E60C CONTEMPORARY CULTURAL AND CRITICAL THEORY: POST-STRUCTURALISMS AND POST-COLONIALISMS II

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1 E60C CONTEMPORARY CULTURAL AND CRITICAL THEORY: POST-STRUCTURALISMS AND POST-COLONIALISMS II 2000-2001 Lecturer: Meeting Times: R. Clarke; Room A30; Tel.: 417-4411; E-mail: clarker@uwichill.edu.bb. Two 1.5-hour seminars per week on Tu and Thurs: 10.30 AM - 12 PM; Room A27. Where E60B Post-Structuralisms and Post-colonialisms I explores the ongoing dialogue between contemporary Post-colonial theory and the Post-Structuralist schools of Deconstruction, Dialogical criticsm, and Foucauldian Discursive criticism, E60C seeks to introduce students to three other Post-Structuralist schools of cultural and critical theory with which Post-colonial theorists have also engaged in recent times. To these ends, after exploring the implications of Saussure s critique of traditional models of signification for traditional notions of selfhood, linguistic representation and self-expression, students will devote the first half of the semester to reading and discussing seminal essays male and self-identified feminists drawn from the following three Post-Structuralist schools: " Semiotics / Structuralism " Lacanian Psychoanalytic criticism " (Post-)Structuralist Marxism The goal in so doing is to explore the ways in which each school of thought has mounted a radical challenge to both traditional liberal humanist and modern dialectical conceptions of: " subjectivity; " knowledge; " the structure of the social formation; " the discursive construction of gender; " the discursive construction of race; " representation / realism ; " authorship / self-expression ; " literary history / intertextuality; and " the role of the reader. Students will devote the second half of the semester to exploring related seminal essays by prominent Post-colonial and African American theorists such as " Sunday Anozie; " Homi Bhabha;

2 " Gayatri Spivak; " Stuart Hall; and " Abdul JanMohamed. The goal in so doing is to explore how each of these thinkers has sought to utilise post- Saussurean concepts of difference in order to rethink the dominant ways in which colonial and post-colonial cultural phenomena and practices have come to be conceptualised. Assessment: " Seminar participation / presentations 40% " Research paper 60% Required Texts: Please disregard the wrong list which appeared by accident in the postgraduate studies pamphlet. " Hazard Adams and Leroy Searle, eds. Critical Theory Since 1965 R " Julie Rivkin and Michael Ryan, eds. Literary Theory: an Anthology R ' " Jacques Lacan Écrits R " Terry Eagleton Criticism and Ideology R " Frederic Jameson The Political Unconscious R " Sunday Anozie Structuralist Models and African Poetics R * " Homi Bhabha The Location of Culture R " Gayatri Spivak In Other Worlds R " Selected essays by Barthes, Todorov, Genette, Kristeva, Irigaray, Rubin, Barrett, Kaplan, Hall, Gilroy, JanMohamed, Gates, Carby, et al. in the E60C folder in the library to be photocopied by students. The texts listed above may or may not be in the bookstore: Although I requested that they be ordered, as lecturers we have no control over what is in fact ordered in the final analysis. R indicates on reserve; * indicates out of print; 'indicates only recently added to the list. Recommended: " Terry Eagleton Literary Theory: an Introduction R " Ania Loomba Colonialism/Post-colonialism R " Bart Moore-Gilbert Post-colonial Theory R READING SCHEDULE

3 TO NOTE Students should note that this course will largely take the seminar format. The degree to which seminars are productive is a function of the effort which students put into a) their preparation of assigned materials and b) the effectiveness of the presentations and reports made to their colleagues. Students must be prepared to read, reread and re-reread the assigned readings. (I have always found the best way to come to grips with difficult readings is to make detailled notes for myself.) They must also be prepared to engage in class in a vigorous exchange of ideas with their colleagues. It is, in short, through a combination of careful preparation and dialogue that students will be able to glean for themselves the important information to be drawn from the assigned readings. Students are also reminded that where the Required Readings are absolutely essential, should be read in the suggested order, and must be prepared ahead of class, the Recommended Readings are suggested readings only designed to provide necessary background and clarification. It is entirely up to you whether you choose to read them or not. You may, however, find them useful, especially when it comes to preparing oral presentations, writing term papers and revising for the final exam. Please check the lists at the end of this course outline to see which texts have been placed on reserve. Week 1: Introduction Discussion Topics: General discussion of the aims of the course, requirements, etc.; What is Cultural Theory? What is Critical Theory? MODULE ONE: SAUSSUREAN LINGUISTICS / SEMIOTICS / STRUCTURALISM Week 2: Saussure s Model of Signification / The (Post-)Saussurean Critique of Realism TU: Saussure, Ferdinand From Course in General Linguistics (in Adams and Searle) TR: Roland Barthes The Discourse of History (in Keith Jenkins, ed. The Postmodern History Reader) Hayden White Introduction: the Poetics of History (in his Metahistory) Roland Barthes The Reality Effect (in Lillian Furst, ed. Realism)

4 Recommended Readings: Terry Eagleton Literary Theory: an Introduction; Structuralism and Semiotics (section on Saussure) David Robey Mode rn Lite rary Th eory: Modern Linguistics and the Language of Literature (section on Saussure) Week 3: The (Post-)Saussurean Critique of Realism and Self-expression / Structural Anthropology TU: Emile Benveniste The Nature of Pronouns (in his Problems in General Linguistics; also in Paul Cobley, ed. The Communication Reader) TR: Claude Lévi-Strauss Structural Anthropology: Structural Analysis in Linguistics and Anthropology Language and the Analysis of Social Laws The Structural Study of Myth. The Elementary Structures of Kinship: The Principles of Kinship Recommended Readings Edmund Leach Claude Levi-Strauss Week 4: Linguistics and Poetics / Narratology TU: Roman Jakobson Linguistics and Poetics (in Lodge, ed. MCT) Sunday Anozie Negritude, Structuralism, Deconstruction (in Gates, ed. Black Literature and Literary Theory) TR: Tzvetan Todorov "A Grammar of Narrative" (in his Poetics of Prose) Susan Lanser "Toward a Feminist Narratology" (in Warhol and Herndl) Recommended Readings: Jonathan Culler Structuralist Poetics MODULE TWO: LACANIAN PSYCHOANALYSIS AND CRITICISM Week 5: Lacanian Psychoanalysis TU: Jacques Lacan "The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I" (in Rivkin and Ryan; also in Adams and Searle) TR: Jacques Lacan "The Function and Field of Speech..." (in Rivkin and Ryan; also in Adams and Searle)

5 Recommended Readings: Malcolm Bowie Lacan: Invenitng the I Language and the Unconsciou s Symbolic, Imaginary, Real and... True The Meaning of th e Ph allus Week 6: Lacanian Psychoanalysis / French Feminism and Anglophone Lacanian Feminism TU: Jacques Lacan On the Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious (in Rivkin and Ryan; also in Adams and Searle) TR: Luce Irigaray "This Sex Which Is Not One" (in her This Sex Which Is Not One; and in Marks and de Courtivron) Luce Irigaray "Another Cause Castration" (in Warhol and Herndl) Gayle Rubin On the Traffic in Women: Notes Toward a Political Economy of Sex (in Rivkin and Ryan; also in Rayna Reiter, ed. Toward an Anthropology of Women) Recommended Readings: Ann Rosalind Jones Writing the Body: Towards an Understanding of l écriture féminine (in Warhol and Herndl) Week 7: Lacanian Psychoanalytic Theory and Criticism: Authorship, Realism, and the Reader / Viewer TU: Shoshana Felman Jacques Lacan and the Adventure of Insight: The Case of Poe: Applications / Implications of Psychoanalysis Shari Benstock Authorising the Autobiographical (in Warhol and Herndl) Hélène Cixous The Laugh of the Medusa (in Adams and Searle) TR: Jacques Lacan Seminar on The Purloined Letter (in Muller and Richardson, eds. The Purloined Poe) Laura Mulvey Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema (in Gerald Mast, et al., eds. Film Theory and Criticism) Recommended Readings: MODULE THREE: (POST-)STRUCTURALIST MARXISM AND CRITICISM

6 Week 8: Structuralist Marxism TU: Louis Althusser "Ideology"Ideology and Ideological Sta"Ideology and Ideologic Adams and Searle) TR: Louis Althusser Part Part I (in h Part I (in his Part I (in his and Étie Capital) Recommended Readings: William C. Dowling Jameson, Althusser, Marx PierrePierre Macherey From AA Theory ofa Theory of Literary Production (in (in Eastho On Literature as an Ideological Form On Literature as an Ideolog Week 9: (Post-)Structuralist Marxist Theory and Criticism TU: Louis AlthusserA A Let A Letter on A Letter on Art in Reply to André Daspre Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays) and McGowan) Étienne Balibar and Pierre Macherey also in Eagleton and Milne) TR: Terry Eagleton Criticism and Ideology: Categories for a Marxist Criticism Towards a Science of the Text Recommended Readings: LowderLowder NewtonLowder Newton, etlowder N Week 10: (Post-)Structuralist Marxist Feminism TU: Michèle Barrett The The Cultural The Cultural Product The Cultural Produc Criticism and Social Change) TR: The Marxist-Feminist Literature Collective Women s Women s Writing: Jane Eyre, Shirley, VillVillette, Aurora Leigh (in Eagleton and Milne) Recommended Readings: Week 11: MODULE FOUR: POST-COLONIAL THEORY AND CRITICISM Post-colonialPost-colonial Post-colonial Cultural Theory I: SubPost-colonial C Formation

7 TU: TR: Homi Bhabha Inter Interrogating Interrogating Identi Interrogating Identity: Frantz Fa Prerogative Prerogative (in his The Location of Culture; there is a different version also in Williams and Chrisman) StuartStuart Hall Race, Race, Articulation, Race, Articulation, and Race, Articulation, and (in(in Sociological Theories : Race and Colonialism; also in Baker) Recommended Readings: Bart Moore-Gilbert Postcolonial Theory passim andand Race / Colonialistand Race / Colonialist Literaand Race / Colonialist ofof Racial Difference inof Racial Difference in Colonialistof (in(in Gates,(in Gates, ed.(in Gates, ed. Race, Writing and D WeekWeek 12: Post-colonial Cultural ThPost-colonial Cultural ThePost-colonial Cultural Theory II: th Condition TU: HomiHomi Bhabha The The Other Question: The Other Question: Stereotype, Discrim thethe Discourse of Colonialism (also in Baker) AbdulAbdul JanMohamed The The Economy of Manichean Allegory: the The Economy of M TR: Gayatri Spivak Femi Feminism Feminism and Critical Theo Feminism and C Worlds) In Other Worlds) Sara Suleri Woman Woman Skin Deep: Feminism an Woman Skin Deep: Fe Condition (in Williams and Chrisman) Recommended Readings: Bart Moore-Gilbert Postcolonial Theory passim Week 13: Post-coPost-colonialPost-colonial Critical Theory: the Post-coloniaPost-colonial Expression and Realism TU: HomiHomi Bhabha The The Commitment to The Commitment to Theory (in The Co Culture) Gayatri Spivak Can Can the Subaltern Speak? Can the Subaltern Spea Chrisman) Woman swoman s Text from the Third World Woman s Te TR: Homi Bhabha Representatio Representation Representation and the Colonial T Gloversmith, ed. The Theory of Reading) Gayatri SpivakA A Lite A Liter A Literary Representation of the Subalt Recommended Readings: Bart Moore-Gilbert Postcolonial Theory passim

8 RESEARCH PAPER Word Limits: Deadline: One (1) approx. 20-page paper which should be double-spaced. (Please insert a word count at the end.) Friday of the week following our last class Answer one of the following questions: 1.Analys1.Analyse1.Analyse a P1.Analyse a Post-colonial text of your choice from the point of view of ONE (1 schools of criticism: " Structuralism; " Lacanian Psychoanalysis; " (Post-)Structuralist Marxist criticism. Your essay should include a clear outline of the methodological principles which you employ. 2.Drawing2.Drawing upon the arguments advanced by a relevant Post-colonial theorist(s), discuss ONE (ONE ( of the following topics: " Post-colonial subjectivity; " Race and the social formation; " The discursive construction of gender and/or race; " Colonialist literature and the discursive construction of gender and/or race; " Gender and the Post-colonial condition; " Rethinking Post-colonial authorship; " Rethinking Post-colonial realism ; " Post-colonial intertextuality; " The Post-colonial reader (of colonial discourse / the European canon). You should aim to groundyou should aim to ground youryou should aim to ground your argument through conc your choice. NB:NB: Essays should be typedessays should be typed up and must be writtenessays should be typed up and must Faculty pamphlet on essay writing and the MLA Handbook: sloppy work will be penalised.