AML 5027 Fall 2021 Epstein
This seminar investigates the relationship between the cultural and historical conditions that characterize the two decades following World War II and developments in literature, as well as music, visual art, and other cultural forms. Blending literary analysis and cultural history, our goal is to explore how various cultural forms respond to, reflect, subvert, and shape the dynamics of post-World War II American culture. We will pay special attention to the radical, oppositional aesthetics that emerged in a wide range of fields, including fiction, poetry, music (jazz, rock), art, and movies. We will also consider the continuities and discontinuities between the allegedly placid 1950s and the turbulent 1960s.
In general, the course will explore how and why postwar American writers and artists invented unconventional aesthetic and political strategies to cope with changing ideas about the nature of the self, language and literary form, racial and sexual identity, and the nature of "America" itself, in a world undergoing dramatic transformations. Readings will likely include Shirley Jackson, Ralph Ellison, John Cheever, Richard Yates, Allen Ginsberg, Sylvia Plath, Amiri Baraka, Gwendolyn Brooks, Thomas Pynchon, Donald Barthelme, Joan Didion, Joyce Carol Oates.
Requirements: This satisfies the requirement for coursework in the following Area of Concentration: Post-1900 Literature and Culture.