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ENGL 190-01, Borderlands: Contemporary American and Canadian Fiction, Spring 2014

Brady, Jennifer
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English, Department of, Syllabus, Academic departments, Curriculum, Text, 2014 Spring
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Abstract
This course is a study of contemporary American and Canadian fiction, much of it written in the realist mode and much of it centered on the topic of trauma - psychological and physical, individual and familial, economic and political - and on the emotions of shame, rage, and guilt. Many of these texts are autobiographical in form. The locales are, in the words of Russell Banks, "on both sides of the long, porous border between our two nations," and, as he observes of both the psychic and geographical terrain of most of these works, "darkness comes early and stays late: summer is not a condition, it's an all-too-brief holiday. Cities are gray, skies are mauve or milky, and there are always wet boots slumped in doorways." Not all of these novels and short story collections have these locales, of course, but, as a group of texts, they explore similar and interconnected themes.
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This syllabus was submitted to the Office of Academic by the course instructor. Uploaded by Lorie Yearwood.