Spring 2018  |  CSCL 3123 Section 001: Jewish Writers and Rebels in German, Austrian, and American Culture (69373)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Discussion
Credits:
3 Credits
Grading Basis:
Student Option
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Meets With:
GER 3631 Section 001
JWST 3631 Section 001
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
01/16/2018 - 05/04/2018
Tue, Thu 11:15AM - 12:30PM
UMTC, East Bank
Nicholson Hall 315
Enrollment Status:
Open (2 of 5 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
Literary/cultural modes of writing used by Jewish writers in Germany, Austria, and America to deal with problems of identity, anti-Semitism, and assimilation. Focus on 20th century. All readings (novels, poetry, stories) in English. prereq: No knowledge of German required; Extra work in German must be done in order to count this course toward a German minor or a German, Scandinavian, Dutch major.
Class Description:
0A

One of the major questions that the course will ask is if there is such a thing as Jewish writing. Gilles Deleuze and FĂ©lix Guattari's book Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature will serve as the starting point for the course, for they propose a theory that seeks to explain how minority groups construct stories, novels, and poems within a major language. Therefore, when Jewish writers compose their works, they inevitably challenge majority assumptions in German, Austrian, and American culture. Not only do they undermine Jewish stereotypes embedded in the majority culture, but they also ask: What does it mean to be German, Austrian, and American? Can we define a national character? Is there really such a thing as national character? Jewish writers such as Kafka, Celan, Canetti, Scholem, Benjamin, Malamud, Biller, Honigmann, Bellow, Ginsberg, and Roth have developed remarkable affinities that cut across German, Austrian and American cultures, and it will be the purpose of this course to study these affinities and determine whether there is such a thing as Jewish writing. In addition, the course will deal with the major crises of the twentieth century that have compelled Jewish writers to assume the role of outsider and rebel. Though this is not a Holocaust course per se, it will analyze how anti-Semitism in Europe and America led to the destruction of European Jewry and how Jewish writers have responded to this catastrophe and continue to do so in new works.


Who Should Take This Class?:
Class is taught in English. Students who want to receive credit towards the German major will have the opportunity to read selected works in the original and write one paper in German.
Grading:

Final grade will be based on the grades of your written work (75%) and your contribution to class discussion, including an in-class presentation (25%). There will be a midterm essay exam, a short paper and a final paper (10-12 pages) due at the end of the semester.

Exam Format:
Mid-term essay exam
Class Format:
Lecture 20%; Discussion 80%. Class will be run as a seminar
Workload:
50-100 pages of reading each week
Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/69373/1183
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
10 November 2017

ClassInfo Links - Spring 2018 Cultural Stdy/Comparative Lit Classes

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