English 250: Black Women Writers

Saturdays, 12:10-2:40pm

Professor Frank Roberts

Department of English

Hunter College, City University of New York

Office Hours: By Appointment

E:

Course Blog:

Course Description:

This seminar course will focus on the politics and poetics of twentieth century black feminist thought and practice. More specifically, in this course we will consider how black women writers in the U.S. have troubled the waters of what constitutes "theory," what constitutes "activism," and ultimately what constitutes feminism. Though literature will be our primary object of analysis, we will go astray many times by engaging black feminism in non-literary genres (such as in music and art). Central themes this semester will include: the dialogic nature of black women's fiction; sexual conservation and the politics of black respectability; subaltern knowledge and "theory from below"; variations in literary form (fiction, poetry, personal essays, etc.), intersectionality and the quadrilateral nature of oppression, and the black female body as a site of ideological and political warfare.

Authors whose work we will engage will include Zora Neale Hurston, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, Lynn Nottage, Audre Lorde, June Jordan, Cheryle Clarke, Hortense Spillers, Patricia Hill Collins, Tricia Rose, Joan Morgan, bell hooks, Kimberle Williams Crenshaw and Alexis Pauline Gumbs.

Required Texts:

(Will be available at Hunter College Bookstore)

  • Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment
  • Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God
  • Ntozake Shange, For colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf
  • Toni Morrison, Beloved
  • Toni Morrison, Home
  • Lynn Nottage, Intimate Apparel
  • Joan Morgan, When Chickenheads Come Home to Roost: My Life as a Hip Hop Feminist

Requirements

  • Active Participation in every session
  • Weekly Response Papers (2 pages each, single spaced, 1500 words each)
  • 1 In-class presentation (Approximately 25 minutes)
  • 3 Discussion questions per class (these questions must be printed and submitted at the beginning of each class)

Grading Breakdown:

50%: Response Papers

25%: Active Participation

25%: In-Class Presentation + Quality of Weekly Discussion Questions

Classroom behavior:

Student participation is required. Arrive to class prepared to work. Students should be respectful of the professor and their classmates by talking when called upon, not disrupting classmates or the instructor, addressing issues and scholarship, and referring to readings and academic arguments to support their statements. The professor encourages students to think critically and use scholarly analysis in their oral and written assessments. Students should come to class prepared, having read the readings and completed assignments on time. Students should be punctual and responsible.

Students are expected to stay awake in class. Do not use cell phones or laptops during class. All cell phones must be turned off and put away during quizzes and examinations. Other electronic devices should be switched off during class, unless a specific exception is made by the professor.

Attendance:

Students are expected to be in attendance to every session. You can be granted up to one absence without having your grade effected. If you miss two of more classes you will be categorically incapable of scoring an “A” grade in this course:

  • 2 or more absences = Your overall grade will be scored from an B+ (meaning the highest grade you can receive in this course is a B+).
  • 3 or more absences= Your overall grade will be scored from a C+ (meaning the highest grade you can receive in this course is a B+).
  • 4 or more absences= Automatic failure (Your start-grade will begin at “D”).

Statement of College Policy on Plagiarism:

Plagiarism is the presentation of someone else’s ideas, words, or artistic, scientific, or technical work as one’s own creation. Using the ideas or work of another is permissible only when the original author is identified. Paraphrasing and summarizing, as well as direct quotation, require the citation of original sources. Plagiarism may be intentional or unintentional. Lack of dishonest intent does not necessarily absolve a student of responsibility for plagiarism. PLAGIARISM WILL INCURE AN F GRADE.

It is the student’s responsibility to recognize the difference between statements that are common knowledge (which do not require documentation) and restatements of the ideas of others. Paraphrasing, summaries, and direct quotations are acceptable forms of restatement, as long as the source is cited. Students who are unsure of how and when to provide documentation are advised to consult with their instructors. The Library has free guides designed to help students with problems of documentation.

An asterisk * indicates that the reading is available on blackboard and/or the course blog.

A pound sign (#) indicates that there will be a student presentation paired with the reading.

Part I: Black Women (W)righting Theory

September 8: Towards a Black Feminist Criticism

Required Readings:

  • Bell Hooks, Feminism Is For Everybody: Passionate Politics
  • Kimberle Crenshaw, "Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color" *
  • Bell Hooks, "Theory as Liberatory Practice" *
  • Combahee River Collective, "A Black Feminist Statement"

September 15: Towards a Black Feminist Criticism

Required Readings:

  • Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment
  • Bell Hooks, "Patriarchy" *

September 22: The Black Female Body as a Site of Ideological Critique

Required Readings:

  • Bell Hooks, "Straightening Our Hair" *
  • Lisa Jones, "The Hair Trade"*
  • Kobena Mercer, "Black Hair/Style Politics" *

In-Class Screening: Chris Rock (Dir, 2008) Good Hair

Part II:

In Search of Our Mother's Gardens

Literature, Poetics And The Fictions of Identity

September 29:

Zora Neale Hurston, Alice Walker, and Politics of Womanist Theory

Required Readings:

  • Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God
  • Zora Neale Hurston, "Art and Such" *
  • Alice Walker, "In Search of Our Mother's Gardens" *

October 6:

Audre Lorde, June Jordan, and the (Lesbian) Politics of Survival

Required Readings:

  • Audre Lorde, Collected Poems (Selections)
  • June Jordan, Collected Poems (Selections) *
  • Sharon Holland, 'WhichMe Will Survive': Audre Lorde, Alice Walker, and Black Feminism"
  • Alexis Pauline Gumbs, "Audre Lorde and the Poetics of Survival"

Part III:

Black Feminist Art, Theater and Performance

October 13: Listening to the Sounds of Black Feminism: Lauryn Hill's Sonic Rage

Required Readings:

  • Hortense Spillers, "Mama's Baby, Papa's Maybe: An American Grammar Book" *

Guest Lecture: La Marr Jurelle Bruce, Yale University

October 20: Material Girls: Black Feminist Stylin(gs)

Required Readings:

  • Zora Neale Hurston: “Characteristics of Negro Expression” *
  • Harryette Mullen, Trimmings
  • Lynn Nottage, Intimate Apparel
  • Harryette Mullen: “African Signs and Spirit Writing” *

Guest Lecture: Chelsea Adewunmi, Princeton University

October 27: Kara Walker and the Art of the Neoslave Narrative

Required Readings:

Sherley Anne Williams, Dessa Rose (Exerpts)

Arlene Keizer, "Gone Astray in the Flesh: Kara Walker, Black Women Writers, and African American Postmemory" *

Kara Walker, Pictures from Another Time (Selections)

November 3:

Required Reading:

  • Ntozake Shange, For colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf

Part IV:

The Fiction of Toni Morrison

November 10:

Required Reading:

  • Toni Morrison, Beloved

November 17:

Required Reading:

  • Toni Morrison, Home

Guest Lecture by John Murillo, Brown University

Part V:

Contemporary Black Feminisms

December 1:
Joan Morgan, When Chickenheads Come Home to Roost: My Life as a Hip Hop Feminist

December 8:

To Be Announced