2023 Summer COMLIT W60AC 001 WBL 001

2023 Summer Session C 8 weeks, June 20 - August 11

COMLIT W60AC 001 - WBL 001

Topics in the Literature of American Cultures

Boroughs and Barrios: Moving in and through NYC & Los Angeles

Karina Ruth-Esther Palau, Max Kaisler

Jun 20, 2023 - Aug 11, 2023
Su
12:00 am - 12:01 am
Internet/Online
Class #:13894
Units: 4

Instruction Mode: Web-Based Instruction

Offered through Comparative Literature

Current Enrollment

Total Open Seats: 46
Enrolled: 34
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 80
Waitlist Max: 5
No Reserved Seats

Hours & Workload

1 hours of web-based or technologically-mediated activities replacing standard discussion sections (effective fall 2006) per week, 19 hours of outside work hours per week, and 3 hours of web-based or technologically-mediated activities replacing standard lectures (effective fall 2006) per week.

Other classes by Karina Ruth-Esther Palau

Other classes by Max Kaisler

Course Catalog Description

Study of the ethnic diversity of American literature. Topics will vary from semester to semester, but may include such themes as Cultures of the City, Gender, Race, Ethnicity in U.S. Literature, Race and Identity. Students should consult the department's course bulletin well before the beginning of the semester for details.

Class Description

The Statue of Liberty with welcome torch always raised. The Hollywood sign against golden California hills. Subways and freeways running like arteries above and below ground, offering to transport us around and across the city. Many iconic images of New York City and Los Angeles construct U.S. urban centers as a space of endless movement and possibility. Physically, New York and Los Angeles spread across the map and encompass multiple neighborhoods and communities, seemingly facilitating our ability to access, explore, and find new connections. Socially and economically, both cities have been figured as distinctly “American” dreamscapes—places of refuge and freedom, success, and self-invention—that hinge on the promise that the American city works like an open circuit, enabling unrestricted movement and mobility to and for everyone who visits or decides to make it home. But who comes to the American city, and why? How do visitors, residents, and migrants negotiate and move through “The Big Apple” and “The City of Angels,” reimagining urban life in the process? With these questions in mind, we will spend the summer tracing the crises of im/mobility that mark the histories of these two U.S. urban centers. Highlighting interconnected and transnational moments like the New York immigration boom and growth of Spanish Harlem, the African American Great Migration and Harlem Renaissance, and the displacement of Chicano communities in the Chávez Ravine and East Los Angeles to make way for L.A freeways and ‘development,’ we will give special attention to the ways that New York and Los Angeles’ stories intersect with themes of immigration and shifting constructions of national ‘American’ identity, contests over urban spaces and representations of race and citizenship, segregation and the politics of urban renewal. In the process, we will explore the traversed and imagined landscapes of New York City and Los Angeles through writing, popular music, advertisements, maps, and visual media including photography and film.

Class Notes

This class will be held asynchronously online. Class enrollment will close on June 26 due to the rapid nature of the course material.

Rules & Requirements

Repeat Rules

Requirements class fulfills

Meets Arts & Literature, L&S Breadth
American Cultures Requirement

Reserved Seats

Current Enrollment

No Reserved Seats

Textbooks & Materials

Associated Sections