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Course, academic year 2023/2024
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British Literature of the African and Asian Diaspora - AAALD001AE
Title: British Literature of the African and Asian Diaspora
Guaranteed by: Department of Anglophone Literatures and Cultures (21-UALK)
Faculty: Faculty of Arts
Actual: from 2021
Semester: winter
Points: 0
E-Credits: 5
Examination process: winter s.:
Hours per week, examination: winter s.:0/2, Ex [HT]
Capacity: unknown / unknown (5)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
Key competences:  
State of the course: taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: full-time
Teaching methods: full-time
Level:  
Is provided by: AAALD001A
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
enabled for web enrollment
Guarantor: PhDr. Soňa Nováková, CSc.
Class: Exchange - 09.2 General and Comparative Literature
Exchange - 14.7 Anthropology
Files Comments Added by
download DiasporaSYLL-WS2023.doc WS 2023 PhDr. Soňa Nováková, CSc.
Annotation
Last update: Mgr. Helena Znojemská, Ph.D. (20.09.2021)
N.B.:
THIS CODE WAS CREATED SPECIFICALLY FOR ERASMUS STUDENTS who need a grade for this course.
The course is only open to DALC incoming MA Erasmus students.

OBJECTIVES
The course focuses on readings of texts exemplifying multicultural Britain and their re-narration of post-colonial
experiences of exile and otherness. A brief excursion into the problematics of contemporary theoretical
approaches will be followed by analyses of poems and novels by contemporary writers of Afro-Caribbean, African
and Asian origin settled in and writing from Britain. Attention will be paid especially to the ways in which this body
of writing can expand our understanding of the complex negotiations of identity: the possible shifts in identity that
occur in relation to migration, the diasporic experience and the workings of the politics of inclusion and exclusion
that erase and inscribe difference. Further issues for discussion and analysis include the role of language, memory
and history, family and home, gender construction, oral and literary traditions. Discussions of primary texts will be
supplemented by theoretical and critical readings exemplifying the range of contemporary (post-colonial)
approaches.

MATERIAL
novels: Hanif Kureishi – The Buddha of Suburbia

Sam Selvon – The Lonely Londoners

Caryl Phillips - The Final Passage

Salman Rushdie – from The Satanic Verses

Zadie Smith – White Teeth

or Bernardine Evaristo - The Emperor's Babe

(Please, note that the list of readings is subject to change. Consult the latest syllabus below. All material, except the
long novels, is available on moodle.)

Short selections from the prose and poetry of Wole Soyinka, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Jackie Kay, Grace Nichols,
Fred D'Aguiar, Merle Collins, Derek Walcott, Amryl Johnson, Benjamin Zephaniah, James Berry, Sujata Bhatt,
David Dabydeen etc. Theoretical texts include selections from the works of Homi Bhabha, Avtar Brah, G. Spivak,
etc.

ASSESSMENT
Credit requirements include active participation, one oral presentation or an essay based on a primary text
(conditions for the submission of this essay are listed in the course syllabus below.)
 
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