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ENGL 5139-001: Global Literature and Culture, Post/Colonial Fictions of Development (Spring 2019)

A crane across a skyline

鈥淒evelopment鈥濃攁nd its myriad cognates, including 鈥渦nderdevelopment,鈥 鈥渦neven development,鈥 鈥渄eveloping nations,鈥 鈥渉uman development index鈥 and so forth鈥攈as been the central paradigm framing colonial and postcolonial geopolitical and economic structures over the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The aim of this graduate course is twofold: first, we will trace the history and evolution of the term 鈥渄evelopment鈥; its historical impact on colonial, postcolonial, and international forms of governance; and its imbrication with other political discourses like human rights and gender equality. Second, the course will read twentieth- and twenty-first century colonial, postcolonial, and world Anglophone fiction to see how various novelistic forms, especially the Bildungsroman鈥攖he quintessential narrative of development鈥攁dapt themselves to different socio-historical conditions of development and intervene in broader political debates. The reading list is still in flux, but will likely include theorists such as: Arturo Escobar, James Ferguson, Amartya Sen, Giovanni Arrighi, and David Harvey. We may also look at a range of primary materials, including government documents on colonial development and World Bank and IMF reports. Authors we may read include: Joseph Conrad Nostromo, Evelyn Waugh Black Mischief, Joyce Cary Mister Johnson, Elizabeth Bowen The Heat of the Day, or Mulk Raj Anand Untouchable from the first half of the century; and Ngugi Wa Thiong鈥橭 Petals of Blood, Ayi Kwei Armah The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born; Tsitsi Dangarembga Nervous Conditions; Jamaica Kincaid A Small Place; Zakes Mda Heart of Redness; Chris Abani GraceLand, or Zadie Smith NW from the second half of the century.

MA-Lit Course Designation: Literature After 1800, Multicultural/Postcolonial Literature, C (Bodies/Identities/Collectivities), D (Cultures/Politics/Histories)