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COURSE OUTLINE: INTERNATIONAL INDIGENOUS

LITERATURES

Winter 2011

Department: Native Studies (Faculty of Arts)

Course No.: NATV 3130

Section A01: Tue, Thu. 10- 11:15 a.m.

Location: 216 Tier

Instructor: Dr. Renate Eigenbrod

Office: 204 Isbister

Phone: 474 7026

Email:

Office Hours: Tue. 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m

We. 3:30-4:30 p.m

and by appointment

Required Readings

Achebe, Chinua. Things Fall Apart. 1996 (expanded ed. with notes)

Ihimaera, Witi Tama. The Whale Rider. 1987

Pilkington, Doris. Follow The Rabbit Proof Fence. 2001

James Welch, Fool’s Crow. 1986.

Jeannette Armstrong. Slash. 2007 (rev.ed.)

Akiwenzie-Damm, Kateri and Josie Douglas, eds. Skins: Contemporary Indigenous

Writing. American Indian, Inuit. First Nations, Aboriginal, Maori. 2000.

Reference Texts

Maaka, Roger CA and Chris Anderson, eds. The Indigenous Experience: Global

Perspectives, 2006.

DePasquale, Paul, Renate Eigenbrod and Emma LaRocque, eds. Across Cultures/

Across Borders: Native American and Canadian Aboriginal Literatures. 2010.

Course Objectives

This course aims at comparing aesthetic responses to the experience of colonialism, from the classic novel by Ibo author Chinua Achebe Things Fall Apart to a particular focus on well-known Indigenous authors in the settler countries of Canada, the USA, Australia and New Zealand (Aotearoa) as these countries are linked by commonalities of the colonial experience. In lectures, class discussions and student presentations texts will be discussed through postcolonial and Indigenous theories with special emphasis on the continuous importance of Indigenous aesthetic traditions.

As the analysis of texts is central to lectures and class discussions, students are expected to have done the required readings before coming to class.

Evaluation

Attendance/participation………………………………….10%

Mid-Term ………………………………………………. .20 %

2 oral Presentations….. …………. (15% each) 30%

Outline for term paper 10 %

Term Paper (comparative, 13-15 pages) …………………30%

Oral Presentation

At the beginning of the course students will sign up for a topic and a date. There will be approximately half an hour set aside for one presentation. Students are expected to:

follow a clear outline,

speak extemporaneously (rather than read from a paper),

and engage the whole class in a discussion.

One class prior to the presentation, students have to submit a written outline and a list of references to the instructor (who will photocopy the handout for everybody). The presentation will be graded for both, clear delivery and the contribution it makes to the course in terms of textual analysis, literary theory and understanding of the similarites and differences of colonial experiences.

Term Paper and Term paper Outline

The research-based term paper of about 13-15 pages at the end of the course should bring together the main points of a student’s learning experience. A list of comparative topics will be provided later in the course, and students will be asked to choose a topic that differs distinctively from their oral presentation.

Tentative Course Schedule

January 6: Introduction to course

January 11: short stories from Skins

January 13: Introduction to Achebe and his novel

January 18: student presentation on colonalism in Nigeria

January 20: Achebe’s novel

January 25: Introduction to Welch and student presentation on colonialism in the U.S.

January 27: Welch’s novel

February 1: Welch’s novel

February 3: short story by Native American author

February 8: student presentations on Achebe’s and Welch’s novels

February 10: student presentation on colonialism in New Zealand

February 15: Ihimaera’s novel

February 17: Ihimaera’s novel

READING WEEK

March 1: Mid-Term

March 3: presentation on the film Whale Rider (comparison with the novel)

March 8: the gender theme in Indigenous literatures

March 10: AIM and its impacts on Canada

March 15 Armstrong’s novel

March 17: Armstrong’s novel

March 22: viewing of documentary Tthe Spirit of Anna Mae

March 24: student presentation on colonialism in Australia

March 29: Pilkington’s novel

March 31: Pilkington’s novel

April 5: taking the children: Australia and Canada (student presentation)

April 7: Review

Grading Scheme

A + Exceptional 92-100

A Excellent 81- 91

B+ Very Good 75 -80

B Good 69-74

C+ Satisfactory 64-68

C Adequate 57-63

D Marginal 50-56

F Failure 0- 49

Policy on Due Dates for Assignments and Test Dates

As a rule, it is the students' responsibility to submit their assignments in class on or before the due date. Late submissions will only be accepted for health or compassionate reasons; in the first case, a signed medical certificate must be provided. If at all possible, any problems students may have with due dates should be brought to the instructor's attention before the respective date. This is particularly important in case there is a conflict with the date for an oral presentation and the mid-term test. If students cannot make those dates for health reasons, they have to provide a doctor’s note.

Academic Dishonesty

The wording below is taken from the University of Manitoba Undergraduate Calendar 2010-2011, p. 27-28.

General Academic Regulations and Requirements
Section 8: Academic Integrity
7.1 Plagiarism and Cheating
Plagiarism or any other form of cheating in examinations, term tests or academic work is subject to serious academic penalty (e.g. suspension or expulsion from the faculty or university). Cheating in examinations or tests may take the form of copying from another student or bringing unauthorized materials into the exam room (e.g., crib notes, pagers or cell phones). Exam cheating can also include exam impersonation. (Please see Section 4.2.8 on Exam Personation). A student found guilty of contributing to cheating in examinations or term assignments is also subject to serious academic penalty.
To plagiarize is to take ideas or words of another person and pass them off as one's own. In short, it is stealing something intangible rather than an object. Plagiarism applies to any written work, in traditional or electronic format, as well as orally or verbally presented work. Obviously it is not necessary to state the source of well known or easily verifiable facts, but students are expected to appropriately acknowledge the sources of ideas and expressions they use in their written work, whether quoted directly or paraphrased. This applies to diagrams, statistical tables and the like, as well as to written material, and materials or information from Internet sources.
To provide adequate and correct documentation is not only an indication of academic honesty but is also a courtesy which enables the reader to consult these sources with ease. Failure to provide appropriate citations constitutes plagiarism. It will also be considered plagiarism and/or cheating if a student submits a term paper written in whole or in part by someone other than him/herself, or copies the answer or answers of another student in any test, examination, or take-home assignment.
Working with other students on assignments, laboratory work, take-home tests, or on-line tests, when this is not permitted by the instructor, can constitute Inappropirate Collaboration and may be subject to penalty under the Student Discipline By-Law.
An assignment which is prepared and submitted for one course should not be used for a different course. This is called "duplicate submission" and represents a form of cheating because course requirements are expected to be fulfilled through original work for each course.
When in doubt about any practice, ask your professor or instructor.
The Student Advocacy Office, 519 University Centre, 474-7423, is a resource available to students dealing with Academic Integrity matters.

For appeals of grades received for term work please consult the UofM 2010/2011 Calendar p. 26-27.