File spoon-archives/postcolonial.archive/postcolonial_2002/postcolonial.0208, message 31


From: Semra Somersan <semras-AT-bilgi.edu.tr>
Subject: Re: Novels for a course on the 'non-west'
Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2002 11:19:22 +0300


Would you also care to try Orhan Pamuk's "MY NAme ıs Red". Orhan Pamuk ıs
well known not only ınTurkeyö hıs homeö but also ın the West.  He ıs also
known for hıs
outspokenness agaınst human rıghts vıolatıons of the government ın Turkey.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Vanessa F Hudson" <vfhuds2-AT-uky.edu>
To: <postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu>
Sent: Monday, August 19, 2002 8:53 PM
Subject: Novels for a course on the 'non-west'


> Dear List Serve Members,
>
> Thanks for your very helpful suggestions.  I've pasted a list of the
novels/short stories/plays you suggested for my course.
>
> Since some of you had questions about the course, here's a little more
information.  The course I'm teaching is a geography course that fulfills a
cross-cultural perspectives requirement at my university, so I am only
requiring that the students read one novel (in addition to other readings).
However, I'm planning to put them into reading groups where each group reads
a different book.  There are 75 students enrolled and I'm hoping the small
groups will engage more students in discussion (it's hard to get everyone
talking in a such a large class).  A final project for the groups will be a
presentation on their book and how it relates to the themes of the class.
If anyone would like to see a copy of the assignment, email me privately and
I'll be happy to forward a copy to you.
>
> Thanks again,
> Vanessa Hudson
>
>
> *********************************************************
> Makuchi, _Your Madness, Not Mine_ (Ohio UP, 1999). The stories cover a
variety of issues from the Aids pandemic ("Slow Poison"); the destruction of
the environment ("The Forst Will Claim You Too"); Rape ("The Healer");
stories on post-colonial/economic crises, etc. plaguing
Cameroonians/Africans, especially women and children.
>
> Sia Figiel's 'Where we once belonged'. (It's Samoan.)
>
> Emile Habiby, The Secret Life of Said, the ill-fated Pessoptimist: a
> Palestinian who became a citizen of Israel
>
> Elias Khoury, Little Mountain
>
> Anton Shammas, Arabesques
>
> Hanan al-Shaykh, The Story of Zahra
>
> Etel Adnan, Sitt Marie Rose (Trans. from French)
>
> Mahmoud Darwish, Memory for Forgetfulness
>
> Abd al-Rahman Munif, Cities of Salt
>
> Ronit Matalon, The One Facing Us
>
> Keys to the Garden: The New Israeli Writing,
> edited by Ammiel Alcalay.
>
> Extended Biblio on Albert Wendt (from Paul Sharrad)
> http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/icd/publications/wendt.pdf
>
> June Ellis' page at Loyola
> http://webdev.loyola.edu/jellis/poco.html
>
> Extended PI lit biblio and sample syllabi:
> http://lama.kcc.hawaii.edu/psiweb/bibliography/pac_lit_guide.html
>
> Samskara by UR Ananthamurthy (not in
> English, but translation available)
>
> Mahasweta Devi's work, a lot of which is available in
> translation now (there's a list on the net at the
> Seagull website)
>
> Soyinka _ Kongi's harvest (play that goes really well and
> addresses the modernity/tradition/postcoloniality
> question)
>
> Mulk Raj Anand. Untouchable
>
> Gita Mehta. Raj
>
> Duong Thu Huong. Paradise of the Blind
>
> Pramoedya Toer. This Earth of Mankind
>
> Alejo Carpentier. The Kingdom of this World
>
> Julia Alvarez. In the Time of the Butterflies
>
> Adhaf Souief. A Map of Love
>
> Buchi Emecheta. The Rape of Shavi
>
> some plays:
> Wole Soyinke. Death and the King's Horseman
>
> Caryl Churchill. Cloud-9
>
> David Henry Hwang. M Butterfly
>
> Brian Friel. Translations
>
> Disgrace, J.M. Coetzee (about post-apartheid S. Africa)
>
> A Map of Love (colonial and post-colonial Egypt)
>
> The Shadow of the Sun, Ryszard Kapuscinksi
> (this is a little different in that it is a collection of essays based on
his 20 -30 years of travels throughout Africa -- in Colonial and
PostColonial times. vivid illustrations of life and extremely well written)
>
> Deep Rivers_ by Jos Mara Arguedas, and _The Green House_ by
> Mario Vargas Llosa.
> They kind of dichotomize one another, because Arguedas'
> book shows more of the indigenous perspective (or at least a sympathetic
view
> of the indigenes) and Vargas Llosa's comes in more from the western,
> "nationalist" white man's view. (Peruvian literature)
>
> Tsistia Dangarembga "Nervous Conditions" (Zimbabwe)
>
> Kamala Markandaya "Nectar in a Seive" (India)
>
> Steve Chimombo "The Rubbish Dump" Short Story (Malawi)
>
> Armah "The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born" (Ghana)
>
> Thomas King "Green Grass, Running Water" (Native Canadian)
>
>
>
>
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Vanessa Hudson
> Geography/U of Kentucky
> Lexington, KY 40506-0027
> 859.257.6992 (office)
> 859.323.1969 (fax)
> vfhuds2-AT-uky.edu
>
>
>      --- from list postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---


     --- from list postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---

   

Driftline Main Page

 

Display software: ArchTracker © Malgosia Askanas, 2000-2005