Dec 03, 2024  
2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog

UISA 183D - Introduction to Caribbean Literature

Course Cross-listed with ENG 154D  
3 credit(s) High Impact Practice: Diversity
 This course introduces students to major authors, texts, and themes in Caribbean literature. Special attention is paid to the ideas interrogated in Caribbean Literature (e.g., colonial legacies, hybridity, creolization.) and the genres (poetry, prose, and fiction) in which those ideas are communicated. The Caribbean is synonymous with multiplicity. It is a region of different races, ethnicities, cultures, and languages because it has been shaped by “New World” colonialism, slavery, and indentured servitude. Thus, it is a site of trauma but also of adaptation, innovation, and resistance. We will probe what it means to be from this region and to be part of the Caribbean diaspora. How do scholars and artist confront colonial legacies? How do they wrestle with the Caribbean as a site of inclusion and exclusion? What methods or techniques do they use to redefine and better represent their identities? Counts as a “D” diversity course in UIS.


Click here for Fall 2024 course scheduling information.

Click here for Spring 2025 course scheduling information.