*THINK 31: Reimagining America: Cultural Memory and Identity Since the Civil War (lecture)

Taught by: Shelley Fisher Fishkin and A. Hobbs

Spring Quarter, 2012-2013

TTh 12:15-1:05, Room: 320-105

 

 

How have Americans remembered the Civil War--what it meant, what it accomplished, and what it failed to accomplish? How did Americans reimagine the United States as a nation after the war? Who belonged in the national community and who would be excluded? In 1865, the peace treaty was signed at Appomattox and the Thirteenth Amendment outlawed slavery, but the battle over memory and national identity had just begun. The questions that the Civil War addressed-- and failed to address-- continue to affect our lives today. We will focus on how Americans negotiated issues of cultural memory and national identity through a close analysis of historical texts, novels, poems, films, paintings, cartoons, photographs, and music. Our interpretations will foreground the particular themes of race and nationhood; freedom and citizenship; and changing notions of individual and collective identity. Our assumption in this course is that history is not available to us as a set of events-- fixed, past, and unchanging. Rather, history is known through each generation's interpretations of those events, and these interpretations are shaped by each generation's lived experience. What stories get told? Whose? And in what ways? The stories we choose to tell about the past can shape not only our understanding of the present, but also the kind of future we can imagine and strive to realize.

AUTHOR VISIT: Writer David Bradley, whose novel, The Chaneysville Incident, won the Pen-Faulkner Award and an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, will be a guest speaker in the class and will answer your questions about his highly-acclaimed novel.

Course materials  will include Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of a Slave, Written by Himself;  Mark Twain, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn; W.E.B. Du Bois, Black Reconstruction; Film,  D.W. Griffith, The Birth of a Nation; David Bradley, The Chaneysville Incident
 
FIELD TRIP: The class will take a field trip to Angel Island to tour the Immigration Station where many thousands of would-be immigrants from Asia, primarily Chinese, were detained and interrogated between 1910 and 1940.
 
AUTHOR VISIT: Writer David Bradley, whose novel, The Chaneysville Incident, won the Pen-Faulkner Award and an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, will be a guest speaker in the class and will answer your questions about his highly-acclaimed novel.