GNDS-320
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Trauma & Its Aftermath
Department(s)
Course Description
Trauma has attracted critical attention as a limit case through which to explore the nature of selfhood, language, memory and power, and the ethical and political implications of representing violence. Taking contemporary examples of race- and gender-based violence, their intersections, and their specificities as a point of departure, students will examine debates in scholarship and activism over definitions of trauma, its personal and collective impacts, and the social, cultural, and political actions to be taken in its wake. We will pay particular attention to questions of narrative genre, medium and transmission, as well as the role of commemoration in projects to combat violence. May be taken for credit toward the Indigeneity, Race, and Ethnicity Studies major or the Global Literature minor. May be elected as Global Literature 320.
Course Type
Academic Credit, DIST-HUMANITIES, DIST-CULTURAL PLURALISM, Alternative Voices, INTER.DISC-RACEÐNIC ST, INTER.DISC-GENDER STUDIES, Cross-listed Course, Indigeneity, Race & Ethn., Global Studies