ENG 6939 - Summer 2025 - Lathan

Summer
2025
ENG6939
Topics in English: Black Feminist Thought
Rhea Lathan

This graduate seminar is designed with two objectives in mind: 1) to develop a working knowledge of Black Women’s intellectualism with an eye toward Rhetoric and Composition Studies 2) to develop critical reading, research, and writing skills necessary for dislodging canons of Black rhetorical histories that marginalize gender, sexuality, and other vectors of difference. We will accomplish this by focusing on the numerous and fundamental contributions of Black women to social, political, and critical thought—specific to Rhetorical studies. Throughout the course, we will ask the following questions: Who is included in the terms “Black,” “woman,” and “thinker”? What does a genealogy of Black women’s Rhetoric look like? Why, even at this late date, are Black women’s rhetorical contributions still marginalized in mainstream curricula and in broader academia? Our text will include Royster’s Traces of a Stream; Carey’s Rhetorical Healing; Harris-Perry’s Sister Citizen, and Bailey’s Misogynoir. We will have weekly reflections and final paper for this course.

This seminar is developed around three themes-foundations, genealogies, methodologies. First, we will read foundational texts that will give us useful tools for engaging Black women rhetoricians throughout the course. Next, we will spend a time exploring a genealogy of Black Feminist rhetoricians who constitute much of our content for the course. Finally, we will reflect on some of the methods Black women rhetoricians use for constructing knowledge.

Requirements: This course satisfies the requirement for the following Areas of Concentration: African-American Literary and Cultural Studies; Feminism, Gender, and Sexuality Studies; Colonial, Postcolonial, and Transnational Literary and Cultural Studies. This course also meets the Alterity requirement.