Sec. 01 Modern Latin America

Content Teaching Methods: Social Studies. Dr. Melinda Butler

Methods: Teaching Language Arts P-8 W EDU &.02. Dr. Jan LaBonty Ed. 309 Office hours: M 1:00-2:00 W 3:00-4:

CURRICULUM VITAE ANNE M. MCGEE

EDUC 2020: FOUNDATIONS OF MULTICULTURAL EDUCATION Spring 2011

International Environmental Policy Spring :374:315:01 Tuesdays, 10:55 am to 1:55 pm, Blake 131

Instructor Experience and Qualifications Professor of Business at NDNU; Over twenty-five years of experience in teaching undergraduate students.

Guide to the Program in Comparative Culture Records, University of California, Irvine AS.014

ACADEMIC POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

TEACHING SECOND LANGUAGE COMPOSITION LING 5331 (3 credits) Course Syllabus

Fashion Design Program Articulation

Study Center in Alicante, Spain

HIST 3300 HISTORIOGRAPHY & METHODS Kristine Wirts

Sociology. M.A. Sociology. About the Program. Academic Regulations. M.A. Sociology with Concentration in Quantitative Methodology.

UC San Diego - WASC Exhibit 7.1 Inventory of Educational Effectiveness Indicators

NUR 150/HDF 150: Human Sexuality University of Rhode Island. Summer Session I (Online)

The Demographic Wave: Rethinking Hispanic AP Trends

Journalism. An interdepartmental program. Objectives. How to Become a Minor. Committee. Requirements for the Minor

Parent Academy. Common Core & PARCC

HISTORY COURSE WORK GUIDE 1. LECTURES, TUTORIALS AND ASSESSMENT 2. GRADES/MARKS SCHEDULE

PUERTO RICO DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION CAGUAS REGION SPECIALIZED BILINGUAL EDUCATION SCHOOL LUIS MUÑOZ IGLESIAS

English 2319 British Literature Heroes, Villains, and Monsters in British Literature

JOSHUA GERALD LEPREE

LEAD 612 Advanced Qualitative Research Fall 2015 Dr. Lea Hubbard Camino Hall 101A

Modern Languages. Introduction. Degrees Offered

Course Syllabus p. 1. Introduction to Web Design AVT 217 Spring 2017 TTh 10:30-1:10, 1:30-4:10 Instructor: Shanshan Cui

SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017

HLTHAGE 3R03: INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH INEQUALITIES Winter 2017

SAN JOSÉ STATE UNIVERSITY URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING DEPARTMENT URBP 236 URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING POLICY ANALYSIS: TOOLS AND METHODS SPRING 2016

Reaching the Hispanic Market The Arbonne Hispanic Initiative

BME 198A: SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT I Biomedical, Chemical, and Materials Engineering Department College of Engineering, San José State University

Arizona s English Language Arts Standards th Grade ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION HIGH ACADEMIC STANDARDS FOR STUDENTS

ANT 2000: Intro to Anthropology Room #RDB 1100 (Law Bldg) Mon. & Wed. 2:00 4:45 p.m. Summer B 2012 (June 25 Aug. 8)

CMST 2060 Public Speaking

AP English Language and Composition Instructor: Jason Flanagan Room 210, A Office: 210, 3B

disadvantage research and research research

African American Studies Program Self-Study. Professor of History. October 9, 2015

LIT Novel Unit. Spring Semester 2008

HIS 317L7/AFR 317C: UNITED STATES AND AFRICA Unique # &39210 T&TH PM.

Bergen Community College School of Arts, Humanities, & Wellness Department of History & Geography. Course Syllabus

Grade 11 Language Arts (2 Semester Course) CURRICULUM. Course Description ENGLISH 11 (2 Semester Course) Duration: 2 Semesters Prerequisite: None

Instructor: Michael Schuster Office Alder Bldg Room 1000 Mon-Thurs: 10:35 am 11:10 am Phone:

Introduction to Caribbean History

Grade 4. Common Core Adoption Process. (Unpacked Standards)

Philosophy in Literature: Italo Calvino (Phil. 331) Fall 2014, M and W 12:00-13:50 p.m.; 103 PETR. Professor Alejandro A. Vallega.

95723 Managing Disruptive Technologies

MYP Language A Course Outline Year 3

MGMT 479 (Hybrid) Strategic Management

English, Composition and Literature

Classroom Assessment Techniques (CATs; Angelo & Cross, 1993)

THE APPROVED LIST OF HUMANITIES-SOCIAL SCIENCES COURSES FOR ENGINEERING DEGREES

Oakland Unified School District English/ Language Arts Course Syllabus

Assessment System for M.S. in Health Professions Education (rev. 4/2011)

CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205

Reading Grammar Section and Lesson Writing Chapter and Lesson Identify a purpose for reading W1-LO; W2- LO; W3- LO; W4- LO; W5-

Undergraduate Programs INTERNATIONAL LANGUAGE STUDIES. BA: Spanish Studies 33. BA: Language for International Trade 50

Approaches to Teaching Second Language Writing Brian PALTRIDGE, The University of Sydney

ABOUT THIS COURSE. Discuss and make arguments (both orally and in writing) about literary works with your peers and instructor

MIGUEL ANGEL PILLADO

STA2023 Introduction to Statistics (Hybrid) Spring 2013

Albright College Reading, PA Tentative Syllabus

Sociology and Anthropology

Office: Colson 228 Office Hours: By appointment

words or ideas without acknowledging their source and having someone write your work. If you feel that you need help with your writing outside class,

African American Studies Program Self-Study. Professor of History. October 8, 2010

History. 344 History. Program Student Learning Outcomes. Faculty and Offices. Degrees Awarded. A.A. Degree: History. College Requirements

Master Program: Strategic Management. Master s Thesis a roadmap to success. Innsbruck University School of Management

TROY UNIVERSITY MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DEGREE PROGRAM

CEEF 6306 Lifespan Development New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary

American Literature: Major Authors Epistemology: Religion, Nature, and Democracy English 2304 Mr. Jeffrey Bilbro MWF

SYD 4700: Race and Minority Group Relations

Syllabus for GBIB 634 Wisdom Literature 3 Credit hours Spring 2014

Introduction to Psychology

Writing for the AP U.S. History Exam

Demography and Population Geography with GISc GEH 320/GEP 620 (H81) / PHE 718 / EES80500 Syllabus

Transcription:

RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF LATINO AND HISPANIC CARIBBEAN STUDIES LHCS 01:595:240: Latino Literature and Culture (Course number and name change-this course replaces 01:595:267 Latino Literature) Course description This course proposes a definition of Latino literature and culture by reviewing some of the canonical texts produced by Mexican American, Chicano and Hispanic Caribbean Diasporic writers from the 1960s until 2010. The course begins with a working definition of Latino Studies, using foundational works by Juan Flores, Román de la Campa and Clara Rodríguez. Then we will focus on the close-reading of a selection of well-known texts from the Chicano tradition (Tomás Rivera, Sandra Cisneros, Gloria Anzaldúa, and Richard Rodríguez), and a selection of Nuyorican, Dominican American and Cuban American texts (Piri Thomas, Pedro Pietri, Tato Laviera, Lourdes Casal, Gustavo Pérez Firmat, Cristina García, Junot Díaz, Julia Alvarez and Sonia Rivera Valdés). Some of the topics addressed in class will be: conceptualizations of the border and hybrid identities, mestizaje, indigeneity, la raza and racialization, Spanglish and the limits of transculturation, the transformation of Latino gender and sexuality, and the subversion of internal colonialism in the creation of a new notion of American identity. We will also see clips from the following films/programs: Before Night Falls, Selena, Ugly Betty and Quinceañera. Course description for Catalog: Survey of Latino/a literary voices drawn from the Mexican, Puerto Rican, Dominican, Cuban and other Latin American migrations to the U.S. Discussion of exile, resistance and assimilation; political presence and identity formation; race, ethnicity, gender and sexuality; and examination of literary modes and genres (autobiography, poetry, novel, film, music). Requirements: Credit not given for both this course and American Studies 01:050:240. Course Structure: Students will read approximately 50-120 pages per class and write brief commentaries on some primary texts. Even though the course is organized thematically, a chronological and geographical approach will also inform class discussions. Each primary text will be introduced through a brief lecture, followed by group discussion. Texts: Most readings available on Sakai, electronic reserve. The following books are also required readings and are available at the Rutgers Library or at amazon.com, NJ Books and/or www.barnesandnoble.com: Tomás Rivera, y no se lo tragó la tierra/ and the Earth did not Devour Him. ISBN- 13: 978-1558850835. $10.17

Sandra Cisneros, House on Mango Street. ISBN-13: 9780679734772 $9.85 Richard Rodríguez, Hunger of Memory. ISBN-13: 9780553272932 $6.99 Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets. ISBN-13: 9780679781424 $12.95 Cristina García, Dreaming in Cuban. ISBN-13: 9780345381439 $13.95 Junot Díaz, The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. ISBN-13: 9781594489587 $17.45 Department Learning Goals: 1. Be familiar with several of the disciplines that comprise the field of Latino and/or Caribbean studies, including but not limited to: anthropology, art history, cinema studies, education, geography, history, literature, media studies, music, philosophy, political science, sociology, and women s and gender studies. 2. Develop critical thinking skills and the ability to speak and write clearly and analytically. 3. Employ different research methodologies and interdisciplinary approaches in the humanities and/or social sciences, demonstrating proficiency in one or more of the following areas: historical, political, sociological, anthropological, environmental, philosophical, literary, visual, cinematic, musical, and/or performative analysis. 4. Develop multi- and inter-cultural competence and sensitivity to issues particular to Latino and/or Caribbean experience(s). 5. Conduct individual research to formulate rigorous and convincing arguments in the field of Latino and/or Caribbean studies; honors students will perform and present original research. Course Learning goals: 1. Students will learn what is Latino literature, and they will learn to distinguish between Hispanic Caribbean and Chicano literature. 2. Course includes a historical contextualization of Chicano and Hispanic Caribbean cultures in the U.S. and addresses key topics and questions that distinguish Chicano and Hispanic Caribbean cultural expressions, such as conceptualizations of the border and hybrid identities; mestizaje, indigeneity, la raza and racialization; Spanglish and the limits of transculturation; the transformation of Latino gender and sexuality; and the subversion of internal colonialism in the creation of a new notion of American identity. 3. The course will also teach students how to conduct discursive literary analysis by working on their close-reading skills. 4. Students will also learn writing skills, through essay exams written in class, workshops conducted during class time to work on peer-editing of their essays, and by writing and re-writing three short reflexiones on the primary texts analyzed in class.

5. The course will also cover a basic chronology of the immigration and incorporation of Latino populations into the United States. 6. Students will learn to distinguish between sociological and historical studies of Latino populations from the theoretical and discursive analysis of the cultural manifestations about or produced by Latinos in the U.S. This fulfills the Arts and Humanities requirements of the SAS Core curriculum (AHo). Evaluation: Class Attendance and Participation 20% 3 reflexiones or 2-3 pages reaction papers 30% Midterm 10% 2 essay exams written in class 20% Pop quizzes 10% Partial Exam on the day of the final exam 10% Requirements: 1. Three brief reflexiones (2-3 pages, double spaced) written in English and typed. Each reflexión will be a commentary of the main topic and discursive strategy developed in one of the primary texts. If a rewrite is needed, the student must complete the revision of each reflexión before the deadline for the next written exercise, or the rewrite will not be graded. 2. One midterm will be administered in class. 3. Two essay exams (open-book exercises) will be administered in class. 4. One partial test will be administered on the day of the final exam. 5. There will be weekly pop quizzes on the assigned reading. 6. Attendance and participation are expected. Students should come to each class having read the assigned texts and ready to participate in the discussion. Participation will be graded based on attendance, active intervention in class, quizzes, and preparation of short assignments that will be presented in class (such as oral reports on some of the critical readings, as well as on some of the primary literary and audiovisual materials studied in the course). Participation grade will be lowered 10% after 3 absences with no written medical excuse. Three late arrivals are equivalent to one absence. 7. Grade scale for the department is the following: A = 93 100; B+ = 89 92; B = 81 88; C+ = 77 80; C = 70 76; D = 65 69; F= 64 and below. 8. Papers, quizzes, assignments and exams should be completed by the dates announced in the syllabus. There will be no make-ups for any of the class assignments, and in case of illness students must provide a written medical excuse to request any extensions or make-ups. 9. The department has a writing tutor to help our students in writing their class papers. Please go to the department s webpage and locate the contact information under the link for LHCS Writing Tutor. For more information see the following link: http://latcar.rutgers.edu/writingtutor.html

10. Plagiarism is not allowed in class. If a student uses any ideas from another person without properly acknowledging the sources used, the evaluation of her/his work will be suspended and his case will be referred to the University s administration. Plagiarism is understood as follows: Plagiarism is the representation of the words or ideas of another as one's own in any academic exercise. To avoid plagiarism, every direct quotation must be identified by quotation marks or by appropriate indentation and must be properly identified by using parenthetical references that include the author s last name and the page number of the essay or chapter quoted, as well as by including a list of works cited at the end of the text. Acknowledgment is required when material from another source stored in print, electronic, or other medium is paraphrased or summarized in whole or in part in one's own words. To acknowledge a paraphrase properly, one might state: "to paraphrase Plato's comment..." and conclude with a parenthetical reference. A footnote [or endnote] acknowledging only a directly quoted statement does not suffice to notify the reader of any preceding or succeeding paraphrased material. Information which is common knowledge, such as names of leaders of prominent nations, basic scientific laws, etc. need not be referenced; however, all facts or information obtained in reading or research that are not common knowledge among students in the course must be acknowledged. In addition to materials specifically cited in the text, only materials that contribute to one's general understanding of the subject may be acknowledged in the bibliography. Plagiarism can, in some cases, be a subtle issue. Any questions about what constitutes plagiarism should be discussed with the faculty member. For more information, see the following websites: http://latcar.rutgers.edu/academichonesty.html http://wp.rutgers.edu/courses/201/plagiarism_policy/plagiarism_defined.html Course Syllabus: Class # 1: What is Latino studies and Latino literature Discuss sillabus. READ BEFORE FIRST CLASS!! What it Means to be Latino: Rubén Martínez, At the Crossroads: Latinos in the New Millenium Otto Santa Ana, Is There Such Thing as Latino Identity? Clara Rodríguez, What it Means to Be Latino http://www.pbs.org/americanfamily/latino.html Class # 2 What is Latino studies and Latino literature Juan Flores, Latino Studies: New Contexts, New Concepts. (sakai) Tomás Rivera,. Y no se los tragó la tierra. (1971)

Class # 3 Tomás Rivera,. Y no se los tragó la tierra. (1971) Class # 4 Cisneros, House on Mango Street (1984) Reflexión # 1 Class # 5 Cisneros, House on Mango Street (1984) Silvio Torres Saillant, The Political Roots of Chicano Discourse (sakai) Class # 6 First Essay Exam in Class Class # 7 Selena-Film in class Frances Aparicio, Jennifer as Selena: Rethinking Latinidad in Media and Popular Culture (sakai) Class # 8 Selena: Film in class Frances Negrón Muntaner, Jennifer s Butt Boricua Pop. (sakai) Class # 9 Anzaldúa, Borderlands-selections pp. 1-23; 54-98.(sakai) Brenda Watts, Aztlán as Palimsest: From Chicano Nationalism Toward Transnational Feminism in Anzaldúa s Borderlands (sakai) Class # 10 Richard Rodríguez, Hunger of Memory (Prologue, Aria, The Achievement of Desire) Workshop: Editing the First Essay Exam Class # 11 Richard Rodríguez, Hunger of Memory (Credo, Complexion) Henry Staten, Ethnic Authenticity, Class, and Autobiography: The Case of Hunger of Memory (sakai) Class # 12 Richard Rodríguez, Hunger of Memory (Profession, Mr. Secrets) Rewrite First Essay DUE Class # 13 Caribbean Diasporas in New York Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, Chapters 1-10. Class # 14

MIDTERM EXAM Class # 15 Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, Chapters 11-19. Arnaldo Cruz, What a Tangled Web: Masculinity, Abjection, and the Foundations of Puerto Rican Literature in the United States. Differences 8 (1996). (sakai) Reflexión #2 Class # 16 Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, Chapters 20-35. Class # 17 Nuyorican Poets Pedro Pietri, Puerto Rican Obituary (sakai) Tato Laviera, Amerícan (sakai) Tato Laviera, selection of poems (sakai) Sandra Maria Esteves (sakai) Ana Celia Zentella, Hows and Whys of Spanglish Growing Up Bilingual. (sakai) Class # 18 Beyond New York Ricans Spanglish Ilan Stavans, Introduction. Spanglish. Lourdes Casal, For Ana Ana Veldford (sakai) Julia Alvarez- My English, On losing the Native tongue (sakai) Gustavo Pérez Firmat, Introduction, Tongue Ties (sakai) Class # 19 Cristina García, Dreaming in Cuban Class # 20 Second Essay EXAM in class Class # 21 Cristina García, Dreaming in Cuban Raphael Dalleo, How Cristina García Lost Her Accent and Other Latina Conversations. (sakai) Class # 22 Sexiles: Failed patriarcal masculinities Luis Rafael Sánchez, Jum! (Spanish version) (sakai) Luis Rafael Sánchez, Hum! (English version (sakai) Junot Díaz, Drown How to to Date (sakai) Reinaldo Arenas, Selections Before Night Falls. (sakai) Clip: Before Night Falls Workhop: Editing the Second Essay Exam

Class # 23 Beyond your wildest desires: Beyond Hetero/Homonormativities: Sonia Rivera Valdés, The Forbidden Stories of Marta Veneranda Five Windows on the Same Side Lunacy The Fifth River Class # 24 Junot Diaz, The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, pp. 1-100. Rewrite Second Essay DUE Class # 25 Junot Diaz, The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, pp. 101-200. Clip from Ugly Betty Class # 26 Junot Diaz, The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, pp. 200-335. Reflexión #3 Class # 27 Quinceañera Class # 28 Quinceañera Review for Second Midterm Second partial exam will be administered on the day assigned by the registrar for the final exam