English/African American & African Studies 3598W: Tuesday, Thursday, 11:15-1:10 Nate Mills: mills175@umn.edu 50C Lind Hall Office Hours: Thursday, 2:30-3:30 African American Literature and Culture II: African American Culture and the Era of the Great Migration Perhaps the most significant event in twentieth-century U.S. history was the gradual yet large-scale migration of African Americans out of the rural south to cities in both the south and the north. Between approximately 1915 and the 1970s, large numbers of African Americans left southern states governed by Jim Crow rule, ordered by white supremacy and racist terror, and plagued by economic decline. This movement fundamentally changed the character of African American culture and politics, as well as the manner in which race and race relations were understood in the United States. For all of American history prior to the Great Migration, most African Americans had been concentrated in the south, lived in rural environments, and worked in agricultural labor. 90% of African Americans lived in the south in 1910; in 1970, only 53% did, and approximately 80% of African Americans in the U.S. lived in cities. This shift from the south to the north and west, and from rural communities to urban environments, is reflected in a variety of ways in twentieth-century African American literature, culture, and politics. In this course, we’ll survey twentieth-century literature and culture by foregrounding four major themes shaped by the Great Migration: attempts to reimagine the culture and experiences of the traditional rural southern black folk from the perspective of modern black life; the influence of anti-racist and anticapitalist modern politics and necessities of literary protest on African American writing; efforts to represent the complexities of whiteness as a racial ideology and identity and to diagnose interracial relations; and the late twentieth-century emergence of African American historical fiction that seeks to understand the continued legacies and traumas of slavery in the present age. Required Texts (Available at UMN Bookstore) Jean Toomer, Cane Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God Richard Wright, Native Son (1940 or “Abridged” Edition) Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man Lorraine Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun and The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka, Dutchman Toni Morrison, Beloved Additional required texts, as well as all course documents and assignments, will be available as electronic files on Canvas. Additional university and department policies that apply to this course can be found in the Additional Classroom Policies document on Canvas. Assignments and Grading Discussion, Participation, Attendance: 10% Micro-Essays: 30% Paper #1: 30% Paper #2: 30% All grades on your individual assignments will be letter grades. For the numerical ranges and equivalents of the letter grades, see the Letter Grades document on Moodle. Discussion, Participation, Attendance This is a discussion-driven course. I’ll expect you to come to each class session not only having completed all the assigned reading, but ready to explore, debate, and work through the reading’s key issues in conversation with your peers. Active participation entails being prepared for each class session (you’ve brought your copy of the readings with you, you’re taking notes as appropriate); speaking in class discussions in an informed, thoughtful, and respectful manner; closely following and responding to the ideas of your classmates; and engaging in any small group work or other class activities. You will earn a B for this portion of your grade provided you participate regularly (at least once a week) and productively in class discussion and in class activities. If you fall below this level of participation, your grade will be lower. However, if you exceed it (for instance, if you participate in discussion frequently and substantially, and consistently demonstrate your dedication to analyzing the readings and bringing up subjects for discussion in class) your grade will be higher. At midterm, I will provide you with an estimate of your final participation grade based on your performance to that point. The ability to contribute to class requires, of course, your attendance in class. You should attend every class meeting on time and remain in class for the duration of the period. You may miss two class meetings, for whatever reason, without penalty. If you have more than 2 absences, your participation grade will be automatically reduced by 1/3 (for example, a C+ to a C, a C to a C-) for each additional absence. 3 or more unexcused absences beyond your first allowed 2 may result in your overall course grade being reduced. 3 unexcused tardies will be counted as one unexcused absence. If you feel that an absence or tardy warrants being excused due to extenuating circumstances, you must arrange to discuss it with me immediately. Please see also the “Makeup Work for Legitimate Absences” policy in the Additional Classroom Policies document. Use your two free absences wisely: outside of rare circumstances, absences are not “excused.” Save your absences in case you find yourself unable to make it to class one day, accidentally miss a class due to changed travel plans, and so on. Micro-Essays At three points during the semester, you will write a 2-page analysis of a specific passage or textual feature from one of the course texts. Further directions and prompts for these essays will be provided. Toward the end of the semester (see course calendar), you will have the option to submit a fourth microessay. If your grade on that micro-essay is higher than your grade for any of the previous three, the lower grade will be replaced with your grade on the fourth essay. At the end of the semester, your three grades will be averaged to determine this component of your final grade. Papers #1 and #2 You will write 2 5-7-page papers (one near midterm and one at the end of the semester) in which you will defend and develop an original argument about an issue or problem raised in the course readings. You will be given a set of topic-based prompts from which you will choose the particular subject and series of questions your argument will engage. Further directions for each paper, as well as a list of topics, will be provided as deadlines approach. Course Policies Plagiarism Plagiarizing an assignment may result in you receiving no credit on that assignment. Additionally, it may cause you to automatically fail the course, and may lead to further punitive action. Please see the “Student Academic Integrity and Scholastic Dishonesty” policy in the Additional Classroom Policies document. Cell Phone and Laptop Use Please put away your phone during class. You may use laptops to take notes and access PDF materials in class, provided your use doesn’t distract you or others from actively participating. Recording Devices You may not use any devices to record any class proceedings, unless you have a documented accommodation that would require it. If you do require such an accommodation, be sure to let me know at the start of the semester. Religious Accommodations If you have to miss class or need to make other arrangements for religious observances, please let me know as soon as possible. Disability Accommodations The University of Minnesota is committed to providing equitable access to learning opportunities for all students. The Disability Resource Center (DRC) is the campus office that collaborates with students who have disabilities to provide and/or arrange reasonable accommodations. If you have, or think you may have, a disability (e.g., mental health, attentional, learning, chronic health, sensory, or physical), please contact the DRC at 612-626-1333 to arrange a confidential discussion regarding equitable access and reasonable accommodations. If you are registered with the DRC and have a current letter requesting reasonable accommodations, please contact your instructor as early in the semester as possible to discuss how the accommodations will be applied in the course. For more information, please see the DRC website: https://diversity.umn.edu/disability/ Sensitive Nature of Course Content As twentieth-century African American literature explores the complexities and full extent of anti-black racism in the United States, the internal workings of racist ideologies and racist stereotypes, and the multiple forms of trauma racism has inflicted on African American life (such as economic marginalization and sexual violence), this course necessarily deals with sensitive and often painful material. The issues it covers are also by no means relegated to the historical past, but continue to shape present-day experiences of all individuals living in the United States. While you will be required to engage with such materially fully and in-depth, you must do with care, thoughtfulness, respect, and particular attentiveness to the perspectives African American literature provides on U.S. history and society. Course Calendar Readings and other assignments are due on the date for which they are listed. Specific page numbers for reading assignments will be provided over the course of the term. 9/3: Introductions, course policies, etc. 9/5: W.E.B. Du Bois, “Of Our Spiritual Strivings” from The Souls of Black Folk (1903); George Schuyler, “The Negro-Art Hokum” (1926); Langston Hughes, “The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain” (1926) After Migration: Looking Back at the South and the African American Folk 9/10: Jean Toomer, Cane (1923) 9/12: Continue Toomer MICRO-ESSAY ONE ASSIGNED 9/17: Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937) 9/19: Continue Hurston; MICRO-ESSAY ONE DUE 9/24: Continue Hurston 9/26: Margaret Walker, from For My People (1940): “For My People,” “Southern Song,” “Lineage,” “Molly Means,” “Bad-Man Stagolee,” “Kissie Lee,” “Big John Henry.” Literary Protest and Modern Politics in the Urban North 10/1: Richard Wright, Native Son (1940) 10/3: Continue Wright MICRO-ESSAY TWO ASSIGNED 10/8: Continue Wright 10/10: Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man (1952) MICRO-ESSAY TWO DUE 10/15: Continue Ellison PAPER #1 ASSIGNED 10/17: Continue Ellison 10/22: Lorraine Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun (1959) 10/24: Continue Hansberry 10/29: In-class viewing: Sorry to Bother You (2018, dir. Boots Riley) 10/31: Finish viewing / discuss PAPER #1 DUE The Ways of White Folks and The Ethics of Race Relations 11/5: Langston Hughes, from The Ways of White Folks (1934): “Cora Unashamed,” “The Blues I’m Playing” 11/7: NO CLASS 11/12 Lorraine Hansberry, The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window (1964) 11/14 LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka), Dutchman (1964) MICRO-ESSAY 3 ASSIGNED 11/19: In-class viewing: Get Out (2017, dir. Jordan Peele) 11/21: Finish viewing / discuss MICRO-ESSAY 3 DUE 11/26: TBA 11/28 – THANKSGIVING BREAK - NO CLASS OPTIONAL REWRITE OF PAPER #1 DUE THIS WEEK Seeking the African American Past Within the Present 12/3: Toni Morrison, Beloved (1987) OPTIONAL MICRO-ESSAY (#4) ASSIGNED 12/5: Continue Morrison 12/10: Finish Morrison; Ta-Nehisi Coates, “The Case for Reparations” (2014) OPTIONAL MICROESSAY (#4) DUE PAPER #2 DUE DURING EXAM WEEK (TBA)