2024 Fall FRENCH 260A 001 SEM 001

2024 Fall

FRENCH 260A 001 - SEM 001

Studies in 20th-Century Literature

Entangled Pasts at the Border: Aesthetics, Race and Migration

Debarati Sanyal, Rhiannon Welch

Aug 28, 2024 - Dec 13, 2024
Th
02:00 pm - 04:59 pm
Class #:31384
Units: 4

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Offered through French

Current Enrollment

Total Open Seats: 1
Enrolled: 7
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 8
Waitlist Max: 5
No Reserved Seats

Hours & Workload

3 hours of student-instructor coverage of course materials per week, and 9 hours of outside work hours per week.

Other classes by Debarati Sanyal

Other classes by Rhiannon Welch

Course Catalog Description

Offerings vary from year to year. See the Department's <Course Description> for current topics.

Class Description

This team-taught seminar (cross-listed with the D Italian and Critical Theory) examines histories of racialized violence–slavery, colonialism, the Nazi genocide– and their convergence at select border sites. Our primary works are mostly drawn from Francophone and Italian geographies. We turn to literature, visual media and multidisciplinary studies to sound out the reverberations of violent histories at contemporary borders such as Lampedusa, Gaza, Melilla or Calais. How do contemporary border technologies and policies reanimate histories of extraction, racism and empire? How are borders felt and sensed by migrants who seek to cross them? How do literature and film, in conjunction with theory, help us better understand race and racialization and to question dominant discourses of humanity, human rights and humanitarianism? How do testimonies by migrants and their aesthetic representations resist border violence, historicize the refugee “crisis,” and convey new modes of becoming or belonging? How do we understand poesis– making, self-fashioning, world-building– as lived practices as well as aesthetic representations that show us the power of life to endure and escape the border’s power over life? We will consider theories of biopolitics, necropolitics, anti-Blackness, postcoloniality, and migration, paying particular attention to the critical and creative resources of postcolonial and Black radical thought. Our readings and screenings include: Literary works by Primo Levi, Marie NDiaye, Laila Lalami, Valeria Luiselli Theoretical writings by Enzo Traverso, Saree Makdisi, Hortense Spillers, Sylvia Winter, Alexander Weheliye, Saidiya Hartman, Achille Mbembe, Giorgio Agamben, Jacques Rancière, Nicolas de Genova Visual works by Dagmawi Yimer, Hélène Crouzillat & Laetitia Tura, Forensic Architecture, Isaac Julien, John Akomfrah

Rules & Requirements

Repeat Rules

Reserved Seats

Current Enrollment

No Reserved Seats

Textbooks & Materials

See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.

Textbook Lookup

Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials

eTextbooks

Associated Sections

None