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American Literature 1865-Present (Bodelson)

  • Page ID
    310648
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    About this period of American Literature

    “America is woven of many strands…Our fate is to become one, and yet many – This is not prophecy, but description.” These are the words of a nameless narrator in the last chapter of Ralph Ellison’s landmark 1952 novel,  Invisible Man. In the novel, the narrator recounts his struggles as an ambitious young black man seeking identity in early twentieth century America. His story describes an impressively diverse America, a place where many races, beliefs, and distinct perspectives intermix. This diversity often leads to conflict, and the narrator’s own encounters with discrimination and violence vividly demonstrate this. Time and time again, his attempts to find a meaningful, fulfilling life are disrupted and discouraged. Nonetheless, at the novel’s end, the wiser, warier hero remains committed to finding his own place in an immensely diverse America.

    Like America itself, American literature is distinct and diverse. Perhaps this is especially true of American literature since 1865, when the Civil War ended. At this moment, America became a new nation, more truly a land of promise, innovation, and equal opportunity. And American literature flourished along with it, chronicling the tragedies, the transformations, and the triumphs.

    For the last 150 years, American literature has offered brilliant stories, fearless language experiments, astute social criticism, comic philosophizing, and more. These writings are the focus of this course. We will read famous authors and major works from the late 19th, the 20th, and the 21st centuries. Emphasis will be on reading carefully, thinking critically, and sharing well developed, clearly expressed interpretations. Assignments will highlight the connection between famous works and the major historical, cultural, geographical, and political environments from which they emerged.


    This page titled American Literature 1865-Present (Bodelson) is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Amery Bodelson.