PULS
Foto: Matthias Friel
Dear students, all courses will be taught as online courses with asynchronous access until further notice. Once you have signed on in PULS and have been admitted in PULS, your instructor will email you via PULS to let you know when and how to access the online material (moodle, etc.). Testatsleistungen (course requirements) may be subject to change. Students who cannot (yet) access PULS: Please email your instructor directly. It is possible that classes can be switched to classroom teaching (Präsenzlehre) at some point during the semester. If this happens, your instructor will let you know and classes will take place at the times originally scheduled.
The urban space is one of the most persistent and prominent motifs in African American Literature; Amiri Baraka even asserts that African American writing is at its core urban. The city therefore represents a productive vantage point on African American history as well as on the changes of literary production. In this course we will trace the representations of the city in texts from the slave narrative to contemporary African American artists and critics. We will explore the changing perspectives and images of the city from a ”Promised Land” to ”A Dream Deferred,” which were created within these spaces, as well as about them, and try to understand the differences to the respective white American literary representations.
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