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Course, academic year 2023/2024
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Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in American History and Literature - JTM255
Title: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in American History and Literature
Czech title: Rasa, etnicita a gender v americké historii a literatuře
Guaranteed by: Department of North American Studies (23-KAS)
Faculty: Faculty of Social Sciences
Actual: from 2023
Semester: winter
E-Credits: 6
Examination process: winter s.:
Hours per week, examination: winter s.:1/1, Ex [HT]
Capacity: unknown / unknown (20)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
State of the course: not taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: full-time
Teaching methods: full-time
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
enabled for web enrollment
priority enrollment if the course is part of the study plan
Guarantor: David Lee Robbins, Ph.D.
Mgr. Marcela Janíčková
Class: Courses for incoming students
Examination dates   Schedule   Noticeboard   
Annotation -
Last update: PhDr. Jan Hornát, Ph.D. (12.06.2019)
Annotation:
An overview of American cultural history from the perspective of its racial and ethnic minorities. The course examines the notions of ethnicity, cultural diversity, and the "other" in the U.S. present and past. It focuses on the problematic struggle of various disempowered, marginalized "minorities" in American society to gain recognition as full and equal members of a society that claims to be a haven for all oppressed from the rest of the world -- a society that prides itself on its openness, pluralism, and equality of opportunity. We shall see that, rather than attacking the hypocrisy of this society, minorities have now and again chosen to appeal to the fairness of the very people who exclude them. It is quite surprising that the speakers of the disempowered have, historically, been the most hopeful, most ardent proponents of the country's ideals. We shall examine the rhetoric of their attack on -- or appeal to? -- the "majority" and the majority's response.


This course is offered as one of the core courses for students of Intercultural Studies in Prague program. The other course JMMZ - Imperial Nations and Subject Peoples: Czechs in the Austrian Empire (17th - 21st ct.) is in many ways comparative: we explore different attitudes to and roles of race and ethnicity in Europe and in the U.S.

All participants of Race, Ethnicity and Gender course are welcome to attend, at their very reasonable expense, four optional trips to interesting locales in the Czech Republic and a four-day trip to Vienna.

Destinations:
Terezin concentration camp and Nazi prison
Kutna hora and Bone Chapel in Sedlec
An overnight trip to Cesky Krumlov, monastery Golden Crown and the medieval castle Maiden Stone
Hiking in the natural preserve Bohemian Paradise
4-day trip to Vienna

Aim of the course
Last update: PhDr. Jan Hornát, Ph.D. (30.10.2019)

The course aims to introduce students to the thoughts and thinking of the United States' most notable public philosophers ddelaing with issues of race, ethnicicty and gender.

Course completion requirements
Last update: PhDr. Jan Hornát, Ph.D. (30.10.2019)

Evaluation is based on 1 comparative essay on a topic discussed with an instructor (6 pages, spacing 1,5, font Times New Roman p.12).

Students are obliged to write a reaction paper based on the reading for each upcoming class.

 

Attendance:

Two absences are permitted. If you are absent more times, you will be asked to write a paper to make up for the class(es) missed.

Literature
Last update: Bc. Jana Poskerová (13.10.2022)

See attached sylabus.

Teaching methods
Last update: Mgr. Marcela Janíčková (14.10.2022)

Instruction solely in the classroom, Hollar building, classroom number 11, on Thursdays, from 17:00 to 18:20. 

Requirements to the exam
Last update: PhDr. Jan Hornát, Ph.D. (07.09.2020)

Grading is based on the Dean's Measure no. 20/2019: https://fsv.cuni.cz/deans-measure-no-20/2019

  • 91% and more   => A
  • 81-90%             => B
  • 71-80%             => C
  • 61-70%             => D
  • 51-60%             => E
  • 0-50%               => F
Syllabus -
Last update: PhDr. Jan Hornát, Ph.D. (12.06.2019)

Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in American History and Literature

 

Course supervisor: David L. Robbins, PhD

Instructors: prof. David Robbins, PhD, Blanka Maderová, PhD, Mgr. Marcela Janíčková,

 

Recommended number of ECTS credits: 6

Class meets once a week for 2 hours (lecture and seminar).

 

 

Grading procedure:

 

Evaluation is based on 1 comparative essay on a topic discussed with an instructor (6 pages, spacing 1,5, font Times New Roman p.12).

Students are obliged to write a reaction paper based on the reading for each upcoming class.

 

Attendance:

Two absences are permitted. If you are absent more times, you will be asked to write a paper to make up for the class(es) missed.

 

 

Course Content:

 

1) Ideological foundations of American society I.

    R.W. Emerson: "Circles"    

     excerpts from A. de Tocqueville: Democracy in America [1835 and 1840]

 

2) Ideological foundations of American society II. --

    R.W. Emerson: "Spiritual Laws", "Politics"

    excerpts from:

    A. de Tocqueville, Democracy in America [1835 and 1840]

    J. H. St. J. de Crevecoeur: Letters from an American Farmer [1782]

    and from the work of J.F. Cooper and B. Franklin

   

 

3) Ideology of the self-made man and of the American dream

    F.S. Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby [1925]

     excerpts from  Autobiography of Frederick Douglass [1845]

   

 

4) Becoming "white American" - European ethnic immigration to the USA in the second half of the 19th    century

    excerpts from:

    Mary Antin, The Promised Land [1912]           

    Jennifer L. Hochschield: Facing up to the American Dream [1995]

     Noel Ignatiev, How the Irish Became White [1995]

 

5) Hispanic immigration

    excerpts from Gloria Anzaldúa, Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza [1987]

 

6) Early American feminist writing

    Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "The Solitude of Self" [1892]

    Charlotte Perkins Gilman, "Yellow Wallpaper" [1899]

    Hegel, Phenomenology of Spirit, chapter Master and Slave [1807]

     Stanton, Seneca Falls Woman's Rights Convention, Declarations and resolves [1848]

     excerpts from Margaret Fuller, Woman in the Nineteenth Century [1845]

 

7) 20th-century American feminism

    excerpts from Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique [1963]

    excerpts from Judith Butler, Gender Trouble [1990]

 

8) Antebellum South, rhetorics employed to justify and oppose slavery and racism;

    traditional, southern rendering of the Reconstruction that became the nation's interpretation in the early

    20th ct

    Eric Foner, Forever Free: The Story of Emancipation and Reconstruction[2006]

    chapter 2: Forever Free

    Kenneth M. Stampp: "The Tragic Legend of Reconstruction" in Reconstruction - An Anthology of

    Revisionist Writings [1967]

 

9) Meanings of freedom for African Americans after the Civil War -- Presidential Reconstruction and         achievements of Congressional Reconstruction

     Foner, Forever Free: The Story of Emancipation and Reconstruction[2006]

     chapter 4: An American Crisis

     chapter 5: The Tocsins of Freedom (with the exception of  p. 134 , paragraph"In 1867 ..." to page 137, 

     paragraph "Hostile contemporaries ...")

                    

10) The "Jim Crow" era as documented in contemporary black writers

    W.E.B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk[1903]

    Cha 1: Of Our Spiritual Strivings

    Cha 3: Of B.T. Washington and Others

    excerpts from B.T. Washington: Up From Slavery [1901]

     poetry of Paul Laurance Dunbar; excerpts from Marcus Garvey

 

11) 20th-century African-American writers I

     James Baldwin, Nobody Knows My Name [1949]

     chapters: "Discovery What It Means to Be an American", "In Search of a Majority"

     excerpts from Richard Wright, Native Son [1940] and  Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man [1952]

     poetry of Langston Hughes

 

12) 20th-century African-American writers II

    Alice Walker, The Color Purple [1982]

 

13) The Civil Rights Movement, Women’s Rights, and Gay Rights Movements of the second half of the    twentieth century; their various rhetorics and manifestations

     M. L. King, "Black Power" in Where Do We Go From Here?" [1967]

     Malcolm X, "The Ballot or the Bullet" [1964]

     excerpts from Stokeley Carmichael, Eldredge Cleaver, Angela Davis, and gay liberation activists;    

     poetry by Maya Angelou

 
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